In the
Court of Appeals
Second Appellate District of Texas
at Fort Worth
___________________________
No. 02-19-00340-CV
___________________________
VETMOVES, MOVES TEXAS, PLLC, AND DR. ROBYN READ, Appellants
V.
LONE STAR VETERINARIAN MOBILE SURGICAL SPECIALISTS, PC AND
CHARISSE DAVIDSON, Appellees
On Appeal from County Court at Law No. 2
Denton County, Texas
Trial Court No. CV-2019-01801
Before Birdwell, Bassel, and Wallach, JJ.
Memorandum Opinion by Justice Wallach
MEMORANDUM OPINION
This is an accelerated interlocutory appeal from the denial of a motion to
dismiss under the Texas Citizens Participation Act. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code
Ann. §§ 27.003, 27.008(b), 51.014(a)(12). Appellees Dr. Charisse Davidson and Lone
Star Veterinarian Mobile Surgical Specialists, PC, (collectively, Plaintiffs) sued
Appellants Dr. Robyn Read, VetMoves, and Moves Texas, PLLC (collectively,
Defendants) for defamation and related claims. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss
Plaintiffs’ claims under the TCPA, and Plaintiffs filed a response raising the TCPA’s
commercial speech exemption. The trial court denied the motion. In two issues,
Defendants challenge the applicability of the TCPA’s commercial speech exemption.
We affirm.
Background
In Plaintiffs’ petition, they alleged the following facts. 1 Defendants and
Plaintiffs provide specialty veterinarian services to referring veterinarians; Dr.
Davidson and Dr. Read are both veterinary surgeons, and VetMoves, Moves Texas,2
and Lone Star are all businesses that provide mobile veterinary surgical services. In
June 2018, Dr. Read began contacting referral veterinarians who conduct business
1
As always when we uphold a trial court’s denial of a TCPA motion, our
disposition of this case is not a comment on the merits of Plaintiffs’ claims.
2
According to Dr. Davidson’s affidavit attached to Plaintiffs’ petition,
VetMoves is a national mobile veterinary surgical company, and Moves Texas, PLLC
is its Texas Branch.
2
with Plaintiffs. Although Dr. Read has never been employed by or associated with
Plaintiffs, she represented herself to these referral veterinarians as an associate of, or
relief vet for, Plaintiffs. Dr. Read falsely advised those referral veterinarians that
Plaintiffs had made major surgical mistakes and that state board complaints had been
filed against them, and she solicited business from those referral veterinarians for
herself. Plaintiffs alleged that Dr. Read made these statements for the sole purpose of
inducing Plaintiffs’ clients to use Defendants rather than Plaintiffs for veterinary
surgical services. Based on these alleged facts, Plaintiffs sued Defendants for fraud,
negligent misrepresentation, tortious interference with existing business relationships,
slander, disparagement, and conspiracy. In an attached affidavit, Dr. Davidson
described losing several clients to Dr. Read because of Dr. Read’s statements to those
clients.
Defendants filed a motion to dismiss under the TCPA. In the motion,
Defendants denied that Dr. Read told anyone that she is Dr. Davidson’s associate and
denied ever contacting anyone for the purpose of advising them that Dr. Davidson or
Lone Star made major surgical mistakes or had received board complaints against
them. Defendants acknowledged that Dr. Read had made statements about Dr.
Davidson’s services but contended that she did so only after being asked for her
opinion during a consultation. They asserted that in May 2019, two staff veterinarians
at Mazie’s Mission asked Dr. Read to review some X-rays and consult with them on
the work of another veterinarian. Dr. Read provided the requested consultation for
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free. After Dr. Read gave her opinion, the two staff veterinarians, Dr. Schultz and
Dr. Carroll, asked if she had heard other providers express frustration over Dr.
Davidson’s failure or delay in providing similar consultations. Dr. Read replied that
she had heard similar comments, and she also told them that she had performed a
consultation on another case for a surgery that Dr. Davidson had performed and, in
her opinion, Dr. Davidson’s work in that case was substandard. She told them that
the pet owners in that case were considering filing a complaint with the Texas Board
of Veterinary Medical Examiners. Defendants argued Dr. Read’s statements to Dr.
Schultz and Dr. Carroll were protected free speech regarding services in the
marketplace and, as such, the TCPA applied.
Plaintiffs filed a response to the motion that did not dispute that the statements
were communications on a matter of public concern or that Defendants had met their
burden to show the TCPA’s applicability. However, they asserted that Defendants’
TCPA motion showed that the statements at issue arose out of the sale or lease of
goods or services and that the intended audience of the statements were actual or
potential buyers or customers of Plaintiffs and that therefore the TCPA’s commercial
speech exemption applied. The trial court denied Defendants’ TCPA motion.
Discussion
I. The TCPA does not protect commercial speech.
The TCPA provides a mechanism for dismissal of a legal action that is based
on, relates to, or in response to a defendant’s exercise of the right of free speech.
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Dallas Morning News, Inc. v. Hall, 579 S.W.3d 370, 376 (Tex. 2019). However, the
TCPA exempts commercial speech from its application. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.
Code Ann. § 27.010(a)(2)). Section 27.010 provides that the TCPA does not apply to
a claim against a person who is “primarily engaged in the business of selling or leasing
goods or services, if the statement or conduct arises out of the sale or lease of goods,
services . . . or a commercial transaction in which the intended audience is an actual or
potential buyer or customer.” Id. Four conditions must be met for the commercial
speech exemption to apply:
(1) the defendant was primarily engaged in the business of selling or
leasing goods [or services], (2) the defendant made the statement or
engaged in the conduct on which the claim is based in the defendant’s
capacity as a seller or lessor of those goods or services, (3) the statement
or conduct at issue arose out of a commercial transaction involving the
kind of goods or services the defendant provides, and (4) the intended
audience of the statement or conduct were actual or potential customers
of the defendant for the kind of goods or services the defendant
provides.
Castleman v. Internet Money Ltd., 546 S.W.3d 684, 688 (Tex. 2018) (per curiam); Bejarano
v. Dorgan, No. 03-19-00182-CV, 2019 WL 4458798, at *2 (Tex. App.—Austin Sept.
18, 2019, no pet.) (mem. op.). In two issues, Defendants challenge the second and
third conditions: whether their alleged communications arose out of or proposed a
commercial transaction and whether the alleged communications were made in their
capacity as a seller of their mobile veterinary surgical services.
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II. The trial court could review evidence on the third Castleman factor.
Plaintiffs’ arguments in their response did not fully address the requirements of
the commercial speech exemption. As Defendants point out, the motion “failed
entirely to address the third Castleman exemption factor, [which] requir[es] that the
communication arise out of an actual or proposed commercial transaction.” 3 See
Castleman, 546 S.W.3d at 688. Defendants contend that “[t]he failure to address this
required factor in the trial court below precluded the [Plaintiffs] from satisfying their
burden to establish that the commercial speech exemption applies and required the
trial court to grant” their dismissal motion.
However, Plaintiffs clearly raised the issue of the exemption’s applicability and,
for the reasons discussed herein, their petition established the challenged elements of
the exemption. See Adams v. Starside Custom Builders, LLC, 547 S.W.3d 890, 896 (Tex.
2018) (noting that the movant had raised as an issue in the trial court that he was
entitled to dismissal under the TCPA because the claim against him was based on his
speech about a matter of public concern and holding that the movant did not have to
argue all subparts of the definition of “matter of public concern” to preserve appellate
argument as to all subparts). Because Plaintiffs raised the issue of the commercial
speech exemption, the trial court was required to review the relevant pleadings and
evidence to determine the exemption’s applicability. See id.
3
Plaintiffs also did not specifically assert that the intended audience was
Appellants’ actual or potential customer, but their petition established that element.
6
III. The commercial transaction exemption applies to the alleged
communications.
Plaintiffs had the burden to establish by a preponderance of the evidence the
commercial speech exemption’s applicability. 4 See Better Bus. Bureau of Metro. Dall., Inc.
v. BH DFW, Inc., 402 S.W.3d 299, 309 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2013, pet. denied); Forget
About It, Inc., 585 S.W.3d at 68; see also Ray, 2019 WL 6606170, at *4. In determining
whether the commercial speech exemption applies, we look at the communications on
which the challenged claim is based. See The Pinkerton Law Firm, PLLC v. Univ. Cancer
Ctr., Inc., No. 01-19-00089-CV, 2020 WL 97173, at *5 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st
Dist.] Jan. 9, 2020, no pet. h.) (mem. op.). We start with Plaintiffs’ pleadings, and we
assume that Dr. Read made the statements alleged therein. See Hersh v. Tatum,
526 S.W.3d 462, 467 (Tex. 2017); Morrison v. Profanchik, 578 S.W.3d 676, 683 (Tex.
App.—Austin 2019, no pet.). Defendants do not dispute that Plaintiffs established
that Defendants are primarily engaged in the business of selling veterinary surgical
4
The TCPA does not state by what standard a proponent of an exemption must
prove the exemption, but several courts of appeals, including this one, have applied
the preponderance standard. See Hawkins v. Fox Corp. Hous., LLC, No. 01-19-00394-
CV, 2020 WL 425121, at *3 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Jan. 28, 2020, no pet.
h.); Forget About It, Inc. v. BioTE Med., LLC, 585 S.W.3d 59, 68 (Tex. App.—Dallas
2019, pet. denied); Ray v. Fikes, No. 02-19-00232-CV, 2019 WL 6606170, at *5 (Tex.
App.—Fort Worth Dec. 5, 2019, pet. denied) (mem. op.); Abatecola v. 2 Savages Concrete
Pumping, LLC, No. 14-17-00678-CV, 2018 WL 3118601, at *10 (Tex. App.—Houston
[14th Dist.] June 26, 2018, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (noting that a TCPA motion is a
matter involving civil litigation to which the preponderance of the evidence standard
typically applies and stating that establishing the commercial speech exemption
“should demand the same burden”).
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services or that the intended audience of the alleged statements were Defendants’
actual or potential customers for the kind of goods or services that they provide.
Plaintiffs alleged in their petition that Defendants provide mobile veterinary
services, that Dr. Read contacted Plaintiffs’ clients and made the alleged statements
“in the regular course of business and acting on behalf of Defendants VetMoves and
Moves Texas, PLLC” while purporting to be affiliated with Plaintiffs, and that in
those contacts she solicited the clients for her own business. Plaintiffs’ petition thus
alleged facts to show that Dr. Read made the statements in her capacity as a seller of
veterinary surgical services in a series of conversations in order to pursue business for
Defendants. Plaintiffs thus met their burden to satisfy the second and third factors of
the commercial speech exemption. See Clean Energy v. Trillium Transp. Fuels, LLC,
No. 05-18-01228-CV, 2019 WL 3212145, at *4–6 (Tex. App.—Dallas July 9, 2019, no
pet.) (mem. op.).
To persuade us that the commercial speech exemption does not apply,
Defendants point to their own contradictory evidence of what Dr. Read said about
Dr. Davidson and in what context, evidenced by their TCPA motion and Dr. Read’s
affidavit. However, the petition alone satisfies the exemption’s application. See Hersh,
526 S.W.3d at 467 (stating that the plaintiff’s petition is the best and all-sufficient
evidence of the nature of the plaintiff’s action); Gaskamp v. WSP USA, Inc., No. 01-
18-00079-CV, 2020 WL 826729, at *16 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Feb. 20,
2020, no pet. h.) (op. on reh’g en banc) (“[T]he factual allegations contained in the
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pleadings may alone be sufficient to demonstrate that the nature of the claims is such
that the claims are statutorily exempt without need of additional proof.”).
Defendants argue that Dr. Read’s alleged statements criticizing Dr. Davidson’s
work and relaying customer complaints and Dr. Read’s statements that she was
affiliated with Plaintiffs do not arise out of a commercial transaction. Defendants
further assert in their reply brief that “Dr. Read’s alleged statements about the
[Plaintiffs] are not subject to the commercial speech exemption unless they were
accompanied by Dr. Read’s attempt to sell something.” Defendants base their
argument on language in Castleman that the commercial speech exemption applies to
“communications made not as a protected exercise of free speech by an individual,
but as commercial speech which does no more than propose a commercial
transaction.” Castleman, 546 S.W.3d at 690 (citations and internal quotation marks
omitted). They further argue that “[s]peech critical of a competitor’s product or
service is not subject to the commercial speech exemption unless the speaker also
tries to sell her own product or service based on that criticism.”
To the extent that Defendants argue that under Castleman, the commercial
speech exemption applies only when the defendant explicitly makes a detailed sales
pitch, we disagree. See Giri v. Estep, No. 03-17-00759-CV, 2018 WL 2074652, at
*4 (Tex. App.—Austin May 4, 2018, pet. denied) (mem. op.). “[T]he exemption
applies when communications involve business pursuits for oneself or a business
stands to profit from the statements at issue.” Clean Energy, 2019 WL 3212145, at *4–
9
5; cf. Sanders as Next Friend of Ejiofor v. Bansal, No. 01-18-00508-CV, 2019 WL 7341660,
at *5 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Dec. 31, 2019, pet. filed) (stating that
Castleman’s “does no more than propose a commercial transaction” language “does
not purport to refine the exemption’s third requirement” that the statements arise out
of a commercial transaction but instead “differentiates between speech directed to
customers and speech directed elsewhere, as part of the analysis of the fourth
requirement” that the intended audience of the statements be the defendant’s actual
or potential customers (citations and internal quotation marks omitted)). Here, the
petition alleges that Dr. Read contacted Plaintiffs’ customers and solicited those
customers for herself by claiming an affiliation with Plaintiffs and telling the
customers that Dr. Davidson had made major surgical mistakes. The statements at
issue thus arose out of a commercial transaction. See Rouzier v. Biote Med., LLC,
No. 05-19-00277-CV, 2019 WL 6242305, at *5 (Tex. App.—Dallas Nov. 22, 2019, no
pet.) (mem. op.). The statements at issue thus satisfied the third condition for the
exemption to apply.
Defendants further argue that the alleged statements were not made by Dr.
Read in her capacity as a seller or lessor of her service because “[t]o the extent that
Dr. Read successfully hoodwinked these veterinary clinics into believing she worked
for the [Plaintiffs] (no such thing occurred), the result would be additional business
for the [Plaintiffs], not for Dr. Read” and as such the statements did not relate to
Defendants’ sale of goods or services. A defendant may establish the commercial
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speech exemption as to some statements and not to others. Toth v. Sears Home
Improvement Prods., Inc., 557 S.W.3d 142, 153 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th District]
2018, no pet.). However, we must consider the alleged statements in context. See
Rouzier, 2019 WL 6242305, at *5 (evaluating whether commercial speech exemption
applied by looking at the alleged statements in context); cf. In re Office of the Att’y Gen. of
Tex., 456 S.W.3d 153, 155 (Tex. 2015) (“When construing statutes, or anything else,
one cannot divorce text from context.”). Plaintiffs alleged that Dr. Read disparaged
Dr. Davidson’s work in the same conversations in which she claimed to be affiliated
with Dr. Davidson. That is, Plaintiffs alleged that she targeted Plaintiffs’ clients—
specifically selected those clients because of their relationship with Plaintiffs—and
used a claimed affiliation with Plaintiffs and allegations about Dr. Davidson’s inferior
work to persuade those clients to hire Defendants. See Clean Energy,
2019 WL 3212145, at *5 (“Thus, by emailing customers and implying that [the
plaintiff] was overcharging and attempting to meet and ‘start a conversation’ about
[the defendant]’s goods or services, [the defendant] proposed a commercial
transaction and pursued business for itself with intention to profit from it.”).
Defendants cite Toth, 557 S.W.3d at 154, and Dickens v. Jason C. Webster, P.C.,
No. 05-17-00423-CV, 2018 WL 6839568, at *6 (Tex. App.—Dallas Dec. 31, 2018, no
pet.) (mem. op.), to support their argument that the statements or conduct at issue did
not arise out of a commercial transaction. Toth is distinguishable. As noted by the
Dallas court of appeals in Rouzier, the defendant’s communications in Toth “were
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merely about a good in the marketplace and not made in his capacity as a seller of that
good or in an effort to market his own services in competition with the company for
which he worked as an independent contractor.” Rouzier, 2019 WL 6242305, at *5.
Here, unlike in Toth, Plaintiffs identified statements and conduct by Defendants that
described and promoted Defendants’ business. See Toth, 557 S.W.3d at 154. Dickens
also fails to persuade us against the exemption’s application. In that case, the
defendant, an attorney, made comments to a client about the quality of the services
provided by the plaintiff, also an attorney, to a client they both represented. See
Dickens, 2018 WL 6839568, at *6. As Defendants note in their reply brief, the Dickens
opinion states, “For the exemption to apply, the defendant’s statements or conduct
must be about the defendant’s goods or services, not the plaintiff’s.” Dickens,
2018 WL 6839568, at *6. Reading Dickens’s characterization of the exemption to
mean that the alleged statements must be made in promoting or pursuing the
defendant’s business, we agree with it.5 As the Dallas court of appeals has stated, “the
5
The Dallas court has since explained that its Dickens opinion does not stand
for the proposition that the commercial speech exemption applies only to specific
statements discussing the defendant’s business or that communications that discuss
the plaintiff’s services in an attempt to solicit business for the defendant may not be
exempt from the TCPA. Clean Energy, 2019 WL 3212145, at *4–5. In Clean Energy,
the Dallas court noted that although the emails at issue in the case “included
information about [the plaintiff] and the alleged overpricing of its services, the
intended goal of the emails was to persuade [the plaintiff’s] customers and potential
customers to terminate its contracts and allow [the defendant] an opportunity to bid
on its goods and services.” Id. at *4. The court discussed the emails on which the
plaintiff based its claim—emails that discussed the plaintiff’s pricing but not the
defendant’s—and noted that the emails “certainly involve the kind of goods and
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exemption applies when communications involve business pursuits for oneself or a
business stands to profit from the statements at issue.” Staff Care, Inc. v. Eskridge
Enters., LLC, No. 05-18-00732-CV, 2019 WL 2121116, at *8 (Tex. App.—Dallas May
15, 2019, no pet.) (mem. op.). Here, Plaintiffs pled that Dr. Read made disparaging
comments about Dr. Davidson’s services in the same conversation in which Dr. Read
promoted her own services and that she made those disparaging comments for the
purpose of soliciting Plaintiffs’ clients for Defendants.
Plaintiffs met their burden to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that
the commercial speech exemption applies. Accordingly, regardless of the merits of
Plaintiffs’ claims, the trial court correctly denied Defendants’ motion to dismiss. We
overrule Defendants’ two issues.
Conclusion
Having overruled the two issues raised by Dr. Read, VetMoves, and Moves
Texas, we affirm the trial court’s denial of the TCPA motion.
services [that the defendant] provides,” that [the defendant] “sent unsolicited emails
to [the plaintiff’s] customers, indicated [the plaintiff’s] prices were too high, and
attempted to meet with [the plaintiff’s] customers to ‘present our renewable CNG
offering and support services’ and discuss ‘what we could do today.’” The court held
that “[t]he fact that the emails do not provide specific details about [the defendant]’s
pricing or business proposal does not mean the emails are not about [the defendant]’s
goods and services” and that “[b]ecause part of [the defendant]’s communications
involves its goods and services, Dickens is distinguishable and does not control the
outcome under these facts.” Id. at *5.
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/s/ Mike Wallach
Mike Wallach
Justice
Delivered: April 16, 2020
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