in Re CVR Energy, INC. and CVR Refining, LP ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                ACCEPTED
    01-15-00715-CV
    FIRST COURT OF APPEALS
    HOUSTON, TEXAS
    10/9/2015 8:32:15 PM
    CHRISTOPHER PRINE
    CLERK
    No. 01-15-00715-CV
    FILED IN
    1st COURT OF APPEALS
    In the Court of Appeals            HOUSTON, TEXAS
    For The First District of Texas   10/9/2015 8:32:15 PM
    CHRISTOPHER A. PRINE
    Clerk
    In re:
    CVR Energy, Inc. and CVR Refining, LP,
    Relators
    Original Proceeding from the 268th Judicial District Court
    Fort Bend County, Texas, Hon. Brady G. Elliott presiding
    Tr. Ct. No. 2015-DCV-220330
    REAL PARTY IN INTERESTS’ RESPONSE TO
    PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS
    David M. Medina, SBN: 00000088
    5300 Memorial Dr, Ste 890
    Houston, TX 77007
    Timothy A. Hootman, SBN 09965450
    2402 Pease St
    Houston, TX 77003
    Gary M. Riebschlager, SBN 16902200
    801 Congress, Ste 250
    Houston, TX 77002
    Richard L. Tate, SBN 19664460
    206 South 2nd St
    Richmond, TX 77469
    ATTORNEYS FOR REAL PARTIES IN
    INTEREST, DONALD R. COLLIER, JENNIFER
    J. COLLIER, DALE A. NIEMEYER, AND
    WENDY NIEMEYER
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    TABLE OF CONTENTS .......................................................................... 2
    INDEX OF AUTHORITIES ..................................................................... 4
    STATEMENT OF FACTS ........................................................................ 6
    a.      Introduction to the statement of facts. ................... 6
    b.      The corporate structure and the
    “Services Agreement” placing the
    negligent acts in Texas. ................................................ 7
    c.      The corporate officers; their location;
    and their testimony. ................................................... 11
    d.      The related case currently pending in
    Fort Bend County. ....................................................... 13
    e.      The trial court’s consideration of the
    record and its ruling................................................... 13
    SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT ................................................................ 16
    ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES ......................................................... 17
    a.      Introduction. ................................................................ 17
    b.      The applicable standards of review. ....................... 19
    i.      The mandamus standard of review in
    general. .................................................................. 19
    ii.     The mandamus standard of review as
    applied to a trial court’s ruling on a
    forum non conveniens motion to
    dismiss under section 71.051(b) of the
    Civil Practice & Remedies Code. ........................... 20
    c.      The law of forum non conveniens. .......................... 21
    d.      Discussion. ................................................................... 23
    Factor 1—alternate forum. ........................................... 24
    Factor 2—adequacy of alternate forum. ...................... 25
    Factor 3—substantial injustice. .................................... 26
    Factor 4—jurisdiction over all defendants. .................. 28
    2
    Factor 5—private/public interests. .............................. 29
    Factor 6–proliferation of litigation. ............................ 32
    e.       Conclusion. .................................................................. 34
    PRAYER ............................................................................................. 35
    CERTIFICATE OF WORD COUNT ....................................................... 35
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE ................................................................ 36
    RULE 52.3(J) CERTIFICATION .......................................................... 36
    3
    INDEX OF AUTHORITIES
    Texas Cases:
    Enterprise Prod. Partners v. Mitchell, 
    340 S.W.3d 476
    , 479-80 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2011, pet. dism’d by agr.)…………….. 25
    Flaiz v. Moore, 
    359 S.W.2d 872
    , 875 (Tex. 1962)…………………………. 32
    Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert, 
    330 U.S. 501
    (1947)……………………………… 29
    Gurvich v. Tyree, 
    694 S.W.2d 39
    (Tex. App.—Corus Christi 1985, no
    writ)……………………………………………………………………………….. 32
    Hill v. Perel, 
    923 S.W.2d 636
    (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1995, no
    pet.)………………………………………………………………………………… 25
    In re BPZ Res., Inc., 
    359 S.W.3d 866
    (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    2012)(orig. proceeding)…………………………………………. 28, 30, 33
    In re Cerberus Capital Mgmt., L.P., 
    164 S.W.3d 379
    (Tex. 2005)
    (orig. proceeding) (per curiam)………………………………………….. 19
    In re Ensco Offshore Int’l Co., 
    311 S.W.3d 921
    (Tex. 2010)……… 23, 33
    In re Gen. Elec. Co., 
    271 S.W.3d 681
    (Tex. 2008)…………………………. 23
    In re Mantle Oil & Gas, LLC, 
    426 S.W.3d 182
    (Tex. App.—Houston
    [1st Dist.] 2012) (orig. proceeding)…………………………….. passim
    In re McAllen Med. Ctr., Inc., 
    275 S.W.3d 458
    (Tex. 2008) (orig.
    proceeding)……………………………………………………………………… 19
    In re Omega Protein, Inc., 
    288 S.W.3d 17
    (Tex. App.—Houston [1st
    Dist.] 2009) (orig. proceeding)…………………………………… passim
    In re Pirelli Tire, L.L.C., 
    247 S.W.3d 670
    (Tex. 2007) (orig.
    proceeding)………………………………………………………………… 20, 21
    In re Reece, 
    341 S.W.3d 360
    (Tex. 2011) (orig. proceeding)…………… 19
    In re Smith Barney, Inc., 
    975 S.W.2d 593
    (Tex. 1998)…………………. 21
    In re Team Rocket, L.P., 
    256 S.W.3d 257
    (Tex. 2008) (org.
    proceeding)……………………………………………………………………… 19
    Owens Corning v. Carter, 
    997 S.W.2d 560
    (Tex. 1999)………………… 22
    Seung Ok Lee v. Ki Pong Na, 
    198 S.W.3d 492
    (Tex. App.—Dallas
    2006, no pet.)………………………………………………………………….. 20
    4
    Tullis v. Georgia-Pacific Corp., 
    45 S.W.3d 118
    (Tex. App.—Fort
    Worth 2000, no pet.)…………………………………………………………22
    Young Refining Corp. v. Pennzoil Co., 
    46 S.W.3d 380
    , 385 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2001, pet. denied)……………………… 26
    Statutes:
    K.S.A. § 60-258a………………………………………………………………………. 26
    K.S.A. § 60-513a(4)…………………………………………………………………… 26
    P.I.K 4th § 171.02……………………………………………………………………… 26
    TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 71.051…………………………………… passim
    TEX. R. EVID. 202………………………………………………………………………. 32
    5
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    a.       Introduction to the statement of
    facts.
    Donald and Jennifer Collier are married and live in
    Independence, Kansas (App. Tab 4, p. 1). Dale and Wendy Niemeyer
    are married and live in South Coffeyville, Oklahoma (id.). Donald
    and Dale were severely injured while working at an oil refinery in
    Coffeyville, Kansas when a pump leak caused a major explosion (id.,
    p. 3).1 The negligence and gross negligence leading to the explosion
    took place in Sugar Land, Texas (id., p. 4-5).               Moreover, key
    documentary and testimonial evidence bearing on the acts of
    negligence and gross negligence are also located in Sugar Land,
    Texas, and therefore, the Colliers and Niemeyers filed suit in Fort
    Bend County as the most logical forum to pursue their personal injury
    claims against the responsible parties.
    Relators’ assertion in its petition for writ of mandamus that
    “virtually all material witnesses and evidence regarding the accident
    are located in Kansas” in support of its claim that the trial court
    1 According to the defendants’ General Counsel Edmund S. Gross, “the
    accident occurred when [a] pump[] within the refinery experienced a shaft
    seal failure which caused the release of volatile vapor which ignited.” (App.,
    Tab 7, Exh. 1, p. 2).
    6
    abused its discretion in keeping the case in Texas is not supported by
    the record. (See Issue Presented in Pet. for Mand. at x.). What is
    supported by the record, and was therefore the factual basis of Judge
    Elliott’s ruling in denying Relators’ forum non conveniens motion to
    dismiss, is the following.
    b.    The corporate structure and the
    “Services Agreement” placing the
    negligent acts in Texas.
    CVR Energy, Inc., CVR Refining, LP, and CVR Refining GP,
    LLP, signed a document entitled “Service Agreement” that is key to
    the allegations of negligence in this case and in particular resolution
    of the forum non conveniens issue (App. Tab 11). In the Service
    Agreement, CVR Refining GP, LLP and CVR Refining, LP agree that
    CVR Energy, Inc. will make the intellectual operational decisions
    regarding the plant that exploded in Kansas along with the
    intellectual operational decisions regarding five other plants—that is,
    CVR Energy, Inc. decides how and when the plant that exploded will
    be operated and maintained (Id.). The Service Agreement provides
    that the intellectual operational decisions to be made by CVR Energy,
    Inc. include:
    7
    • Services in capacities equivalent to the capacities of
    corporate executive officers.
    • Safety and environmental advice.
    • Administrative and professional services, including legal,
    accounting, human resources, insurance, tax, credit, finance,
    government affairs, and regulatory affairs.
    • Manage the Service Recipients’ day-to-day business and
    operations, including managing its liquidity and capital
    resources and compliance with applicable law.
    • Recommend capital raising activities, the entry into credit
    facilities or other credit arrangements, structured financings
    or changes, or other modifications in the capital structure,
    including repurchases.
    • Recommend or, if approval is not required, engage third
    party service providers, including accountants, lawyers or
    experts.
    • Manage the Service Recipients’ property and assets in the
    ordinary course of business.
    • Manage or oversee litigation, administrative or regulatory
    proceedings, investigations or any other reviews of the
    Services Recipients’ business or operations that may arise in
    the ordinary course of business or otherwise.
    • Establish and maintain appropriate insurance policies.
    • Recommend payment of dividends and distribution of equity
    interests.
    • Attend to calculation and payment of taxes, and filing of tax
    returns.
    • Manage or provide advice or recommendations for other
    projects (App. Tab 11).
    CVR Energy, Inc. is a Delaware corporation with its principal
    executive offices in Sugar Land, Texas, which is where the intellectual
    operational decisions that led to the explosion of the plant in Kansas
    8
    were made. (App. Tab 4, p. 2). CVR Energy, Inc. is engaged in
    petroleum refining and nitrogen fertilizing manufacturing through its
    limited partnerships, which include CVR Refining, LP and CVR
    Partners, LP (App. Tab 9, Exh. A & F). CVR Refining, LP is a
    Delaware limited partnership also located in Sugar Land, Texas,
    formed by CVR Energy, Inc. (Id. at Exh. B & F). CVR Refining GP,
    LLP is the general partner of CVR Refining, LP (App. Tab 11, p. 1). 2
    One of the plants is operated under the name of CVR Refining, LLC,
    which is distinct from CVR Refining, LP.
    The Coffeyville oil refinery that exploded is owned by Coffeyville
    Resources Refining Marketing, LLC, which is a Kansas business entity
    (called “Coffeyville Resources”) (App. 7, Exh. 1, p. 1).      Coffeyville
    Resources is a subsidiary of CVR Energy, Inc. In that regard, Relators
    state on page 2 of their memorandum in support of the motion to
    dismiss that “CRV Energy, Inc. owns the General Partnership and
    66% of the Limited Partner units of CVR Refining, LP” and that
    Coffeyville Resources “is a wholly-owned subsidiary of CVR Refining,
    2  “[CVR Refining GP, LLC] is the owner, directly or indirectly, of CVR
    Refining, LLC, Wynnewood Refining Company, LLC, Coffeyville Resources
    Refining & Marketing, LLC, Coffeyville Resources Crude Transportation,
    LLC, Coffeyville Resources Terminal, LLC and Coffeyville Resources
    Pipeline, LLC” (App. Tab 1, p. 1).
    9
    LP (App. 7, p. 2). Pursuant to the Service Agreement, CVR Energy,
    Inc. makes the intellectual operational decisions for the Coffeyville
    Resources plant that exploded from its office in Sugar Land, Texas.
    There are at least five witnesses located in Sugar Land that will testify
    and produce documents about the decisions made under the Services
    Agreement leading to the explosion (App. 9, p 8-9 & Exh. H & I).
    The corporate structure is graphed as follows:
    CVR Energy, Inc.
    (Del Corp headquartered in TX; makes management, maintenance
    & operational decisions; owns 66% of CVR Refining, LP)
    ↓
    CVR Refining GP, LLP
    (General Partner of CVR Refining, LP which is owned by CVR
    Energy, Inc.; signed Service Agreement allowing CVR Energy, Inc.
    to operate plants)
    ↓
    CVR Refining, LP
    (Located in Sugarland, Texas; owned by CVR Energy, Inc. which
    owns the 6 plants; signed Service Agreement allowing CVR
    Energy, Inc. to operate plants)
    ↓
    Six LLCs Holding Six Plants thru CVR Refining, LLC
    1.    Coffeyville Resources Refining & Marketing, LLC (plant at
    issue; “wholly-owned subsidiary of CVR Refining, LP)
    2.    Coffeyville Resources Crude Transportation, LLC
    3.    Coffeyville Resources Terminal, LLC
    4.    Coffeyville Resources Pipeline, LLC
    5.    Wynnewood Refining Company, LLC
    6.    Wynnewood Energy Company, LLC
    10
    c.   The corporate officers; their
    location; and their testimony.
    Robert Haugen is “Executive Vice President of Refining
    Operations” for Coffeyville Resources, CVR Energy, Inc., and CVR
    Refining, LP—Mr. Haugen’s office is in Sugar Land and he resides in
    Houston (App. Tab 9, Exh. H, p. 6). Mr. Haugen testified that he is
    “responsible for day-to-day operations and maintenance personnel”
    and that the environmental, capital-project, and pipeline operations
    groups of the companies report to him (id at pp. 9, 10-15).
    Jay Finks is a non-decision making employee of CVR Energy,
    Inc. with a fancy, but misleading title called “Director of Investor
    Relations” who has his office in Kansas and has the duty of paying
    bills when instructed to do so by the decision makers from CVR
    Energy, Inc. and CVR Refining, LP in Texas (App. Tab 9, Exh. I, pp.
    6-24).
    The affidavit of Edmund S. Gross was attached to Relators’
    memorandum in support of the motion to dismiss, and states as
    follows:
    I, Edmund S. Gross, served as the General Counsel
    to CVR Energy, Inc., CVR Refining, LP, and
    Coffeyville Resources … for a number of years prior
    to my retirement on December 31, 2014. I have
    personal knowledge of the facts and information
    11
    provided below, and I am competent to testify
    concerning these matters. The accident which
    injured Donald R. Collier and Dale A. Niemeyer
    occurred while they worked at the refinery of
    Coffeyville Resources …, all in Coffeyville, Kansas,
    on July 28, 2014. Two other [Coffeyville Resources]
    employees were also injured, one fatally, in the
    accident. All employees or their families received
    workers’ compensation benefits for the injuries and
    losses sustained. The accident occurred when one
    of [Coffeyville Resources’] pumps within the
    refinery, P-2217, experienced a shaft seal failure
    which caused the release of a volatile vapor which
    ignited. The investigation of the pump failure was
    undertaken at the refinery in Coffeyville, Kansas
    and at a shop located in Lee’s Summit, Missouri.
    The pump, which is estimated to weigh 1,000
    pounds is stored in Coffeyville, Kansas.         All
    witnesses to the accident were either [Coffeyville
    Resources] employees who were at work at the time,
    or medical or emergency personnel from the
    Coffeyville, Kansas area who arrived soon
    thereafter. I believe that the majority of the
    physicians, healthcare providers and hospitals that
    initially cared for Mr. Collier and Mr. Niemeyer are
    either in Kansas or in the adjacent areas of Tulsa,
    Oklahoma. CVR Energy, Inc. is registered to do
    business and doing business in the State of Kansas.
    CVR Energy, Inc. is amenable to process in the State
    of Kansas through its resident agent, The
    Corporation Company, Inc., 
    112 S.W. 7th
    Street, Suite
    3C, Topeka, Kansas 66603. CVR Refining, LP is
    registered to do business and doing business in the
    State of Kansas. CVR Refining, LP is amenable to
    service within the State of Kansas through its
    resident agent, Corporate Service Company, 
    200 S.W. 30th
    Street, Topeka, Kansas 66611. (App. 7,
    Exh. 1) (numbering of paragraphs removed).
    12
    d.   The related case currently pending
    in Fort Bend County.
    Another plant owned by Relators and located in Oklahoma also
    exploded which is within 100 miles of the plant in this case. That case
    is currently pending in cause number 13-DCV-209679, in the 434th
    Judicial District of Fort Bend County, Texas and is currently set for
    trial. (App. 9, pp. 3, 6). Relators have never complained that that
    proceeding is inconvenient and extensive discovery, including
    depositions in Oklahoma has occurred.         (Id.).   The trial court
    specifically asked about this other pending case at the hearing on the
    motion to dismiss. (App. 2, pp. 29-30).
    e.   The trial court’s consideration of
    the record and its ruling.
    It is clear from the reporter’s record of the hearing on the
    motion to dismiss that the trial court considered all of the
    circumstances and the factors required by section 71.051(b) of the
    Civil Practice & Remedies Code regarding a forum non conveniens
    motion to dismiss, including the problems associated with taking
    testimony by deposition or trial and the applicability of Kansas law.
    (App. 2, pp. 9-13).     The trial court specifically considered the
    contested factual issues as the following portion of the record
    exemplifies:
    13
    The Court:   First, tell me what the involvement of the Sugar Land
    corporations were in the Kansas refinery that makes
    them more than just an administrative operation.
    What will you be able to show me in evidence that
    shows they had direct operating control over that
    Kansas refinery?
    Mr. Tate:    … [T]he heart of this case is going to be decisions
    made right here in Sugar Land, Texas not to spend
    the money that was allocated in the budget under a
    management of change forum to make the specific
    improvement on this hydrogen separator that would
    have prevented this accident. Now, I’m going to
    come back to that in a minute; but he also –
    The Court:   Well, let’s talk about that a little.
    Mr. Tate:    Okay.
    The Court:   And I perceived in the pleadings that there was –
    there’s issues involving the management direction of
    the Kansas refinery.
    Mr. Tate:    Right.
    The Court:   In listening to what you just said, there’s certainly a
    difference between budget and application of that
    budget.
    Mr. Tate:    Right.
    The Court:   The negligence would have to fall in that gray area in
    between and the degree of control exercised by the
    Sugar Land company over the Kansas refinery.
    Mr. Tate:    Exactly, Your Honor. And Exhibit –
    The Court:   And I think – and I’m sure you perceive where I’m
    going. If that is going to be the primary issue, then
    that may drive a decision here; or it may drive a
    decision to Kansas, because, “Okay. We need to do
    this”; and the Kansas operators’ not doing it is
    entirely two different things.
    Mr. Tate:    Well, the Kansas operators can’t do it until Sugar
    Land tells them to. Exhibit F, Your Honor, to our – to
    our response is an excerpt from Form 10-Q for CVR
    14
    Refining, Inc.; and it discusses in very small print the
    shared services agreement and the responsibilities
    that CVR Energy and CVR Refining undertake under
    the management services agreement to provide daily
    day-to-day operations and supervision of the
    operations of their – of the Coffeyville refinery and
    the Wynnewood refinery which incidentally is the
    subject of the lawsuit down in Judge Shoemaker’s
    court.
    The Court:    “Operational” I perceive to be, “I’m the guy on the
    ground; I’m the guy who tells the guy to turn it off.”
    Mr. Tate:     Yes.
    The Court:    Administrative may differentiate in saying, “This is
    our rules and regulations. You have to follow them.”
    There’s a gap there.
    Mr. Tate:     No.
    The Court:    And that is an important gap because that determines
    in my mind whether this should be a Kansas case or
    this should be a Texas case. (App. 2, pp. 18-22).
    The trial court proceeds to ask a series of questions further
    developing this same line of conversation. (App. 2, pp. 22-24).
    At the close of the hearing, the trial court denied the motion to
    dismiss. (App. 2, p. 33).
    15
    SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT
    This Court’s opinions in In re Mantle Oil & Gas, LLC, and In re
    Omega Protein instruct that a key focus of forum non conveniens
    analysis is on whether the alleged negligence of a defendant took
    place in Texas or another state. When the negligence occurred within
    a corporate office located in Texas, the private and public interests of
    § 71.051(b)(5) weigh heavily in favor of keeping the case in Texas.
    Relators argue that “virtually all witnesses and evidence
    surrounding the cause of the fire, the events occurring during and
    after the fire, and damages are located in Kansas and Oklahoma,
    outside subpoena range of the Fort Bend County, Texas trial court.”
    However, the fact that a fire and the resulting injuries occurred is not
    contested; everyone agrees that this happened.       Rather, the only
    contested issue is whether the decisions regarding the plant that took
    place in Relators’ Sugar Land offices were negligent and proximately
    caused the explosion and injuries to the Colliers and the Niemeyers.
    Because the trial court focused precisely on this point in denying the
    motion to dismiss—as required by In re Mantle Oil & Gas, LLC, and
    In re Omega Protein—there was no abuse of discretion and
    mandamus relief should be denied.
    16
    ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES
    a.   Introduction.
    Relators argue that mandamus relief is in order because the
    trial court abused its discretion in denying their forum non
    conveniens motion to dismiss under section 71.051(b) of the Civil
    Practice & Remedies Code. In this regard, Relators claim (1) Kansas
    is a more appropriate and convenient forum for the parties, (App. 7,
    pp. 4-8), and (2) Kansas law applies and therefore Kansas courts are
    better positioned than Texas courts to adjudicate the controversy.
    (App. 7, pp. 9-11). Relators’ sum up their entire argument by stating:
    In litigation between Kansas parties over an
    accident that occurred in Kansas related to an
    employment relationship in Kansas, for which
    Kansas law will apply, a petition filed in Fort Bend
    County, Texas has little, if any, relationship to the
    cause of action. (App. 7, p. 12).
    This entire argument hangs on the misleading factual assertion that
    “virtually all witnesses and evidence surrounding the cause of the fire,
    the events occurring during and after the fire, and damages are
    located in Kansas and Oklahoma, outside subpoena range of the Fort
    Bend County, Texas trial court.” (See Issue Presented in Pet. for
    Mand. at x.).
    17
    The events during and after the fire and damages are not the
    contested facts in this case. Everyone agrees that a fire occurred and
    that serious damages to the Colliers and Niemeyers resulted from that
    occurrence.   What is contested is whether the managerial and
    operational decisions made in Sugar Land, Texas pursuant to the
    Service Agreement were the proximate cause of the fire and damages
    that took place in Kansas.     All of the witnesses and documents
    bearing on those decisions are located in Sugar Land, Texas. As the
    trial court said: “And that is an important gap because that
    determines in my mind whether this should be a Kansas case or this
    should be a Texas case” (App. 2, pp. 18-22). Therefore the trial court
    was well within its discretion in denying the motion to dismiss on the
    grounds that Texas has a public interest in adjudicating negligence
    occurring on Texas soil and the Colliers and the Niemeyers have a
    private interest in litigating the only contested issue in the forum
    where the witnesses and documents as to that issue are located.
    It is worth noting at the outset that the most relevant authority
    for this Court’s determination of this case is In re Mantle Oil & Gas,
    LLC, 
    426 S.W.3d 182
    (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2012) (orig.
    18
    proceeding). Another key case is In re Omega Protein, Inc., 
    288 S.W.3d 17
    (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2009) (orig. proceeding).
    b.    The applicable standards of review.
    i.    The mandamus          standard     of
    review in general.
    Mandamus is appropriate when the relator demonstrates that
    (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); In re Mantle Oil & 
    Gas, 426 S.W.3d at 187
    .
    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) (org.
    proceeding). Because this balance depends heavily on circumstances,
    it is 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
    19
    detriments, an appellate court considers whether mandamus will
    preserve    important   substantive    and   procedural   rights   from
    impairment or loss. In re 
    Prudential, 148 S.W.3d at 136
    . A reviewing
    court should 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, a
    reviewing court should consider whether mandamus will
    spare the litigants and the public “the time and money utterly wasted
    enduring eventual reversal of improperly conducted proceedings.”
    
    Id. ii. The
    mandamus standard of
    review as applied to a trial court’s
    ruling on a forum non conveniens
    motion to dismiss under section
    71.051(b) of the Civil Practice &
    Remedies Code.
    A trial court’s ruling on a forum non conveniens motion to
    dismiss is reviewed for a clear abuse of discretion. In re Pirelli Tire,
    L.L.C., 
    247 S.W.3d 670
    , 676 (Tex. 2007) (orig. proceeding) (abuse of
    discretion where trial court denied forum non conveniens motion to
    dismiss); Seung Ok Lee v. Ki Pong Na, 
    198 S.W.3d 492
    , 495 (Tex.
    App.—Dallas 2006, no pet.) (abuse of discretion where trial court
    granted forum non conveniens motion to dismiss); In re Mantle Oil
    20
    & 
    Gas, 426 S.W.3d at 187
    . An order denying a motion to dismiss
    based on forum non conveniens may be reviewed in a mandamus
    proceeding. In re Pirelli 
    Tire, 247 S.W.3d at 679
    ; In re Mantle Oil &
    
    Gas, 426 S.W.3d at 198
    .
    c.       The law of forum non conveniens.
    The forum non conveniens doctrine applies when a dispute
    turns on a claim arising in another state (or country) and the parties
    are before a court which, under the general jurisdictional statutes, has
    the power to determine the type of controversy involved.                The
    principle of forum non conveniens is that, given these assumptions,
    the court nevertheless, in the exercise of sound judicial discretion,
    may resist the imposition of such litigation on its jurisdiction. 3 In a
    personal injury case, a defendant may assert a forum non conveniens
    motion to dismiss pursuant to section 71.051 of the Civil Practice &
    Remedies Code.       TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 71.051(i) (“This
    section applies to actions for personal injury or wrongful death.”); see
    also In re Mantle Oil & 
    Gas, 426 S.W.3d at 187
    -88. The relevant part
    3 See In re Smith Barney, Inc., 
    975 S.W.2d 593
    (Tex. 1998) (The rule
    of forum non conveniens does not prohibit a court from entertaining a case
    it ought to hear, but rather, it protects courts from being compelled to hear
    cases when doing so would be fundamentally unfair to defendants, the
    public, or both.)
    21
    of section 71.051 for purposes of this mandamus proceeding is
    subsection (b), which states 4:
    If a court of this state, on written motion of a party,
    finds that in the interest of and for the convenience
    of the parties a claim or action to which this section
    applies would be more properly heard in a forum
    outside this state, the court shall decline to exercise
    jurisdiction under the doctrine of forum non
    conveniens and shall stay or dismiss the claim or
    action. In determining whether to grant a motion
    to stay or dismiss an action under the doctrine of
    forum non conveniens, the court shall consider
    whether:
    (1) an alternative forum exists in which the
    claim or action may be tried;
    (2) the alternate forum provides an adequate
    remedy;
    (3) maintenance of the claim or action in the
    courts of this state would work a substantial
    injustice to the moving party;
    (4) the alternative forum, as a result of the
    submission of the parties or otherwise, can
    exercise jurisdiction over all the defendants
    properly joined to the plaintiff’s claim;
    (5) the balance of the private interests of the
    parties and the public interest of the state
    predominate in favor of the claim or action
    being brought in an alternative forum, which
    shall include consideration of the extent to
    which an injury or death resulted from acts
    or omissions that occurred in this state; and
    4  Subsection (b) does not apply to Texas residents. 
    Id. at §
    71.051(e);
    Owens Corning v. Carter, 
    997 S.W.2d 560
    (Tex. 1999); Tullis v. Georgia-
    Pacific Corp., 
    45 S.W.3d 118
    (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2000, no pet.). Here,
    the Colliers and Niemeyers are residents of Kansas and Oklahoma, and
    therefore, subsection (b) applies.
    22
    (6) the stay or dismissal would not result in
    unreasonable duplication or proliferation of
    litigation. 5
    Regarding section 71.051(b), this Court stated in In re Mantle
    Oil & Gas the following:
    The doctrine of forum non conveniens has always
    afforded great deference to the plaintiff’s choice of
    forum. However, the doctrine generally affords
    substantially less deference to a nonresident’s forum
    choice.      The forum non conveniens doctrine
    recognizes that the plaintiff’s choice must sometimes
    yield in the public interest, and in that interest of
    fundamental fairness. Dismissal on forum non
    conveniens grounds is appropriate when sufficient
    contacts between the defendant and the forum state
    exist so as to confer personal jurisdiction, but the
    case itself has no significant connection to the forum
    
    state. 426 S.W.3d at 187-88
    (citations and quotation marks omitted).
    d.       Discussion.
    Resolution of this mandamus proceeding turns on Relators’
    assertion that “virtually all witnesses and evidence surrounding the
    cause of the fire, the events occurring during and after the fire, and
    damages are located in Kansas and Oklahoma, outside the subpoena
    5 TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 71.051(b); see generally In re Gen.
    Elec. Co., 
    271 S.W.3d 681
    (Tex. 2008) (discussing how section 71.05(b) has
    been amended and no longer places the burden of proof on a particular
    party in regard to the factors enumerated in the statute.); see also In re
    Ensco Offshore Int’l Co., 
    311 S.W.3d 921
    , 927 (Tex. 2010); In re Mantle Oil
    & 
    Gas, 426 S.W.3d at 188
    (“The statute also does not contain any language
    placing the burden of proof on a particular party[.]”).
    23
    range of the Fort Bend County, Texas trial court.”             (See Issue
    Presented in Pet. for Mand. at x.). This assertion is misleading in that
    it misses the point of what is contested in this case. It is not contested
    that a disastrous fire resulting in severe injuries to the Colliers and
    the Niemeyers took place in Kansas. The fire and the injuries are a
    given. What is contested is whether the intellectual decisions as to
    how the plant should be maintained and operated that occurred in an
    office in Sugar Land, Texas, were negligence, gross negligence, or the
    proximate cause of the explosion, fire, and resulting personal injuries.
    All of the witnesses and supporting documentary evidence as to this
    issue are located in Sugar Land, Texas. In this regard, Relators state
    on page 29 of their petition for writ of mandamus that, “Plaintiffs
    clearly hope to develop a theory that Relators’ corporate decisions
    somehow affected the pump seal leak.”
    With this in mind, a discussion of the six factors listed in
    section 71.051(b) as applied to the facts in this case are in order.
    Factor 1. An alternative forum exists in which the claim
    or action may be tried. TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM.
    CODE § 71.051(b)(1).
    “An alternate forum is one in which the defendant is amenable
    to process.” In re Mantle Oil & 
    Gas, 426 S.W.3d at 189
    . Here,
    24
    Relators are amenable to process in Kansas, and therefore, Kansas is
    an alternative forum where this case could be tried if it is not tried in
    Texas.
    Factor 2. The alternate forum provides an adequate
    remedy. 
    Id. at §
    71.051(b)(2).
    “An alternate forum is inadequate if the remedies that it offers
    are so unsatisfactory that they comprise no remedy at all.” In re
    Mantle Oil & 
    Gas, 426 S.W.3d at 189
    . Before an alternate forum
    analysis is even required in this case this Court must first conclude
    that Kansas law applies in the first place.
    Texas law applies here according to the conflict of laws’ “most
    significant relationship test” because the place where the conduct
    causing the injury occurred is Sugarland, Texas. See Enterprise Prod.
    Partners v. Mitchell, 
    340 S.W.3d 476
    , 479-80 (Tex. App.—Houston
    [1st Dist.] 2011, pet. dism’d by agr.).6 Moreover, the negligence laws
    6  It is also plausible that under the “most significant relationship test”
    that Texas law regarding liability applies and that Kansas law regarding
    remedies applies because the test requires consideration of “the place
    where the injury occurred” (which is Texas) and “the place where the
    conduct causing the injury occurred” (which is Kansas). 
    Id. at 480.
    However, even this scenario has been specifically address by the First
    Court of Appeals with the conclusion that “[q]uestions of substantive law
    are controlled by the laws of the state where the cause of action arose, but
    matters of remedy and procedure are governed by the laws of the state
    where the action is sought to be maintained.” Hill v. Perel, 
    923 S.W.2d 636
    , 639 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1995, no pet.).
    25
    of Kansas and Texas are so similar that there is in fact no conflict of
    laws problem present, and therefore, there is no need to even engage
    in a conflict of laws analysis. Young Refining Corp. v. Pennzoil Co.,
    
    46 S.W.3d 380
    , 385 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2001, pet.
    denied).   For example, Kansas law, like Texas law, provides for
    comparative negligence, K.S.A. § 60-258a, a two-year limitations
    period for personal injury claims, K.S.A. § 60-513a(4), and economic
    damages flowing from bodily injury. P.I.K 4th § 171.02.
    Assuming this Court were to get past the above problems and
    conclude that Kansas law applies to this case, then Kansas would be
    an alternative forum that could provide an adequate remedy if this
    case is not litigated and tried in Texas and this Court were to conclude
    that Kansas law applies.
    Factor 3. Maintenance of the claim or action in the courts
    of this state would work a substantial injustice
    to the moving party. 
    Id. at §
    71.051(b)(3).
    When evaluating the “substantial injustice” factor, “the trial
    court considers, among other things, the location of relevant
    documents, and evidence and whether a majority of witnesses may be
    reached    by   compulsory   process    in   Texas,   which   are   also
    considerations under the fifth factor—the balance of private
    26
    interests.” In re Mantle Oil & 
    Gas, 426 S.W.3d at 192
    . In this regard,
    the mere “presence of a corporate headquarters is an insufficient
    basis for keeping a nonresident’s suit in Texas when all of the other
    factors favor another forum.” In re Omega 
    Protein, 288 S.W.3d at 23
    .
    It is quite another thing, however, when the negligence at issue
    took place at the corporate headquarters, and the key witnesses and
    documents bearing on that negligence are at that location.        For
    example, in In re Mantle Oil & Gas, the decisive fact as to the most
    convenient forum was the negligence in installation of a blowout
    preventer in Louisiana because there was no allegation of negligence
    originating at the defendants company base in 
    Texas. 426 S.W.3d at 195
    (“This case involves a Texas limited liability company based in
    Friendswood, Texas, and the Alcee plaintiffs allege that Mantle Oil
    committed, in Texas, negligent acts in operating the Well, leading to
    the blowout. Thus, we assume, without deciding, that this litigation
    does have at least some relation to the citizens of Galveston County.
    However, Mantle Oil contends that the proximate cause of the Alcee
    plaintiffs’ alleged injuries is the blowout preventer that apparently
    27
    failed and that was installed by Cajun Well, a Louisiana contractor.”)
    (citation omitted).
    In short, a “court shall consider the extent to which the injury
    resulted from acts or omissions that occurred in Texas.” In re Mantle
    Oil & 
    Gas, 426 S.W.3d at 194
    (citing In re 
    Ensco, 311 S.W.3d at 926
    and In re BPZ Res., Inc., 
    359 S.W.3d 866
    , 875 (Tex. App.—Houston
    [14th Dist.] 2012) (orig. proceeding). Here, the only contested issue is
    whether the acts and omissions within the Sugar Land, Texas office
    resulted in the explosion in Kansas. And this is exactly what the trial
    court focused on in making its ruling as clearly exemplified by its
    comments during the hearing on the motion to dismiss: “And that is
    an important gap because that determines in my mind whether this
    should be a Kansas case or this should be a Texas case” (App. 2, pp.
    18-22).
    Factor 4. The alternative forum, as a result of the
    submission of the parties or otherwise, can
    exercise jurisdiction over all the defendants
    properly joined to the plaintiff’s claim. 
    Id. at §
                 71.051(b)(4).
    “The fourth factor is whether the alternate forum can exercise
    jurisdiction over all the defendants.” In re Mantle Oil & 
    Gas, 426 S.W.3d at 194
    . Kansas, just as Texas, could exercise jurisdiction over
    28
    all the defendants properly joined to the Colliers’ and Niemeyers’
    cases.
    Factor 5. The balance of the private interests of the parties
    and the public interest of the state predominate
    in favor of the claim or action being brought in
    an alternative forum, which shall include
    consideration of the extent to which an injury or
    death resulted from acts or omissions that
    occurred in this state. 
    Id. at §
    71.051(b)(5).
    The private/public interests balancing required by factor 5 is a
    codification of forum non conveniens factors the United States
    Supreme Court applied in Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert, 
    330 U.S. 501
    , 508
    (1947). See In re Omega 
    Protein, 288 S.W.3d at 23
    . In this regard,
    this Court has stated:
    Gulf Oil instructs courts to consider the following
    private interests of the parties: the relative ease
    of access to sources of proof; the availability of
    compulsory process for attendance of unwilling
    witnesses, and the cost of obtaining willing
    witnesses; the possibility to view the premises, if
    viewing would be appropriate to the action; the
    enforceability of a judgment if one is obtained; and
    all other practical problems that make trial of a case
    easy, expeditious, and inexpensive. Gulf Oil also
    requires courts to consider the following public
    interests: administrative difficulties caused by
    litigation not handled at its origin; jury duty
    imposed upon people of a community that has not
    relation to the litigation; local interest in having
    localized controversies decided at home; and
    appropriateness of having a trial in a diversity case
    in a forum that is familiar with the state law that
    29
    must govern the case, rather than having a court in
    another forum untangle problems in conflict of law
    and law that is foreign.
    
    Id. (emphasis added).
    In conducting this private/public balance a
    “court shall consider the extent to which the injury resulted from acts
    or omissions that occurred in Texas.” In re Mantle Oil & 
    Gas, 426 S.W.3d at 194
    (citing In re 
    Ensco, 311 S.W.3d at 926
    and In re BPZ
    
    Res., 359 S.W.3d at 875
    ).
    The only contested issue is whether there was negligence within
    the Sugar Land office—that is, the extent to which the injuries in
    Kansas resulted from the acts or omissions that occurred in the Sugar
    Land Office. With this in mind, the private interests of the Colliers
    and the Niemeyers are that (1) there is an ease of access to the sources
    of proof in the Fort Bend County court because the evidence as to the
    negligence is located in Sugar Land; (2) compulsory process for
    attendance of unwilling witnesses, and the cost of obtaining willing
    witnesses is easier in the Fort Bend County court, again, because the
    relevant witnesses are in Sugar Land; (3) there is no reasonably
    likelihood that the chemical plant needs to be viewed because the
    negligence in Sugar Land is at issue, not the negligence at the plant;
    (4) the enforceability of a judgment if one is obtained is just as easily
    30
    enforced via a Texas judgment as via a Kansas judgment; and (5)
    given the only contested issue, all other practical problems indicate
    that the case can most easily, expeditiously, and inexpensively be
    tried in Fort Bend County, Texas. See In re Omega 
    Protein, 288 S.W.3d at 23
    .
    As for the public interests, (1) administrative difficulties that
    might arise are those associated with proof related to the negligence
    in Texas—again, there is no dispute as to what happened in Kansas,
    and so the case turns exclusively on establishing what happened in
    the Sugar Land offices; (2) jury duty would be imposed upon people
    of a community where the negligence took place, and therefore, the
    Fort Bend County citizens would be directly passing on the actions of
    residents from their own community and not on the actions of
    residents of an out-of-state community; (3) there is an important
    local interest in having a Fort Bend County jury pass on negligence
    originating in their own backyard, those acts and omissions being a
    localized controversy that should be decided at home; and (4) the
    issue of a Texas judge determining Kansas law in this case is a non-
    issue for the reasons discussed under Factor 2 above and because (i)
    the applicable Kansas and Texas negligence laws are so similar that
    31
    there is no concern of difficulty of interpretation for the Texas court, 7
    (ii) judges are required to take judicial notice of the laws of other
    states, TEX. R. EVID. 202, and (iii) judges are specialized in
    determining questions of law the law.
    Factor 6. The stay or dismissal would not result in
    unreasonable duplication or proliferation of
    litigation. 
    Id. at §
    71.051(b)(6).
    “The final factor that the trial court must consider is whether
    the      dismissal   would   result   in   unreasonable   duplication    or
    proliferation of litigation.” In re Mantle Oil & 
    Gas, 426 S.W.3d at 197
    . A dismissal would not result in unreasonable duplication or
    proliferation of litigation, because once the case is resolved in Texas
    or Kansas the dispute will not be required to be litigated elsewhere.
    e.       Conclusion.
    This Court’s opinions in In re Mantle Oil & Gas and In re
    Omega Protein instruct that when a defendant company is located in
    Texas but a damaging event occurs in another state a key aspect of the
    inquiry is where the negligence occurred. Relators’ directing of the
    7 Flaiz v. Moore, 
    359 S.W.2d 872
    , 875 (Tex. 1962) (a court should only
    “refuse to hear a suit when the foreign law is so dissimilar to this laws of
    this state as to be difficult or incapable of enforcement here”); Gurvich v.
    Tyree, 
    694 S.W.2d 39
    , 46 (Tex. App.—Corus Christi 1985, no writ) (“there
    is no proof that the laws of Louisiana and Texas differ or that the law of
    Texas could not be applied effectively in Louisiana”).
    32
    issue onto the fact of an explosion and resulting injuries is akin to
    saying that the earth is round. The roundness of the earth is no
    longer contested, just as the fact that an explosion which resulted in
    injuries to the Colliers and the Niemeyers is not contested. What is
    contested is whether the acts and omissions of Relators in Sugar
    Land, Texas caused the explosion and resulting injuries. All of those
    witnesses and documents bearing on this question are located in
    Texas. The trial court was attuned to the significance of this point
    and its relevance to the forum non conveniens issue as is obvious
    from its comments: “And that is an important gap because that
    determines in my mind whether this should be a Kansas case or this
    should be a Texas case” (App. 2, pp. 18-22). Now, Relators would
    have this Court conclude that the trial court abused its discretion even
    though its analytical focus was on the very factors that this Court has
    said in In re Mantle Oil & Gas and In re Omega Protein are the most
    relevant when confronted with a factual scenario like the one in this
    case; namely, on whether “the injury resulted from acts or omissions
    that occurred in Texas.” In re Mantle Oil & 
    Gas, 426 S.W.3d at 194
    (citing In re 
    Ensco, 311 S.W.3d at 926
    and In re BPZ 
    Res., 359 S.W.3d at 875
    ).
    33
    PRAYER
    Accordingly,   Real-Parties-in-Interest,   Donald      R.   Collier,
    Jennifer J. Collier, Dale A. Niemeyer, and Wendy Niemeyer, request
    that the Court deny the application for writ of mandamus.
    Respectfully submitted,
    /s/Timothy A. Hootman
    Timothy Hootman,
    SBN 09965450
    2402 Pease St
    Houston, TX 77003
    713.247.9548; 713.583.9523 (f)
    Email: thootman2000@yahoo.com
    /s/ David M. Medina
    David M. Medina SBN 00000088
    davidmedina@justicedavidmedina.com
    THE MEDINA LAW FIRM
    5300 Memorial Dr., Ste. 890
    Houston, TX 77007
    /s/Gary M. Riebschlager
    Gary M. Riebschlager
    SBN 16902200
    Email: gary@riebschlagerlaw.com
    GARY M. RIEBSCHLAGER LAW FIRM,
    PC
    801 Congress, Ste 250
    Houston, TX 77002
    281.904.1404
    /s/Richard L. Tate
    Richard L. Tate
    SBN 19664460
    Email: rltate@tate-law.com
    TATE, MOERER & KING, LLP
    206 South 2nd St
    34
    Richmond, TX 77469
    281.341.0077
    ATTORNEYS FOR REAL PARTIES IN
    INTEREST, DONALD R. COLLIER,
    JENNIFER J. COLLIER, DALE A.
    NIEMEYER, AND WENDY NIEMEYER
    CERTIFICATE OF WORD COUNT
    I hereby certify that, in accordance with Rule 9.4 of the Texas
    Rules of Appellate Procedure, that the number of words contained in
    this document are 6,372 according to the computer program used to
    prepare this document.
    Dated: October 9, 2014.
    /s/Timothy A. Hootman_____
    Timothy A. Hootman
    35
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I hereby certify that, in accordance with Rule 9.5 of the Texas
    Rules of Appellate Procedure, I have served the forgoing document
    upon the following attorneys by personal mail, by commercial
    delivery service, or by electronic service:
    Phillip D. Sharp
    MARTIN, DISIERE, JEFFERSON & WISDOM, L.L.P.
    808 TRAVIS, 20TH F.
    Houston, TX 77002
    Lee M. Smithyman
    SMITHYMAN & ZAKOURA, CHARTERED
    750 West 110th St
    Overland Park, Kansas 66210-2362
    Dated: October 9, 2014
    /s/Timothy A. Hootman
    Timothy A. Hootman
    RULE 52.3(J) CERTIFICATION
    I certify that I have reviewed this response and have concluded
    that every factual statement in the response is supported by
    competent evidence included in the appendix of documents attached
    hereto.
    Dated: October 9, 2014.
    /s/Timothy A. Hootman_____
    Timothy A. Hootman
    36