Supreme Court of Texas
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No. 21-1047
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Alcus Reshod Fortenberry,
Petitioner,
v.
Great Divide Insurance Company,
Respondent
═══════════════════════════════════════
On Petition for Review from the
Court of Appeals for the Fifth District of Texas
═══════════════════════════════════════
Argued January 11, 2023
JUSTICE HUDDLE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Texas Labor Code Section 410.252(b) is a mandatory venue
provision governing suits for judicial review of administrative decisions
regarding workers’ compensation benefits. In a case involving an
injured employee, Section 410.252(b) requires that suit be brought in
“the county where the employee resided at the time of the injury.”
Determining where an employee resided at one point in time is usually
uncontroversial. But in the case of employees who travel frequently or
have moved recently, the answer is not necessarily obvious.
Here, a Texas Tech University offensive lineman signed a three-
year contract in May 2015 to play for the Dallas Cowboys. He stayed in
a hotel in Dallas County while attending team practices that summer.
And he was injured while attending the team’s training camp in
California on August 2. After his workers’ compensation claim was
denied, he exhausted the administrative process and sought judicial
review of the final administrative decision in Dallas County. A jury
found in his favor, and the insurer appealed, challenging venue among
other things. The court of appeals concluded that the Dallas County
hotel at which the employee averred he “lived and resided” at the time
of his injury could not constitute his residence under Section 410.252(b).
The court of appeals also concluded the insurer failed to prove that the
county to which it sought a transfer, Travis County, was a county of
proper venue. Based on its conclusion that neither party had
established proper venue, the court reversed and remanded with
instructions to conduct further venue proceedings, adding that the law-
of-the-case doctrine operated to exclude Dallas County as a proper venue
in any subsequent proceeding. We granted review and hold that the
record adequately demonstrates that the employee “resided” in Dallas
County at the time of his injury as Section 410.252(b) requires.
Accordingly, venue was mandatory in Dallas County.
I. Background
A native of Mississippi, Alcus Reshod Fortenberry played college
football at Texas Tech University. After graduating, Fortenberry signed
an NFL player contract in May 2015 with the Dallas Cowboys. The
contract’s term began on May 14, 2015, the day it was executed. The
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parties agreed the term would span the three following football seasons
and terminate at the end of February 2018. The contract obligated
Fortenberry to attend team games, practices, and events throughout its
term.
Fortenberry began practicing with the Cowboys in Dallas County
in May 2015. The record reflects he attended team practices and
workouts until he sprained his knee in June. The sprain caused
Fortenberry to sit out from team practices for two weeks, but he was
treated by the team’s medical staff and participated in other team
activities, including “Cowboys U,” during that time. Later in June, he
traveled to Louisiana to continue rehabilitation of his knee. He stayed
in touch with the team regarding his progress while in Louisiana, and
he returned to Dallas for a conditioning test with his teammates in July,
before training camp began.
On July 28, 2015, Fortenberry traveled with the Cowboys to
Oxnard, California, for training camp. A few days into the trip, on
August 2, Fortenberry sustained the knee injury that is the basis of this
suit. He was initially added to the Cowboys’ reserve/injured list with an
estimated recovery time of nine to twelve months. The Cowboys
ultimately terminated his contract in May 2016.
Fortenberry sought workers’ compensation benefits from the
Cowboys’ insurer, Great Divide Insurance Company, which denied his
claim. Following an unsuccessful benefit review conference,
Fortenberry sought a contested case hearing. See TEX. LAB. CODE
§ 410.023 (providing for a benefit review conference); id. § 410.151
(providing for a contested case hearing). The contested case hearing,
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which was held in December 2017 and January 2018, took place at the
Dallas Field Office of the Texas Department of Insurance’s Workers’
Compensation Division. During the administrative process,
Fortenberry and Great Divide stipulated that venue for the contested
case hearing was proper in the Dallas Field Office,1 and the
administrative law judge (ALJ) made a finding of fact and a conclusion
of law to that effect. Regarding the merits, the ALJ concluded that
Fortenberry reached maximum medical improvement in April 2016 with
an impairment rating of 1% and ordered benefits to be paid accordingly.
After an administrative appeals panel affirmed, Fortenberry sued for
judicial review in Dallas County district court. See id. § 410.202
(providing for an administrative appeal from an ALJ decision); id.
§ 410.251 (permitting judicial review from the appeals panel’s decision).
In district court, Fortenberry alleged that venue was mandatory
in Dallas County under Labor Code Section 410.252 because he “was a
resident of Dallas County, Texas at the time of his injury.” Great Divide
moved to transfer venue. It argued that Fortenberry was not a resident
of Dallas County or any county in Texas at the time of his injury, so
Section 410.252 did not apply. It sought instead to transfer the case to
Travis County, where Great Divide claimed to have an agent or
representative. Fortenberry averred in a responsive affidavit that, at
1 The Labor Code mandates that, unless the Workers’ Compensation
Division determines otherwise, “a contested case hearing may not be conducted
at a site more than 75 miles from the claimant’s residence at the time of the
injury.” TEX. LAB. CODE § 410.005(a). The Labor Code also provides that “[a]
written stipulation or agreement of the parties that is filed in the record or an
oral stipulation or agreement of the parties that is preserved in the record is
final and binding.” Id. § 410.166.
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the time of his injury, he “lived and resided at 950 West Walnut Hill
Lane” in Irving, Dallas County. Great Divide presented evidence that
950 West Walnut Hill Lane is the address for a Marriott Residence Inn
hotel and that the Cowboys provided Fortenberry with these
accommodations.
After a hearing, the trial court denied Great Divide’s motion to
transfer venue without specifying its reasoning. A jury returned a
verdict for Fortenberry, and the trial court rendered judgment on the
verdict.
Great Divide appealed, challenging, among other things, the trial
court’s venue ruling. The court of appeals first concluded that
Section 410.252 did not apply because Fortenberry failed to present
prima facie proof of a residence in Dallas County. ___ S.W.3d ___,
2021 WL 3160189, at *3–4 (Tex. App.—Dallas July 26, 2021). It
reasoned that Fortenberry’s assertion in his affidavit that he “lived and
resided” in Dallas County was unsupported by facts and thus conclusory
and not probative evidence. Id. at *3 (citing TEX. R. CIV. P. 87.3(a)). It
then turned to what it described as the “residency requirements for
venue purposes,” citing Snyder v. Pitts, 241 S.W.2d 136 (Tex. 1951).
2021 WL 3160189, at *3; see Snyder, 241 S.W.2d at 140 (applying a
three-prong analysis to determine whether a party could be deemed a
resident of the county in which he occupied a hotel or rented room during
weekly visits away from his permanent home). The court concluded that
Fortenberry could not establish residency in Dallas County under
Snyder. 2021 WL 3160189, at *4.
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The court of appeals also rejected the parties’ other venue
arguments. Fortenberry advanced two fallback theories to support
venue in Dallas County. First, he argued that his NFL player contract
stated that Dallas County would be the proper and exclusive venue for
“all workers’ compensation claims and other matters related to workers’
compensation.” The court of appeals concluded that agreement between
Fortenberry and the Cowboys did not bind Great Divide. Id.
Alternatively, Fortenberry argued that Great Divide’s principal office
was in Dallas County, making venue proper under the general venue
statute. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 15.002(a)(3) (permitting suit
to be brought against an entity “in the county of the defendant’s
principal office in this state”). The court of appeals rejected this
argument, too, on the grounds that Fortenberry failed to establish that
Great Divide’s decision makers conducted the company’s daily affairs in
Dallas County. 2021 WL 3160189, at *5; see TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM.
CODE § 15.001(a) (defining “principal office”). For its part, Great Divide
asserted venue was proper in Travis County because it maintained a
representative there to act as its agent before the Workers’
Compensation Division. The court of appeals concluded that Great
Divide failed to meet the relevant standard, which was to show it had a
principal office in Travis County. 2021 WL 3160189, at *5–6.
Having rejected all the parties’ respective venue arguments, the
court of appeals reversed the trial court’s judgment and remanded for
further venue proceedings. Id. at *6; see TEX. R. CIV. P. 87(3)(d). In a
footnote, it added that the law-of-the-case doctrine applied to preclude
the parties from asserting Dallas County was a proper venue in any
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subsequent proceeding. 2021 WL 3160189, at *6 n.7. Fortenberry
petitioned for review.
II. Applicable Law
Venue may be proper in one or more counties based on the general
venue statute, see TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 15.002(a), or a statute
may create mandatory or permissive venue, see generally id.
§§ 15.011–.020 (mandatory venue statutes); id. §§ 15.031–.039
(permissive venue statutes). But if an action is governed by a statute
prescribing mandatory venue, the action “shall be brought in the county
required by that statute.” Id. § 15.016.
The initial choice of venue is left to the plaintiff, who first decides
venue by filing an original petition. Wilson v. Tex. Parks & Wildlife
Dep’t, 886 S.W.2d 259, 260 (Tex. 1994). The defendant may challenge
the plaintiff’s venue choice through a motion to transfer venue. See TEX.
CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 15.063(1); TEX. R. CIV. P. 86. If the defendant
challenges venue, the plaintiff bears the burden to present prima facie
proof that venue is maintainable in the county of suit, while the
defendant bears the burden to prove venue is maintainable in the county
to which transfer is sought. Wilson, 886 S.W.2d at 260 & n.1; TEX. R.
CIV. P. 87(2)(a). A venue determination must be “based on the facts
existing at the time the cause of action that is the basis of the suit
accrued.” TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 15.006. No interlocutory
appeals are permitted from the trial court’s determination. Id.
§ 15.064(a); TEX. R. CIV. P. 87(6).
If the trial court’s venue determination is challenged on appeal
from a final judgment, “the appellate court shall consider the entire
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record, including the trial on the merits” in its review. TEX. CIV. PRAC.
& REM. CODE § 15.064(b); Ruiz v. Conoco, Inc., 868 S.W.2d 752, 757 (Tex.
1993) (observing that Section 15.064 “allows appellate review of venue
on a basis different from that on which it was decided”). And if there is
probative evidence in the record to support the trial court’s
determination, the appellate court should defer to the trial court, even
if the preponderance of the evidence is to the contrary. Ruiz, 868 S.W.2d
at 758.
Given these standards, remand for further proceedings on venue
should be quite rare. It is proper only when there is “no probative
evidence that venue was proper either in the county of suit or in the
county to which transfer was sought.” Id. Despite its peculiarity, this
standard of review strikes a balance between the competing interests of
“preserv[ing] the plaintiff’s right to select and maintain suit in a county
of proper venue” and “protect[ing] the defendant from fraud or
inaccuracy at the pleading stage.” Wilson, 886 S.W.2d at 262; see Dan
R. Price, New Texas Venue Statute: Legislative History, 15 ST. MARY’S
L.J. 855, 875–80 (1984) (detailing history of legislation in Texas
regarding appellate review of venue).
Labor Code Section 410.252(b) governs venue in suits for judicial
review of a final administrative decision in workers’ compensation
disputes. It states:
The party bringing suit to appeal the decision must file a
petition with the appropriate court in:
(1) The county where the employee resided at the
time of the injury or death, if the employee is
deceased; or
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(2) in the case of an occupational disease, in the
county where the employee resided on the
date disability began or any county agreed to
by the parties.
TEX. LAB. CODE § 410.252(b). Fortenberry asserts that venue in Dallas
County is mandatory under Section 410.252(b)(1) because he resided
there at the time of his injury.
“Reside” is not defined in the Labor Code, but when this statute
was first enacted, Black’s Law Dictionary reflected several shades of
meaning:
Live, dwell, abide, sojourn, stay, remain, lodge. To settle
oneself or a thing in a place, to be stationed, to remain or
stay, to dwell permanently or continuously, to have a
settled abode for a time, to have one’s residence or domicile
....
Reside, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (5th ed. 1979) (citation omitted).
Texas courts have long grappled with residency and venue questions in
the context of mobile Texans, and our precedents take a flexible view of
what it means to “reside” somewhere for purposes of establishing proper
venue. In Snyder, for example, this Court held that a person who had a
permanent home in Wilbarger County nevertheless had a residence and
therefore could be sued in Dallam County, where he worked
intermittently over time and rented a room, first at a hotel and later at
a private residence. 241 S.W.2d at 137, 142. Collecting our precedents,
the Snyder court described a residence as:
1. A fixed place of abode within the possession of the
defendant
2. occupied or intended to be occupied consistently over
a substantial period of time
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3. which is permanent rather than temporary.
Id. at 140. Yet the Court made clear that “intent to make it a permanent
home” is not necessary to establish residence. Id. at 139. Indeed, Snyder
held that intermittent stays in a hotel or rented room in a private home
could suffice to establish residence in a county. Id. at 142.
The cases Snyder cites likewise reflect that short and
intermittent stays in a county may suffice, depending on the
circumstances. In Wilson v. Bridgeman, this Court held that a
defendant’s brief stay in a room in Calhoun County while he helped a
city conduct an election made venue proper there, despite facts showing
he resided in another county. 24 Tex. 615, 617 (1860). And in Caprito
v. Weaver, the court of appeals held that renting a room by the week in
Howard County for six to seven weeks was sufficient to create a fact
issue whether the defendant resided in that county. 63 S.W.2d 1043,
1044 (Tex. App.—Eastland 1933, no writ). Similarly, spending one to
five days twice a month in a county over a fifteen-month period despite
maintaining a home elsewhere was held sufficient to establish residence
in that county for venue purposes. Funk v. Walker, 241 S.W. 720, 722
(Tex. App.—San Antonio 1922, no writ).
The Snyder Court also cited a case holding that venue did not lie
in a county where a party had been staying for about two months.
241 S.W.2d at 141 (citing Dixon v. McDonald, 130 S.W.2d 884 (Tex.
App.—Beaumont 1939, no writ)). But in Dixon, the court determined
that the evidence showed a clear intent not to remain in the county or to
return after leaving. 130 S.W.2d at 884–85 (holding that the proprietor
of a traveling skating rink that had been operating in Jefferson County
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did not establish a residence there because he had a history of moving
to new locations with no intent to return).
The cases reflect particular flexibility in establishing residency
for venue purposes when a party is in the process of moving from one
county to another. See, e.g., Brown v. Boulden, 18 Tex. 431, 434–35
(1857) (concluding that a defendant who had started the process of
moving to a new county remained a resident for venue purposes of the
county he had lived in for a considerable time before suit was filed).
Howell v. Mauzy, 899 S.W.2d 690 (Tex. App.—Austin 1994, writ denied),
illustrates the point. In that case, a judicial candidate in the process of
moving from Dallas to Austin was sued in Travis County. See id. at 695.
Although he had little connection to Travis County (other than
attending campaign events there), the court of appeals concluded that
his affairs were in such an uncertain state that he could be said to reside
in either county. Id. at 697.
III. Analysis
The court of appeals held that Fortenberry failed to adduce any
probative evidence that he resided in Dallas County at the time of his
injury and therefore failed to establish venue under Labor Code
Section 410.252(b). This conclusion was based on a too-rigid reading of
Snyder coupled with a failure to credit evidence of facts existing at the
time of Fortenberry’s injury that supports the trial court’s venue
determination. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 15.006 (mandating
that venue determinations be based on the facts existing when a claim
accrues); id. § 15.064 (requiring appellate courts reviewing venue
determinations to consider the entire record, including evidence
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adduced at trial); Ruiz, 868 S.W.2d at 757–58 (noting the deferential
standard of review for a trial court’s venue determination).
The court of appeals concluded that a hotel cannot constitute a
residence for venue purposes. 2021 WL 3160189, at *4. It read Snyder
to require greater rights of possession than a hotel guest enjoys. Id.
(reasoning that a guest in a hotel is a mere licensee with insufficient
rights to possess or control the property). But there is no categorical
prohibition against a hotel serving as one’s residence. Snyder implicitly
rejects such a hard-and-fast rule. See 241 S.W.2d at 140. It concluded
a party established residence in Dallam County based on his
intermittent stays there, first at a hotel, and later at a rented room in a
residence, without distinguishing between the nature of the property
rights corresponding to the two different arrangements. Id.
The court of appeals also relied on Warehouse Partners v.
Gardner, 910 S.W.2d 19 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1995, writ denied), for the
proposition that a hotel room cannot constitute a residence. 2021 WL
3160189, at *4. But Warehouse Partners does not support this
conclusion. The issue in that case was whether an apartment built in a
warehouse constituted a “dwelling”—defined by the Property Code to
mean property rented for use as a “permanent residence”—such that it
would be subject to the Property Code’s residential lockout statute.
Warehouse Partners, 910 S.W.2d at 22; see TEX. PROP. CODE § 92.001(1).
The case is unrelated to venue and turns on the meaning of the statutory
phrase “permanent residence,” which does not govern here. See Snyder,
241 S.W.2d at 139 (noting the “intent to make it a permanent home” is
not necessary to establish residence).
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Perhaps because it regarded a stay in a hotel as disqualifying, the
court of appeals did not properly credit the record evidence supporting
the trial court’s venue ruling. It disregarded Fortenberry’s affidavit
testimony that he “lived and resided” in Dallas County at the time of his
injury as conclusory because it was “unsupported by facts showing that
he maintained that residence in Dallas County on the date of his injury
in California.” 2021 WL 3160189, at *3. But it was not necessary for
Fortenberry to prove that he was physically present in the Residence
Inn on the day he was injured in California for the Residence Inn to
qualify as his residence at the time. One certainly can “live” in a place
despite not being physically present there on a particular day.
Fortenberry’s testimony that he “lived” at the Residence Inn at the time
of his injury is sufficiently specific and factual that the court of appeals
should have considered and not disregarded it. See Reside, BLACK’S LAW
DICTIONARY (5th ed. 1979) (“Live, dwell, abide, sojourn, stay, remain,
lodge.”).
Other evidence in the record establishes Fortenberry’s intent to
stay in Dallas County for an indefinite time. Fortenberry agreed in the
NFL player contract that he would attend Dallas Cowboys games,
practices, and events for all of 2015, 2016, and 2017. The record shows
that before his August 2 injury, Fortenberry in fact trained with the
Cowboys and was treated by their doctors and trainers in Dallas County
for two months, except for a trip to Louisiana for physical rehabilitation,
during which he remained in contact with the team. He returned in July
and participated in a conditioning test with his teammates before
leaving with the team for training camp in California late that month.
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This evidence constitutes some probative evidence of Fortenberry’s
presence in and intent to remain in Dallas County. See Snyder,
241 S.W.2d at 141.
Finally, the parties’ stipulation regarding venue is probative
evidence supporting the trial court’s venue ruling. Fortenberry and
Great Divide stipulated during the contested case hearing that venue
was proper at the Workers’ Compensation Division’s Dallas Field Office.
And they recited the stipulation into the record again during trial.
Under Labor Code Section 410.005, venue for a contested case hearing
is proper at the field office that is not “more than 75 miles from the
claimant’s residence at the time of the injury.” TEX. LAB. CODE
§ 410.005. Thus, Great Divide twice stipulated—and the ALJ found—
that Fortenberry resided within 75 miles of the Dallas Field Office at
the time of the injury. Great Divide correctly notes that there are
counties other than Dallas County within a 75-mile radius of the Dallas
Field Office. But there is no suggestion that Fortenberry lived or resided
anywhere other than Dallas County at the time of his injury. The
stipulation is final and binding on Great Divide. TEX. LAB. CODE
§ 410.166 (“A written stipulation or agreement of the parties that is filed
in the record or an oral stipulation or agreement of the parties that is
preserved in the record is final and binding.”). And the stipulation is, of
course, contrary to Great Divide’s new assertion that Fortenberry did
not reside in any county in Texas at the time of his injury.
* * *
Fortenberry averred that he lived and resided in Dallas County
at the time of his injury on August 2, and the fact that he inhabited a
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hotel room during his intermittent stays there, by itself, does not
disqualify him from proving he resided there for purposes of Labor Code
Section 410.252(b). The evidence adduced at trial shows he trained in
Dallas County in the three months beforehand, and that he intended to
perform his NFL player contract there for another two-and-a-half years.
And Great Divide stipulated that Fortenberry resided within 75 miles
of the Division of Workers’ Compensation’s Dallas Field Office at the
time of his injury. The court of appeals should have credited this
evidence supporting venue in Dallas County. See Ruiz, 868 S.W.2d at
758 (explaining that the trial court’s venue determination must be
upheld “if there is any probative evidence in the entire record, including
trial on the merits, that venue is proper in the county where judgment
was rendered”).
IV. Conclusion
Under the deferential standards set forth in Civil Practice and
Remedies Code Section 15.064(b) and Ruiz, the record contains
sufficient probative evidence that Fortenberry resided in Dallas County
at the time of his injury. Thus, venue in Dallas County was mandatory
under Labor Code Section 410.252(b). We reverse the court of appeals’
judgment and remand the case to that court for consideration of Great
Divide’s unaddressed issues.
Rebeca A. Huddle
Justice
OPINION DELIVERED: March 31, 2023
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