in Re: CTMI, LLC Mark Boozer And Jerrod Raymond

Conditionally Granted; Opinion Filed December 8, 2016.




                                              In The
                                Court of Appeals
                         Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
                                       No. 05-16-01078-CV

       IN RE CTMI, LLC, MARK BOOZER, AND JERROD RAYMOND, Relators


                 Original Proceeding from the 134th Judicial District Court
                                   Dallas County, Texas
                            Trial Court Cause No. DC-16-05360

                              MEMORANDUM OPINION
                          Before Justices Bridges, Myers, and Whitehill
                                    Opinion by Justice Myers
       The underlying dispute in this original proceeding relates to the interpretation of the

rights and duties of the parties under a settlement agreement made in 2011. Relators (“CTMI”)

filed a lawsuit in Tarrant County seeking declaratory relief as to their rights and duties under the

agreement. Thereafter, the real parties in interest (“the Fischer parties”) filed a lawsuit involving

the same issues and parties in Dallas County. CTMI filed a plea to the jurisdiction in the Dallas

County case, arguing the Tarrant County court acquired dominant jurisdiction over the issues

because that lawsuit was filed first. The Fischer parties argued that CTMI may not rely on the

first-filed rule to establish jurisdiction in Tarrant County. The Dallas County court agreed with

the Fischer parties and denied CTMI’s plea to the jurisdiction. CTMI now seeks mandamus

relief from the Dallas court’s order denying the plea in abatement. We granted CTMI’s motion

for a temporary stay of proceedings in the trial court pending review of the original proceeding
and requested responses to the petition. After reviewing the petition, the responses, and the

record, we conditionally grant the writ.

                                     BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

          In 2011, the parties settled part of a case involving a dispute over the sale of a business.

In the rule 11 settlement agreement, which was dictated into the record, the parties agreed to

entry of a $1.7 million judgment to address one aspect of the dispute and agreed to allow the trial

court to resolve one issue of contract interpretation. The parties also agreed to allow the contract

interpretation ruling to be appealed, and agreed that the party who ultimately prevailed on that

issue would be entitled to receive fifteen percent of gross receipts collected by CTMI from

certain projects during the course of the appellate process. Those funds were to be kept in an

escrow account established and held by attorney Wesley Holmes. CTMI was required to fund

the escrow account as revenue from the Devon projects1 was received. The fifteen percent gross

receipts would be distributed to the party who ultimately prevailed on appeal. Following appeals

to this Court and the Texas Supreme Court, Ray Fischer ultimately prevailed on the issue of

contract interpretation and was entitled to distribution of fifteen percent of the gross revenue

being held in escrow. See Ray Fischer and Corporate Tax Management, Inc. v. CTMI, L.L.C.,

479 S.W.3d 231 (Tex. 2016). The Supreme Court’s mandate issued in that appeal on February

19, 2016.

          The current dispute relates to the money owed to Fischer from escrow. Relators claim

they complied with their responsibilities under the settlement agreement by placing all required

funds into the escrow account held by Holmes. However, CTMI alleges that Holmes absconded

with the money it placed in the escrow account. On March 7, 2016, after discovering the missing

funds, relators filed a declaratory judgment action in the 48th Judicial District Court of Tarrant

   1
       These were business transactions involving Devon Energy (Devon).



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County seeking a declaration of the parties’ rights and responsibilities under the settlement

agreement. The Fischer parties moved to transfer the Tarrant County case to Dallas County.

The Tarrant County court denied the motions to transfer venue on July 22, 2016. Prior to that

order, on May 3, 2016, the Fischer parties had filed a lawsuit in Dallas County asserting that

CTMI breached the settlement agreement and seeking damages for the alleged breach. CTMI

moved to abate the Dallas County suit, asserting the Tarrant County case was filed first and, as

such, the Tarrant County court acquired dominant jurisdiction over the claims related to the

terms and enforcement of the settlement agreement. The Dallas court disagreed and denied the

motion to abate. This original proceeding followed.

                                     STANDARD OF REVIEW

       To be entitled to mandamus relief, the relator must demonstrate that the trial court clearly

abused its discretion and the relator has no adequate remedy by appeal. In re Lee, 411 S.W.3d

445, 463 (Tex. 2013) (orig. proceeding); In re Reece, 341 S.W.3d 360, 364 (Tex. 2011) (orig.

proceeding); In re Prudential Ins. Co. of America, 148 S.W.3d 124, 135–36 (Tex. 2004) (orig.

proceeding). A trial court clearly abuses its discretion if it reaches a decision so arbitrary and

unreasonable as to amount to a clear and prejudicial error of law or if it clearly fails to analyze

the law correctly or apply the law correctly to the facts. In re Cerberus Capital Mgmt. L.P., 164

S.W.3d 379, 382 (Tex. 2005) (orig. proceeding) (per curiam). “[A] relator need only establish a

trial court’s abuse of discretion to demonstrate entitlement to mandamus relief with regard to a

plea in abatement in a [case involving] dominant jurisdiction.” In re J.B. Hunt Transp., Inc., 492

S.W.3d 287, 299–300 (Tex. 2016) (orig. proceeding).

                                        APPLICABLE LAW

       The general rule regarding dominant jurisdiction is that “the court in which suit is first

filed acquires dominant jurisdiction to the exclusion of other coordinate courts.” Id. at 294

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(quoting Curtis v. Gibbs, 511 S.W.2d 263, 267 (Tex. 1974)). When two suits are inherently

interrelated, the court in which the second action was filed must grant a plea in abatement unless

an exception to the general rule applies. In re J.B. Hunt Transp., 492 S.W.3d at 299–300.

“Filing a plea in abatement is the proper method for drawing a court’s attention to another

court’s possible dominant jurisdiction.” In re Puig, 351 S.W.3d 301, 305 (Tex. 2011) (per

curiam). Generally, the plea in abatement must be granted when an inherent interrelation of the

subject matter exists in the two pending lawsuits. Perry v. Del Rio, 66 S.W.3d 239, 252 (Tex.

2001). Abatement of a suit due to the pendency of a prior suit is based on the principles of

comity, convenience, and the necessity for an orderly procedure in the trial of contested issues.

Miles v. Ford Motor Co., 914 S.W.2d 135, 138 (Tex. 1995) (per curiam).

       Exceptions to this “first-filed” rule may apply when its justifications fail, such as when

the first court does not have the full matter before it, when conferring dominant jurisdiction on

the first court will delay or even prevent a prompt and full adjudication, or “when the race to the

courthouse was unfairly run.” Perry, 66 S.W.3d at 252. A plaintiff who filed the first suit may

be estopped from asserting the dominant jurisdiction of the first court if it is found that he is

guilty of inequitable conduct. Hiles v. Arnie & Co., P.C., 402 S.W.3d 820, 825–26 (Tex. App.—

Houston [14th Dist.] 2013, pet. denied). The inequitable conduct exception is central to this case

because the Fischer parties maintain that CTMI engaged in inequitable conduct before filing the

Tarrant County action and, as such, the Dallas court properly determined the first-filed rule does

not apply here.

       Texas courts have found parties guilty of inequitable conduct and applied the estoppel

exception to the first-filed rule when the plaintiffs in the first-filed suit (1) filed suit merely to

obtain priority, without a bona fide intention to prosecute the suit; or (2) prevented their

adversaries from filing the subsequent suits more promptly by fraudulently representing that they

                                                 –4–
would settle. In re Henry, 274 S.W.3d 185, 191 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2008, pet.

denied) (citing Johnson v. Avery, 414 S.W.2d 441, 443 (Tex. 1966) and Russell v. Taylor, 121

Tex. 450, 458–59, 49 S.W.2d 733, 736 (1932)).             Other examples of inequitable conduct

sufficient to defeat the first-filed rule are when the plaintiffs in the first-filed suit affirmatively

represented to the court in the second-filed suit that it had jurisdiction, or manipulated the courts

by sitting in silence while conflicting orders on the same subject matter are issued in another

court. In re Henry, 274 S.W.3d at 191 (citing Howell v. Mauzy, 899 S.W.2d 690, 698 (Tex.

App.—Austin 1994, writ denied) and Grimes v. Harris, 695 S.W.2d 648, 651–52 (Tex. App.—

Dallas 1985, orig. proceeding)). In Russell v. Taylor, for example, the plaintiff in the first-filed

action instructed the clerk not to issue citation unless directed to do so. Russell, 49 S.W.2d at

735. A few days later, the defendant in the first action filed suit in another county on the same

issues and claims. Id. Plaintiff number one filed a plea in abatement, and plaintiff number two

filed a sworn controverting affidavit alleging that plaintiff number one did not intend to issue

process and prosecute the suit, but rather filed the first action only to prevent plaintiff number

two from filing the latter suit on the note.       Id.   The Texas Supreme Court held that the

controverting affidavit raised a question of fact that was to be decided exclusively by the judge in

the second suit. Id. at 737–38. Similarly, in Johnson v. Avery the evidence supported allegations

that the party who had first filed suit fraudulently induced opposing counsel to delay filing suit.

414 S.W.2d at 442.

       This Court found inequitable conduct in Grimes v. Harris, where the parties to a divorce

pending in Dallas County did not tell the Dallas Court that the wife was pregnant when they filed

the divorce action, they participated in a later-filed action in Collin County brought by the

prospective adoptive parents of the infant, they failed to inform the Dallas court of the Collin

County action when they sought an order making the wife the managing conservator of the

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infant, and they allowed the Dallas court to issue an order making the wife the infant’s managing

conservator in direct conflict with the Collin County court’s order that was issued 13 days earlier

naming the adoptive parents managing conservators. Grimes, 695 S.W.2d at 652. A week after

the Dallas court signed its divorce decree and conservatorship orders, the adoptive parents filed a

motion to modify the decree in the Dallas suit. Id. The Dallas court first learned of the Collin

County suit and conservatorship order from that filing. Id. On appeal, this Court concluded that

the Collin County court had dominant jurisdiction over the infant even though the Dallas suit

was filed first because the wife engaged in inequitable conduct by sitting in silence and allowing

the Collin County case to proceed and then seeking contradictory relief in the Dallas Court

without informing that court of the Collin County proceedings. Id.

        The Texas Supreme Court recently confirmed that “establishing inequitable conduct

alone is insufficient” because the inequitable-conduct exception is a remedy for the second-filer

“who is delayed—that is, prejudiced—by inequitable conduct. If there is no prejudice and no

allegation of prejudice, then there is no harm to remedy.” In re J.B. Hunt Transp., 492 S.W.3d at

294–95. In J.B. Hunt, however, the real parties never argued that the inequitable conduct caused

them to delay filing suit. Id. Rather, the real parties argued that the relator’s conduct was

“designed to hinder” the real parties’ efforts to file suit. Id.

                                             DISCUSSION

        CTMI argues that the Tarrant County case was filed first, that no exception to the general

rule applies, and, as such, the Dallas court abused its discretion by denying the plea in abatement.

The Fischer parties argue the general rule does not apply because CTMI engaged in inequitable

conduct that prevented the Fischer parties from filing their lawsuit first.       Specifically, the

Fischer parties claim that CTMI indicated it was going to pay the money owed from escrow even

though CTMI knew the money had been pilfered. The Fischer parties insist that CTMI misled

                                                  –6–
them in order to buy time to file the Tarrant County suit in CTMI’s chosen venue and to prevent

the Fischer parties from filing suit first in Dallas.

           We conclude that the record does not support the Fischer parties’ contention that CTMI

engaged in inequitable conduct or that CTMI’s conduct prevented them from filing suit in Dallas

first. The Fischer parties contend that the following alleged conduct was inequitable:

                     CTMI failed to provide complete documentation of the deposits made into the
                      escrow account and the monies received from the Devon and DCP projects2
                      during the course of the four-year appellate process.
                     CTMI failed to provide account statements of the escrow account during the
                      course of the four-year appellate process.
                     On February 24, 2016, after the Supreme Court of Texas issued its mandate,
                      CTMI’s counsel, Andrew Turner, sent an e-mail to the Fischer parties’ counsel in
                      which he stated that he was “gathering the supporting documents for the various
                      Devon/DCP projects” and asked for the Fischer parties’ wiring instructions “to
                      facilitate payment of the escrow funds.”
                     The Fischer parties contend that Turner’s e-mail was a representation that the
                      monies owed Fischer pursuant to the agreement would be forthcoming.

But there is no evidence showing that either Turner or CTMI knew on or before February 24,

2016, that the money had been pilfered and that CTMI’s deposits were gone. The Fischer

parties’ counsel acknowledged he had no evidence that the information and documents produced

by CTMI and Turner before CTMI filed the Tarrant County suit were false or that Turner or

CTMI knew the information was false. It is undisputed that CTMI discovered Holmes’s actions

sometime after Turner sent the February 24, 2016 e-mail. According to CTMI’s new counsel,

once CTMI discovered the money was gone, CTMI worked quickly to confirm that Holmes did

not intend to repay the pilfered funds and then quickly filed suit to protect CTMI’s interests.

CTMI’s conduct before it knew the money had been pilfered cannot be considered inequitable

because there is no indication they had knowledge different from the Fischer parties that could


    2
        These were transactions involving Devon Energy (Devon) and DCP Midstream, L.P., a/k/a Duke Energy (DCP).



                                                                  –7–
be used in an unfair manner.

       The Fischer parties argue it was inequitable for CTMI to file suit before telling the

Fischer parties that Holmes had stolen the money. However, CTMI had the right to protect its

own interests by filing suit after it discovered Holmes’s misconduct. See generally Texas Beef

and Cattle Co. v. Green, 921 S.W.2d 203, 211 (Tex. 1996) (“ ‘ ‘Whatever a man has a legal right

to do, he may do with impunity, regardless of motive, and if in exercising his legal right in a

legal way damage results to another, no cause of action arises against him because of a bad

motive in exercising the right.’ ’ ”) (quoting Montgomery v. Phillips Petroleum Co., 49 S.W.2d

967, 972 (Tex. Civ. App.—Amarillo 1932, writ ref’d) (quoting 1 R.C.L. § 6 at 319)))). CTMI

was not required to give the Fischer parties the Holmes information and then wait to be sued. As

the Texas Supreme Court stated in the J.B. Hunt case:

       And third, the subtext of the Real Parties’ argument is that J.B. Hunt should have
       waited to be sued (perhaps in a forum in which J.B. Hunt would rather not be
       sued), even though J.B. Hunt has a cause of action. That argument essentially
       crowns the Real Parties as the ‘real’ plaintiffs who alone are entitled to select the
       forum of battle. But sorting out winners and losers is the whole point of a trial,
       not a plea in abatement. It would be odd and premature to require a potential
       litigant sit on his hands because his claim, viable though it may be, could be
       countered by an equally viable claim. A potential litigant need not do so.

In re J.B. Hunt Transp., 492 S.W.3d at 297. Moreover, there is no evidence CTMI took any

action to prevent the Fischer parties from discovering the money was gone. The Fischer parties

presented no evidence they were prevented from contacting Holmes directly for payment or

prevented from filing suit as a matter of right when the appellate mandate issued. The Fischer

parties presented no evidence that CTMI withheld the information with the intent to win the race

to the courthouse or to prevent the Fischer parties from filing suit. The only evidence presented

established that CTMI filed suit quickly to protect its own interests after discovering the money

was gone. There is no evidence CTMI stalled the Fischer parties’ efforts to get information from

Holmes or that CTMI avoided the Fischer parties’ calls or demands after they discovered the
                                               –8–
money had been stolen. CTMI discovered what happened and, within days, filed the Tarrant

County suit. CTMI was permitted to do this and was under no obligation to first confer with the

Fischer parties––their potential opponents. See id. Hence, the Dallas court’s finding that CTMI

engaged in inequitable conduct is not supported by the evidence and is contrary to J.B. Hunt.

Nonetheless, even assuming for purposes of this opinion that CTMI’s failure to immediately tell

the Fischer parties of Holmes’s action was inequitable, the evidence does not support a finding

that the conduct prevented or delayed the Fischer parties from filing suit in Dallas before CTMI

could file suit in Tarrant County. As such, that conduct was insufficient as a matter of law to

support denial of the plea in abatement.     See id. (inequitable conduct alone is insufficient to

defeat the first-filed rule).

        The Fischer parties argue they would have filed suit against CTMI earlier had they

known the escrow account balance did not include the amounts CTMI claimed to have deposited

during the course of the appeal. The Fischer parties allege CTMI “knew that the Fischer Parties

had delayed the filing of the lawsuit to collect the monies due to them based upon, inter alia, the

CTMI Parties’ representation made in February 2016 that the settlement funds were

forthcoming.” But the reporter’s record references cited by the Fischer parties do not support

their suggestion that CTMI knew the Fischer parties were delaying filing suit based on Turner’s

February 24, 2016 e-mail. Indeed, according to the reporter’s record of the hearing on the plea in

abatement, CTMI’s new counsel, Robert Myers, states that he truly believed Turner did not

know the money was gone when he sent the February 24, 2016 e-mail:

        MR. MYERS: Yeah. I truly believe he did not know –– (unintelligible).

        THE REPORTER: I’m sorry?

        MR. MYERS: When he wrote the e-mail, I truly believe he did not know.

        THE COURT: But at some CTMI knew, right?

        MR. MYERS: Yes.
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       THE COURT: Because they filed a lawsuit within two weeks.

       MR. MYERS: Yes.

During that same hearing, Myers also indicates that once CTMI discovered the money was gone

and Holmes made clear he would not pay it back, Myers expected the Fischer parties to sue

Holmes but did not expect them to sue CTMI: “I would have fully expected them to sue Mr.

Holmes. I don’t know why it is that they think that they need to sue my clients who have done

everything that they were supposed to do under that agreement.” Myers further states that CTMI

had no choice at that point but to sue Holmes and seek a declaratory judgment that CTMI had

fulfilled its side of the settlement agreement by depositing all monies required into the escrow

account:

       I mean, I don’t know what my clients do other than what they did, which was to
       sue Mr. Holmes and to sue these people for declaratory relief because they read
       the agreement to say we had to pay the money twice. We read it, and I think it’s
       pretty clear, to say that once we had put it into the Holmes trust account our
       obligation is over.

The record simply does not show any intent to delay the Fischer parties from filing suit. On the

contrary, the record shows CTMI’s counsel protected CTMI’s interests by filing suit in Tarrant

County on March 7, 2016, shortly after discovering Holmes’s conduct. There is no evidence

CTMI knew there was a race to the courthouse or that it took any steps to unfairly win such a

race. Rather, CTMI learned of Holmes’ actions and quickly acted to protect its rights and seek

redress from Holmes.

       The J.B. Hunt case is instructive. That case arose from a fatal vehicle accident in which a

J.B. Hunt tractor-trailer struck a disabled vehicle that had entered the tractor-trailer’s lane. In re

J.B. Hunt Transp., 492 S.W.3d at 289. J.B. Hunt sued the occupants in Waller County to recover

property-damage costs. Id. Ten days later, the occupants sued J.B. Hunt in Dallas County to

recover personal-injury damages. Id. J.B. Hunt filed a plea in abatement in the Dallas court,


                                                –10–
arguing that the Waller County court, where suit was first filed, had dominant jurisdiction. Id.

The occupants of the car claimed, and the Dallas court agreed, that exceptions to the first-filed

rule apply and the Dallas court had dominant jurisdiction. There, as here, the real parties in

interest argued the inequitable-conduct exception applied to prevent J.B. Hunt from relying on

the first-filed rule. They argued the following constituted inequitable conduct3:

           1.         J.B. Hunt sent its claims manager to the hospital to express condolences and said
                      “we figure we are liable”;
           2.         The claims manager offered to cover hotel room expenses and said J.B. Hunt had
                      “internal insurance that can handle this”;
           3.         J.B. Hunt’s employees never mentioned a property-damage claim to the Real
                      Parties or their counsel;
           4.         J.B. Hunt’s counsel frequently inquired about the Real Parties’ health, but did not
                      mention a property-damage claim; and
           5.         J.B. Hunt’s counsel sent an email entitled “Williams v. JB Hunt,” implying that
                      J.B. Hunt was defending against a personal-injury claim and not prosecuting its
                      own claim.
Id. at 294–95. Simply put, they contended that J.B. Hunt led them to believe J.B. Hunt did not

intend to sue for property damages and, therefore, the real parties did not have to race to the

courthouse to file their personal injury and wrongful death claims.

           The Texas Supreme Court concluded that those claims, even if considered inequitable,

“fail to satisfy the inequitable-conduct standard” because the evidence did not show that the

alleged conduct caused real parties to delay filing suit. Id. at 295. Although the real parties

emphasized the purported inequity of J.B. Hunt’s conduct, they never complained that J.B.

Hunt’s conduct in fact caused them to delay filing their Dallas County suit. Id. In the Dallas

County trial court, the real parties’ response to J.B. Hunt’s plea in abatement only argued that

“Hunt engaged in deceptive conduct designed to hinder the Plaintiffs from filing its [sic] suit

more promptly.” Id. The court held that establishing inequitable conduct alone was insufficient:


   3
       The court took these assertions as true for purposes of the opinion.



                                                                      –11–
       This is because the inequitable-conduct exception functions as a remedy for a
       second-filer who is delayed—that is, prejudiced—by inequitable conduct. If there
       is no prejudice and no allegation of prejudice, then there is no harm to remedy.
       For that reason alone, assuming J.B. Hunt’s conduct was inequitable, the Real
       Parties fatally failed to allege that the conduct caused their delay, if any, in filing
       suit.

Id.

       CTMI’s alleged conduct, like J.B. Hunt’s post-suit actions, did not cause the Fischer

parties to delay in filing suit. Furthermore, the record includes no evidence that CTMI withheld

the information about Holmes’s actions because CTMI wanted to beat the Fischer parties to the

courthouse. The only evidence of why CTMI filed suit quickly after learning of Holmes’s

actions was that CTMI wanted to protect its interests under the settlement agreement. A desire

to protect one’s own interests is not the same as a desire to harm or hamper another party’s

attempts to protect its interests, nor is it evidence of a desire to circumvent the choice of forum.

See, e.g., Sweezy Const., Inc. v. Murray, 915 S.W.2d 527, 532 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1995,

no writ) (“We believe that the type of misconduct necessary to invoke as an exception to the

general rule of dominant jurisdiction must in some manner involve or circumvent the choice of

forum, and not merely go to the merits of the underlying lawsuit. There is no indication in the

present case that Sweezy made the allegedly false claims specifically in order to obtain venue of

the present lawsuit in Hidalgo County.”).

       The cases relied on by the Fischer parties are distinguishable. In Hiles, the defendant

filed suit in Dallas County after agreeing to venue in Harris County and then evaded service of

the Harris County suit so that he could proceed with the Dallas County suit and delay the Harris

County suit. Hiles, 402 S.W.3d at 829. The Hiles court noted that “Hiles’s actions could be seen

as demonstrating contempt for legal process and a willingness to unfairly manipulate the system

to his advantage.” Id. In the present case, by contrast, there is no evidence CTMI engaged in

such manipulation. Rather, CTMI learned of Holmes’s actions and filed suit to protect its
                                               –12–
interests. In re Pasadena Independent School District, 76 S.W.3d 144, 147–48 (Tex. App.—

Amarillo 2002, no pet.) is also distinguishable because in that case relators failed to file a

complete reporter’s record and, therefore, failed to provide evidence to overcome the deference

given to the trial court’s determination that they had engaged in inequitable conduct. Id. at 147–

48. In re Pasadena does not stand for the proposition that a trial court’s findings must be

afforded complete and total deference, nor has such a case been cited to us. See id. And in this

case, the Dallas County court’s finding of inequitable conduct is contradicted by the evidence

and the law, as explained in In re J.B. Hunt Transport.

       Accordingly, we conditionally grant the relators’ petition for writ of mandamus. A writ

will issue only in the event the trial court fails to vacate its August 26, 2016 order denying the

relators’ plea in abatement and entering an order granting the plea in abatement. We lift the stay

imposed by this Court on September 14, 2016.



161078F.P05

                                                            /Lana Myers/
                                                            LANA MYERS
                                                            JUSTICE




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