in Re Prodigy Services, LLC ( 2014 )


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  • Petition for Writ of Mandamus Conditionally Granted, in Part, and Denied,
    in Part, and Memorandum Opinion filed June 26, 2014.
    In The
    Fourteenth Court of Appeals
    NO. 14-14-00248-CV
    IN RE PRODIGY SERVICES, LLC, Relator
    ORIGINAL PROCEEDING
    WRIT OF MANDAMUS
    234th District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    Trial Court Cause No. 2012-35849
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    On March 28, 2014, relator Prodigy Services, LLC filed a petition for writ of
    mandamus in this Court. See Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 22.221; see also Tex. R.
    App. P. 52. In the petition, relator asks this Court to compel the Honorable Wesley
    Ward, presiding judge of the 234th District Court of Harris County, to (1) dismiss
    the Office of the Attorney General (the “OAG”) from the underlying lawsuit; (2)
    reverse his ruling denying Prodigy’s motion for release of liens, and grant the
    motion; (3) conclude discovery in the case, and deny any discovery sanctions; and
    (4) reverse his ruling denying Prodigy’s motion to disburse settlement funds, and
    grant the motion. We conditionally grant the petition, in part, and deny it, in part.
    I. Background
    Prodigy sued ENI US Operating Company in June 2012 for breach of
    contract. ENI deposed Christopher Spates, a managing member of Prodigy, on
    September 4, 2013. The OAG, on September 5, 2013, filed three child support
    liens against Spates’s interest in the proceeds in Prodigy’s suit against ENI. 1 The
    liens were in the amounts of $4,223.43, $21,463.13, and $53,374.02.
    On October 1, 2013, Prodigy and ENI entered into a mediated settlement
    agreement. ENI agreed to pay $257,500 into the registry of the court on or before
    November 1, 2013 to settle Prodigy’s claims.               Furthermore, pursuant to the
    settlement agreement, Prodigy agreed to “indemnify[y] Defendant from any
    liability for the lien filed against Christopher Spates in this case by the Office of
    [the] Attorney General of the State of Texas.”
    On October 10, 2013, ENI filed a motion to deposit the settlement funds into
    the registry of the court, and the trial court held a hearing on October 28, 2013.
    The OAG appeared at the October 28, 2013 hearing and presented argument that
    the court should disburse the settlement funds to the OAG. Prodigy states that it
    objected to the OAG’s appearance because the OAG was not a party to the suit and
    had not filed a plea in intervention. The trial court overruled Prodigy’s objections
    1
    Each lien names Spates as the obligor and states that the “lien attaches to all non-
    exempt real and/or personal property of the above-named obligor which is located or existing
    within this State/county of filing, including any property specifically described below.” The
    property is described as “Any and All Proceeds in the following: Prodigy Services LLC [v]. ENI
    Operating Co., Inc., Cause No. 201235849[.]”
    2
    and allowed the OAG to present argument. The trial court signed an order granting
    ENI’s motion and ordered that the settlement funds be deposited into the registry
    of the court.
    Prodigy subsequently moved to release the OAG’s liens, and the OAG filed
    a denial and request for a charging order, asking for an order (1) charging Spates’s
    membership interest in Prodigy in the amount of $82,730.64 for payment of child
    support liens; (2) requiring Prodigy to distribute all cash and assets due Spates
    directly to registry of the court until the unsatisfied child support liens have been
    satisfied; and (3) requiring the court clerk to disburse funds from the registry of the
    court to the Texas Child Support Disbursement Unit to satisfy the child support
    liens. The trial court held a hearing on Prodigy’s motion to release the liens and
    the OAG’s request for a charging order on November 18, 2013. The trial court
    orally denied Prodigy’s motion to release the liens at the hearing, but did not sign a
    written order. The trial court did not rule on the OAG’s request for a charging
    order.
    Prodigy moved to disburse the settlement funds from the registry of the
    court, and the trial court heard Prodigy’s motion on December 16, 2013. At the
    hearing, the OAG moved to reopen discovery to allow the OAG to examine
    Prodigy’s business records. The trial court denied Prodigy’s motion to disburse,
    but the trial court granted the OAG’s request to reopen discovery, and the OAG
    served requests for production on Prodigy.2
    2
    Although the Harris County District Clerk’s website shows that the OAG filed a request
    for a charging order, it does not reflect that the OAG filed a “motion to disburse.” The Harris
    County District Clerk’s website indicates that the OAG’s motion to disburse was “Not Granted”
    3
    On January 28, 2014, Prodigy filed a motion for clarification, requesting that
    the trial court specify the reason it denied Prodigy’s motion to disburse the
    settlement funds. During a February 10, 2014 hearing, the trial court stated that it
    would not clarify the order.
    The trial court also heard the OAG’s motion to compel discovery at the
    February 10, 2014 hearing. Prodigy admitted at the hearing that it had not filed a
    written response to the OAG’s discovery requests.              Prodigy explained that it
    objected, in a letter to the trial court dated January 8, 2014, to the trial court’s
    asserted lack of jurisdiction. Prodigy also admitted at the hearing that it had not
    responded to the motion to compel. The trial court stated that it was granting the
    motion to compel and ordered the documents to be produced by February 21, 2014.
    On March 12, 2014, the trial court held a hearing on another motion to
    compel discovery. Prodigy responded to the OAG’s discovery requests by stating
    certain documents were not in Prodigy’s possession, but filed no objections. The
    trial court observed that there were no objections to the requests and stated it was
    ordering Prodigy to produce what was in its “possession, care, custody, or control”
    within seven days.
    A hearing was set for March 31, 2014 on the OAG’s request for a charging
    order and/or motion to disburse. Prodigy filed its petition for writ of mandamus
    and motion to stay in this court. On March 28, 2013, we issued an order staying
    the March 31, 2014 hearing.
    at the December 16, 2013 hearing. All other references by District Clerk’s website are to the
    OAG’s motion to disburse, rather than the request for a charging order.
    4
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    To be entitled to mandamus relief, a relator must demonstrate (1) the trial
    court clearly abused its discretion; and (2) the relator has no adequate remedy by
    appeal. In re Reece, 
    341 S.W.3d 360
    , 364 (Tex. 2011) (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).
    The adequacy of an appellate remedy must be determined by balancing the
    benefits of mandamus review against the detriments. In re Team Rocket, L.P., 
    256 S.W.3d 257
    , 262 (Tex. 2008) (orig. proceeding). Because this balance depends
    heavily on circumstances, it must be guided by analysis of principles rather than
    simple rules that treat cases as categories. In re McAllen Med. Ctr., Inc., 
    275 S.W.3d 458
    , 464 (Tex. 2008) (orig. proceeding).       In evaluating benefits and
    detriments, we consider whether mandamus will preserve important substantive
    and procedural rights from impairment or loss. In re Prudential Ins. Co. of Am.,
    
    148 S.W.3d 124
    , 136 (Tex. 2004) (orig. proceeding). We also consider whether
    mandamus will “allow the appellate courts to give needed and helpful direction to
    the law that would otherwise prove elusive in appeals from final judgments.” 
    Id.
    Finally, we consider whether mandamus will spare the litigants and the public “the
    time and money utterly wasted enduring eventual reversal of improperly conducted
    proceedings.” 
    Id.
    5
    III. ANALYSIS
    A. The OAG’s Intervention
    In its first issue, Prodigy asserts that the trial court abused its discretion by
    allowing the OAG to become a party in the underlying case because the OAG did
    not file a plea in intervention in accordance with Rule 60 of the Texas Rules of
    Civil Procedure. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 60.
    Pursuant to Rule 60, “[a]ny party may intervene by filing a pleading subject
    to being stricken out by the court for sufficient cause on the motion of any party.”
    
    Id.
     The rule authorizes a party with a justiciable interest in a pending suit to
    intervene in the suit as a matter of right. In re Union Carbide Corp., 
    273 S.W.3d 152
    , 154 (Tex. 2008) (orig. proceeding) (per curiam) (citing Guar. Fed. Sav. Bank
    v. Horseshoe Operating Co., 
    793 S.W.2d 652
    , 657 (Tex. 1990)). To constitute a
    justiciable interest, an intervenor’s interest must be such that if the original action
    had never been commenced, and he had first brought it as the sole plaintiff, he
    would have been entitled to recover in his own name to the extent at least of a part
    of the relief sought in the original suit. Id. at 155. An intervenor is not required to
    secure the trial court’s permission to intervene under Rule 60; the party who
    opposes the intervention has the burden to challenge it by a motion to strike. Guar.
    Fed. Sav. Bank, 793 S.W.2d at 657. If any party to the pending suit moves to
    strike the intervention, the intervenors have the burden to show a justiciable
    interest in the pending suit. Union Carbide Corp., 273 S.W.3d at 155. Although
    the trial court has broad discretion in determining whether an intervention should
    be stricken, the trial court abuses its discretion in striking a plea in intervention if
    (1) the intervenor could have brought or defeated recovery on the underlying
    6
    action had it been acting in its own right; (2) the intervention will not complicate
    the case by an excessive multiplication of the issues; and (3) the intervention is
    almost essential to effectively protect the intervenor’s interest. Guar. Fed. Sav.
    Bank, 793 S.W.2d at 657.
    Prodigy contends that the OAG did not file a written plea in intervention or
    show that it had a justiciable interest in the lawsuit between Prodigy and ENI in
    accordance with Rule 60. The OAG filed three child support liens asserting a
    justiciable interest in the underlying suit. Prodigy acknowledges that the trial court
    implicitly ruled that the OAG’s pleadings were sufficient to assert its justiciable
    interest based on the filing of the liens.
    There is nothing in the mandamus record to reflect that Prodigy objected to
    the OAG’s Rule 60 intervention.          According to Prodigy, the OAG made an
    appearance at the October 28, 2013 hearing on ENI’s motion to deposit the
    settlement funds into the registry of the court and presented argument that the trial
    court should disburse the settlement funds to the OAG for payment of Spates’s
    child support arrearages. Prodigy states that it objected to the OAG’s appearance
    at the hearing on the ground that the OAG had not filed a plea in intervention to
    become a proper party, and the trial court overruled its objection.          Prodigy,
    however, informs this court that no court reporter’s record was made of the
    October 28, 2013 hearing. Therefore, there is no record of Prodigy’s objections to
    the OAG’s appearance at the October 28, 2013 hearing.
    Moreover, the mandamus record does not show that Prodigy filed a motion
    to strike the OAG’s intervention or otherwise objected to the OAG’s intervention
    based on lack of a justiciable interest. Therefore, the burden never shifted to the
    7
    OAG to show a justiciable interest. See Union Carbide Corp., 273 S.W.3d at 155;
    Guar. Fed. Sav. Bank, 793 S.W.2d at 657. We overrule Prodigy’s first issue.
    B. Denial of Prodigy’s Motion for Release of Liens
    In its second issue, Prodigy claims that the trial court abused its discretion
    by denying Prodigy’s motion for release of liens. Prodigy contends that the trial
    court lacked jurisdiction to enforce judgments from the 246th, 247th, and 315th
    District Courts.
    There is neither a written order denying Prodigy’s motion to release of liens
    nor a reporter’s record containing an oral ruling by the trial court on Prodigy’s
    motion. See Tex. R. App. P. 52.3(k)(1)(A) (requiring the relator to provide a
    certified or sworn copy of any order complained of ); In re Keen Transp., Inc., No.
    14-10-00075-CV, 
    2010 WL 307965
    , at *1 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Jan.
    28, 2010, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.) (holding that relators did not establish
    entitlement to mandamus relief where they did not include in the mandamus record
    a written order or the portion of the reporter’s record demonstrating an oral ruling).
    Therefore, we conclude that Prodigy has not shown that it is entitled to relief on its
    second issue and overrule it.
    C. Granting of the OAG’s Discovery Requests
    In its third issue, Prodigy raises two arguments regarding discovery. First,
    Prodigy claims the trial court abused its discretion by granting the OAG’s motion
    to reopen discovery because the OAG did not file a plea in intervention and
    therefore is not a party to the case. This is based on the same argument we rejected
    in Prodigy’s first issue. In the absence of the reporter’s record of the October 28,
    8
    2013 hearing, we have no record of Prodigy’s objection to the OAG’s appearance
    at that hearing. Moreover, Prodigy did not file a motion to strike or otherwise
    object that the OAG’s liens were insufficient to constitute a justiciable interest.
    Second, Prodigy asserts that the OAG’s discovery requests seeking
    Prodigy’s financial information are overly broad and unduly burdensome and
    constitute a fishing expedition. Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 193.2(a) requires
    objections to written discovery to be in writing and provide the specific legal or
    factual basis for the objection. Tex. R. Civ. P. 193.2(a). Prodigy admitted at the
    February 10, 2014 and March 12, 2014 hearings that it had not objected to the
    OAG’s discovery requests.        Therefore, Prodigy waived its complaint that the
    OAG’s discovery requests are overly broad and unduly burdensome and constitute
    a fishing expedition. See In re Sand, No. 14-13-00160-CV, 
    2013 WL 1384916
    , at
    *2 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Apr. 4, 2013, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.)
    (holding that relator waived complaints about overbroad discovery because no
    written objections were included in the mandamus record); In re HEB Grocery
    Co., L.P., 
    375 S.W.3d 497
    , 501 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2012, orig.
    proceeding) (holding that relator waived complaint about burdensome discovery by
    failure to object in the trial court, and the failure of the trial court to sustain an
    objection not made could not provide a basis for mandamus relief).3 We overrule
    Prodigy’s third issue.
    3
    Moreover, Prodigy did not include a copy of the OAG’s second motion to compel in the
    mandamus record. See Tex. R. App. P. 52.3(k)(1)(A), 52.7(a)(1).
    9
    D. Denial of Prodigy’s Request for Disbursement of Funds
    In its fourth issue, Prodigy claims that the trial court abused its discretion by
    denying Prodigy’s motion to disburse settlement funds.4 The OAG has applied for
    a charging order and also seeks to have the funds disbursed to it.
    We review what a charging order is and the parameters under which it is
    used. The charging order is the method by which a judgment creditor of a member
    of a limited liability company or assignee reaches the membership interest. 20
    Elizabeth Miller, et al., Texas Practice Series: Business Organizations § 20:20 (3d
    ed. 2013) (citing 
    Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Ann. § 101.112
    ).5 A judgment creditor of a
    4
    Prodigy further argues in connection with this issue that the child support liens are
    improperly attached to the underlying case. However, we rejected Prodigy’s second issue
    complaining of the trial court’s denial of Prodigy’s motion to release the liens because there is
    neither a written order nor a reporter’s record containing the trial court’s oral ruling.
    5
    Section 101.112 of the Texas Business Organization’s Code, entitled “Member’s
    Membership Interest Subject to Charging Order,” provides:
    (a) On application by a judgment creditor of a member of a limited
    liability company or of any other owner of a membership interest in a limited
    liability company, a court having jurisdiction may charge the membership interest
    of the judgment debtor to satisfy the judgment.
    (b) If a court charges a membership interest with payment of a judgment
    as provided by Subsection (a), the judgment creditor has only the right to receive
    any distribution to which the judgment debtor would otherwise be entitled in
    respect of the membership interest.
    (c) A charging order constitutes a lien on the judgment debtor’s
    membership interest. The charging order lien may not be foreclosed on under this
    code or any other law.
    (d) The entry of a charging order is the exclusive remedy by which a
    judgment creditor of a member or of any other owner of a membership interest
    may satisfy a judgment out of the judgment debtor’s membership interest.
    10
    member of a limited liability company may apply to the trial court having
    jurisdiction to “charge the membership interest of the judgment debtor to satisfy
    the judgment.” 
    Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Ann. § 101.112
    (a). The member does not
    have an interest in any specific property of the company. 
    Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Ann. § 101.106
    (b) (West 2012). Therefore, a charging order only provides the
    judgment creditor of the member with the right to receive any distribution to which
    the member would be entitled to receive with respect to the membership interest.
    
    Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Ann. § 101.112
    (b). Although the charging order is a lien on
    the membership interest of the judgment debtor, the judgment creditor may not
    foreclose on it. 
    Id.
     § 101.112(c). Moreover, the judgment creditor of the member
    has no right to possess or exercise legal or equitable remedies with respect to the
    company’s property. Id. § 101.112(f).
    The Dallas Court of Appeals addressed the effect of a charging order in the
    context of a limited liability partnership. See Stanley v. Reef Sec., Inc., 
    314 S.W.3d 659
     (Tex. App.—Dallas 2010, no pet.). The court explained that, under section
    153.256(d), a charging order is the exclusive remedy by which a judgment creditor
    of a partner may satisfy a judgment out of the judgment debtor’s partnership
    interest.   
    Id.
     at 664 (citing 
    Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Ann. § 153.256
    (d)).                     A
    (e) This section may not be construed to deprive a member of a limited
    liability company or any other owner of a membership interest in a limited
    liability company of the benefit of any exemption laws applicable to the
    membership interest of the member or owner.
    (f) A creditor of a member or of any other owner of a membership interest
    does not have the right to obtain possession of, or otherwise exercise legal or
    equitable remedies with respect to, the property of the limited liability company.
    
    Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Ann. § 101.112
     (West 2012).
    11
    partnership interest is not an interest in any specific property. 
    Id.
     (citing 
    Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Ann. § 152.101
    ). Instead, it is the partner’s right to receive his
    distributive share of the profits and surpluses of the partnership. 
    Id.
     A charging
    order entitles that judgment creditor to receive a partner’s share of partnership
    profits. 
    Id.
    Previously, a judgment creditor could disrupt the business of an entire
    partnership by forcing an execution sale of the partner’s interest to satisfy a
    nonpartnership debt. 
    Id.
     The charging order developed as a way to prevent that
    type of interference with the business of the partnership. 
    Id.
     Now, a creditor that
    obtains a charging order against a partner’s interest in a partnership may not
    compel a distribution of profits by the partnership and does not obtain a right to
    participate in the partnership. 
    Id.
     at 664−65. The charging order creates a lien on
    the debtor partner’s distributive share of partnership profits, but does not give the
    creditor the rights of that partner. 
    Id.
     at 665 (citing 
    Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Ann. § 153.256
    (c)). The judgment creditor is also prohibited from foreclosing on the lien.
    
    Id.
     (citing 
    Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Ann. § 153.256
    (c)). Because the debtor partner’s
    interest in the partnership remains intact, the debtor partner has the ability to
    control the timing and amount of distributions, if any, by the partnership. 
    Id.
    However, once a partnership distribution has been made to a partner, it ceases to be
    the partner’s partnership interest, and becomes the partner’s personal property. 
    Id.
    The Stanley court concluded that nothing in the plain language of section
    153.256 precluded a judgment creditor from seeking the turnover of proceeds from
    a partnership distribution after that distribution has been made and is in the debtor
    partner’s possession.     
    Id.
     (citing 
    Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Ann. § 153.256
    ).
    12
    Therefore, the charging order was not the exclusive remedy in the Stanley case.
    See 
    id.
     The Stanley court recognized the exclusivity of the remedy of the charging
    order while also distinguishing between the remedies available to the creditor with
    respect to distributions already made to a debtor. 20 Elizabeth Miller et al., Texas
    Practice Series: Business Organizations § 20:20.
    The narrow issues to be decided in this proceeding are whether the trial court
    abused its discretion by denying Prodigy’s motion to disburse the settlement fund,
    and whether Prodigy has an adequate remedy by appeal. The OAG, although
    recognizing that Texas law does not permit a judgment creditor to foreclose on the
    lien created by a charging order, skips ahead of the necessary first step before any
    proceeds will be distributed to Spates: the distribution of the settlement proceeds to
    the limited liability company, Prodigy. As explained by the court in Stanley, a
    judgment creditor cannot use a charging order to compel a distribution of profits by
    the partnership and does not obtain a right to participate in the partnership. See
    
    314 S.W.3d at
    664−65. Similarly, a judgment cannot use a charging order to
    compel a distribution of proceeds by a limited liability company. See 20 Elizabeth
    Miller et al., Texas Practice Series: Business Organizations § 20:20.
    While the trial court can charge Spates’s membership interest in Prodigy
    pursuant to section 101.112(a), section 101.112(c) expressly prohibits the OAG
    from foreclosing on any future charging order it may obtain. See 
    Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Ann. § 101.112
    (a), (c). Moreover, as Spates’s judgment creditor, the OAG
    “does not have the right to obtain possession of, or otherwise exercise legal or
    equitable remedies with respect to, the property of the limited liability company.”
    See 
    id.
     § 101.112(f). Therefore, the trial court cannot force Prodigy to make
    13
    distributions to its members, and the OAG will have to wait for Prodigy to make
    such distributions before it can attempt to satisfy the child support judgment
    against Spates. See Elizabeth N. Kozlow, A Charging Order Conundrum: Is It
    Really the “Exclusive Remedy” of an LLC Member Judgment Creditor?, 63
    BAYLOR L. REV. 884, 886−87 (2011) (“As the exclusive remedy, a charging order
    may be a ‘rather unsatisfactory remedy for the judgment creditor’ of a member in
    that a ‘judgment creditor with a charging order may be in a position of waiting
    indefinitely for any payments. If an LLC is not making distributions and there is
    no prospect of liquidation in the foreseeable future, a charging order on a
    member’s interest may be of little value to the judgment creditor.’” (quoting 19
    Robert W. Hamilton, Texas Practice Series: Business Organizations § 18.7, at 681
    (2d ed. 2004))). In order for Prodigy to ever make any distributions to Spates, it
    will first have to receive the proceeds.
    At the time Prodigy filed its petition for writ of mandamus, there was no
    order granting the OAG’s request for a charging order or for disbursement of funds
    to the OAG. But for our stay issued on March 28, 2014, the OAG’s request for a
    charging order or disbursement of the settlement proceeds was set to be heard by
    the trial court on March 31, 2014. Prodigy requests that we order the trial court to
    vacate its ruling that denied Prodigy’s motion to disburse the settlement funds to
    itself, and grant Prodigy’s motion. ENI informed this court that it was not going to
    file a response to Prodigy’s petition because it had settled all claims with Prodigy
    and has no position on the issues in Prodigy’s petition, which are centered on the
    disbursement of the settlement funds. Texas law makes clear that the OAG has no
    entitlement to the settlement deposited into funds in the registry of the court by
    14
    ENI. There is no reason for the trial court to refrain from ordering the settlement
    funds disbursed to Prodigy. Consequently, we conclude that the trial court abused
    its discretion by not granting Prodigy’s motion to disburse settlement funds from
    the Prodigy/ENI litigation to Prodigy.
    We next address whether Prodigy has an adequate remedy by appeal. The
    trial court has not ruled on the OAG’s request for a charging order or disbursement
    of the funds. If the trial court orders the disbursement of the settlement proceeds
    directly to the OAG from the registry of the court, Prodigy may not be able to
    recover the funds once they are disbursed to the OAG. Therefore, we conclude
    that Prodigy does not have an adequate remedy by appeal, and sustain Prodigy’s
    fourth issue.
    In sustaining this issue, however, we make no comment on the validity of
    the OAG’s request for a charging order, on which the trial court has yet to issue a
    ruling, and is not otherwise at issue in this mandamus proceeding.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    We hold that the trial court abused its discretion by denying Prodigy’s
    motion to disburse the settlements funds in the court’s registry to Prodigy, and
    Prodigy does not have an adequate remedy by appeal.               Accordingly, we
    conditionally grant the petition for writ of mandamus, in part, and direct the trial
    court to set aside its December 16, 2013 order denying Prodigy’s motion to
    disburse, and enter an order granting the motion. The writ will issue only if the
    15
    trial court does not act in conformity with this opinion. We deny the remainder of
    the petition and lift our stay granted on March 28, 2014.
    /s/    Marc W. Brown
    Justice
    Panel consists of Justices Boyce, Jamison, and Brown.
    16
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 14-14-00248-CV

Filed Date: 6/26/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/22/2015