rainbow-group-ltd-and-alan-sager-v-bonnie-wagoner-morgana-morgan ( 2007 )


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  •       TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
    NO. 03-06-00138-CV
    Rainbow Group, Ltd. and Alan Sager, Appellants
    v.
    Bonnie Wagoner, Morgana Morgan, Debbie Berry, and Debbie Barr Villegas,
    on Behalf of Themselves and Others Similarly Situated, Appellees
    FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 53RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    NO. GN9202221-A, HONORABLE STEPHEN YELENOSKY, JUDGE PRESIDING
    OPINION
    This accelerated appeal arises from a set of orders entered by the trial court relating
    to the certification of a class of hairstylists represented by Bonnie Wagoner, Morgana Morgan,
    Debbie Berry, and Debbie Barr Villegas, appellees, against their former employer, Supercuts, which
    is owned by Rainbow Group, Ltd. and Alan Sager, appellants.1 Specifically, Rainbow Group appeals
    a November 23, 2005 order denying its motion to decertify the class and a December 19, 2005 order
    granting the hairstylists’ motion to amend the class certification. Because the November 23 order
    is not properly subject to an interlocutory appeal and because Rainbow Group failed to timely file
    a notice of appeal in relation to the December 19 order, we are compelled to dismiss this appeal for
    want of jurisdiction. See Tex. R. App. P. 26.1(b).
    1
    We will refer to appellants collectively as “Rainbow Group.”
    PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The instant appeal is the latest progression in nearly fifteen years of litigation between
    the hairstylists and Rainbow Group, which began with the hairstylists’ complaint that Rainbow
    Group committed breach of contract by refusing to pay them when they were at work but “off the
    clock,” i.e., not performing haircuts.
    In 1993, the plaintiffs sought and obtained certification of a class of hairstylists
    formerly employed by Rainbow Group to pursue the breach of contract claim for “off the clock”
    compensation. Following a removal to federal court and a remand to state court, Rainbow Group
    appealed the certification order. This Court affirmed the original certification, holding that the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the breach of contract claims could be
    litigated on a classwide basis. Rainbow Group, Ltd. v. Johnson, 
    990 S.W.2d 351
    , 356, 361
    (Tex. App.—Austin 1999, pet. dism’d w.o.j.) (Rainbow Group I). This opinion, however, predated
    Southwest Refining Co. v. Bernal, 
    22 S.W.3d 425
    (Tex. 2000), and later cases mandating a rigorous
    analysis of class certification before a class is certified.2
    2
    The original certification order stated only that, having considered the record, evidence,
    and arguments before it, the trial court found the requirements of Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 42
    were satisfied. Bernal now requires that a trial court perform a “rigorous analysis” before certifying
    a class to determine whether all prerequisites to certification have been satisfied. Southwest Ref. Co.
    v. Bernal, 
    22 S.W.3d 425
    , 435 (Tex. 2000). One aspect of this change in the law is that
    the requirement that the classwide claims “predominate” over individual claims must be rigorously
    analyzed by the court at the outset of the litigation. The predominance requirement
    must be considered first because it “is one of the most stringent prerequisites to class certification.”
    
    Id. at 433.
    “The predominance requirement is intended to prevent class action litigation when the
    sheer complexity and diversity of the individual issues would overwhelm or confuse a jury or
    severely compromise a party’s ability to present viable claims or defenses.” Ford Motor Co. v.
    Sheldon, 
    113 S.W.3d 839
    , 846 (Tex. App.—Austin 2003, no pet.) (quoting Henry Schein, Inc. v.
    Stromboe, 
    102 S.W.3d 675
    , 690 (Tex. 2002)). “A lawsuit may be certified for class litigation only
    2
    On remand from Rainbow Group I, the trial court ordered that the trial proceedings
    would be bifurcated to first consider the “liability issues common to the class, if any, and the
    individual liability issues and the damages if any of those class members who testify live or by
    deposition,” while the “individual liability issues, if any, and the amount of damages, if any, suffered
    by the non-testifying class members and the amount of attorneys’ fees and costs, if any, to which
    Plaintiffs may be entitled, will be determined in a subsequent proceeding or proceedings.” The
    plaintiffs then filed a second amended petition, which added quantum meruit as an alternative theory
    of recovery. The original class certification order, however, was not amended to add quantum meruit
    as a claim certified for classwide adjudication following the filing of the second amended petition.
    Following a bench trial in May 2000, the trial court issued a judgment awarding
    only individual damages on the basis of quantum merit to thirteen hairstylists (which included the
    four named class representative plaintiffs and nine class members) who appeared and testified at the
    trial.3 Although the judgment is silent regarding the breach of contract claims, the parties do not
    dispute that these thirteen hairstylists did not prevail on their breach of contract claims.4 The
    if it is clear that all elements of plaintiffs’ proposed claims can be tried to a single jury (by both
    plaintiffs and defendants) using evidence and arguments equally applicable to every class member.”
    
    Id. at 850
    (emphasis added) (citing 
    Bernal, 22 S.W.3d at 435-36
    ). If it is not determinable from the
    outset that the individual issues can be considered in a manageable, time-efficient, yet fair manner,
    then certification is not appropriate. 
    Bernal, 22 S.W.3d at 436
    .
    3
    The question of whether individual members of the class who are not joined as plaintiffs
    can have their claims separately adjudicated simply because they appear and testify is not before us.
    4
    After Rainbow Group paid the thirteen hairstylists’ individual quantum meruit damages,
    the thirteen hairstylists signed releases of the judgment liens.
    3
    judgment also recites that “the claims of the remaining class members” were severed and assigned
    a new cause number.5
    Rainbow Group appealed the damages award, and the thirteen hairstylists cross-
    appealed the denial of their breach of contract claims and the amount of post-judgment interest. See
    Rainbow Group, Ltd. v. Johnson, No. 03-00-00559-CV, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 6359, at *1
    (Tex. App.—Austin Aug. 30, 2002, pet. denied) (Rainbow Group II). In that opinion, this Court
    discussed the parties’ dispute as to whether—in light of the second amended petition adding
    quantum merit as a claim for relief in the absence of an amendment to the class certification
    order—the quantum merit claim could be pursued on a classwide basis. 
    Id. at *5-7.
    Under the
    circumstances presented, this Court “failed to see the significance” of the dispute because the trial
    court had not adjudicated any quantum meruit claims on behalf of the class. 
    Id. at *6-7.
    Rather, the
    quantum meruit claims of the thirteen testifying hairstylists had been adjudicated on only an
    individual basis. 
    Id. at *7.
    Accordingly, this Court did “not decide any issues relating to the alleged
    quantum meruit class.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).6
    Ultimately, this Court reformed the judgment to
    5
    Rainbow Group asserts that it has “challenged that severance in the trial court,” but such
    a challenge is not before us in the current appeal.
    6
    We note that in the trial court’s December 19, 2005 order (which is at issue in the current
    appeal), in determining whether common issues prevail as to each of the three quantum meruit
    elements, the court relies on Rainbow Group II for the proposition that this Court found the
    hairstylists’ testimony sufficient to establish each element of quantum meruit and then states “the
    Defendants offer no reason why Plaintiffs could not prove [these elements] in the same class-wide
    manner.” (Emphasis added). No one disputes, however, that no class claims were adjudicated in
    the bench trial that was the subject of Rainbow Group II. See 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 6359, at *7.
    What this Court affirmed in Rainbow Group II was the sufficiency of the individual testimony of
    thirteen hairstylists to support the recovery of individual damages on quantum meruit—the testimony
    did not establish, and this Court did not affirm, any classwide relief. 
    Id. 4 include
    post-judgment interest, reversed and remanded as to attorneys’ fees, and otherwise affirmed
    the damages award. 
    Id. at *1-2,
    *39.
    One month after the issuance of Rainbow Group II, in the severed cause, the
    remaining members of the original class filed a “motion to certify quantum meruit claim as a class
    action.”7 The motion recognized that the 1993 certification was based on a suit “filed as a breach
    of contract action” and that the certification had never been amended to include a quantum meruit
    theory of recovery as alleged in the second amended petition.
    Before the motion to certify was heard or ruled on, the hairstylists filed a third
    amended petition abandoning the breach of contract claims and asserting quantum meruit as the only
    basis for recovery.8 Thus, at this point, the only claim for which a class had been certified was
    effectively nonsuited, and the only remaining claim in the lawsuit had yet to have a class certified
    or to undergo the “rigorous analysis” required for class certification. See 
    Bernal, 22 S.W.3d at 435
    .
    The third amended petition claimed that “Plaintiffs sue on behalf of themselves and a class defined
    7
    The attorneys for the class also sought to have new class representatives named because
    the claims of the original class representatives had been adjudicated on an individual basis in the
    bench trial.
    8
    This amended pleading had the legal effect of nonsuiting the claims for breach of contract.
    J.M. Huber Corp. v. Santa Fe Energy Res., 
    871 S.W.2d 842
    , 844 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    1994, writ denied) (“amended petition also supersedes all prior petitions and operates to dismiss
    parties and causes of action to the extent they are omitted from the amended pleading”) (emphasis
    added); see also Webb v. Jorns, 
    488 S.W.2d 407
    , 409 (Tex. 1972) (amended petition omitting
    defendant “operated as a voluntary dismissal as to that party”).
    5
    as: All Supercuts hairstylists employed at any time between February 21, 1988 and July 16, 1993 at
    a ‘Supercuts’ store operated by Rainbow Group and Alan Sager.”9
    In response, Rainbow Group filed both an opposition to the motion to certify a
    quantum meruit class and an answer to the third amended petition, which included a plea to the
    jurisdiction. Rainbow Group argued that the trial court did not retain jurisdiction over the “severed”
    cause because it was an “empty case”—Rainbow Group asserted that the only claim certified for
    class treatment was breach of contract and, because this claim was no longer part of the lawsuit,10
    no justiciable cause survived on behalf of the class. Rainbow Group also argued that, under Bernal,
    a class action was not the appropriate device for adjudicating the quantum meruit claims and asserted
    various affirmative defenses.
    After conducting a hearing, the trial court granted Rainbow Group’s plea to the
    jurisdiction without ruling on the hairstylists’ motion to certify. The hairstylists appealed, and
    this Court reversed, holding that the bench trial had adjudicated only the individual claims of the
    thirteen hairstylists (four named plaintiffs and nine class members) who had appeared and testified.
    Because no “class claims” had been adjudicated, the trial court retained jurisdiction over the severed
    cause. Wagoner v. Rainbow Group, No. 03-03-00478-CV, 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 6821, at *13-16
    9
    We note that no court had certified this class; the original, certified class was “All
    hairstylists employed by Defendants Rainbow Group Ltd. and Alan Sager at anytime between
    February 21, 1988 and the present.”
    10
    Rainbow Group argued that the contract claims had been adjudicated adversely to the class
    in the bench trial. However, the trial court expressly severed all classwide claims and adjudicated
    only individual claims in the bench trial. Nonetheless, the breach of contract claims on behalf of the
    class were effectively nonsuited by the filing of the third amended petition and were no longer part
    of the lawsuit.
    6
    (Tex. App.—Austin July 29, 2004, pet. denied) (Rainbow Group III).11 As a result, we remanded
    the severed cause for further proceedings on the remaining, non-testifying hairstylists’ claims. 
    Id. On remand,
    Rainbow Group filed a “supplemental opposition” to the motion to certify
    asking the trial court to rule on that motion, which had yet to be decided given the court’s previous
    grant of the plea to the jurisdiction. The trial court declined to rule on that motion, and the case was
    reassigned to the central docket. The hairstylists then filed a motion to amend the original class
    certification order (1) to permit the remaining members of the original class to pursue their quantum
    meruit claims as a Rule 42(b)(4) class action, and (2) to designate Wagoner, Morgan, Berry, and
    Villegas as the new class representatives.
    Rainbow Group again requested a ruling on the original motion to certify, arguing that
    it was unfair to allow the plaintiffs to file and have heard a duplicative motion when the first one was
    still pending. The hairstylists responded that it would be unfair to force the decision to be made on
    11
    Given the current procedural posture of this litigation, it is necessary to further explain our
    statements in Rainbow Group III that the “class quantum meruit claims of the non-testifying
    hairstylists were not adjudicated . . . but rather were severed” and that, “[b]ecause . . . no final
    judgment has been entered on the hairstylists’ class claims, the class certification order may still be
    amended.” 
    Id. at *15-16.
    This language should not be read as expressing the view that a quantum
    meruit class had been certified. Our holding should be understood as recognizing that, following the
    bench trial, the request in plaintiffs’ pleadings for class certification of the quantum meruit claims
    survived for the trial court to consider in the severed cause. At the time of the court’s judgment, the
    breach of contract claims for which a class had been certified had not been abandoned. Thus, there
    existed a certified class, which could have possibly been amended to include additional claims
    should class treatment be warranted. Because the trial court had ruled only on the plea to the
    jurisdiction and not the motion to certify, in Rainbow Group III we noted that the issue of whether
    a class action was the appropriate method to adjudicate quantum meruit claims was not before this
    Court. 
    Id. at *9
    n.3. Also, Rainbow Group’s arguments were considered only in light of their claim
    that the trial court had denied class relief on the breach of contract claim without considering the
    effect of the abandonment of that claim in the third amended petition.
    7
    a record that was two years old. The court denied Rainbow Group’s request, and the case remained
    on the central docket with the hairstylists’ motion to amend the class certification pending.
    Rainbow Group then filed a motion to decertify the class arguing, in part, that because
    the class had only been certified to pursue breach of contract claims, “the class was effectively
    decertified when Plaintiffs filed their Third Amended Petition non-suiting their claim for breach of
    contract.” Rainbow Group asked that an order be entered reflecting this decertification and argued
    that any pleadings asserting a quantum meruit claim on behalf of the remaining hairstylists should
    be struck because this claim was barred by limitations.
    On November 8, 2005, the trial court conducted a hearing on Rainbow Group’s
    motion to decertify and the hairstylists’ motion to amend the certification. On November 23, the trial
    court issued both an order denying Rainbow Group’s motion to decertify the class and a letter
    informing the parties that the court would grant the hairstylists’ motion to amend the class
    certification and directing their counsel to prepare a draft order. On December 19, the trial court
    issued its order granting the motion to amend the class certification. Rainbow Group has sought
    review of both orders. In response, the hairstylists have filed a motion to dismiss urging that this
    Court lacks jurisdiction over the appeal.
    ANALYSIS
    Orders certifying or refusing to certify a class are subject to interlocutory appeal.
    Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(3) (West Supp. 2006). Appeals from interlocutory
    orders are accelerated. Tex. R. App. P. 28.1. A notice of appeal must state the date of the order from
    which appeal is sought. 
    Id. 25.1(d)(2). Rule
    26.1 requires that, “in an accelerated appeal, the notice
    8
    of appeal must be filed within twenty days after the judgment or order is signed.” 
    Id. 26.1.12 This
    deadline may be extended by fifteen days if the appellant files a motion reasonably explaining the
    need for an extension. 
    Id. 26.3; see
    also 
    id. 10.5(b)(2). The
    order denying Rainbow Group’s motion to decertify the class was signed on
    November 23, 2005, and the order granting the hairstylists’ motion to amend the prior class
    certification was signed on December 19, 2005. Rainbow Group filed a notice of appeal on
    December 27, 2005, stating that it was appealing “from the Order signed on November 23, 2005,
    denying Defendant’s Motion to Decertify Class.” Rainbow Group then filed an amended notice of
    appeal on January 25, 2006, stating that its December 27 notice “incorrectly referenced only the
    November 23, 2005 Order. Defendants hereby amend that notice to appeal the Order signed on
    December 19, 2005.” On the same day, January 25, Rainbow Group also filed a second notice of
    appeal, stating that it was “appealing the Order signed on December 19, certifying this case as a class
    action.” We consider whether our appellate jurisdiction was invoked, first in relation to the
    November 23 order, and second in relation to the December 19 order.
    November 23 order
    We lack jurisdiction over an interlocutory appeal of the November 23 order because
    an order denying a motion to decertify a class is not within the scope of the statute authorizing
    interlocutory appeals. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(3) (allowing interlocutory
    appeal of order that certifies or refuses to certify a class action); Bally Total Fitness Corp. v. Jackson,
    12
    All references to “Rules” in this opinion refer to Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    9
    
    53 S.W.3d 352
    , 358 (Tex. 2001) (order refusing to decertify class is not encompassed by section
    51.014(a)(3)). Thus, the November 23 order denying Rainbow Group’s motion to decertify the class
    is not appealable on an interlocutory basis.
    December 19 order
    Rainbow Group contends that its amended notice of appeal and its second notice of
    appeal, both filed January 25, 2006, perfected an appeal of the December 19 order. We disagree.
    Although both of these notices express Rainbow Group’s intent to appeal the December 19 order,
    neither of these notices was timely filed. The deadline for appealing the December 19 order was
    January 9—the first business day following twenty days from the date the order was signed. See
    Tex. R. App. P. 4.1, 26.1. This deadline may be extended if a motion for extension together with
    a notice of appeal is filed within fifteen days of the deadline. 
    Id. 10.5, 26.3.
    Rainbow Group did not
    file a motion for extension. Even had Rainbow Group been granted a 15-day extension, the latest
    date on which a notice of appeal for the December 19 order could have been timely filed was January
    24, 2006. Rainbow Group did not file its amended and second notices of appeal until January 25,
    2006. Thus, Rainbow Group did not file a notice of appeal of the December 19 order within the
    deadline to invoke our appellate jurisdiction of that order. See 
    id. 26.1, 26.3.
    Rainbow Group argues that its January 25 amended notice relates back to its
    December 27 notice, thereby timely perfecting appeal of the December 19 order. However, Rule
    25.1(f) does not permit an amendment to add an entirely different order from which the appeal is
    taken. See 
    id. 25.1(f). 10
                   Rule 25.1(f) permits an amended notice of appeal to “correct[] a defect or omission
    in an earlier filed notice.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    This allows for amendments to correct mistakes
    or accidents, such as inadvertently omitting one of the statements required by Rule 25.1(d), see
    Lefton v. Griffith, 
    136 S.W.3d 271
    , 274 n.1 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2004, no pet.), or correcting
    a typographical error, see City of San Antonio v. Rodriguez, 
    828 S.W.2d 417
    , 418 (Tex. 1992)
    (comparing notices of appeal in two different cases, court contrasted one notice’s typographical error
    in cause number of isolated case, which was amendable defect, with another notice’s citation of
    wrong cause number in case that had multiple cause numbers involving same parties, which was not
    amendable because mistake created confusion as to which judgment party sought to appeal).
    Rule 25.1(f) does not, however, allow an appellant to alter its notice of appeal
    from appealing one interlocutory order to appealing an entirely separate interlocutory order. See
    Tex. R. App. P. 25.1(f); see also 
    id. 2 (appellate
    court has power to suspend operation of rule of
    appellate procedure, but not in manner that would “alter the time for perfecting an appeal in a civil
    case”). We are guided by the analysis of a similar case from our sister court. See Thomas v. Thomas,
    No. 14-02-01286-CV, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 2180 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Mar. 13,
    2003, no pet.). In Thomas, the appellant filed a notice of appeal in November 2002, specifically
    stating that she was appealing a July 18, 2002 order. She later asked the court to let her “appeal[]
    an order signed October 30, 2002, rather than the July 18, 2002, order specified in her notice of
    appeal.” 
    Id. at *2.
    The court held that this was an ineffective notice and did not allow amendment
    under Rule 25.1(f) because
    11
    the notice of appeal filed in this case contains neither a defect nor an omission.
    Appellant specified the order she intended to appeal, however. . . . Appellant now
    asks that we ignore the specific language in her notice of appeal indicating she is
    appealing the July 18th order, and instead, asks that we allow her to appeal a
    completely different order, signed on October 30, 2002, not mentioned in the notice
    of appeal. If the two orders were not separately appealable, appellant could amend
    a notice of appeal. . . . [T]here is no defect or omission in the notice of appeal to be
    amended. No notice of appeal was filed by appellant specifying the intent to appeal
    the October 30th order.
    
    Id. at *3-4.
    Similarly, Rainbow Group’s December 27 notice of appeal expressly specified an intent
    to appeal the November 23 order, giving not just the date of the order but also listing the title of the
    motion that was denied by the order. Further, the December 27 notice contained nothing relevant
    to the December 19 order or the relief granted by that order, which ruled on a separate motion and
    was separately appealable from the November 23 order. Just as the court concluded in Thomas, we
    cannot ignore the specific language in Rainbow Group’s initial notice of appeal indicating that it was
    appealing the November 23 order and instead allow it, by amendment, to appeal a completely
    separate order entered on December 19. See 
    id. Accordingly, Rainbow
    Group cannot now transform its December 27 notice of appeal
    (of the November 23 order) into a timely notice of appeal of the December 19 order because this is
    not the type of amendment that Rule 25.1(f) was designed to accomplish. See Tex. R. App. P.
    25.1(f); see also Crofton v. Amoco Chem. Co., No. 01-01-00526-CV, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 4825,
    at *9-10 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] May 30, 2003, pet. denied) (appellant not permitted
    to amend notice of appeal after deadline passed to add another party to appeal because omission
    was not mere “clerical defect” contemplated by Rule 25.1(f)); Garcia v. Rodriguez,
    No. 08-02-00379-CV, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 4225, *4, *6 (Tex. App.—El Paso May 15, 2003,
    12
    no pet.) (amendment permitted where appellants erroneously cited date of trial rather than date
    judgment signed; noting that this defect was not type that would cause confusion on appeal as to
    which order was being challenged on appeal).
    Rainbow Group also argues that its appellate deadline was extended by filing a
    request for findings of fact and conclusions of law on January 9. However, the supreme court has
    unequivocally held that postjudgment motions do not extend the appellate deadline for filing an
    accelerated appeal. In re K.A.F., 
    160 S.W.3d 923
    , 924 (Tex. 2005). Specifically, the court held
    that in an accelerated appeal, absent a rule 26.3 [15-day extension] motion, the
    deadline for filing a notice of appeal is strictly set at twenty days after the judgment
    is signed, with no exceptions, and filing a rule 26.1(a) motion for new trial, motion
    to modify the judgment, motion to reinstate, or request for findings of fact and
    conclusions of law will not extend that deadline. Allowing such post-order motions
    to automatically delay the appellate deadline is simply inconsistent with the idea of
    accelerating the appeal in the first place.
    
    Id. at 927
    (emphasis added). Because the supreme court expressly included all postjudgment
    motions in its holding, we are not persuaded by Rainbow Group’s attempt to distinguish In re K.A.F.
    on the basis that it involved a motion to modify and motion for new trial rather than a request for
    findings and conclusions. See 
    id. Finally, Rainbow
    Group argues that we should apply the rules liberally to compensate
    for the unfair confusion created by the trial court’s procedures—namely, that on November 23, in
    addition to signing the order denying the motion to decertify, the trial court also sent a letter directing
    the plaintiffs’ counsel to draft an order granting the motion to amend (which was subsequently
    signed on December 19). Rainbow Group claims that its appeal should not be dismissed because
    13
    it made a bona fide attempt to timely appeal the December 19 order, but was confused as a result of
    the trial court’s letter. See generally Grand Prairie Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Southern Parts Imps., Inc.,
    
    813 S.W.2d 499
    , 500 (Tex. 1991) (amendment permissible to correct defect if appellant timely filed
    document in bona fide attempt to invoke appellate jurisdiction). Whatever impressions Rainbow
    Group drew from the trial court’s letter, however, Rainbow Group had both of the trial court’s orders
    in hand at the time it filed its initial notice of appeal on December 27, and that notice of appeal
    referenced only the November 23 order. Considering these circumstances and the prohibition in
    Rule 2 against suspending appellate rules to permit an alteration of the time for perfecting civil
    appeals, we are unable to accord Rainbow Group’s requested leeway. See Tex. R. App. P. 2.13
    13
    In addition to arguing that the December 19 order was not timely appealed, the hairstylists
    contend that, like the November 23 order, the December 19 order purporting to amend the class
    certification is not within the scope of the interlocutory appeals statute because it neither certifies
    nor refuses to certify a class. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(3) (West Supp.
    2006). Although we do not reach this alternative argument because the timeliness issue is
    dispositive of our jurisdiction over the December 19 order, we note that when this “amendment” was
    made to the class certification, there was no certified class to amend. The previously certified class
    for the breach of contract claims had ceased to exist when the breach of contract claims were
    nonsuited. See Summit Office Park, Inc. v. United States Steel Corp., 
    639 F.2d 1278
    , 1281, 1284-85
    (5th Cir. 1981) (affirming district court’s refusal to permit amended pleading where “the cause of
    action and original named plaintiff had been dismissed and [] no named plaintiff or certified class
    member remained with any further stake in the outcome of the litigation” because “[a] pleading
    which abandons the original plaintiff and class and asserts new claims upon which the original
    plaintiff and class could not recover has the characteristics of a new lawsuit rather than an amended
    complaint”). We express no opinion as to whether the December 19 order can be characterized as
    “certifying or refusing to certify” a class for the purposes of section 51.014 when it purports to
    amend a nonexistent class and relies on features of the nonexistent class to support the analysis
    required by Bernal and its progeny.
    14
    CONCLUSION
    Because the November 23 order denying Rainbow Group’s motion to decertify
    the class is not subject to an interlocutory appeal and because Rainbow Group failed
    to timely appeal the December 19 order, we grant the hairstylists’ motion and dismiss this appeal
    for want of jurisdiction. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(3); Tex. R. App. P.
    26.1(b), 26.3, 42.3(a).
    W. Kenneth Law, Chief Justice
    Before Chief Justice Law, Justices Patterson and Puryear
    Dismissed for Want of Jurisdiction
    Filed: March 1, 2007
    15