Toby Paul Couchman and Pro-Surv v. Elizabeth Cardona ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                            ACCEPTED
    01-14-01000-CV
    FIRST COURT OF APPEALS
    HOUSTON, TEXAS
    5/8/2015 3:36:08 PM
    CHRISTOPHER PRINE
    CLERK
    No. 01-14-01000-CV
    In The                          FILED IN
    1st COURT OF APPEALS
    COURT OF APPEALS                    HOUSTON, TEXAS
    5/8/2015 3:36:08 PM
    FIRST DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    CHRISTOPHER A. PRINE
    Houston, Texas                        Clerk
    TOBY PAUL COUCHMAN AND PRO-SURV,
    Appellants,
    vs.
    ELIZABETH CARDONA,
    Appellee
    On Appeal from Case No. 2014-29414
    In the 189th District Court of Harris County, Texas
    Honorable William R. Burke, Presiding Judge
    APPELLEE’S BRIEF
    Robert L. Collins
    Texas Bar No. 04618100
    Audrey E. Guthrie
    Texas Bar. No. 24083116
    P.O. Box 7726
    Houston, Texas 77270-7726
    (713) 467-8884
    (713) 467-8883 Facsimile
    HoustonLaw2@aol.com
    Christopher D. Lewis
    Texas Bar No. 24032546
    1721 West TC Jester Blvd.
    Houston, Texas 77008
    Lewis@TexLaw.info
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE,
    ELIZABETH CARDONA
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    Page
    TABLE OF CONTENTS ...................................................................................... i
    TABLE OF AUTHORITIES ............................................................................. iii
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE ............................................................................1
    STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT .........................................2
    ISSUES PRESENTED .........................................................................................2
    1.      Whether Appellants, without appealing or otherwise
    challenging the dismissal in the previously filed case,
    may attack that dismissal in the currently filed case.
    2.      Whether a court is required to dismiss Tex. Civ. Prac. &
    Rem. Code §150 claims with prejudice despite statutory
    language specifically authorizing a choice between
    dismissals with and without prejudice.
    3.      Whether the trial court properly held Plaintiffs’ affidavit
    met the requirements of Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code
    §150.
    4.      Whether breach of contract claims are required to comply
    with the requirements of Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code
    §150 despite not being based on professional conduct as
    required by Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem Code §150.
    STATEMENT OF FACTS ..................................................................................3
    SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT ..................................................................4
    ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES ..................................................................5
    A.       Appellants are indirectly challenging the dismissal in a
    different and prior case and stating it should have been made
    with prejudice. However, Appellants did not appeal or
    i
    otherwise challenge the dismissal of that prior case without
    prejudice and do not have a legal basis for attacking the
    dismissal of a prior case in the currently filed case ............................5
    B.      Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §150.002(e) specifically grants
    trial courts the discretion to choose between dismissal with or
    without prejudice. Due to this, an interpretation that §150.002(e)
    requires dismissal with prejudice is erroneous and renders
    statutory language superfluous .................................................................6
    C.      The trial court properly held Plaintiffs’ affidavit met the
    requirements of Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §150. Breach
    of contract claims are not required to comply with the
    requirements of §150...................................................................................9
    CONCLUSION AND PRAYER ....................................................................... 13
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE ................................................................ 14
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE ......................................................................... 15
    ii
    TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
    Cases                                                                                                                               Page
    Bruington Eng'g, Ltd. v. Pedernal Energy, L.L.C., 2014 Tex. App.
    LEXIS 9493 (Tex. App. San Antonio Aug. 27, 2014) ........................................... 8
    Bruington Eng'g, L.T.D. v. Pedernal Energy, L.L.C., 
    403 S.W.3d 523
    (Tex. App. San Antonio 2013) ................................................................................ 8
    City of San Antonio v. City of Boerne, 
    111 S.W.3d 22
    (Tex. 2003).............................................................................................................................7
    Criterium-Farrell Eng’rs v. Owens, 
    248 S.W.3d 395
    (Tex. App. – Beaumont
    2008, no pet.) .........................................................................................................................8
    Dunham Eng'g, Inc. v. Sherwin-Williams Co., 
    404 S.W.3d 785
         (Tex. App.-Houston [14th Dist.] 2013, no pet.) .................................................9
    Garza v. Carmona., 
    390 S.W.3d 391
          (Tex.App.–Corpus Christi 2002) ..............................................................................9
    Howe-Baker Eng'rs, Ltd. v. Enter. Prods. Operating, LLC,
    
    2011 WL 1660715
    (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] Apr. 29, 2011,
    no pet.) ...................................................................................................................................9
    Medina v. Hatch Assocs. Consultants, Inc., 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 3044
    (Tex.App.–Corpus Christi March 20, 2014) ............................................................9
    Siemens Energy, Inc. v. Nat'l Union Fire Ins. Co, 2014 Tex. App.
    LEXIS 5923, (Tex.App.–Houston [14th Dist.] June 3, 2014) ........................... 10, 12
    Spence v. Fenchler, 
    180 S.W. 597
    (Tex. 1915) ..................................................................7
    TDIndustries Inc. v. Rivera, 
    339 S.W.3d 749
         (Tex.App.–Houston [1st Dist.] 2011) ................................................................12
    Statutes
    Tex. Civ. Prac. Rem. Code §150.002 ............................................ i, ii, 1-10, 12, 13
    iii
    Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. §311.016 ............................................................................. 7
    Rules
    Rule 9.4, Tex. R. App. P. ...................................................................................... 14
    Rule 162, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure ............................................................ 10
    iv
    TO THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS:
    Appellee Elizabeth Cardona timely submits her brief in this appeal pursuant
    to this Court's Order of April 9, 2015.
    Statement of the Case
    This appeal is from an Order denying Appellants’ Motion to Dismiss in Cause No.
    2014-29414. Prior to the filing of the case from which Appellants now appeal, the Hon.
    William R. Burke granted Plaintiffs’ unopposed Motion to enter an Order in Cause No.
    2014-12614 that severed all Plaintiffs’ claims in that case against Toby Paul Couchman
    and Pro-Surv, now Appellants herein, and dismissed all such claims “without prejudice to
    the re-filing thereof.” Appellant’s Brief, Appendix 3. Defendants in that case –
    Appellants here – filed no appeal of that Order, nor did they file any motion to reconsider
    the Order in favor of one dismissing the claims with prejudice, and at that time they did
    not request that the court enter an Order dismissing the case with prejudice. The time for
    amending the Order, or appealing it, has long ago lapsed. The dismissal of the claims
    against Appellants in that case was without prejudice to later re-filing claims against the
    parties that are now Appellants in this case.
    After the dismissal without prejudice of the earlier claims in Cause No. 2014-
    12614, Plaintiff/Appellee filed a new case bearing Cause No. 2014-29414 together with a
    “Certificate of Merit” affidavit meeting the requirements of Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code
    §150.002,. CR 40-42. Appellants then sought dismissal with prejudice of this case,
    1
    Cause No. 2014-29414, claiming that Plaintiff had not complied with Tex. Civ. Prac. &
    Rem. Code §150.002(a). CR 47-53. The trial court heard the matter and held Plaintiff’s
    affidavit met the Certificate of Merit requirement, found that it was filed
    contemporaneously with the first-filed petition in Cause No. 2014-29414, and denied
    Appellants’ Motion to Dismiss. CR 138.
    Statement Regarding Oral Argument
    Because the record is clear that the trial court properly applied the law in denying
    Appellants’ Motion to Dismiss, Appellee believes that oral argument is unnecessary for
    this Court to decide this appeal, unless oral argument is granted to Appellants, in which
    event Appellee requests oral argument.
    Issues Presented
    ISSUES PRESENTED
    1.     Whether Appellants, without appealing or otherwise
    challenging the dismissal without prejudice in the
    previously filed case, Cause No. 2014-12614, may attack
    that dismissal in the currently filed case, Cause No. 2014-
    29414.
    2.     Whether a court is required to dismiss Tex. Civ. Prac. &
    Rem. Code §150 claims with prejudice despite statutory
    language specifically granting a choice to the trial court
    between ordering such a dismissal to be with or without
    prejudice.
    3.     Whether the trial court properly exercised it’s discretion
    and authority in holding that Plaintiff’s Certificate of
    Merit met the requirements of Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.
    Code §150.
    2
    Statement of Facts
    Appellee, Cardona, filed her petition in Cause No. 2014-12614, based on Pro-
    Surv providing to Appellee a land survey which was substantively incorrect, and upon
    which Appellee relied to her damage. CR 25. Appellant filed a Motion to Dismiss for
    lack of a Certificate of Merit. CR 93-98. After which, Appellee nonsuited her claims
    against ProSurv and the trial court dismissed the claims without prejudice pursuant to the
    nonsuit. Tab 3 of Appellants’ Brief.
    Cardona later filed an Original Petition in Cause No. 2014-29414, this time
    contemporaneously filing a Certificate of Merit that sets forth Appellants’ specific
    errors and omissions made basis of Appellee’s claims. CR 40. The Certificate of
    Merit was an affidavit of a registered land surveyor that identified, among other
    things, that one of two errors had been made: 1) that the surveyor failed to exercise
    reasonable control over his stamp, thereby creating a false survey and Pro-Surv
    acted recklessly in sending a false survey for reliance and use by Appellee or 2)
    that the surveyor initially stated an incorrect opinion that the property did not lie in
    a flood zone and then attempted to later hide the error by issuing a contrary survey.
    CR40-41.
    Appellants then filed a Motion to Dismiss the current action stating that 1)
    the petition in Cause No. 2014-12614 was the only first-filed petition relevant to
    Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §150, so Cardona cannot file a later lawsuit despite
    3
    the dismissal without prejudice of the earlier case and 2) that the Certificate of
    Merit filed by Cardona did not satisfy the requirements of Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.
    Code §150. CR 47-53. The trial court denied the motion to dismiss and held that
    Cardona’s Original Petition in the second-filed suit, Cause No. 29414, was the
    first-filed petition in this case pursuant to Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §150 and
    that the Certificate of Merit filed in this case satisfied the requirements of Tex. Civ.
    Prac. & Rem. Code. §150. CR 138. Appellants now appeal that Order. CR142.
    Summary of the Argument
    Appellants’ arguments fail for three reasons:
     First, Appellant’s argument is a collateral attack on a prior case’s dismissal
    without prejudice and cannot be made in the instant action;
     Second, the trial court properly determined that a Certificate of Merit was filed
    with the first complaint in this case, just as contemplated by Tex. Civ. Prac.
    Rem. Code §150 following a prior dismissal without prejudice. Appellants’
    argument that only the first-filed petition in the first-filed suit can satisfy
    §150 are contrary to both plain statutory language and legislative intent;
    and,
     Third, the Certificate of Merit in this case properly sets forth “the… action,
    error, or omission of the licensed or registered professional in providing the
    professional service… and the factual basis for each such claim” as required
    4
    by §150.002(b) Tex. Civ. Prac. Rem. Code.
    Argument and Authorities
    A.         Appellants are indirectly challenging the dismissal without
    prejudice of a previous case and stating it should have been made
    with prejudice. However, Appellants did not appeal or otherwise
    challenge the previous dismissal without prejudice and do not
    have a legal basis for attacking that dismissal in the currently
    filed case.
    Appellants’ argument is that the Original Petition filed in the current case, Cause
    No. 2014-29414, is not the first-filed complaint pursuant to Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code
    §150, and that the only petition that could possibly satisfy the requirements of §150 is the
    petition filed in the previous case that was dismissed without prejudice, Cause No. 2014-
    12614. Appellants are functionally arguing that the previous case should have been
    dismissed with prejudice, because, they claim, no firs-filed petition in any later filed case
    could satisfy the requirements of Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §150.
    However, the trial court in Cause No. 2014-12614 did order a dismissal without
    prejudice. That became a final judgment of dismissal without prejudice for that case
    without objection from or appeal by Appellants. Had Appellants in this case been
    disappointed with the Court’s ruling in Cause No. 2014-12614, it was incumbent upon
    them to seek a modification of the order of dismissal without prejudice while the Court
    5
    retained jurisdiction to do so, or to appeal it while appeal remained available. Appellants,
    Defendants in the previously-dismissed case, did not exercise their rights to challenge
    that dismissal pursuant to the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. Appellants filed no Motion
    for Reconsideration of the dismissal without prejudice, filed no Motion for New Trial,
    and filed no appeal of the May 2014 Order.
    The Rules of Civil Procedure do not authorize Appellants to challenge that
    dismissal through an appeal in a later filed suit. Appellants have not provided any
    authority that collateral attack on the final judgment of dismissal without prejudice in
    Cause No. 2014-12614 became available to them either in Cause No. 2014-29414 or
    through the instant appeal. Moreover, Appellants demonstrate no impropriety in the
    Court’s exercise of its discretion in Cause No. 2014-12614 to dismiss it without
    prejudice.
    B.         Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §150.002(e) specifically grants the trial
    court discretion to choose between dismissal with or without prejudice.
    Therefore, an interpretation that §150.002(e) requires dismissal with
    prejudice is erroneous and renders statutory language superfluous.
    Appellants argue that the previous case, Cause No. 2014-12614, should have been
    dismissed with prejudice, because no petition in a later filed suit could possibly satisfy
    Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §150 and any later filed suit, even one satisfying §150,
    must therefore be dismissed.
    6
    However, the very statute on which Appellants rely, forbids the result they
    demand. In Texas, "[i]t is an elementary rule of construction that, when possible to do so,
    effect must be given to every sentence, clause, and word of a statute so that no part
    thereof be rendered superfluous or inoperative." City of San Antonio v. City of Boerne,
    
    111 S.W.3d 22
    , 29 (Tex. 2003) (citing Spence v. Fenchler, 
    180 S.W. 597
    , 601 (Tex.
    1915)). The plain language of the statute at issue in this case, §150.002 Tex. Civ. Prac.
    Rem. Code, explicitly grants the trial court discretion to determine whether the dismissal
    required by the statute will be with prejudice, by using the word “may”. Tex. Civ. Prac.
    Rem. Code §150.002(e). Use of the word “may” in this statute creates “discretionary
    authority or grants permission or a power” while the word “shall” imposes a duty. Tex.
    Gov’t Code Ann. §311.016 (West 2005). The relevant statutory language is as follows:
    “The Plaintiff’s failure to file the affidavit in accordance with this section shall result in
    dismissal of the complaint against the defendant. This dismissal may be with prejudice.”
    Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §150 (emphasis added)
    If §150.002(a)’s contemporaneous filing requirement applied not to each
    case’s first-filed petition, but only to the first-filed petition in the first-filed case,
    then the provision in Rule 150.002(e) that dismissal “may” be with prejudice
    would be superfluous, because, if Appellant is correct then the effect of any
    dismissal would be to preclude any later cause of action and, in effect, require a
    mandatory dismissal with prejudice (whether in the first case or in some second or
    7
    subsequent case). Appellants would have this Court read §150.002 to bootstrap
    every dismissal without prejudice into a dismissal with prejudice, which would
    render superfluous §150.002(e)’s plain statement that the dismissal under §150.002 “may
    be with prejudice.”
    To require that each dismissal be a dismissal with prejudice also runs contrary to
    the legislative intent of §150. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §150. The effect of requiring
    every dismissal to be “with prejudice” would be to prevent valid claims based on
    technicalities. The affidavit requirement is not intended to hinder valid claims, but
    instead “provide[s] a basis for the trial court to conclude that the plaintiff's claims
    have merit.” Criterium-Farrell Eng'rs v. Owens, 
    248 S.W.3d 395
    , 399 (Tex.
    App.—Beaumont 2008, no pet.). The affidavit filing requirement shows the court
    from the start that the claim has merit and offers a vehicle for quickly dismissing
    the suit if the merit isn’t initially shown. Bruington Eng'g, Ltd. v. Pedernal Energy,
    L.L.C., 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 9493 (Tex. App. San Antonio Aug. 27, 2014);
    Bruington Eng'g, L.T.D. v. Pedernal Energy, L.L.C., 
    403 S.W.3d 523
    , 530 (Tex.
    App. San Antonio 2013) (Affidavit must be filed with original petition, not a later
    amended petition). Appellees met that burden in the currently-filed case by
    contemporaneously filing a Certificate of Merit with the first-filed pleading in this
    case as required by the §150. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §150.002.
    8
    This issue, under nearly identical circumstances, has already been subjected to
    appellate review. In Medina v. Hatch Assocs. Consultants, Inc. 2014 Tex. App.
    LEXIS 3044 (Tex. App.–Corpus Christi Mar 20, 2014, pet. filed), the Court
    determined that a §150.002(a) affidavit does not become untimely simply because it is
    filed with the first-filed petition of a new cause following a prior dismissal without
    prejudice. Medina, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 3044; Garza v. Carmona, 
    390 S.W.3d 391
    , 398 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 2012, no pet.) (reversing non-dismissal for
    determination whether dismissal should be with or without prejudice). The court
    determined that the legislative intent of §150 was to make dismissal with prejudice
    discretionary. Medina, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 3044.
    C.     The trial court properly held Plaintiff’s affidavit met the
    requirements of Tex. Civ. Prac. Rem. Code §150.
    A trial court’s Order denying a Motion to Dismiss for want of a compliant
    affidavit is reviewed not de novo, but for abuse of discretion. Dunham Eng'g, Inc.
    v. Sherwin-Williams Co., 
    404 S.W.3d 785
    , 789 (Tex. App.-Houston [14th Dist.]
    2013, no pet.). In reviewing a trial court's denial of a section 150.002 motion to
    dismiss, the appellate court reviews the record in the light most favorable to the
    ruling. See Howe-Baker Eng'rs, Ltd. v. Enter. Prods. Operating, LLC, No. 01-09-
    01087-CV, 
    2011 WL 1660715
    , at *5 (Tex. App.-Houston [1st Dist.] Apr. 29, 2011,
    no pet.)(mem. op.).
    9
    Nothing in §150.002 Tex. Civ. Prac. Rem. Code requires a Certificate of
    Merit affidavit to contain legal terms of art; the statute requires only that the
    affidavit state “the action, error, or omission of the licensed or registered
    professional in providing the professional service … and the factual basis for each
    such claim[.]” Tex. Civ. Prac. Rem. Code §150.002(b). Under Texas law, a Court
    faced with a bare-bones affidavit that outlines the errors committed “cannot
    conclude that [it] fails to set forth the negligence, or other action, error, or omission
    … in providing the professional service.” Siemens Energy, Inc. v. Nat'l Union Fire
    Ins. Co., 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 5923 at 19-20 (Tex.App.–Houston [14th Dist.]
    June 3, 2014).
    The affidavit filed contemporaneously with the Original Petition in Cause
    No. 2014-29414 identifies numerous errors committed by Appellants that are the
    basis of Appellee’s claims. The certificate identifies that:
     Two otherwise identical surveys were produced containing contrary
    information – the first, relied upon survey, represented that the subject
    property was NOT in any flood plain, while the later produced survey
    claimed that the property WAS in a flood plain;
     It is foreseeable and reasonable for Appellant to have relied on the
    first survey as being the opinion of the surveyor whose seal it bore;
     The second survey did not identify any change in date or otherwise
    10
    identify that it was a revision;
     Appellant Couchman, the surveyor, negligently failed to exercise
    reasonable control over his surveyor’s seal which is in violation of his
    duty as a registered surveyor;
     Appellant ProSurv recklessly caused an inaccurate survey, not the
    opinion of the surveyor, to be transmitted to its customer Appellee
    with a reckless disregard for the truth or falsity of the information
    provided;
     Safeguarding of the surveyor’s seal would have prevented ProSurv
    from providing a false survey to Appellee;
     Or Appellant Couchman may have changed his opinion and attempted
    to hide that fact by changing the flood plain representation on the
    original face of the survey instead of producing a revised survey;
     The second survey was transmitted to Appellee after the closing of the
    transaction the survey itself states it was created for and the closing
    for which both Appellants knew it was going to be relied on; and
     In light of the aforementioned errors, Appellants breached their duties
    to Appellee.
    Appellants argue that the affidavit timely provided with the first-filed
    pleading in this case as a Certificate of Merit is insufficient because it does not
    11
    specifically address the breach of contract claims and set out the elements of
    breach of contract. However, the affidavit in this case does set out the basis for the
    claims asserted by Appellee and does identify the ways in which Appellants
    breached their duty to Appellee by failing to provide an accurate survey in a timely
    manner for the closing of the transaction contemplated by the face of the survey.
    Moreover, not all claims against licensed professionals lie within §150.002
    Tex. Civ. Prac. Rem. Code. For example, in TDIndustries Inc. v. Rivera, 
    339 S.W.3d 749
    (Tex.App.–Houston [1st Dist.] 2011) this Court held that a negligence
    suit against an engineer could manage not to implicate §150.002(a) Tex. Civ. Prac.
    Rem. Code or invoke its affidavit requirement.         Unlike the contract claim in
    
    Siemens, supra
    , that alleged breach based on a failure to inspect properly, the
    contract claim in the instant case is grounded in untimeliness (i.e., withholding the
    surveyor’s true report asserting the property to actually be in a flood plain until
    after the closing of the transaction for which it was certified had already been
    completed). To the extent a breach of contract is based not on competence or
    professional diligence but only a purely contractual duty, it lies beyond the bounds
    of the affidavit requirement.
    As described above, the affidavit timely provided in this case is rich with
    factual bases for all Plaintiff’s causes of action and the trial court’s discretion was
    properly exercised to deny the Motion to Dismiss.
    12
    Conclusion and Prayer
    Faced with a Motion to Dismiss and a nonsuit in Cause No. 2014-12614, the trial
    court was within its sound discretion to, and did, dismiss that cause without prejudice,
    and Appellants never appealed that Order. That dismissal order is final, and the time for
    appealing it is long gone. To read §150.002(e) to render every dismissal under §150.002
    to be in effect a dismissal with prejudice is not only to deprive the Order of dismissal
    without prejudice of its stated effect, but to rewrite §150.002 in words the Legislature did
    not choose to enact, and to erase the word “may” from §150.002(e). The canons by
    which statutes are construed are clear, and Texas law forbids the result Appellants
    demand.
    The trial court correctly determined that Mrs. Cardona was entitled to bring an
    action against Toby Paul Couchman and Pro-Surv following her prior nonsuit without
    prejudice, correctly determined that the Certificate of Merit filed with her Original
    Petition in Cause No. 2014-29414 was timely filed, and properly exercised the discretion
    conferred upon it by statute to find the Certificate of Merit set forth sufficient facts to
    support some claim capable of surviving dismissal under §150.002. Moreover, §150.002
    does not apply to claims that a contract was not timely performed, and Appellants’ appeal
    should be denied with respect to Appellee’s contract and other claims.
    WHEREFORE, PREMISES CONSIDERED, Appellee Elizabeth Cardona
    respectfully requests that the appeal of Toby Paul Couchman and Pro-Surv be in all
    13
    things denied and overruled, and for such other and further relief to which she may be
    justly entitled.
    Respectfully submitted,
    _________________________
    Robert L. Collins
    Texas Bar No. 04618100
    Audrey Guthrie
    Texas Bar No. 24083116
    P.O. Box 7726
    Houston, Texas 77270-7726
    (713) 467-8884
    (713) 467-8883 Facsimile
    Houstonlaw2@aol.com
    Christopher D. Lewis
    SBOT No. 24032546
    1721 West T.C. Jester Blvd.
    Houston, Texas 77008
    Telephone: (713) 553-4104
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
    This document complies with the typeface requirements of Tex. R. App. P.
    9.4(e) because it has been prepared in a conventional typeface no smaller than 14-
    point font for text and 12-point font for footnotes. This document also complies
    with the word-count limitations of Tex. R. App. P. 9.4(i) because it contains no
    more than 3,008 words, excluding any parts exempted by Tex. R. App. P. 9.4(i)(1).
    Robert L. Collins
    14
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I hereby certify that on the 8th day of May, 2015, a true and correct copy of
    the foregoing was served on the following by certified mail, return receipt
    requested, regular mail, electronic service, and/or facsimile to:
    Zandra Foley, Esq.
    Kimberly Snagg, Esq.
    Thompson, Coe, Cousins & Irons, LLP
    One Riverway, Suite 1400
    Houston Texas 77056
    ZFoley@ThompsonCoe.com
    Facsimile (713) 403-8299
    Robert L. Collins
    15