Jack Rettig v. Ronald E. Bruno, Christopher Garcia, Sergio Lopez, Patrick G. Mendoza, and Troy J. Williams ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                          ACCEPTED
    04-15-00350-CV
    FOURTH COURT OF APPEALS
    SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
    7/7/2015 10:12:27 AM
    KEITH HOTTLE
    CLERK
    No. 04-15-00350-CV
    FILED IN
    4th COURT OF APPEALS
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
    FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF TEXAS7/7/2015 10:12:27 AM
    SAN ANTONIO             KEITH E. HOTTLE
    Clerk
    Jack Rettig,
    Appellant
    v.
    Ronald Bruno, et al.,
    Appellees
    Appeal from the 111th District Court of Webb County, Texas
    APPELLANT JACK RETTIG’S
    REPLY IN SUPPORT OF HIS MOTION TO ABATE APPEAL
    LAW OFFICE OF                              Fritz Byrne Head & Fitzpatrick
    AUDREY MULLERT VICKNAIR                    PLLC
    Audrey Mullert Vicknair                    C. M. Henkel III
    State Bar No. 14650500                     State Bar No. 09463000
    802 N. Carancahua Ste. 1350                500 North Shoreline, Ste. 901
    Corpus Christi, Texas 78401-0022           Corpus Christi, Texas 78401
    (361) 888-8413; (361) 887-6207 fax         (361) 883-1500; (361) 888-9149 fax
    avicknair@vicknairlaw.com                  skip@cmhenkel.com
    Attorneys for Appellant Jack Rettig
    1
    TO THE HONORABLE FOURTH COURT OF APPEALS:
    COMES NOW Appellant Jack Rettig and files this Reply in Support of his
    Motion to Abate Appeal, and for cause would show:
    Rettig would point out preliminarily that a review of Garcia’s Response to
    the Motion to Abate makes clear that the only party who has any purported basis
    to seek relief from the foreign judgment is Mendoza – he is the only party alleging
    lack of service in the case; Garcia simply piggy-backed Mendoza’s motion to
    vacate in Webb County, asserting that if Mendoza prevails, Garcia somehow
    prevails too. Garcia raised no independent grounds to vacate the judgment, nor
    could he, given he fully participated in the federal court action and has a valid,
    subsisting judgment against him. Mendoza is the only party who filed a Rule 60
    Motion for Relief from Judgment in the foreign court. No other party to the
    foreign judgment (Lopez, Williams, and Bruno) filed and/or sought an order on
    any motion in state or federal court.
    Yet it is Garcia who filed a Response to Rettig’s Motion to Abate, relying
    on grounds for relief available only to Mendoza. Then Mendoza simply adopted
    that Response. Garcia’s Response must be rejected out of hand because he has no
    basis to object to this abatement, given that it is not his Rule 60 Motion that is
    pending in federal court. The abatement should be granted.
    2
    But even more important, it cannot be legitimately contested that the foreign
    court’s ruling on the integrity of its Judgment has a great effect on the Webb
    County Court’s Orders vacating that very judgment as domesticated in Texas. A
    filed foreign judgment comprises both a plaintiff’s original petition and a final
    judgment, and it becomes enforceable as a Texas judgment on the date it is filed.
    Walnut Equip. Leasing Co., Inc. v. Wu, 
    920 S.W.2d 285
    , 286 (Tex. 1996). The
    burden then shifts to the judgment debtor to establish why the judgment cannot be
    given full faith and credit. Wu, 920 S.W.2d at 926 (citing Mitchim v. Mitchim, 
    518 S.W.2d 362
    , 364 (Tex. 1975) (“foreign judgment that appears valid and final
    makes prima facie case for party seeking to enforce it, and burden is on resisting
    party to prove judgment is not valid or final”); Bahr v. Kohr, 
    928 S.W.2d 98
    , 100
    (Tex.App.—San Antonio 1996, writ denied).
    To establish the foreign judgment is not entitled to full faith and credit in
    Texas, Mendoza had to show: (1) the foreign judgment is interlocutory (not argued
    by Mendoza here); (2) the foreign judgment is subject to modification under the
    law of the rendering state (the basis for Mendoza’s Federal Rule 60 motion in the
    foreign court); (3) the rendering state lacked jurisdiction (same); (4) the foreign
    judgment was procured by extrinsic fraud (not argued here); and (5) the time to file
    the domestication action has expired (not argued here).
    3
    Mendoza has availed himself of an avenue for relief in the rendering state
    by filing a Rule 60 Motion for Relief from Judgment in federal court. Under Rule
    60, “On motion and just terms, the court may relieve a party or its legal
    representative from a final judgment, order or proceeding.” FED. R. CIV. P. 60(b).
    If Mendoza succeeds on his Rule 60 motion, then he may be relieved from the
    foreign judgment that has been domesticated in Texas. If he fails on his Rule 60
    Motion, then the foreign court will have upheld its judgment against Mendoza’s
    attack and the Webb County Court’s Orders vacating the domesticated foreign
    judgment must be reconsidered, because the foreign judgment cannot be denied
    full faith and credit.
    As of the time of this writing the Federal Court still has not ruled on
    Mendoza’s Rule 60 Motion. Rettig prays this Court to abate this appeal so that the
    foreign court can rule on the pending Motion for Relief from Judgment. That
    ruling directly affects the trial court’s orders and this appeal. Judicial economy
    and conservation of resources way strongly in favor of this abatement.
    Rettig so prays.
    PRAYER
    WHEREFORE, Appellant Jack Rettig prays the Court to ABATE this appeal
    until the foreign court – the Louisiana federal court -- rules on Appellee Mendoza’s
    pending Rule 60 Motion for Relief from Judgment and the Webb County Court has
    4
    the opportunity, as necessary, to rule on Rettig’s Motion to Vacate, Modify,
    Correct or Reform. Rettig prays for all other relief to which he is entitled.
    Respectfully submitted,
    /s/ Audrey Mullert Vicknair
    Audrey Mullert Vicknair
    State Bar No. 14650500
    LAW OFFICE OF AUDREY MULLERT VICKNAIR
    802 N. Carancahua Ste. 1350
    Corpus Christi, TX 78401-0022
    (361) 888-8413; (361) 887-6207 fax
    avicknair@vicknairlaw.com
    C. M. HENKEL III
    State Bar No. 09463000
    FRITZ, BYRNE, HEAD & FITZPATRICK, PLLC
    500 North Shoreline, Ste. 901
    Corpus Christi, Texas 78401
    (361) 883-1500; (361) 888-9149 fax
    skip@cmhenkel.com
    Attorneys for Appellant Jack Rettig
    5
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the foregoing instrument was
    served in accordance with the Texas Rules of Appellate and Civil Procedure, on
    counsel named below, on this the _7th__ day of July, 2015.
    Lance H. Beshara – counsel for Mendoza
    PULMAN CAPPUCCIO
    PULLEN BENSON & JONES, LLP
    2161 N.W. Military Hwy., Suite 400
    San Antonio, Texas 78213
    Jana K. Terry – counsel for Garcia
    BECKSTEAD TERRY P.L.L.C.
    9442 N. Capital of Texas Hwy.
    Arboretum Plaza One, Suite 500
    Austin, Texas 78759
    Carlos Evaristo Flores – counsel for Lopez, foreign judgment defendant
    PERSON,WHITWORTH, BORCHERS &MORALES, LLP
    602 E. Calton Road, 2nd Floor
    P.O. Drawer 6668
    Laredo, Texas 78042-6668
    Darrell W. Cook – counsel for Williams, foreign judgment defendant
    Darrell W. Cook & Associates, P.C.
    One Meadows Building
    5005 Greenville Ave., Ste. 200
    Dallas, Texas 75206
    By tex.gov electronic filing system
    Ronald E. Bruno – foreign judgment defendant
    2838 Woodside Street
    Dallas, Texas 75204
    By U.S. Mail
    /s/ Audrey Mullert Vicknair
    Audrey Mullert Vicknair
    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 04-15-00350-CV

Filed Date: 7/7/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/29/2016