ACCEPTED
01-15-00251-CV
FIRST COURT OF APPEALS
HOUSTON, TEXAS
8/3/2015 3:31:56 PM
CHRISTOPHER PRINE
CLERK
No. 01-15-00251-CV FILED IN
_________________________________________________
1st COURT OF APPEALS
HOUSTON, TEXAS
8/3/2015 3:31:56 PM
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE CHRISTOPHER A. PRINE
Clerk
FIRST DISTRICT OF TEXAS AT HOUSTON
_________________________________________________
In re Texas State Silica Products Liability Litigation
__________________________________________________
Appeal from the 333rd Judicial District Court
of Harris County, Texas No. 2004-70000
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REPLY IN SUPPORT OF
APPELLEES’ MOTION TO DISMISS APPEAL OR,
ALTERNATIVELY, TO STRIKE APPELLANT’S BRIEF
_______________________________________________________________
TO THE HONORABLE JUSTICES OF THE COURT OF APPEALS:
Appellants’ response to the Motion to Dismiss Appeal or, Alternatively, to
Strike Appellants’ Brief, misses two essential points of the motion. First, despite
what Appellants may have asked the MDL Court to do, what the Court actually did
was to dismiss Appellants’ constitutional challenge to portions of Chapter 90 of the
Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code and deny their request for permanent
injunctive relief based on a lack of standing of Appellants to make their
constitutional challenge and on a lack of ripeness in their claims. CR 1639-40.
Second, regardless of what the order dismissing Appellants’ constitutional
1
challenge says, the only relief Appellants are seeking is on the merits of their
challenge, an issue that the MDL Court did not consider and that is not before this
Court.
1. The Lack of an Appealable Order
The clear and unambiguous language of the MDL Court’s order
conclusively contradicts Appellants’ argument that the order denies temporary
injunctive relief; the order says that Appellants’ “Request for Permanent Injunction
Declaring Sections 90.004 and 90.010 Unconstitutional is DENIED.” CR 1639–
40 (emphasis in the original). The Texas Supreme Court has recognized that in
reviewing a trial court action, an appellate court must examine “not what the trial
court should have done but, if possible, what the court actually did.” Shanks v.
Treadway, 110 S.W.3d 444, 447 (Tex. 2003). See also Clay Exploration, Inc. v.
Santa Rosa Operating, LLC, 442 S.W.3d 795, 802 n.9 (Tex. App. – Houston [14th
Dist.] 2014, no pet.) (“The language in the Order is unambiguous; therefore, this
court must interpret the Order as having the effect required by the Order's plain
language, even if this effect is contrary to the result required under applicable
law”).
The MDL signed the order denying permanent injunctive relief in August
2014. Over the subsequent eleven months, Appellants never complained that the
order addressed permanent injunctive relief and they never asked the MDL Court
2
to change the order. Appellants’ suggestion is for this Court to ignore what the
MDL Court did and instead act as if the MDL Court had done something
completely different. An appellate court cannot create jurisdiction that otherwise
does not exist by ignoring the plain language of a trial court order.
2. The Lack of an Appealable Issue
If the MDL Court had issued an order denying temporary injunctive relief,
that would be an issue that the Appellants could challenge on interlocutory appeal,
but they have not done that. They do not claim that the MDL Court abused its
discretion in denying their request for injunctive relief, nor are they asking this
Court to grant injunctive relief. The Brief filed by Appellants in this case
addresses only the merits of their constitutional challenge. The MDL Court did not
consider the merits of the challenge, nor could it have done so once it determined
that the Appellants lacked standing and that their claims were not ripe.
DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Inman, 252 S.W.3d 299, 304 (Tex. 2008) (“Without
jurisdiction, the trial court should not render judgment . . .; it should simply
dismiss the case”); Martinez v. Second Injury Fund of Tex., 789 S.W.2d 267, 277
(Tex.1990) (Hecht, J., dissenting) (“Rendition of judgment on the merits is
inappropriate in an action over which the trial court lacks jurisdiction”).
In order to preserve an issue for appeal, the issue must be presented to and
decided by the trial court. Tex. R. App. 33.1(a). Because the trial court did not
3
rule on the merits of Appellants’ constitutional claims, the issue is not before the
Court. Lincoln v. Clark Freight Lines, Inc., 285 S.W.3d 79, 92 n. 12 (Tex. App.--
Houston [1 Dist.] 2009, no pet.) (“Without a ruling [by the trial court], we have
nothing to review”); Okorafor v. Uncle Sam & Assocs., Inc., 295 S.W.3d 27, 37
(Tex. App. - Houston [1st Dist.] 2009, pet. denied) (when trial court does not rule
on issue, there is nothing for the court of appeals to review). Without a ruling on
the merits of the constitutional challenge from the MDL court, these issues are not
properly before this Court and cannot be considered on this appeal. See Johnson v.
Texas Serenity Academy, Inc., 2015 WL 1135947, *3 (Tex. App. – Houston [1st
Dist. 2015, no pet.); Essex Crane Rental Corp. v. Carter, 371 S.W.3d 366, 383
(Tex. App. – Houston [1st Dist.] 2012, pet. denied).
Even if the Court could ignore the lack of an appealable order, the only issue
that Appellants might have raised is the MDL Court’s denial of their request for
injunctive relief. They have not complained of that ruling, but only of issues that
the MDL Court did not consider and did not rule on. Appellants have presented no
appealable issue to the Court.
3. Appellants’ Other Complaints Present Nothing for Review
Most of Appellants’ Response consists of arguments aimed at why they
believe certain portions of Chapter 90 are unconstitutional, with a short section at
the end addressing why Appellants believe the MDL Court’s ruling on ripeness
4
was wrong. But these substantive matters are not relevant to the motion currently
before the Court which is only aimed at whether this Court has jurisdiction over
the appeal and if some or all of Appellants’ brief should be stricken for
noncompliance with substantive and procedural rules. Nonetheless, Appellants’
ripeness theories are incorrect and Appellees will address those arguments if the
Court determines that it has jurisdiction over the appeal. It is significant to note
that Appellants did not even try to argue that they have standing to assert their
constitutional challenge.
Appellants are wrong, however, when they say that the only pre-2005
silicosis cases that will remain after August 31, 2015 are the Appellants. The
MDL Court has already approved medical reports from thirty-four plaintiffs, most
of whom filed their cases before September 1, 2005, including at least nine who
are represented by the attorney who filed Appellants’ response. CR 1st Supp V. 6,
2970-3062.1 The MDL Court has also allowed one plaintiff represented by the
same lawyer to proceed with his claims under Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §
1
See Exhibits D-1 through D-30 to “Opposition of Defendants’ Steering Committee to Certain
Plaintiffs’ Request for a Temporary Injunction in Connection with their Motion to Enjoin
Enforcement of Sections 90.004 and 90.010 of the Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code
because the Statute is Unconstitutional,” filed June 3, 2014. This pleading contains 30 of the
MDL Court’s orders approving medical reports. Two additional medical reports have been
approved by the MDL Court since the entry of the Court’s August 19, 2014, order. The orders
approving these reports are not currently part of the appellate record, however, Appellees have
requested their supplementation. Two other plaintiffs with active cases are not shown in the
appellate record.
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90.010(f). CR 1st Supp V. 6, 2970-72. None of those plaintiffs will have their
claims dismissed before September 1, 2015 as a result of Chapter 90. And to the
extent those active silica cases have not been tried or settled, they will remain in
the Silica MDL, even though they are more than ten years old.
Additionally, as Appellants concede, any dismissal order entered in an
individual case by the MDL Court will then be appealable as a final order. There
is no need to reply on this procedurally and substantively deficient case as a
vehicle to determine challenges to the statute. Appellants stress that this Court
should overlook procedural issues because of a hypothetical administrative burden
2
the Court could face if individual cases are dismissed and appealed. But even if
this Court were to overlook the procedural and substantive problems with this
appeal, there is no guarantee that it would not have to consider individual cases on
appeal. As was extensively outlined in Appellees’ initial motion and this reply, the
MDL Court denied Appellants’ injunction motion because they had not
demonstrated standing or ripeness. In the best case scenario for Appellants, this
Court would determine that Appellants have standing and that the issues are
ripe. But this Court could still only remand back to the MDL Court for a
2
Appellants’ Response to Appellees’ Motion to Dismiss Appeal or, Alternatively, to Strike
Appellants’ Brief at 4.
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determination on the substance of the injunction because that issue has not
previously been considered by the MDL Court.
The best proof that Appellants lack standing to raise their constitutional
challenge and that their claims are not ripe comes from the numerous plaintiffs
who have been authorized to go forward with their cases under Chapter 90. On
thirty-four occasions, a plaintiff has presented a medical report that has been
deemed or determined to comply with the statute. CR 1st Supp V. 6, 2970-3062.3
In most of these cases, the plaintiff presented a medical report to the MDL Court
that the MDL Court ruled was compliant with Chapter 90, in some cases by
overruling the objections by the defendants. On other occasions, no objections to
the medical report were filed. What those plaintiffs show is that not every plaintiff
with pre-2005 silica claims is prevented from going forward with his claims by the
medical criteria in Chapter 90.
None of the Appellants have submitted medical reports to the MDL Court
for examination.4 Until they do so, they cannot show that they have been harmed
3
See n. 1, supra.
4
Appellants have not explained to this Court or to the MDL Court why they refuse to present
medical reports to the MDL Court. The closest they come to an explanation is their complaint
that counsel for the Maloney Martin Appellants will have to incur an estimated cost of $240,000
to have their clients examined by a physician. Appellees dispute that cost; Mr. Martin represents
approximately 105 of the Appellants in this case, which means that the cost of a medical exam
would exceed $20,000 per claimant. The response to this is that a lawyer’s decision not to pay
for a doctor to examine his client in order to prove the presence of a disease does not make a
statute unconstitutional and does not excuse noncompliance with statutory requirements.
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by Chapter 90.5 If their cases are dismissed on or before August 31, 2015, it will
be because they have not submitted medical reports to the MDL Court. If that
happens, it will be purely speculative as to whether or not they would have gone
forward because they could not meet the medical criteria of Chapter 90. The
history of the Silica MDL shows that Chapter 90 does not always result in the
dismissal of a plaintiff’s claims. The standing and ripeness issues recognized by
the MDL Court are not that the Appellants cannot meet the medical criteria that
others have met; the issue is that these Appellants have not even tried to see if they
can go forward. 6
If Appellants are worried about the dismissal of their claims while their
appeal is pending, the appropriate thing for them to do is to request that the MDL
Court stay the dismissal pending the resolution of their constitutional challenge. It
5
While Appellants address the issue of ripeness in their Response, they do not discuss the lack of
standing issue at all. Of course, those issues go to the merits of the MDL Court’s ruling and not
to the jurisdictional issue raised by Appellees’ Motion to Dismiss.
6
If the Appellants are asserting that they are making a facial challenge to Chapter 90, then
Appellees suggest that their constitutional challenge and this appeal are brought without any
legal or factual basis. To sustain a facial challenge to the constitutionality of a statute, the
complaining party must show that the statute, by its terms, always operates unconstitutionally.
Texas Workers' Comp. Comm' n v. Garcia, 893 S.W.2d 504, 51820 (Tex.1995); Tex. Dep't of
Family & Protective Servs. v. Dickensheets, 274 S.W.3d 150, 155 (Tex. App. - Houston [1st
Dist.] 2008, no pet.). It has been established more than thirty times that Chapter 90 does not act
unconstitutionally in every case. In addition, there are at least two Appellants who attached
medical reports to the Plaintiffs’ constitutional challenge that indicated those claimants suffered
no silica-related medical condition. CR 1st Supp. V5:698 (Givens); 1061 (Syrma). Appellants
have not explained how a plaintiff without a silica-related injury has been harmed by any
provision of Chapter 90.
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would certainly be within the MDL Court’s discretion to do so. The problem,
however, is that Appellants have not asked for that relief from the MDL Court.
The timing problems of which Appellants complain are largely of their own
making. The medical criteria contained in Chapter 90 became effective September
1, 2005. See Acts 2005. 79th Leg., ch. 97, § 2. Appellants waited almost ten years
to bring their constitutional challenge. Chapter 90 was amended in 2013 to allow
for the dismissal of pre-2005 claims, and Appellants knew at that time that their
claims were potentially subject to dismissal in 2015 if they could not present an
adequate medical report. Acts 2013, 83rd Leg., ch. 146, § 3. Appellants then
waited another year before presenting their challenge to the MDL Court.
Appellants obtained an order from the MDL Court that was not sufficient to
support either a direct appeal to the Texas Supreme Court (because the denial of
injunctive relief was not based on the constitutionality or unconstitutionality of the
statute) or an interlocutory appeal to this Court (because the order only denies
permanent injunctive relief, not temporary injunctive relief). Had Appellants made
any reasonable effort to raise their constitutional challenge in the decade between
2005 and 2015, their challenge would most likely have been resolved long before
the August 31, 2015 dismissal date.
Appellants’ lack of diligence in pursuing their constitutional challenge and
their failure to obtain an appealable order is not a sufficient basis for creating
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appellate jurisdiction. Appellants are asking this Court to review an interlocutory
order from the MDL Court denying permanent injunctive relief. There is no
authority for this Court to entertain such an appeal, and the appeal should be
dismissed.
Alternatively, Appellants’ Brief should be stricken and Appellants be
required to redraw their Brief to address the matters ruled on by the MDL Court.
As it stands, Appellants have wasted judicial resources in presenting a massive
brief which only cursorily touches on the issues that the MDL Court actually
decided and instead argues almost exclusively on matters that MDL Court did not
consider or decide. Appellants’ brief does not present any appealable issue for this
Court to consider and Appellees should not be required to respond to a brief that is
in such blatant disregard of the principles of appellate jurisdiction and the rules of
appellate briefing.
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Respectfully submitted,
/s/ Kevin F. Risley______________________
Kevin F. Risley
State Bar No. 16941200
THOMPSON, COE, COUSINS & IRONS, L.L.P.
One Riverway, Suite 1400
Houston, Texas 77056
Telephone: 713.403.8295
Facsimile: 713.403.8299
Email: krisley@thompsoncoe.com
COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE
3M COMPANY
ON BEHALF OF ALL APPELLEES7
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that on August 3, 2015, a true and correct copy of the
foregoing document was served pursuant to electronic service on Mike Martin,
Attorneys for Appellants.
/s/ Kevin F. Risley___________
Kevin F. Risley
7
The Appellees who have joined in the Motion to Dismiss Appeal or, Alternatively, Motion to
Strike Appellants’ Brief are identified in Appendix A to the Motion.
11