Opinion issued May 11, 2023
In The
Court of Appeals
For The
First District of Texas
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NO. 01-22-00188-CV
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IN RE MAURICIO GUTIERREZ AND NRG ENERGY, INC., Relators
Original Proceeding on Petition for Writ of Mandamus
***
————————————
NO. 01-22-00190-CV
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IN RE ISSUANCE OF SUBPOENA FOR THE DEPOSITION OF
MAURICIO GUTIERREZ
On Appeal from the 152nd District Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court Case No. 2022-01400
MEMORANDUM OPINION
A Louisiana court issued a letter rogatory asking a Harris County court to
issue a subpoena for the deposition of Mauricio Gutierrez, a Texas resident and CEO
of NRG Energy, Inc. The parties seeking to depose Gutierrez—Washington-St.
Tammany Electric Cooperative, Inc. (WST) and Claiborne Electric Cooperative,
Inc. (Claiborne) (collectively, the Co-ops)—petitioned the Harris County trial court
to issue the subpoena. Gutierrez and NRG opposed the petition and sought a
protective order preventing the deposition. The trial court signed a discovery order
denying Gutierrez and NRG’s motion for protection and compelling the deposition.
Gutierrez and NRG have challenged the trial court’s discovery order in an appeal
and in a petition for writ of mandamus, contending the trial court abused its
discretion because (1) Texas’s apex-deposition rule prevents the district court from
enforcing the Louisiana letter rogatory, and (2) the Co-ops’ Texas counsel should
have been disqualified based on an imputed conflict of interest.
Because we conclude these issues may be decided by appeal, we deny the
mandamus petition. In the appeal, we affirm the district court’s order.
2
Background
The Louisiana lawsuit 1
WST and Claiborne are member-owned electric cooperative corporations and
plaintiffs in a Louisiana breach-of-contract lawsuit against LaGen. In their Louisiana
lawsuit, the Co-ops allege that LaGen owns and operates electric power generation
and transmission facilities in Louisiana, including the Big Cajun II power generating
plant in Pointe Coupee Parish, and supplies them with power under contracts
executed in 2002 and amended in 2011, as to Claiborne, and in 2012, as to
Washington-St. Tammany. LaGen was a subsidiary of NRG when the power supply
contracts in the Louisiana lawsuit were executed. NRG sold LaGen in 2019.
At issue are the power supply contracts’ clause allocating the costs of
complying with changes in environmental law. According to the Co-ops, the
environmental law clause provides that the Co-ops are responsible only for a share
of the “additional costs of complying” with post-contract changes in environmental
laws and not for any costs to remediate pre-contract environmental conditions or any
1
Our recitation of facts here is based on the Co-ops’ Louisiana petition, which is
pending as Washington-St. Tammany Electric Cooperative, Inc. and Claiborne
Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. Louisiana Generating, L.L.C., No. C-695287, Division
25, in the 19th Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
The Co-ops previously sued LaGen in federal court in Baton Rouge, but the court
dismissed that suit for want of federal subject-matter jurisdiction. The Co-ops
refiled in the Louisiana state court.
3
penalties or costs resulting from violations of any environmental law. In their view,
LaGen is exclusively responsible for those costs.
The Louisiana petition states that three units at the Big Cajun II power
generating plant “became operational in the early 1980s” and “were constructed to
use coal as a fuel source.” In 2009, the United States Environmental Protection
Agency filed an enforcement action against LaGen under the Clean Air Act, alleging
that unpermitted modifications to the Big Cajun II power generating plant in 1998
and 1999 increased the net emission of air pollutants. According to the Co-ops, the
enforcement action resolved through a consent decree in 2012 (Consent Decree),
which required LaGen to implement measures to reduce and control emissions of
nitrogen oxides (NOx), sulfur dioxide (SO2), and particulate matter (PM). The
petition alleges that LaGen agreed in the Consent Decree to:
• implement a selective non-catalytic reduction system to reduce and
control NOx emissions;
• “refuel (that is, convert from coal to natural gas) Big Cajun Unit 2” to
reduce and control SO2 emissions; and
• “continuously operate electrostatic precipitators (‘ESPs’)” and “start
operating PM continuous emission monitoring systems (‘CEMs’)” at
Big Cajun Units 1 and 3 to reduce and control PM emissions.
One of the Consent Decree’s recitals states that “a portion of the emissions
technology, including related to PM emissions and refueling, under th[e] [C]onsent
[D]ecree, will allow [LaGen] to comply with the Mercury Air Toxics Rule [sic], a
4
change in environmental law promulgated after the filing of the [EPA’s] complaint.”
The Co-ops contend that this recital references a Mercury and Air Toxic Standards
(MATS Rule) that was promulgated by the EPA and became effective in 2012,
during the enforcement action, and which, among other things, “required a reduction
in certain toxic air pollutants from existing coal-fired power plants like those owned
by LaGen.” According to the Co-ops, LaGen used the recital to “re-characterize tens
of millions of dollars in Consent Decree costs as related to the 2012 [MATS Rule].”
For instance, the Co-ops allege that LaGen has identified, among other things, the
cost of a boiler conversion from coal to natural gas at Unit 2, ESP upgrades at Units
1 and 3, and the CEMs for Units 1 and 3 as MATS Rule costs even though those
emission controls were required by the Consent Decree. And they allege that LaGen
breached the power supply contracts by improperly passing on these costs to comply
with the Consent Decree, and others, as costs related to the MATS Rule. The Co-ops
also seek declarations on these matters.
The Co-ops asserted in the Louisiana court that although they have taken 20
depositions in connection with their claims against LaGen, they require the
deposition of Gutierrez, who is now NRG’s chief executive officer. Neither
Gutierrez nor NRG is a party to the Louisiana lawsuit or the power supply contracts.2
2
It is undisputed that NRG agreed, as part of the sale of LaGen, to indemnify a subset
of losses arising from the Louisiana lawsuit.
5
But the Co-ops allege that at the relevant times LaGen was an NRG subsidiary and
Gutierrez, then serving as NRG’s chief operating officer, approved the Consent
Decree. Because Gutierrez is a Texas resident, and therefore outside the subpoena
range, the Co-ops obtained a letter rogatory from the Louisiana court, which
requested that a Harris County district court issue a subpoena compelling Gutierrez’s
deposition in Houston for use in the Louisiana lawsuit.
The Texas proceeding
The Co-ops petitioned the Harris County district court under Texas Rule of
Civil Procedure 201.2 to enforce the letter rogatory and issue a subpoena compelling
Gutierrez’s deposition in the Louisiana lawsuit.
Gutierrez and NRG appeared in the district court and jointly moved for a
protective order to prohibit the deposition. They urged the district court to apply
Texas’s apex-deposition rule and find the Co-ops had not satisfied that standard by
showing Gutierrez possesses “unique, non-repetitive knowledge” or that “less
intrusive means of discovery have been exhausted without success.” The motion
accompanied Gutierrez’s affidavit denying that he has “any unique or superior
knowledge of relevant facts concerning the subject matter of the [Louisiana]
lawsuit” or “the allegation that [LaGen] improperly classified costs it incurred to
settle a matter with the [EPA] as costs related to LaGen’s compliance with
6
environmental regulations.” As to his role in approving the Consent Decree,
Gutierrez stated:
[I]n 2012, I was [COO] for NRG. In this position, I presented a
proposed settlement with the EPA in the matter captioned
Environmental Protection Agency v. Louisiana Generating, LLC (M.D.
La. No. 09-100) to NRG’s CEO at that time for his approval, who in
turn had received settlement authority from NRG’s Board of Directors
[]. I presented this settlement based on recommendations I received
from other NRG employees, including those already deposed in the
[Louisiana lawsuit]. These employees conducted an extensive
evaluation of the matter prior to presenting any recommendations to
me. In other words, while I have knowledge of some facts relating to
the [Consent Decree] by virtue of my former position as COO, all of
those facts were relayed to me by other NRG employees. As such, I do
not have unique or superior knowledge about the allegations asserted
in the [Louisiana lawsuit].
Gutierrez and NRG also moved to disqualify the Co-ops’ counsel in the Texas
proceeding—attorney John S. “Jack” Edwards with the law firm of Ajamie LLP.
They asserted that Ajaime serves as local counsel for the law firm of Van Ness
Feldman, LLP (VNF), which represents the Co-ops in the Louisiana lawsuit but
previously represented NRG and LaGen between 1996 and 2001. According to
Gutierrez and NRG, VNF’s previous representation creates a conflict of interest
because it was substantially related to the Louisiana lawsuit in that VNF advised
LaGen on the Big Cajun II power plant acquisition, negotiated power supply
contracts, and made filings with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
(FERC), including opinions about whether LaGen’s contracts allowed it to pass
through to cooperatives a share of increased costs from changes in environmental
7
law. They urged the district court to impute VNF’s former-client conflict to Ajamie
and disqualify Ajaime from representing the Co-ops in their request for a deposition
subpoena.
In response, the Co-ops moved to compel Gutierrez’s deposition. They
challenged whether the apex-deposition rule applies in the letters-rogatory context
and, if it did, whether Gutierrez’s affidavit was sufficient to invoke the rule’s
protections. And they asserted that the discovery already conducted on their
Louisiana claims showed the need for Gutierrez’s testimony because “only
Gutierrez—who was the ultimate decision-maker on both the EPA [Consent Decree]
and the disputed expenses—can answer questions about his own decision-making
process and the primarily verbal communications about what role the plan to shift []
costs onto third parties, including [the Co-ops], played in the settlement.”
The Co-ops also opposed disqualification of Ajamie. They responded that the
Louisiana courts had rejected LaGen’s request to disqualify VNF based on the
alleged conflict, and that NRG and Gutierrez’s disqualification motion was an
improper second bite at the apple. They also disputed that VNF’s prior
representation of LaGen and NRG in federal regulatory matters was substantially
related to the Louisiana lawsuit concerning costs incurred more than a decade after
the representation ended.
8
After a hearing, the district court signed an order (1) denying appellants’
motion for protection or disqualification, (2) granting the Co-ops’ motion to compel,
and (3) ordering Gutierrez to appear for a deposition to be used in the Louisiana
lawsuit. Uncertain whether the district court’s order was a final, appealable order
and out of an abundance of caution, appellants both appealed and petitioned for a
writ of mandamus.
I. Appeal or Mandamus
Before reaching the merits, we must determine whether we have jurisdiction
to decide this matter as an appeal, and if not, whether mandamus is proper.
Generally, appellate courts have jurisdiction only over appeals from “final
judgments” and certain appealable interlocutory orders. Lehmann v. Har-Con Corp.,
39 S.W.3d 191, 200, 205 (Tex. 2001) (holding order or judgment is final for
purposes of appeal if “it actually disposes of every pending claim and party” or “it
clearly and unequivocally states that it finally disposes of all claims and all parties”);
TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 51.014 (listing appealable interlocutory orders).
The trial court’s discovery order does not contain any finality language. But by
denying Gutierrez and NRG’s motion for protection and disqualification and
granting the Co-ops’ motion to compel, the trial court determined all the issues and
rights between the parties and disposed of all the issues in the Co-ops’ petition. We
thus conclude that the trial court’s discovery order is a final, appealable order that
9
we have appellate jurisdiction to review. See Centennial Psychiatric Assocs., LLC v.
Cantrell, No. 14-17-00391-CV, 2017 WL 6544283, at *4–*5 (Tex. App.—Houston
[14th Dist.] 2017, no pet.) (mem. op.) (order quashing discovery for use in
Tennessee proceeding was final because it disposed of all issues in petition asking
Texas court to sustain discovery objections and issue protective order); Warford v.
Childers, 642 S.W.2d 63, 65–66 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 1982, no writ) (order
denying discovery sought under Hawaii commission was final and appealable).
Because we address the trial court’s discovery order by appeal, we deny the
petition for writ of mandamus. See Walker v. Packer, 827 S.W.2d 833, 840–41 (Tex.
1992) (orig. proceeding) (mandamus is inappropriate where relator has adequate
remedy by appeal).
II. Apex Deposition
Gutierrez and NRG argue the trial court abused its discretion by denying their
motion for protection and instead granting the Co-ops’ motion to compel because
the Co-ops did not make the showing required in Texas to take Gutierrez’s apex
deposition.
A. Legal standards
Trial courts have broad discretion in matters of discovery. See Johnson v.
Davis, 178 S.W.3d 230, 242 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2005, pet. denied).
A trial court’s decision on a discovery-related protective order is reviewed for an
10
abuse of that discretion. See Boales v. Brighton Builders, Inc., 29 S.W.3d 159, 168
(Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2000, pet. denied). Likewise, we review a trial
court’s ruling on a motion to compel discovery under the abuse-of-discretion
standard. See Knapp v. Wilson N. Jones Mem’l Hosp., 281 S.W.3d 163, 172 (Tex.
App.—Dallas 2009, no pet.).
Few cases have addressed disputes involving discovery in Texas for use in a
foreign jurisdiction. More than a century ago, the Texas Supreme Court considered
whether a Texas trial court could order compliance with letters rogatory from an
Illinois court, which requested a deposition in Texas for use in an Illinois proceeding.
See Ex parte Taylor, 220 S.W. 74, 75 (Tex. 1920). The Court held that under “the
general jurisdiction possessed under the Constitution by the District Courts,” the
Texas trial court had the power to honor the request of the Illinois court and order
the deposition. Id. The foreign court with jurisdiction over the underlying case
determines the relevance and materiality of the evidence sought by the party seeking
the Texas deposition under letters rogatory. Id. But the Texas court must protect the
witness’s legal rights, including, for example, the witness’s right to avoid compelled
production of privileged evidence. Id.; see also In re Issuance of Subpoenas
Depositions of Bennett, 502 S.W.3d 373, 379–80 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
2016, no pet.) (considering whether movants for protective order met burden to show
harassing effect of subpoena requested in Wyoming letters rogatory). This
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overarching principle promotes comity toward other states’ courts while vesting
Texas trial courts with authority to protect Texas residents subjected to depositions
for out-of-state lawsuits.
No Texas case has addressed whether Texas’s apex-deposition rule applies to
protect the legal rights of a high-level corporate official whose deposition is sought
in Texas for use in an out-of-state proceeding. Our rules of civil procedure include
a separate rule addressing and entitled “Depositions in Texas for Use in Proceedings
in Foreign Jurisdictions,” which provides:
If a court of record of any other state or foreign jurisdiction issues a
mandate, writ, or commission that requires a witness’s oral or written
deposition testimony in this State, the witness may be compelled to
appear and testify in the same manner and by the same process used for
taking testimony in a proceeding pending in this State.
TEX. R. CIV. P. 201.2; accord TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 20.002. This Court
has never interpreted Rule 201.2, but our sister court has construed it to mean that
“the Texas rules of civil procedure apply to a request originating from another state
for a Texas deposition.” Bennett, 502 S.W.3d at 377; see also In re Prince, No.
14-06-00895-CV, 2006 WL 3589484, at *2 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Dec.
12, 2006, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.).
Yet Texas’s apex-deposition doctrine, though known as a “rule,” has never
been promulgated as such through the rule-making process. See In re Alcatel USA,
Inc., 11 S.W.3d 173, 181 (Tex. 2000) (orig. proceeding) (Enoch, J.,
12
dissenting) (noting apex-deposition rule is judicial creation). The doctrine evolved
from guidelines designed to help trial courts determine when Texas Rule of Civil
Procedure 192.6 protects high-ranking corporate officials from unduly burdensome,
expensive, or harassing discovery. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 192.6(b) (allowing courts to
limit discovery to protect moving party from “undue burden, unnecessary expense,
harassment, annoyance, or invasion of personal, constitutional, or property rights”);
see also Alcatel, 11 S.W.3d at 181 (Enoch, J., dissenting) (recognizing apex
guidelines “protect from harassment” and “arose from an evaluation of the existing
Rules of Civil Procedure”); Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Street, 754 S.W.2d 153, 154–
55 (Tex. 1988) (orig. proceeding) (recognizing potential for harassment that
high-level officials face when corporation is frequently sued and official’s
connection to case is as tenuous as Wal-Mart chair’s connection to slip-and-fall case
in Wal-Mart store).
In Texas lawsuits, the apex-deposition rule applies “[w]hen a party seeks to
depose a corporate president or other high[-]level corporate official.” Crown Cent.
Petroleum Corp. v. Garcia, 904 S.W.2d 125, 128 (Tex. 1995) (orig. proceeding);
see AMR Corp. v. Enlow, 926 S.W.2d 640, 642 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1996, orig.
proceeding) (“An apex deposition is the deposition of a corporate officer at the apex
of the corporate hierarchy.”). The corporate official, or the corporate entity on the
official’s behalf, invokes the apex protections by filing a motion for protection
13
accompanied by the affidavit of the official “denying any knowledge of relevant
facts.” Crown Cent., 904 S.W.2d at 128. Once the corporate official moves for
protection and files an adequate affidavit, the trial court must determine whether the
party seeking the deposition has “arguably shown that the official has any unique or
superior personal knowledge of discoverable information.” Id. If that showing has
not been made, the trial court must grant a protective order and require the party to
“attempt to obtain the discovery through less intrusive methods.” Id. After making a
good-faith effort to secure discovery through less intrusive methods, the requesting
party may depose the apex official only after establishing that (1) “there is a
reasonable indication that the official’s deposition is calculated to lead to the
discovery of admissible evidence,” and (2) “the less intrusive methods of discovery
are unsatisfactory, insufficient, or inadequate.” Id.
B. Analysis
Gutierrez’s status as the current CEO and former COO of NRG would
implicate the “guidelines for depositions of persons at the apex of the corporate
hierarchy” if the Co-ops were seeking his deposition in a Texas case. See Crown
Cent., 904 S.W.2d at 126, 128 (adopting guidelines that apply “when a party seeks
to depose a corporate president or other high[-]level corporate official” (emphasis
added)); see also In re BP Prods. N. Am., Inc., 244 S.W.3d 840, 842 n.2 (Tex.
2008) (orig. proceeding) (applying apex-deposition rule to “senior corporate
14
official[s]”); In re TMX Fin. of Tex., Inc., 472 S.W.3d 864, 877–78 (Tex. App.—
Houston [1st Dist.] 2015, orig. proceeding) (applying apex-deposition rule to COO).
That is not the case here. The Co-ops seek Gutierrez’s deposition for use in the
Louisiana lawsuit. The parties’ disagreement about whether the trial court had to
apply the apex-deposition rule in this letter-rogatory context before compelling
Gutierrez’s deposition in Texas is a matter of first impression. But it is not one we
need to resolve. Assuming without deciding that the letter rogatory requesting
Gutierrez’s deposition for use in the Louisiana lawsuit implicates the
apex-deposition rule and that Gutierrez’s affidavit was sufficient to invoke the rule’s
protection, the Co-ops have arguably shown that Gutierrez has some unique or
superior knowledge of discoverable information. Crown Cent., 904 S.W.2d at 128.
Gutierrez and NRG characterize the Co-ops’ evidence as showing, at most,
that Gutierrez was a decision maker in NRG’s “chain of command,” which cannot
satisfy the apex-deposition rule. In support, they cite several cases holding that a
generalized claim that a corporate official has ultimate responsibility for a corporate
decision cannot establish the official’s unique or superior personal knowledge of
discoverable information. For instance, in Alcatel, the plaintiff alleged that “a plan
engineered at the highest level of Samsung’s executive structure” led to the theft of
the plaintiff’s trade secrets. See 11 S.W.3d at 174–75. The plaintiff sought to depose
two of Samsung’s highest-ranking executives to develop facts relevant to the alleged
15
scheme. The Texas Supreme Court concluded that evidence tending to show that
(1) one of the executives set Samsung’s vision, (2) the alleged theft aligned with the
goals of that vision, (3) Samsung had invested significant resources in the project
that perpetrated the theft such that the executives must have known about it, and
(4) the alleged theft “smacks of chairman-level importance” could not show that the
Samsung executives had unique or superior knowledge of discoverable information.
See id. at 176–77. As the Court explained, “many business disputes directly involve
the decisions or actions of a high-level officer,” but the fact that the high-level officer
may have been involved in the relevant dispute does not, standing alone, support the
executive’s deposition. Id. at 180.
In AMR Corp. v. Enlow, a case cited favorably in Acatel, the court of appeals
addressed a somewhat similar argument. There, an airline passenger became
intoxicated on a flight and later had a traffic accident with the plaintiff. AMR Corp.
v. Enlow, 926 S.W.2d 640, 641 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1996, orig. proceeding).
The plaintiff sued the airline under the Dramshop Act and sought the deposition of
its highest-ranking corporate official. Id. The plaintiff argued that he “wish[ed] to
depose [the official] in order to determine where the authority lies within the
organization for making those [alcohol service and flight attendant training] policy
decisions so that [he] can understand how and why those policy decisions were made
and what precisely the policies in place were.” Id. at 643. The court of appeals held:
16
“This testimony amounts to nothing more than the simple, obvious recognition that
the highest-ranking corporate officer of any corporation has the ultimate
responsibility for all corporate decisions and falls far short of the [Crown Central]
standard.” Id. at 644; accord In re El Paso Healthcare Sys., 969 S.W.2d 68, 74 (Tex.
App.—El Paso 1998, orig. proceeding) (“A generalized claim that a corporate
president has ultimate responsibility for all corporate decisions or has knowledge of
corporate policy is insufficient to establish that the corporate president has unique
or superior personal knowledge of discoverable information.”).
More recently, this Court conditionally granted mandamus relief from a
discovery order compelling the deposition of Baylor University’s president in a tort
suit alleging that the plaintiff was sexually assaulted by university football players.
In re Baylor University, No. 01-20-00439-CV, 2020 WL 6878411, at *1 (Tex.
App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Nov. 24, 2020, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.). The
plaintiff alleged that the university president was a fact witness because she “made
representations to prospective Baylor students, including [the plaintiff] and her
parents, about the safety of Baylor’s campus several months before [the plaintiff]
was sexually assaulted in her Baylor-owned and Baylor-assigned apartment.” Id.
The plaintiff continued:
As demonstrated by her own statements, [the university president] is
clearly a person with unique personal knowledge relevant to the claims
in this lawsuit. [She], for example, has personal knowledge regarding
the safety of Baylor’s campus with respect to the risk of sexual assault
17
to prospective female students and “the many changes” that Baylor has
allegedly made “to ensure a safer and healthier campus.”
Id. For her part, the president disclaimed in her affidavit that she had unique or
superior personal knowledge about the plaintiff’s specific allegations, and she stated
that she acted based on reports and information provided by others. Id. In holding
that the trial court erred by compelling the deposition, this Court determined that the
record showed that the president had “general knowledge of most, if not all, of the
various aspects” of the university but it did not show she had unique or superior
personal knowledge about whether Baylor knew its campus was unsafe or that
Baylor failed to adequately warn the plaintiff about that problem. Id. at *7. The
plaintiff’s deposition request was also undermined by (1) the president’s short tenure
before making the statements at issue and (2) the plaintiff’s own acknowledgment
that “other Baylor employees might have knowledge [of] specific instances of sexual
violence on Baylor’s campus” or “‘mistakes’ made by Baylor or ‘lessons’ that
Baylor allegedly learned.” Id.
Considering these cases, we agree with NRG and Gutierrez that showing
merely that an apex official possess apex-level knowledge of the subject matter of a
dispute is not enough to compel an apex deposition. But we conclude the Co-ops
showed something more.
At the times relevant to the Louisiana lawsuit, Gutierrez was not in his current
role as NRG’s CEO. Though still a high-ranking official, he oversaw operations.
18
The Co-ops submitted deposition excerpts from NRG and LaGen employees about
operational oversight for the Consent Decree and requests for expenditure for
Consent Decree and MATS Rule work.
It is undisputed that Gutierrez contributed to NRG’s decision to approve the
settlement of the EPA claims against LaGen in 2012. V. Shortell, the former vice
president of NRG’s environmental division, testified:
Q. . . . As the Vice President Environmental, did you have to sign
off on or approve any settlement offer before it could be
communicated to [the] EPA?
A. . . . I did not have approval authority so I would have made
recommendations to my chain of command, and it would have
had approval from them before it could have been made.
Q. Who was in that chain of command?
A. That would have been – so I reported to Mauricio Gutierrez [],
the COO.
Gutierrez’s affidavit confirmed this. Although Gutierrez stated that he presented the
proposed settlement to NRG’s CEO based on information he received from others,
his acknowledged role as an intermediary means that he was both a recipient and a
purveyor of information related to the Consent Decree.3
3
As evidence of Gutierrez’s involvement in approving the Consent Decree, the
Co-ops also point to an order from a federal magistrate judge refusing to prevent his
deposition in a separate lawsuit against LaGen by the co-owner of the Big Cajun II
power generating plant. See Entergy Gulf States La., L.L.C. v. La. Generating,
L.L.C., Civil Action No. 14-385-SDD-RLB, 2021 WL 24686, at *8–9 (M.D. La.
Jan. 4, 2021, order). The co-owner’s suit includes similar allegations against LaGen
of improperly allocated Consent Decree costs. However, the order is not evidence
19
The Consent Decree is not the allegedly breached contract in the Louisiana
lawsuit. It is the power supply contracts at issue. But the Co-ops’ breach theory is
that LaGen improperly allocated the costs of complying with the Consent Decree as
MATS Rule expenditures to its customers. More than one witnesses testified about
Gutierrez’s role in approving requests for expenditures related to Consent Decree
and MATS Rule compliance. For instance, J. Vosburg, LaGen’s President, testified
that when LaGen was an NRG subsidiary, its operations and environmental groups
reported through NRG’s “COO group,” instead of to her. She identified Gutierrez as
having a role in approving spending on the projects at issue in the Louisiana lawsuit.
NRG’s Senior Vice President of Development, Engineering, and Construction, B.
Trammell, did too. He offered some explanation of how NRG evaluated the options
for complying with environmental regulations and identified Gutierrez as a
decision-maker:
Q. . . . If you’ve got to comply with the environmental regulations,
you would more often be looking for your least-cost option?
supporting the trial court’s discovery ruling here. The order expressly did not
consider Gutierrez’s status as an apex official. The magistrate judge concluded that,
unlike Texas, the federal law did not require “special treatment of ‘high-level’
corporate managers” in discovery and that Gutierrez’s deposition should be allowed
because he “was the ultimate decisionmaker on the settlement at issue and would
have personal knowledge of his own decision-making process and discussions with
other individuals on the settlement.” Id. at *9. Consequently, the order issued under
different guidelines. And we cannot say whether the magistrate judge’s ruling was
based on something less, more, or altogether different from the evidence submitted
by the Co-ops here because it is not before us.
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A. That’s correct.
Q. Who is the [] project team that is making the recommendations
to the executives?
A. In [] the case of this particular project, . . . there were two
principals who conducted the evaluation prior to my direct
involvement in the project. It would have been J[.] Klumpyan
and the environmental compliance director, V[.] Shortell.
Q. So Mr. Klumpyan and Ms. Shortell would be the persons who
would look at the four-step process we’ve discussed and then
make a recommendation to the executives about which option
they were [] recommending?
A. Yes, that’s correct.
Q. And who would be [] the executives that they would have needed
to present that type of information to in 2012?
A. . . . [I]n this case, the decision-maker would have been COO,
Mauricio Gutierrez, who was then responsible for
recommending the decision to [the] CEO [] and then to our
board.
In her testimony, Shortell did not recall whether Gutierrez asked if the Consent
Decree costs could be passed through to the Co-ops in the decision-making process.
Read together, the deposition excerpts submitted by the Co-ops also describe
an approval process for requests for expenditures for both Consent Decree and
MATS Rule work that began in the plant and continued up the chain to and through
Gutierrez. LaGen’s Technical Services Manager, R. Roland, testified about the
approval process for requests for expenditures (“RFEs”):
A. . . . [Requests for expenditures] were generated on the plant
level. Like you saw, I was inputting them. So probably my plant
manager would have been the first stop [in the approval
21
process] . . . and worked their way up the chain based on
delegation of authority as to how far they had to go.
Q. It goes on to say, we have also briefed Mauricio that this is
headed his way. Who was Mauricio?
A. At that time Mauricio Gutierrez was, I believe, the [COO] of the
company.
Q. [D]oes that indicate to you that at least at some point in the RFE
approval process, because these were [$]55 and $101 million
RFEs respectively, that – that they would have to land on his desk
for approval?
A. It appears that way, yes.
Consistent with Roland’s testimony, Trammel also described an approval
process that applied for requests for expenditure for both MATS Rule and Consent
Decree work that involved Gutierrez:
Q. Let me ask you about the – the RFE process. Did you go – have
to go through the RFE process for both the MATS and the
settlement work?
A. Yes.
Q. Are you in the chain of people that has to approve an RFE as it
works its way through NRG?
A. I am.
Q. And who is immediately before you in that process?
A. Typically it would be the vice president of whichever
construction group is charged with executing the project. In this
case, it would have been J[.] Klumpyan.
Q. And who sees it after you’ve approved? Who does it go to next?
22
A. . . . [A]t this time, if I recall, it would have gone from me to COO
Gutierrez. And then depending on the scope and the amount
that’s required, it may have gone to other officers beyond him.
Q. And . . . if it was large enough and significant enough, it might
have to go to [the CEO.]
Gutierrez correctly points out that a chain of command for decision-making
about the costs at issue in the Louisiana lawsuit implies that others may have the
information the Co-ops seek. But as the Co-ops point out, less intrusive methods
have already been taken through 20 depositions, including of these lower-level
officials, and information is still wanting as to costs allocations, according to the
Louisiana letter rogatory. We conclude that Co-ops have shown that Gutierrez
arguably has unique or superior personal knowledge of discoverable information.
See Crown Cent., 904 S.W.2d at 128; see also Boales, 29 S.W.3d at
168 (apex-deposition doctrine does not protect corporate officials who have
“first-hand knowledge of certain facts”). We hold the trial court did not abuse its
discretion in denying appellants’ motion for protection and compelling Gutierrez’s
deposition.
23
III. Disqualification
NRG and Gutierrez contend the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to
disqualify Ajamie—the Co-ops’ Texas counsel—under Rule 1.09(a)(3) of the Texas
Disciplinary Rule of Professional Conduct.
A. Legal standards
Lawyer disqualification is “a severe remedy” that “can result in immediate
and palpable harm, disrupt trial court proceedings, and deprive a party of the right
to have counsel of choice.” In re Nitla S.A. de C.V., 92 S.W.3d 419, 422 (Tex.
2002) (orig. proceeding) (per curiam) (quoting Spears v. Fourth Ct. of Appeals, 797
S.W.2d 654, 656 (Tex. 1990) (orig. proceeding)). Thus, a trial court evaluating a
disqualification motion “must strictly adhere to an exacting standard.” In re
Thetford, 574 S.W.3d 362, 373 (Tex. 2019) (orig. proceeding). We review the trial
court’s refusal to disqualify a lawyer for abuse of discretion. In re Turner, 542
S.W.3d 553, 555 (Tex. 2017) (orig. proceeding) (per curiam). “A trial court abuses
its discretion when it acts in an unreasonably or arbitrary manner or, stated
differently, when it acts without reference to guiding rules or principles.” In re
Meador, 968 S.W.2d 346, 353 (Tex. 1998) (orig. proceeding).
Although the disciplinary rules are not intended as standards for procedural
decisions, courts often look to them as guidelines in deciding whether to grant a
motion to disqualify counsel. Nitla, 92 S.W.3d at 422; Nat’l Med. Enters. v. Godbey,
24
924 S.W.2d 123, 132 (Tex. 1996) (orig. proceeding). “In resolving the meaning of
these rules, we apply statutory construction principles.” In re Caballero, 272 S.W.3d
595, 599 (Tex. 2008). We review questions of statutory construction de novo. Id.
When a movant seeks disqualification based on an alleged violation of a
disciplinary rule, he must carry the burden to establish the violation with specificity.
See Spears, 797 S.W.2d at 656. “Mere allegations of unethical conduct or evidence
showing a remote possibility of a violation of the disciplinary rules” do not satisfy
the exacting standard. Id. In addition, the party seeking disqualification based on
violation of a disciplinary rule must also “demonstrate that the opposing lawyer’s
conduct caused actual prejudice that requires disqualification.” Nitla, 92 S.W.3d at
422; see also Meador, 968 S.W.2d at 350 (“a court should not disqualify a lawyer
for a disciplinary violation that has not resulted in actual prejudice to the party
seeking disqualification”).
Rule 1.09 deals with conflicts of interest that arise in connection with former
clients. Relevant here, subsection (a)(3) provides that, without prior consent, a
lawyer who personally has formerly represented a client in a matter may not
represent another person in a matter adverse to the former client if the matters are
the same or substantially related. TEX. DISCIPLINARY R. PROF’L CONDUCT 1.09(a)(3).
Although the phrase “substantially related” is not defined, “it primarily involves
situations where a lawyer could have acquired confidential information concerning
25
a prior client that could be used either to that prior client's disadvantage or for the
advantage of the lawyer's current client or some other person.” TEX. DISCIPLINARY
R. PROF’L CONDUCT 1.09 cmt. 4B. Matters are substantially related “when the
similarity of the facts involved creates a genuine threat that confidences revealed to
the client’s former counsel will be divulged to his present adversary.” Thetford, 574
S.W.3d at 374 (cleaned up). “Neither conclusory statements of similarities nor facial
similarities will suffice—the movant must delineate specific facts that tie the former
and current representations together.” Id. “A substantial relationship may be found
only after the moving party delineates with specificity the subject matter, issues and
causes of action common to prior and current representations and the court engages
in a painstaking analysis of the facts and precise application of precedent.” In re
Murphy, No. 14-08-01017-CV, 2009 WL 707650, at *5 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th
Dist.] Mar. 5, 2009, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.) (cleaned up).
If a lawyer is disqualified this way, any firm with which the lawyer is
associated is also disqualified under Rule 1.09(b). TEX. DISCIPLINARY R. PROF’L
CONDUCT 1.09(b) (“[W]hen lawyers are or have become members of or associated
with a firm, none of them shall knowingly represent a client if any one of them
practicing alone would be prohibited from doing so[.]”); see also In re Epic
Holdings, 985 S.W.2d 41, 52 (Tex. 1998) (orig. proceeding).
26
B. Analysis
NRG and Gutierrez have not asserted that Ajamie has its own conflict of
interest either because it is co-counsel for the Co-ops in the Louisiana lawsuit or has
represented NRG, Gutierrez, or LaGen. And VNF is not counsel of record and has
made no appearance on behalf of the Co-ops in either this Court or the trial court
below. Only Ajamie is counsel of record here. The disqualification motion thus rests
on the imputation of VNF’s former-client conflict to Ajamie under Disciplinary
Rules 1.09(a)(3) and 1.09(b). TEX. DISCIPLINARY R. PROF’L CONDUCT 1.09(a)(3),
(b). To prevail in disqualifying Ajamie then, NRG and Gutierrez must show that
(1) Ajamie is associated with VNF, and (2) the matters in the Louisiana lawsuit are
substantially related to VNF’s prior representation of NRG in federal regulatory
matters.
We note a lack of evidence that Ajamie is associated with VNF as local or
co-counsel in the record. That is, NRG and Gutierrez’s assertion that Ajamie is not
independent counsel for the Co-ops in Texas but instead is a local surrogate for or
co-counsel with VNF is unsupported by any record citation establishing this
association. See TEX. R. APP. P. 38.1(i) (appellant’s brief must contain “appropriate
citations . . . to the record”). Instead, NRG and Gutierrez rely on case law
interpreting Rule 1.09’s association requirement as extending to litigation
co-counsel, including the San Antonio Court of Appeals’ decision in In re CMH
27
Homes, Inc., No. 04-13-00050-CV, 2013 WL 2446724, at *5 (Tex. App.—San
Antonio June 5, 2013, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.).4
In CMH Homes, the court of appeals observed that the disciplinary rules “do
not prescribe a particular definition of ‘associated with.’” Id. Applying a dictionary
definition of “associated,” the court determined that the phrase means “to be ‘closely
connected (as in function or office) with another.’” Id. (citing MERRIAM WEBSTER’S
COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY 75 (11th ed. 2004)). The court then held that Rule
1.09(b) “include[s] not only partners, employees, and associates within the same
firm, but individuals working together on a case or issue regardless of their actual
status as a member of the firm, of-counsel, or co-counsel.” Id.
We find no reason to disagree with the court’s interpretation of “associated
with” here, but we note the record in CMH Homes contained more information about
the involvement of the attorney having the former-client conflict than is contained
in our record. There, the former-client conflict arose in litigation brought by Duval
4
NRG and Gutierrez cite a second San Antonio opinion as supporting the existence
of an imputed conflict: City of San Antonio v. Caruso, 350 S.W.3d 247 (Tex. App.—
San Antonio 2011, pet. denied). We presume this citation is an error. Caruso is an
appeal from the denial of a plea to the jurisdiction on governmental immunity.
Although it discusses the standard of review for statutory construction, which we
apply to interpret disciplinary rules, it is not a disqualification case and contains no
discussion of the disciplinary rules. See id. at 250. The quotation and holding NRG
and Gutierrez attribute to Caruso are found instead in In re CMH Homes, Inc., No.
04-13-00050-CV, 2013 WL 2446724, at *5 (Tex. App.—San Antonio June 5, 2013,
orig. proceeding) (mem. op.).
28
County against CMH Homes alleging a fraudulent home financing scheme. Id. at
*1. The County elected to retain as counsel two lawyers—D. Rumley and B.
Gutierrez—who had previously represented private plaintiffs in similar claims
against CMH Homes. Id. Even though the County Attorney, R. Carillo, had
represented CMH Homes as local counsel in some of these private actions, he was
tasked by the Duval County Commissioner’s Court with retaining Rumley and
Gutierrez. Id. at *2. In doing so, Carillo met with Rumley or Gutierrez and ultimately
approved their contract with the County. Id. When the County later sued, Carillo was
listed on the original petition as an attorney representing the County against his
former client. Id. at *2. Carillo withdrew from the representation on CMH Home’s
request, but the trial court denied a motion to disqualify Rumley and Gutierrez based
on their association with Carillo. Id. at *2–*3. In conditionally granting mandamus
relief, the appellate court held:
Carrillo was prohibited from representing a current client, Duval
County, against a former client, CMH Homes, in a matter that is
substantially related to the earlier representation. TEX. DISCIPLINARY R.
PROF’L CONDUCT 1.09(a). When Carrillo embarked upon negotiations
with Rumley and Gutierrez, he was acting in an adverse manner toward
CMH Homes, regarding the exact same issues out of Store 214, and the
presumption attached. Moreover, Carrillo’s name appeared on the
pleadings as Attorney for Duval County and his motion to withdraw
acknowledges [his] position as Attorney for Duval County in the suit
filed against CMH [Homes]. Based on the presumption of shared
confidences, Carrillo’s involvement necessitated the disqualification of
Rumley and Gutierrez.
Id. at *7.
29
Here, in contrast, Ajamie and VNF are not listed on any pleading as
co-counsel for the Co-ops in either the Texas or Louisiana proceedings. And beyond
Ajamie’s acts in service of obtaining discovery for use in the Louisiana lawsuit, there
is no information about how Ajamie and VNF are “associated,” i.e., “closely
connected (as in function or office) with another” or “working together on the
case[s] or issue[s].” Even if that is something the parties or trial court implicitly
understood, it is not reflected in the appellate record.
In addition, to satisfy the substantial relationship test as a basis for
disqualification, NRG and Gutierrez had to prove that the facts of VNF’s previous
representation are so related to the facts in the Louisiana lawsuit that a genuine threat
exists that confidences revealed to VNF will be divulged to the Co-ops. See Thetford,
574 S.W.3d at 374. They contend they did so through evidence that VNF represented
NRG and LaGen during the formation of the power supply contracts and that VNF’s
representation included:
(1) regulatory approval of the [power supply contracts] in 2000[;]
(2) FERC filings related to the acquisition of [Big Cajun II] assets—for
which the environmental compliance status was represented to FERC
by VNF and is at issue in the [Louisiana lawsuit][;] and (3) other legal
services from 1996 to 2001 on specific issues relating to federal energy
regulatory matters.
NRG and Gutierrez cite In re Sharplin, No. 2-05-386-CV, 2006 WL 2167179,
at *1 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Aug. 3, 2006, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.), in
support. There, the court considered whether the trial court abused its discretion by
30
refusing to disqualify the law firm of Kelly, Hart & Hallman, P.C. (“KHH”) from
representing Southwest Environmental Services, Inc. (“Southwest”) because a KHH
lawyer, as part of his past employment and under a joint defense agreement and the
joint defense privilege, had obtained confidential information in a prior case about
substantially related matters. Id.
The appellate court compared the two cases. In the first case, D. Sharplin, Jr.,
the relator seeking KHH’s disqualification, served as a consultant and executive for
a company that tested underground fuel storage tanks. The company was
investigated and charged by federal agencies. Id. During the investigation and the
pendency of the criminal case, Sharplin provided the KHH attorney with information
about “applicable regulatory standards, regulatory enforcement, leak detection
alternatives, third-party certifications, intrinsic safety for leak detection alternatives,
regulatory compliance alternatives, quality control, and [his] management of [the
company] in keeping with [his] interpretation of these issues.” Id. And in the second
case, KHH represented Southwest in a suit against another underground fuel storage
tank testing company controlled by Sharplin seeking, among other things,
“declaratory relief concerning its rights under sublicensing and settlement
agreements and alleging defamation, breach of contract, and tortious interference
with business relations.” Id. at *2. However, “shortly after KHH appeared as
Southwest’s co-counsel, Southwest’s theory of the case began to change.” Id.
31
Southwest, for the first time, asserted complaints involving regulatory compliance,
safety, and quality control issues, accusing Sharplin of criminal acts and disclosing
evidence related to Sharplin’s prior employment. Id.
The appellate court ultimately held that KHH should be disqualified,
reasoning:
In determining whether the factual matters in the pending suit are
substantially related to the matters in the previous suit, the factual
matters “do[ ] not need to be ‘relevant’ in the evidentiary
sense. . . . [They] need only be akin to the present action in a way
reasonable persons would understand as important to the issues
involved.”
Id. at *5. And there, the cases were similar in more than one way. Both involved
Sharplin personally as the dominant, controlling figure in the operation of the
corporation. Both involved alleged wrongdoing by Sharplin-controlled corporations
in testing and leak detection. Both involved risks of explosions. And both involved
allegations of criminal behavior.
We agree with the Co-ops that the record reflects fewer similarities here.
VNF’s prior representation involved federal energy regulatory advice. VNF’s
current representation concerns whether pollution control costs were incurred to
comply with old or new environmental laws, namely the 2012 Consent Decree or
the 2012 MATS Rule. The record does not establish with specificity the overlap
between them. See In re Drake, 195 S.W.3d 232, 237 (Tex. App.—San Antonio
2006, orig. proceeding) (reversing trial court’s disqualification order, where there
32
was no evidence that facts material to the resolution of the current case were related
to the facts in the prior cases handled by counsel).
Although NRG claims the matters are substantially related because both touch
the power supply contracts and the Big Cajun II power generating plant, the exhibits
show only a facial similarity, which is not sufficient. Thetford, 574 S.W.3d at 374
(“Neither conclusory statements of similarities nor facial similarities will suffice—
the movant must delineate specific facts that tie the former and current
representations together.”). For instance, NRG and Gutierrez cite a memo obtained
from VNF in discovery, entitled “Potential Utility Liability for Consequential
Damages,” as evidence that VNF researched contract law issues. But the Louisiana
lawsuit does not involve consequential damages. NRG and Gutierrez also cite a 1997
draft contract under a cover memorandum prepared by a different law firm that does
not specifically identify any VNF attorneys. While VNF apparently received the
draft contract because it was in VNF’s files, that is not evidence that VNF
participated in drafting or negotiating the power supply contracts.
In early 2000, VNF represented LaGen before FERC. Specifically, VNF
petitioned FERC for acceptance of LaGen’s market-based rate schedule and filed
the power supply contracts in connection with it, but nothing connects the FERC
work to the Louisiana lawsuit alleging misallocation of costs in the performance of
those contracts, as amended, more than a decade later. In February 2000, a VNF
33
attorney was copied on an email from a different law firm. Attached to the email was
a draft letter to one of the Cooperatives. The paper copy produced by VNF in
discovery reflects that a VNF attorney suggested changes to a paragraph addressing
FERC orders related to prohibitions on undue discrimination in access to electric
transmission. But there are no transmission-related charges at issue in this suit. Then,
in March 2000, VNF filed an application at FERC seeking authorization for LaGen
to issue debt. Attached to this filing was a Preliminary Offering Circular for the debt.
The Circular discussed environmental matters, but it shows that the legal matters
about the bonds were evaluated by other law firms.
The test for abuse of discretion is whether the trial court acted without
reference to any guiding rules or principles or acted in an arbitrary or unreasonable
manner. See Downer v. Aquamarine Operators, Inc., 701 S.W.2d 238, 241–42 (Tex.
1985). On this record, we hold that it was not an abuse of discretion for the trial court
to conclude that no substantial relationship existed between the former and current
representations and to deny the motion to disqualify.
Conclusion
We affirm the trial court’s order.
Sarah Beth Landau
Justice
Panel consists of Justices Landau, Countiss, and Guerra.
34