Opinion issued August 30, 2018
In The
Court of Appeals
For The
First District of Texas
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NO. 01-16-00847-CV
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ADAN G. ADAME, ROBERT H. ARISPE, HARVEY EDWARD ARNOLD,
HERMON HARVEY ARNOLD, LUCIANO BARRIENTEZ, HOMER L.
BATCHELOR, TOMAS BENITEZ, DELBERT RAY BLUNDELL, MELVIN
BRIONES, TROY BRITT, RAYMOND H. BUTTERFIELD, GUADALUPE
CALVO JR., RICHARD F. CAPSON, MERCEDES CASTILLO, IGNACIO
CAVAZOS, HECTOR A. CHAPA, HUMBERTO CHAPA, REX CICERO,
PALFREY COLLINS, GLENN COURMIER, EDDIE M. CROSS,
FRANCISCO DABDUB, CAROL GENE DABNEY, STEVE DAVIS, NOE
DE LA CRUZ, JOSE G. DELAPAZ, JOSE DUENES, JESSIE DUNCAN,
RUDY ENCINAS, JOSE ESQUIVEL, JOSE T. FAJARDO, BENJAMIN D.
FIELDS, FRANK FRANCO, JESUS CANTU GARCIA JR., PABLO G.
GARCIA SR., MICHAEL GARY, ALONZO GARZA, HERMILO GARZA
SR., HOMERO GARZA, OSCAR GARZA JR., PAUL D. GAWLIK,
MANUEL B. GONZALES, BACILIO M. GUZMAN, CHESTER
HARRINGTON, NORRIS G. HAWLEY, GERALD HENRY, JOSE A.
HERNANDEZ, RIGOBERTO HERNANDEZ, C. DELL HODGE JR.,
DAVID HOLLINGSWORTH, KENNETH W. HOUFF, ELMER JAMISON,
RONNIE L. JOHNSON, CURTIS JONES, JOE KOENIG, ELIAS LEAL,
ROBERT LEMOS, JOSE G. LONGORIA, ANTONIO LOPEZ, CELSO
LOPEZ, ARRON LUKE, GEORGE MCFARLAND, ERNEST MECHELL,
ROBERT MECHELL, JOSE MEZA, CLYDE T. MILLER, KEITH
MOORE, JUAN MORALES, TOMAS MORIN, ADALBERTO MUNIZ,
DANIEL NAVEJAR, ESTEBAN NIETO, DANIEL OCHOA, MARCOS
ORTIZ, JIMMY PATTERSON, MANUEL C. PAZ SR., ROBERTO PAZ,
JUAN R. PEREZ, OSCAR PEREZ, VICTOR C. PEREZ, CARL PRENTICE,
RENE R. RAMIREZ, RAY CHARLES REDMON, BILLY W.
RICHARDSON, JOSE RIOS, FLOYD H. RODGERS, JOSE Z. ROJAS,
GEORGE SAENZ, HECTOR SALAZAR, GUADALUPE C. SERNA, JESUS
SOLIZ, HOWARD LEROY SPEARS, ROGER SPENCER, CARROLL G.
STARKS, WILLIAM T. TERRAL, CURTIS THOMAS, MARTIN TORRES,
TEODORO TOVAR, JOSE LUIS URESTI, ENRIQUE G. VILLARREAL
JR., CLIFTON WEITZEL, ROBERT F. WEITZEL, JOSEPH H.
WHEELER, JAY C. WHITLOCK, HERBERT WHITMIRE, AND
ABELARDO ZAMBRANO, Appellants
V.
3M COMPANY F/K/A MINNESOTA MINING AND MANUFACTURING
COMPANY; AEARO COMPANY; AIR EQUIPMENT & REPAIR, INC.;
AIR LIQUIDE AMERICA L.P.; AIRTROL SUPPLY, INC.; ALAMO
CEMENT COMPANY; AMCOL INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION;
AMERICAN COLLOID COMPANY; AMERICAN OPTICAL
CORPORATION; AMF INCORPORATED & MINSTAR, INC.; ASHLAND
CHEMICAL, INC.; BACOU-DALLOZ SAFETY, INC. F/K/A DALLOZ
SAFETY, INC. F/K/A WGM SAFETY CORPORATION D/B/A WILLSON
SAFETY PRODUCTS; BARRETTS MINERALS INC.; BARRY & BARRY
SAND COMPANY, INC.; BLACK & DECKER (U.S.), INC.; BOB
SCHMIDT, INC.; BONDO CORPORATION; CEL INDUSTRIES, INC.;
CENTRAL READY MIX CONCRETE; CHEVRON U.S.A. INC. F/K/A
GULF OIL; CHICAGO PNEUMATIC, INC.; CITGO PETROLEUM
CORPORATION; CITGO REFINING AND CHEMICALS COMPANY,
L.P.; CLEMCO INDUSTRIES CORPORATION HANSON AGGREGATES
LLC SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO PIONEER INTERNATIONAL (USA),
INC. SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO HANSON AGGREGATES, INC.
F/K/A HANSON AGGREGATES CENTRAL, INC. F/K/A PIONEER
SOUTH CENTRAL, INC. F/K/A PIONEER CONCRETE OF TEXAS, INC.;
CORPUS CHRISTI EQUIPMENT COMPANY; DEVILBISS OR THE
DEVILBISS COMPANY (SOMETIMES NAMED AS RANSBURG
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CORPORATION, ITW FINISHING LLC OR ILLINOIS TOOL WORKS
INC.); E. I. DU PONT DE NEMOURS; E.D. BULLARD COMPANY, INC.;
EASTERN SAFETY EQUIPMENT CO., INC.; EL PASO SAND &
TRUCKING; EMPIRE ABRASIVE EQUIPMENT COMPANY, L.P.;
EMPIRE ABRASIVE EQUIPMENT CORPORATION; ENCON SAFETY
PRODUCTS, INC.; ESPEY SILICA SAND COMPANY, INC.;
FAIRMOUNT MINERALS, LTD.; FERRO ENGINEERING DIVISION OF
ON MARINE SERVICES; FLEX-KLEEN; FLEXO PRODUCTS, INC.;
GARDNER DENVER, INC.; GENERAL PATTERN COMPANY
(SUCCESSOR-BY-MERGER TO GENERAL FOUNDRY PRODUCTS
CORP.); GLENDALE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.; GRANITE CITY TOOLS;
HAMILTON SUNDSTRAND; HANSON AGGREGATES WEST, INC.;
HEXION INC. F/K/A MOMENTIVE SPECIALTY CHEMICALS F/K/A
HEXION SPECIALTY CHEMICALS, INC. AND F/K/A BORDEN
CHEMICAL, INC.; HUMBLE SAND & GRAVEL, INC.; IDEAL BASIC
INDUSTRIES, INC.; INDUSTRIAL HOLDINGS CORPORATION F/K/A
THE CARBORUNDUM COMPANY; INGERSOLL-RAND COMPANY;
JOBE CONCRETE PRODUCTS; KELCO SALES & ENGINEERING CO.,
A DIVISION OF POLLEY, INC.; KEY HOUSTON, A DIVISION OF
JACKSONVILLE SHIPYARDS, INC.; KEY HOUSTON, INC., A DIVISION
OF JACKSONVILLE SHIPYARDS, INC.; LOCKHEED MARTIN
CORPORATION; LOGAN & WHALEY COMPANY; LONE STAR
INDUSTRIES, INC.; LOUIS M. GERSON COMPANY, INC.;
MARTINDALE ELECTRIC COMPANY; MILTON ROY; MINE SAFETY
APPLIANCES; MISSISSIPPI VALLEY SILICA COMPANY, INC.;
MOLDEX-METRIC, INC.; NORCROSS; NORTH SAFETY PRODUCTS;
OGLEBAY NORTON; P.K. LINDSAY COMPANY; PANGBORN
CORPORATION; PARMELEE INDUSTRIES, INC.; PAULI & GRIFFIN
COMPANY; PORTER WARNER INDUSTRIES, INC.; PREMIER
REFRACTORIES, INC., IMPROPERLY NAMED AND SERVED AS
AMERICAN PREMIER, INC. F/K/A PREMIER REFRACTORIES AND
CHEMICALS, INC.; PROTECH COATINGS, INC. F/K/A FOUNDRY
SPECIALTIES, INC.; PULMOSAN SAFETY EQUIPMENT
CORPORATION; QUIKRETE; RACAL HEALTH AND SAFETY, INC.;
RUEMELIN IN RECEIVERSHIP; SABINE PROPELLER & MARINE
SERVICE COMPANY; SAINT-GOBAIN ABRASIVES, INC., F/K/A
NORTON COMPANY; SCHRAMM, INC.; SCOTT TECHNOLOGIES,
INC.; SHREVEPORT RUBBER AND GASKET; SIEBE NORTH; SILICA
PRODUCTS, INC.; SLY, INC. F/K/A W. W. SLY MANUFACTURING CO.;
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SOUTHERN SILICA OF LOUISIANA, INC.; SPECIALTY MINERALS
INC.; SPECIALTY SAND COMPANY; SPENCE CONCRETE COMPANY
SULLAIR, LLC; SUNDYNE; SURVIVAIR, A DIVISION OF U.S.D.
CORPORATION; SURVIVAIR, INC.; TECHNISAND, INC.; TEXAS
GASKET; TEXTRON INC.; THE DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY;
THE EASTWOOD GROUP INC. D/B/A THE EASTWOOD COMPANY;
THE GOODYEAR RUBBER AND TIRE COMPANY; THE HILL AND
GRIFFITH COMPANY; THE MORIE COMPANY; THORSTENBERG
MATERIALS CO., INC.; TIDE-AIR; TRIANGLE SUPPLY; TRIPLEX,
INC.; TRUMAN’S INC.; TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX FILM
CORPORATION; TXI OPERATIONS, LP; TYROLIT NORTH AMERICA
INC.; U.S. SILICA COMPANY, FORMERLY KNOWN AS
PENNSYLVANIA GLASS SAND CORPORATION AND SUCCESSOR IN
INTEREST THOUGH MERGER TO OTTAWA SILICA COMPANY;
UNIMIN CORPORATION; UNION CARBIDE CORPORATION; VALERO
ENERGY CORPORATION; VALLEN CORPORATION; VESUVIUS USA
CORPORATION; VULCAN MATERIALS COMPANY; WEDRON SILICA
COMPANY, AN OHIO CORPORATION; WESCO; WESCO
REFRACTORIES; AND WHEELER PROTECTIVE APPAREL, INC.,
Appellees
On Appeal from the 333rd District Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court Case No. 2006-76611
MEMORANDUM OPINION
This is an appeal from the dismissal of 106 individual silica products-liability
cases. The appellants are sandblasters who allege personal injury from exposure to
silica in their workplaces. The appellees are manufacturers, producers, designers,
distributors, and sellers of silica-related products. The multidistrict litigation pretrial
court sustained objections to the sandblasters’ medical reports on various grounds,
4
including the failure to produce documentation required under Civil Practice and
Remedies Code Section 90.004(a)(4). As a result of the sandblasters’ failure to serve
medical records in compliance with Chapter 90 of the Civil Practice and Remedies
Code, the trial court dismissed the cases without prejudice, as mandated by
Section 90.010(d-1).
On appeal, the sandblasters present various constitutional challenges to the
dismissal of their claims pursuant to Chapter 90. However, they have failed to
challenge the constitutionality of the medical-record production requirement of
Section 90.004(a)(4). Nor have they presented any other argument that it was error
to dismiss their claims for failure to satisfy Section 90.004(a)(4). Because the trial
court’s ruling on this point is sufficient to sustain the dismissal of their claims, the
sandblasters’ constitutional challenges are waived, and we cannot address their
merits. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
I
The sandblasters’ individual lawsuits were pending in 2005 when the
Legislature enacted Chapter 90 of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code. TEX. CIV.
PRAC. & REM. CODE §§ 90.001–.012; Act of May 16, 2005, 79th Leg., R.S., ch. 97,
§ 1, 2005 Tex. Gen. Laws 169. Pursuant to the statute, the individual cases were
transferred to a MDL pretrial court, see TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 90.010,
pending the submission of medical reports. See id. § 90.004. In 2005, a checklist for
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medical reports and documentation was filed in the MDL pretrial court and approved
by the trial judge, providing guidance to the sandblasters in satisfying the statutory
requirements.
In 2013, the Legislature amended Section 90.010 to mandate dismissal of
silica cases that had been on file since before the 2005 enactment of Chapter 90 and
in which compliant medical reports had not been submitted.1 Such dismissals are
without prejudice to the right to file a subsequent action seeking damages arising
from a silica-related injury, see id. § 90.010(l), and any such subsequently refiled
action is treated for purposes of determining the applicable law as if that claimant’s
action had never been dismissed. Id. § 90.010(n).
In March 2016, the sandblasters submitted medical reports in an attempt to
satisfy the requirements of Chapter 90. Appellees filed both general objections and
plaintiff-specific objections to the medical reports. They argued, among other
grounds, that the reports did not comply with Chapter 90. Among the arguments was
1
Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 90.010(d-1) provides:
Beginning on September 1, 2014, the MDL pretrial court shall
dismiss each action for . . . a silica-related injury that was
pending on August 31, 2005, unless a report was served on or
after September 1, 2013, that complies with Section 90.003,
Section 90.004, or Subsection (f). The MDL pretrial court shall
provide for the dismissal of such actions in a case management
order entered for that purpose. All actions for a silica-related
injury shall be dismissed on or before August 31, 2015. . . .
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a general objection that the sandblasters failed to produce all the testing
documentation required by the statute. Appellees further alleged that the
sandblasters destroyed or failed to preserve this evidence. They moved to dismiss
the sandblasters’ claims.
The sandblasters responded with a challenge to the constitutionality of various
parts of Chapter 90 for various reasons. These contentions included arguments that
certain provisions are unconstitutionally vague and oppressive, and that they violate
the Texas Constitution by applying retroactively.
The MDL pretrial court held hearings on the objections to the medical reports.
As to each of the sandblasters, the court overruled one of the general objections
relating to the untimeliness of the court’s review of the reports, and it expressly
sustained “all remaining objections by the Defendants to this Plaintiff’s Medical
Report,” finding that each one failed to comply with Chapter 90. The MDL pretrial
court dismissed each sandblaster’s silica-related claims, without prejudice, pursuant
to Section 90.010(d–1).
The sandblasters appeal.
II
Chapter 90 requires claimants asserting silica-related injuries to include
specified testing documentation when they serve their medical reports on each
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defendant.2 The general objections to these claimants’ medical reports alleged that
the reports were not accompanied by the necessary testing documentation because
they failed to include all “error codes and pulmonary function test data,” as required
by the statute. Many of the specific objections to the sandblasters’ medical reports
reiterated this claim. The appellees further alleged spoliation, asserting that the
sandblasters had admitted to destroying the testing documentation for almost all of
the reports.
2
Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 90.004(a)(4) provides:
A claimant asserting a silica-related injury must serve on each
defendant a report by a physician who is board certified in
pulmonary medicine, internal medicine, oncology, pathology, or,
with respect to a claim for silicosis, occupational medicine and
whose license and certification were not on inactive status at the
time the report was made that:
....
(4) is accompanied by copies of all ILO
classifications, pulmonary function tests, including
printouts of all data, flow volume loops, and other
information demonstrating compliance with the
equipment, quality, interpretation, and reporting standards
set out in this chapter, lung volume tests, diagnostic
imaging of the chest, pathology reports, or other testing
reviewed by the physician in reaching the physician’s
conclusions.
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The sandblasters did not challenge the constitutionality of this aspect of
Chapter 90 in the MDL pretrial court. Nor do they challenge on appeal the dismissal
of their claims based on this objection to the adequacy of their medical reports.
Appellees argue that among the numerous legal arguments made in the trial
court, the dismissal of the sandblasters’ claims was independently justified by the
destruction of and failure to produce documentation required by
Subsection 90.004(a)(4). They further contend that because appellants have not
challenged the constitutionality of 90.004(a)(4), this Court need not address any of
the constitutional questions presented on appeal.
To prevail on appeal, an appellant must attack all independent grounds
supporting a judgment. See, e.g., Nobility Homes of Tex., Inc. v. Shivers, 557 S.W.2d
77, 83 (Tex. 1977); City of Deer Park v. State ex rel. Shell Oil Co., 275 S.W.2d 77,
84 (Tex. 1954); Britton v. Tex. Dep’t of Criminal Justice, 95 S.W.3d 676, 681 (Tex.
App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2002, no pet.). If the appellant fails to do so, the appellate
court must “accept the validity of that unchallenged independent ground” and affirm
the judgment. Britton, 95 S.W.3d at 681–82. Additionally, if a controversy may be
resolved on a nonconstitutional ground, then prudence generally requires that the
appellate court rest its decision on that ground and refrain from unnecessarily
deciding any “ancillary” constitutional questions presented. VanDevender v. Woods,
222 S.W.3d 430, 432–33 (Tex. 2007).
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Other than refuting a separate and distinct spoliation allegation relating to the
testing data underlying their medical reports, the sandblasters never responded to
appellees’ remaining objections to the reports under Subsection 90.004(a)(4). The
sandblasters argue for the first time in their reply brief that, under the terms of the
court-approved checklist, they were not obligated to produce documentation related
to pulmonary function tests demonstrating compliance with Chapter 90 standards
because such documents had not been reviewed by physicians in reaching their
conclusions as to each claimant’s medical condition. Because the sandblasters’
opening brief did not assign error to the ruling sustaining appellees’ objections under
Section 90.004(a)(4), we conclude that the argument is waived. See, e.g., N.P. v.
Methodist Hosp., 190 S.W.3d 217, 225 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2006, pet.
denied) (“An issue raised for the first time in a reply brief is ordinarily waived.”);
see also TEX. R. APP. P. 38.1(i).
One other constitutional argument mentioned in appellants’ brief requires
mention, because if successful it would undermine the application of Chapter 90 in
these cases. In their last issue, the appellants assert that the dismissal of their cases
would be an “unconstitutional retroactive taking” in violation of Section 16 of the
Texas Bill of Rights.3 We conclude this four-page argument is waived due to
3
“No bill of attainder, ex post facto law, retroactive law, or any law impairing
the obligation of contracts, shall be made.” TEX. CONST. art. I, § 16.
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inadequate briefing. TEX. R. APP. P. 38.1(i). The brief contains no argument that
dismissal of the cases constitutes an unconstitutional taking, but instead suggests
unconstitutional retroactivity because the appellants would be prejudiced by the
dismissal of their cases, and dismissal purportedly would destroy the “claimed
purpose of the law.”4 While inviting us to invalidate a statute as applied to over 100
claimants, the brief entirely fails to engage the complex legal analysis that would be
required to determine that the statute is unconstitutionally retroactive, which requires
consideration of the dual purposes of the prohibition against retroactivity—
protection of “the people’s reasonable, settled expectations” and against “abuses of
legislative power”—in light of three factors: “the nature and strength of the public
interest served by the statute as evidenced by the Legislature’s factual findings; the
nature of the prior right impaired by the statute; and the extent of the impairment.”
Robinson v. Crown Cork & Seal Co., Inc., 335 S.W.3d 126, 139, 145 (Tex. 2010).
Merely asserting that the appellants are prejudiced by the operation of the law and
4
See Act of May 16, 2005, 79th Leg., R.S., ch. 97, § 1, 2005 Tex. Gen. Laws
169 (“It is the purpose of this Act to protect the right of people with impairing
asbestos-related and silica-related injuries to pursue their claims for
compensation in a fair and efficient manner through the Texas court system,
while at the same time preventing scarce judicial and litigant resources from
being misdirected by claims of individuals who have been exposed to asbestos
or silica but have no functional impairment from asbestos-related or silica-
related disease.”).
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contending that the statute has failed to achieve its stated public-policy purpose is
inadequate to present this issue for our review.
Because the MDL pretrial court sustained appellees’ objections under
subsection 90.004(a)(4), and the sandblasters have failed to challenge that ruling on
any ground, constitutional or nonconstitutional, we affirm the judgments of the trial
court without reaching the constitutional challenges. See VanDevender, 222 S.W.3d
at 432–33; Nobility Homes, 557 S.W.2d at 83.
Michael Massengale
Justice
Panel consists of Justices Keyes, Massengale, and Caughey.
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