Reynolds Energy Transport, LLC and Reynolds Transportation, Inc. v. Plains Marketing, L.P., Plains All American Pipeline, L.P., Plains Pipeline, L.P. ( 2024 )


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  •                                Fourth Court of Appeals
    San Antonio, Texas
    OPINION
    No. 04-22-00450-CV
    REYNOLDS ENERGY TRANSPORT, LLC and Reynolds Transportation, Inc.,
    Appellants
    v.
    PLAINS MARKETING, L.P.; Plains All American Pipeline, L.P.; and Plains Pipeline, L.P.,
    Appellees
    From the 57th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas
    Trial Court No. 2022-CI-11568
    Honorable Antonia Arteaga, Judge Presiding 1
    Opinion by:       Patricia O. Alvarez, Justice
    Sitting:          Patricia O. Alvarez, Justice
    Liza A. Rodriguez, Justice (not participating)
    Lori I. Valenzuela, Justice
    Delivered and Filed: June 28, 2024
    REVERSED AND RENDERED
    This appeal involves a motion for sanctions by Plains Marketing, L.P.; Plains All American
    Pipeline, L.P.; and Plains Pipeline, L.P. against Reynolds Energy Transport, LLC and Reynolds
    Transportation, Inc. The movants sought sanctions under Rule 13 of the Texas Rules of Civil
    Procedure and Chapter 10 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. After a hearing on the
    motion, the trial court assessed monetary sanctions of $482,895.92 against Reynolds Energy and
    1
    The Honorable Larry Noll heard Appellees’ Motion for Sanctions; the Honorable John Gabriel heard Appellants’
    Motion for Reconsideration and for New Trial.
    04-22-00450-CV
    Reynolds Transportation for documents signed by their attorneys, Ronald L. Bair and Marc B.
    Johnson, both with the law firm of BairHilty, P.C.
    Because Appellees failed to overcome the presumption that Appellants acted in good faith,
    the trial court abused its discretion in awarding monetary sanctions. We reverse the trial court’s
    sanctions order and render judgment that Appellees take nothing on their motion for sanctions.
    BACKGROUND
    A.      Personal Injury Incident
    Appellees Plains Marketing, L.P.; Plains All American Pipeline, L.P.; and Plains Pipeline,
    L.P. (collectively Plains or Appellees) operated a crude oil delivery station, known as North
    Owens. Plains Marketing owned the station, but it leased the premises. Plains Marketing paid
    trucking companies to haul crude oil from North Owens to other locations. The North Owens
    station had two Lease Automatic Custody Transfer (LACT) 2 systems.
    Dianna Marable, who was employed by Timekeepers Company, was assigned to guard
    duty at the North Owens station. One of her duties was to record data on trucks being loaded with
    crude oil at North Owens.
    Shortly before midnight on December 20, 2018, John Hayes, a driver for Reynolds
    Transportation, drove his tractor and tank trailer into the North Owens station to use LACT 2. As
    Hayes began to fill his trailer’s tank, he heard a “pop-off” of the tank’s relief valve. He
    immediately stopped filling the tank to troubleshoot the problem. After checking the hoses, he
    resumed filling the tank, but another pop-off occurred, and he again stopped filling the tank. The
    second pop-off meant that, although the tank’s valves and hoses were open, the vapor was not
    being accepted into the Plains vapor recovery system.
    2
    A LACT unit is used to transfer liquid hydrocarbons from production output into trucks, pipelines, and storage
    facilities; it also measures the amount of liquid hydrocarbons transferred.
    -2-
    04-22-00450-CV
    After the second pop-off, Dianna came out of the guard house to inquire about the noise.
    Hayes told her he heard air coming out of his trailer. He also told her he was shutting down his
    truck’s systems, and he was looking into the problem.
    While Hayes was under the belly of the trailer attempting to determine where the pop-off
    noise came from, Dianna remained standing next to the trailer. Hayes heard a “woosh,” turned his
    head, and saw Dianna lying on the ground inside the railing of the LACT 2 and bleeding from her
    head.
    No one saw how Dianna fell. Plains Marketing’s safety manager reported that Dianna fell
    when she tripped over a guardrail at the site. As a result of the fall, Dianna suffered a brain injury
    and a broken neck.
    B.      Procedural History
    1.     Dianna’s Original Petition
    On January 10, 2019, Dianna’s son and next friend, Andrew Marvin Stock, filed a personal
    injury lawsuit against Reynolds Energy and Plains Marketing. Against Reynolds Energy, Dianna
    alleged recovery under the doctrine of respondeat superior, negligence, and gross negligence.
    Against Plains Marketing, she alleged negligence, premises liability, and gross negligence.
    2.     Defendants Answer
    Both Reynolds Energy and Plains Marketing timely answered. Bair made an appearance
    on behalf of Reynolds Energy.
    3.     Dianna’s First Amended Petition
    On October 22, 2019, Dianna filed a first amended petition adding Hayes as a defendant.
    She sued Hayes for negligence and gross negligence. She added the following:
    Upon information and belief, Defendant Reynolds intends to allege that Defendant
    Plains Marketing, L.P. is at fault for this incident for failing to ensure the location
    was safe. Specifically, it is believed that Defendant Reynolds intends to allege that
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Defendant Plains’ failure to properly grade and maintain the surface of the location
    contributed to Plaintiff’s fall and resultant injuries.
    She further alleged the following:
    Upon information and belief, prior to this incident, Defendant Plains was aware that
    the grading on its location, and specifically in the area where this incident occurred,
    was improper and unsafe. Defendant Plains knew, or should have known this
    information, because other contractors and/or Plains employees on location had
    reported such unsafe conditions to Plains. Furthermore, such unsafe conditions
    were discoverable by Defendant Plains if it had exercised its rights and obligations
    to inspect the premises to ensure it was safe.
    4.      Charles Mills’s Deposition
    On January 8, 2020, Charles Mills was deposed. Mills, like Dianna, was employed by
    Timekeepers as a guard at the North Owens station. He was also Dianna’s boyfriend and ex-
    husband. He did not witness Dianna’s fall, but he testified about the loading operations at the
    North Owens station and the guards’ role in those operations.
    5.      Reynolds Energy’s Answers to Interrogatory No. 3
    On January 16, 2020, Reynolds Energy served Dianna with its amended answers to her
    first discovery requests. In her Interrogatory No. 3, Dianna had asked for Reynolds Energy’s
    theories of liability as follows:
    If you contend that someone else’s conduct or some condition or event not under
    your control was a cause of the incident which forms the subject matter of this
    litigation, please identify the other person, event, or condition, and describe in detail
    the activity or condition involved and how it caused the incident.
    Reynolds Energy’s response included its original and amended answers.
    Answer: Defendant objects to the request as it seeks information not currently
    available. As Defendant was not present at the time of the incident and therefore
    not able to give a firsthand response on the actions of the parties present at the time
    of the incident but may supplement as discovery progresses and more details
    become known.
    Amended Answer: Defendant objects to the request as it seeks information not
    currently available. As Defendant was not present at the time of the incident and
    therefore not able to give a firsthand response on the actions of the parties present
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    04-22-00450-CV
    at the time of the incident. Subject to and without waiving the objections, Plaintiff
    placed herself in a position she was not qualified for and had no reason to be in at
    the time of the incident. Defendant contends a failure, malfunction or design defect
    in Plains Marketing’s equipment, a defect in the design and installation of the guard
    rails at issue and the failure to properly instruct and warn Ms. Marable and others
    to avoid entry in and around the loading area and monitor Ms. Marable and others
    to ensure compliance with these warnings caused or contributed to the incident at
    issue. Defendant reserves the right to amend this answer as discovery is ongoing.
    The amended discovery responses were signed by Bair.
    6.      Rule 11 Agreement
    On January 22, 2020, Dianna and Reynolds Energy entered into a Rule 11 agreement. Part
    of that agreement addressed Dianna’s motion to disclose Reynolds Energy’s theories of liability
    as set forth in Reynolds Energy’s amended answer to Dianna’s Interrogatory No. 3. In the
    agreement, the parties agreed as follows:
    [Reynolds Energy] will amend ROG No. 3 to indicate information related to our
    liability theory against Plains will be supplemented when received. Currently, no
    more specific information exists which could be supplemented at this time. Nothing
    is being withheld on the basis of the objection.
    The Rule 11 agreement was signed by Marc Johnson.
    7.      Hayes’s First Deposition
    On January 28, 2020, John Hayes, Reynolds Energy’s driver, was deposed. He testified he
    believed that a potential cause of Dianna’s fall was that mud, water, or gunk had built up inside
    the vent lines which caused his truck to pop-off. He agreed that when Dianna fell, the ground was
    not muddy. He also agreed he did not see Dianna fall, but he saw her laying inside the railing of
    LACT 2.
    8.      Motion for Spoliation
    On February 7, 2020, Dianna filed a motion for a finding of evidence spoliation against
    Reynolds Energy concerning the tractor trailer operated by Hayes on the day of her accident.
    Dianna alleged that, although Reynolds Energy’s duty to preserve the tractor trailer was triggered
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    04-22-00450-CV
    immediately after the accident, Reynolds Energy failed to do so and instead produced an entirely
    different tractor and a modified tank trailer for inspection.
    Dianna sought discovery sanctions under Rule 215.2(b) of the Texas Rules of Civil
    Procedure. Later, Plains Marketing joined Dianna’s motion. 3
    9.       Plains Marketing’s Answer to Cross-Claim
    On February 2, 2020, Plains Marketing filed its original answer to Reynolds Energy and
    Hayes’s cross-claim. The record before us, however, does not include a cross-action filed by either
    Reynolds Energy or Hayes before February 2, 2020.
    10.      Reynolds Energy, Hayes’s Second Amended Answer
    On March 3, 2020, Reynolds Energy and Hayes filed their second amended answer. The
    answer was signed by Bair. In that answer, the defendants raised the following defenses: (1)
    comparative fault against Dianna, (2) new and independent cause, (3) pre-existing or subsequent
    injuries and conditions, (4) sole proximate cause, (5) failure to mitigate damages, (6) right to
    amend their answer following further discovery, (7) no duty, (8) the accident did not occur in the
    manner Dianna alleged, (9) contribution if Dianna settled with other persons sued by Dianna, (11)
    paid and incurred, (12) failure to mitigate healthcare expenses, and (13) taxable wages.
    11.      Motion on Hayes’s First Errata Sheet
    On April 7, 2020, Dianna filed a motion concerning Hayes’s corrections to his January 28,
    2020 deposition testimony that he made on an errata sheet. In this motion, Dianna alleged Hayes
    made “extremely important and highly suspect changes to his deposition testimony.” Hayes’s
    errata sheet revisions included changes to his testimony on the whereabouts of photographs he
    3
    Eventually, Judge David Canales granted the motion and struck Reynolds Energy’s defenses asserted against Dianna
    but allowed it to maintain its contributory negligence defense against Plains Marketing.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    took with his cellphone on the night of the accident and the content of his driver’s logs. Later,
    Plains Marketing joined in Dianna’s motion.
    12.     Motion to Strike Liability Theories Not Disclosed
    On April 7, 2020, Dianna filed a motion to strike liability theories not disclosed. She
    sought sanctions against Reynolds Energy for discovery abuse.
    She contended that in preparation for Hayes’s January 28, 2020 deposition, she made a
    good faith effort to inquire about Reynolds Energy’s theories of liability through Interrogatory
    No. 3. When Reynolds Energy’s attorney confirmed that it currently had no specific information
    on the allegations set forth in its previously amended answer to Interrogatory No. 3, they entered
    into the January 22, 2020 Rule 11 agreement.
    In her April 7, 2020 motion, Dianna argued that when Hayes was deposed, he brought up
    a theory of liability that was not previously disclosed. As a result, she was prevented from
    investigating that theory of liability and adequately examining Hayes when he was deposed.
    Later, Plains Marketing joined in Dianna’s motion.
    13.     Plains Marketing’s Motion for No-Evidence Summary Judgment
    On April 27, 2020, Plains Marketing filed a motion for no-evidence summary judgment
    against Dianna’s claims.
    14.     Reynolds Energy, Hayes’s Cross-Action
    Also on April 27, 2020, Reynolds Energy and Hayes filed a cross-action against Plains
    Marketing for contribution under “Chapters 32 and 33 of the Texas Civil Practice[] and Remedies
    Code, the Doctrine of Comparative Causation, and all applicable statutory and common law.”
    Marc Johnson signed the cross-action.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    15.     Reynolds Energy’s Third Amended Answers to Interrogatory No. 3
    On April 28, 2020, Reynolds Energy served its third amended answers to Dianna’s
    Interrogatory No. 3 (which asked for the other responsible parties or conditions that caused
    Dianna’s accident). Reserving its right to supplement once the Plains defendants produced their
    employees for depositions, in that amended response, Reynolds Energy included nine theories of
    liability against Plains Marketing and its related companies. Bair signed the amended discovery.
    16.     Dianna’s Second Amended Petition
    On May 29, 2020, Dianna filed a second amended petition. She added the following as
    defendants: Reynolds Transportation, Inc.; Plains All American Pipeline, L.P.; Plains Pipeline,
    L.P.; Vapor Point, LLC; John E. Meador Construction, Inc.; and Quality Pipeline Construction,
    LLC.
    Dianna then explained why she was suing these defendants:
    Because Defendants Reynolds and Hayes have elected to pursue a vague scorched
    earth defense in this case, Plaintiff is left with no choice but to amend this lawsuit
    and bring into this litigation the above entities and individuals that Defendant
    Reynolds alleges, either directly or indirectly, are liable to Plaintiff. Out of an
    abundance of caution, Plaintiff hereby incorporates by reference into this Second
    Amended Pleading, and any future amended pleadings, any allegation, evidence,
    claims or evidence advanced by Defendant Reynolds against any other Defendant
    in this case.
    17.     Reynolds Energy’s Response to Plains Marketing’s No-Evidence Motion
    On June 9, 2020, Reynolds Energy filed a response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence
    motion for summary judgment. In its response, Reynolds Energy argued that discovery had not
    concluded, depositions of Plains Marketing’s employees and others were needed given that cross-
    plaintiff Reynolds Energy asserted additional allegations against Plains Marketing, and Reynolds
    Energy had included additional allegations against Plains Marketing in its response to plaintiff’s
    Interrogatory No. 3.
    -8-
    04-22-00450-CV
    In the alternative, Reynolds Energy argued that a genuine issue of material fact existed
    based on Hayes’s depositions testimony, on the affidavit of its expert, Richard “Rich” A. Gehse,
    and on the affidavit of its attorney, Marc Johnson, who testified that discovery was ongoing, and
    that Plains had refused to present it employees for depositions. All three documents were attached
    to Reynolds Energy’s response opposing Plains Marketing’s summary judgment. The response
    was signed by Bair.
    a.     Hayes’s Depositions Testimony
    Reynolds Energy pointed to Hayes’s depositions testimony that Plains Marketing’s vapor
    hose was defective, it was left in the mud and would become clogged with mud and dirt, Plains
    failed to provide tips for the hose to prevent it from being clogged, Plains failed to properly
    maintain the vapor recovery system, and there was a railing where Dianna fell.
    b.     Gehse’s Affidavit
    Reynolds Energy provided an affidavit from Richard A. Gehse dated June 9, 2020. It stated
    in part as follows:
    This affidavit is based on preliminary information known and available to me
    at this time through my investigation and through documents and other materials
    reviewed by me. I reserve the right to supplement or amend this affidavit, or the
    statements and preliminary opinions made herein, based on additional information,
    including information that may become available from witnesses and other parties
    as this dispute proceeds.
    The crux of Gehse’s opinion was that Plains Marketing, who controlled the premises of the
    vapor recovery and railing systems, failed to properly maintain the premises. Gehse identified the
    following contributing factors: (1) improper site grading, (2) the vapor recovery system hoses did
    not have a hanger mechanism to store the hose, (3) the vapor recovery system’s mechanisms were
    not designed to prevent or remove solid material from the system components, and (4) the rail
    system around the loading station was twenty inches below the required height.
    -9-
    04-22-00450-CV
    c.      Marc Johnson’s Affidavit
    Reynolds Energy also included an affidavit from Johnson. In his affidavit, Johnson
    testified that discovery was ongoing and that Plains Marketing had not produced its employees for
    depositions despite requests made to its attorney.
    18.     Plains Marketing’s Motion for Leave to Amend No-Evidence Motion
    On June 10, 2020, Plains Marketing filed a motion for leave to amend its no-evidence
    motion for summary judgment, which was later granted. In its amended no-evidence motion,
    Plains Marketing asserted there was no evidence to support Reynolds Energy’s contentions as set
    forth in its response to Interrogatory No. 3.
    19.     Dianna’s Response to Plains Marketing’s No-Evidence Motion
    Also on June 10, 2020, Dianna filed her response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion
    for summary judgment. She announced that she was not opposed to that motion because, among
    other things, there was no evidence that Plains Marketing contributed to Dianna’s accident, and it
    bore “no possible causal responsibility as a matter of law.”
    20.     Reynolds Energy’s Response to Plains Marketing’s Motion for Leave to Amend
    On June 12, 2020, Reynolds Energy responded to Plains Marketing’s motion for leave
    asserting, among other things, that there had not been enough time to complete discovery because
    Plains Marketing was not cooperating with the scheduling of its employees’ depositions. Reynolds
    Energy’s response included evidence that showed Plains Marketing’s safety manager reported
    Dianna’s fall as a trip over a guardrail. This pleading was signed by Bair.
    21.     Plains Marketing’s Motion for Summary Judgment Denied
    On June 17, 2020, the trial court granted Plains Marketing’s motion for leave to amend its
    no-evidence motion for summary judgment, but it denied Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion
    for summary judgment. It ordered Plains Marketing to produce eight employees for depositions.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    22.     Reynolds Transportation’s Answer
    On July 13, 2020, Reynolds Transportation filed its original answer to Dianna’s second
    amended petition.
    23.     Reynolds Energy’s Motion to Compel Deposition Dates
    On September 9, 2020, Reynolds Energy filed a motion to compel Plains Marketing to
    provide adequate dates for the depositions of the eight employees the trial court had ordered to be
    deposed.
    24.     James White’s Deposition
    On December 3, 2020, James White, a Reynolds Energy driver, was deposed. He testified
    that the vapor recovery system hose did not contain a cap or a plug. For this reason, on various
    occasions he had to kick off the mud against the bumper of his trailer.
    25.     Reynolds Energy’s Cross-Action Against Plains Pipeline Companies
    On February 2, 2021, Reynolds Energy and Hayes filed cross-actions against Plains All
    American Pipeline, L.P. and Plains Pipeline, L.P. for contribution. The cross-actions were signed
    by Johnson.
    26.     Plains Pipeline Companies’ Cross-Claims
    On February 4, 2021, Plains Pipeline and Plains All American Pipeline filed cross-claims
    against Reynolds Energy and Hayes alleging that Reynolds and Hayes were the sole and proximate
    cause of Dianna’s damages. The Plains pipeline companies asked for contribution and indemnity.
    27.     Reynolds Defendants, Hayes Change Law Firms
    On March 5, 2021, the trial court granted the motion by Reynolds Energy Transport, LLC,
    Reynolds Transportation, Inc. (Reynolds defendants), and John A. Hayes to substitute the Flores
    Law Firm, in place of the BairHilty law firm, as their retained counsel.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    28.     Reynolds Energy, Hayes’s Nonsuit
    On April 16, 2021, Reynolds Energy and Hayes nonsuited their cross-claims against the
    three Plains defendants. Their nonsuit stated they no longer desired to prosecute their cross-claims
    against the Plains defendants. The nonsuit was signed by the Flores Law Firm.
    29.     Motion for Finding of Spoliation Granted
    On May 28, 2021, the trial court granted Dianna’s motion for a finding of spoliation of
    evidence against Reynolds Energy. The trial court struck all of Reynolds Energy’s defenses except
    the defense of comparative fault asserted against parties other than Dianna. The order was signed
    by the Honorable David Canales.
    30.     Hayes’s Second Supplemental Responses to Dianna’s Request for Admissions
    On June 28, 2021, Hayes answered Plains Marketing’s requests for admission. In his
    answers, he admitted he lied in his January 28, 2020 deposition about not having criminal
    convictions. The admissions were signed by Reynolds Energy’s new attorney.
    31.     Reynolds Transportation’s Responses to Dianna’s Request for Admissions
    On June 30, 2021, Reynolds Transportation filed its responses to Dianna’s requests for
    admissions. Reynolds Transportation admitted it did not blame the Plains defendants for Dianna’s
    fall. The admissions were signed by the Flores Law Firm.
    32.     Plains Defendants’ Motion for Sanctions
    On October 15, 2021, the three Plains defendants filed a motion for sanctions against
    Reynolds Energy and Reynolds Transportation, to which the two Reynolds defendants responded.
    33.     Hearing on Motion for Sanctions
    On January 6, 2022, the Plains defendants’ motion for sanctions was heard by the
    Honorable Larry Noll. There was no live testimony. Instead, the attorneys argued their respective
    positions based on the offered evidence. The trial court asked the parties to agree that the exhibits
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    04-22-00450-CV
    offered for the hearing would be admitted “as long as they were withdrawn thereafter and made
    available for future litigation.” So, by agreement, the exhibits admitted were those presented to
    the trial court and those attached to the Plains defendants’ motion for sanctions and the Reynolds
    defendants’ response to that motion.
    34.     Evidentiary Hearing on Attorney’s Fees as Sanctions
    On February 18, 2022, the trial court heard evidence on Plains Marketing’s attorney’s fees.
    35.     Sanctions Order Signed
    On March 8, 2022, the trial court, the Honorable Larry Noll, signed an order granting the
    sanctions motion against Reynolds Energy and Reynolds Transportation. 4 The trial court’s order
    includes twenty-one findings of fact.
    36.     Post-Order Actions
    On March 8, 2022, Reynolds Energy and Reynolds Transportation filed a petition for writ
    of mandamus in this court. Later, the parties reached an agreement, and the petition was dismissed.
    In re Reynolds Energy Transp., LLC, No. 04-22-00141-CV, 
    2022 WL 4492798
    , at *1 (Tex. App.—
    San Antonio Sept. 28, 2022, orig. proceeding) (per curiam) (mem. op.).
    On March 23, 2022, Reynolds Energy and Reynolds Transportation filed a motion for
    reconsideration and new trial on the trial court’s sanctions ruling. The motion was denied.
    On July 21, 2022, Reynolds Energy and Reynolds Transportation filed their notice of
    appeal.
    4
    In its order for sanctions, the trial court granted the Plains companies’ objection to the Reynolds defendants’ (1) late-
    filed response and sur-reply to the Plains companies’ motion for sanctions and (2) motion for reconsideration; it struck
    those pleadings.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    APPELLANTS’ ISSUES
    In three issues, Appellants contend the trial court abused its discretion (1) by entering
    sanctions on Rule 13, Chapter 10, and its inherent power; (2) by not granting the motion for
    reconsideration and motion for new trial; and (3) by awarding attorneys’ fees as sanctions without
    sufficient evidence that those fees were reasonable and necessary and directly related to the
    sanctionable conduct.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review the trial court’s order granting sanctions under an abuse of discretion standard.
    Bennett v. Grant, 
    525 S.W.3d 642
    , 654 (Tex. 2017) (Rule 13 sanctions); Low v. Henry, 
    221 S.W.3d 609
    , 614 (Tex. 2007) (Chapter 10 sanctions); Nath v. Tex. Children’s Hosp. (Nath I), 
    446 S.W.3d 355
    , 361 (Tex. 2014) (both). If the trial court acts without reference to guiding rules and principles
    to such an extent that its ruling is arbitrary or unreasonable, the trial court abuses its discretion.
    Nath I, 446 S.W.3d at 361.
    “Although we view conflicting evidence favorably to the court’s decision, we are not
    bound by a trial court’s fact findings or conclusions of law and must, instead, review the entire
    record independently to determine whether the trial court abused its discretion.” Brewer v. Lennox
    Hearth Prods., LLC, 
    601 S.W.3d 704
    , 717, (Tex. 2020).
    “Under an abuse of discretion standard, legal and factual sufficiency are relevant factors in
    assessing whether the trial court abused its discretion.” Zeptner v. Zeptner, 
    111 S.W.3d 727
    , 734
    (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2003, no pet.); accord Bradshaw v. Bradshaw, 
    555 S.W.3d 539
    , 559
    (Tex. 2018) (quoting Zeptner); Matter of Marriage of Thrash, 
    605 S.W.3d 224
    , 229 (Tex. App.—
    San Antonio 2020, pet. denied). “A decision lacking factual support is arbitrary and unreasonable
    and must be set aside.” Brewer, 601 S.W.3d at 717; see Beaumont Bank, N.A. v. Buller, 
    806 S.W.2d 223
    , 226 (Tex. 1991); Loeffler v. Lytle Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    211 S.W.3d 331
    , 347–48 (Tex.
    - 14 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    App.—San Antonio 2006, pet. denied) (“A trial court abuses its discretion in imposing sanctions
    if the order is based on an erroneous view of the law or a clearly erroneous assessment of the
    evidence.”).
    REQUIREMENTS TO IMPOSE SANCTIONS
    The decision to impose sanctions involves two distinct determinations: (1) whether conduct
    is sanctionable, and (2) what sanction to impose. Brewer, 601 S.W.3d at 716.
    At issue in this case are sanctions imposed for filing (1) groundless pleadings, motions or
    documents brought in bad faith and for harassment under Rule 13, and (2) pleadings or motions
    filed without making a reasonable inquiry, that lacked legal or factual support, or were filed for an
    improper purpose under Chapter 10 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code.
    A.     Rule 13
    Under Rule 13, a pro se party or an attorney who signs a pleading, motion, or other
    document certifies that the signatory read the instrument and “that to the best of their knowledge,
    information, and belief formed after reasonable inquiry the instrument is not groundless and
    brought in bad faith or groundless and brought for the purpose of harassment.” TEX. R. CIV. P. 13;
    see KB Home Lone Star Inc. v. Gordon, 
    629 S.W.3d 649
    , 658 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2021, no
    pet.). Rule 13 further provides that a party or attorney who “make[s] statements in pleading which
    they know to be groundless and false, for the purpose of securing a delay of the trial of the cause,
    shall be held guilty of a contempt.” TEX. R. CIV. P. 13.
    1.      Groundless Definition
    A party seeking Rule 13 sanctions must first establish that the complained-of document is
    groundless. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 13; Gordon, 629 S.W.3d at 658; Mann v. Kendall Home Builders
    Construction Partners I, LTD, 
    464 S.W.3d 84
    , 92 (Tex. App—Houston [14th Dist.] 2015, pet.
    denied). “Groundless” for purposes of [Rule 13] means no basis in law or fact and not warranted
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    04-22-00450-CV
    by good faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law.” TEX. R. CIV.
    P. 13; Gordon, 629 S.W.3d at 658.
    2.      Reasonable Inquiry Required
    The test to determine whether a document is groundless is an objective one: Did “the party
    and counsel [make] a reasonable inquiry into the legal and factual basis of the claim at the time
    the [instrument] was filed.” Loeffler, 
    211 S.W.3d at
    348 (citing In re United Servs. Auto. Ass’n,
    
    76 S.W.3d 112
    , 116 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2002, no pet.)); accord Mann, 464 S.W.3d at 92
    (noting that a “‘[r]easonable inquiry’ means the amount of examination that is reasonable under
    the circumstances of the case”).
    To answer such an inquiry, “[t]he court will look to the facts available to the litigant and
    the circumstances at the time the [instrument] was filed.” In re United Servs. Auto. Ass’n, 
    76 S.W.3d at 116
    ; accord Tarrant Cnty. v. Chancey, 
    942 S.W.2d 151
    , 155 (Tex. App—Fort Worth
    1997, no writ) (requiring the trial court to “examine the facts and circumstances existing at the
    time the pleading was filed”); see Bravenec v. Flores, No. 04-11-00444-CV, 
    2013 WL 1149418
    ,
    at *8 (Tex. App.—San Antonio Mar. 20, 2013, no pet.) (mem. op.).
    When a represented party or the attorney fails “to make an objectively reasonable inquiry
    into the legal and factual basis of the claims at the time the pleading was filed,” the pleading is
    groundless. Mann, 464 S.W.3d at 92; see Loeffler, 
    211 S.W.3d at 348
    .
    3.      Additional Element
    If a pleading, motion, or other document is found to be groundless, the conduct is not
    sanctionable unless accompanied by bad faith, brought for the purpose of harassment, or false
    when signed. Nath I, 446 S.W.3d at 363; In re United Servs. Auto. Ass’n, 
    76 S.W.3d at 116
    .
    - 16 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    a.      Bad Faith
    Bad faith is more than mere errors in judgment, lack of diligence, unreasonableness, or
    even gross negligence. Brewer, 601 S.W.3d at 718–19; Estate of Davis v. Cook, 
    9 S.W.3d 288
    ,
    298 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1999, no pet.). Bad faith is “an intent to engage in conduct for an
    impermissible reason, willful, noncompliance, or willful ignorance of facts [and] includes
    ‘conscious doing of a wrong for a dishonest, discriminatory, or malicious purpose.’” Brewer, 601
    S.W.3d at 718–19 (quoting Pearson v. Stewart, 
    314 S.W.3d 242
    , 248 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth
    2010, no pet.)).
    b.      Purpose of Harassment
    Harassment occurs when an instrument is filed with the intent to annoy, alarm, and abuse
    another person. WWW.URBAN.INC. v. Drummond, 
    508 S.W.3d 657
    , 676 (Tex. App.—Houston
    [1st Dist.] 2016, no pet.); Bravenec, 
    2013 WL 1149418
    , at *5 (“‘Harass’ is used in a variety of
    legal contexts to describe words, gestures, and actions that tend to annoy, alarm, and verbally abuse
    another person.”).
    c.      False When Made
    Rule 13 does not define “false statement.” In the context of libel and slander cases, the
    supreme court defined “false statement” as one where “the gist of the statement[] was not
    substantially true.” KBMT Operating Co., LLC v. Toledo, 
    492 S.W.3d 710
    , 711 (Tex. 2016). “To
    not be false, ‘[a] statement need not be perfectly true[] as long as it is substantially true.’” Netflix,
    Inc. v. Barina, No. 04-21-00327-CV, 
    2022 WL 3908540
    , at *3 (Tex. App.—San Antonio Aug. 31,
    2022, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (alterations in original) (quoting Dall. Morning News, Inc. v. Hall,
    
    579 S.W.3d 370
    , 377 (Tex. 2019)). For purposes of Rule 13, we adopt the Toledo definition of
    “false statement.”
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    04-22-00450-CV
    4.        Good Cause, Particularity
    Rule 13 sanctions may not be imposed “except for good cause, the particulars of which
    must be stated in the sanctions order.” TEX. R. CIV. P. 13; Guerra v. L&F Distribs., LLC, 
    521 S.W.3d 878
    , 889 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2017, no pet.); Mann, 464 S.W.3d at 90.
    The purpose of the “particularity” requirement is (a) to ensure the trial court is held
    accountable and adheres to the standard of the rule, (b) for the court to reflect carefully on its order
    before ordering sanctions, (c) to give notice to the offending party of the particular conduct being
    sanctioned, and (d) to enable the appellate court to review the order in light of the particular
    findings. Alpert v. Crain, Caton & James, P.C., 
    178 S.W.3d 398
    , 411 (Tex. App—Houston [1st
    Dist.] 2005, pet. denied) (citing Rudisell v. Paquette, 
    89 S.W.3d 233
    , 237 (Tex. App.—Corpus
    Christi–Edinburg 2002, no pet.)).
    5.        Sanctions under Rule 215
    “If a pleading, motion or other paper is signed in violation of this rule, the court, upon
    motion or upon its own initiative, after notice and hearing, shall impose an appropriate sanction
    available under Rule 215.” TEX. R. CIV. P. 13 (citing TEX. R. CIV. P. 215); see New York
    Underwriters Ins. Co. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    856 S.W.2d 194
    , 204 (Tex. App.—Dallas
    1993, no writ).
    B.      Chapter 10
    Chapter 10 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code also authorizes sanctions.
    1.        Statutory Provisions
    Section 10.001 provides that a person who signs a pleading or a motion certifies “that to
    the signatory’s best knowledge, information, and belief, formed after reasonable inquiry” that the
    following are true:
    - 18 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    (1) the pleading or motion is not being presented for any improper purpose,
    including to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the
    cost of litigation;
    (2) each claim, defense, or other legal contention in the pleading or motion is
    warranted by existing law or by a nonfrivolous argument for the extension,
    modification, or reversal of existing law or the establishment of new law;
    (3) each allegation or other factual contention in the pleading or motion has
    evidentiary support or, for a specifically identified allegation or factual
    contention, is likely to have evidentiary support after a reasonable opportunity
    for further investigation or discovery; and
    (4) each denial in the pleading or motion of a factual contention is warranted on the
    evidence or, for a specifically identified denial, is reasonably based on a lack of
    information or belief.
    TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.001; see Gordon, 629 S.W.3d at 658.
    2.      Reasonable Inquiry Required
    A party seeking sanctions under chapter 10 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code
    is not required to specifically show bad faith or malicious intent on the part of the person signing
    the pleading or the motion. Low v. Henry, 
    221 S.W.3d 609
    , 617 (Tex. 2007); see also Nath I, 446
    S.W.3d at 369. Instead, the inquiry is whether that person made a reasonable inquiry into all of
    the allegations and, accordingly, certified that all the allegations in the petition or the motion had
    evidentiary support or were likely to have evidentiary support. Low, 221 S.W.3d at 617.
    3.      Sanctions for Lack of Legal or Factual Basis
    Therefore, unlike Rule 13, “Chapter 10 provides that a claim that lacks a legal or factual
    basis—without more—is sanctionable.” See Nath I, 446 S.W.3d at 369 (citing Low, 221 S.W.3d
    at 617).
    a.      Legal Basis
    “Legally, the claim must be warranted by existing law or a nonfrivolous argument to
    change existing law.” Id. (citing TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.001(2)). However, a
    claim based on legal contentions in a pleading is not sanctionable against a represented party but
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    04-22-00450-CV
    only against its counsel. Id. (citing TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.004(d)); Malouf v.
    Elana Spitzberg Tr., No. 05-15-00824-CV, 
    2016 WL 4158890
    , at *2 (Tex. App.—Dallas Aug. 5,
    2016, no pet.) (mem. op.).
    b.      Factual Basis
    “Chapter 10 requires that each factual contention have evidentiary support or be likely to
    receive it after a reasonable opportunity for discovery.” Nath I, 446 S.W.3d at 369 (citing TEX.
    CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.001(3)). A pleading is sanctionable when the allegations do
    not have factual support and it is not likely they will have evidentiary support in light of the
    evidence the attorney has when he filed the pleading. Id. (citing Low, 221 S.W.3d at 616).
    4.      Sanctions Limits
    For a violation of section 10.001, “[t]he sanction must be limited to what is sufficient to
    deter repetition of the conduct or comparable conduct by others similarly situated.” TEX. CIV.
    PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.004(b); accord Low, 221 S.W.3d at 620.
    A sanction may include any of the following:
    (1) a directive to the violator to perform, or refrain from performing, an act;
    (2) an order to pay a penalty into court; and
    (3) an order to pay the other party the amount of the reasonable expenses
    incurred by the other party because of the filing of the pleading or motion,
    including reasonable attorney’s fees.
    TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.004(c); see Low, 221 S.W.3d at 620.
    C.     Rule 13 and Chapter 10
    1.      Relevant Time Period
    Whether determining sanctions under Rule 13 or Chapter 10, a trial court should only
    assess the evidentiary support available to the attorney at the time the pleading is filed. Nath I,
    446 S.W.3d at 369; Wenger v. Flinn, 
    648 S.W.3d 448
    , 455–56 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2021, no
    - 20 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    pet.) (citing In re M.A.G., No. 04-18-00833-CV, 
    2020 WL 7633920
    , at *12 (Tex. App.—San
    Antonio Dec. 23, 2020, pet. denied) (mem. op.)); Gomer v. Davis, 
    419 S.W.3d 470
    , 478, 480 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2013, no pet.). Considering evidence developed subsequently would
    “chill litigation in cases where claimants in good faith believe they possess a claim.” Nath I, 446
    S.W.3d at 369. If the party later learns through discovery that no factual support for the contention
    exists and continues to pursue litigation, then such conduct may be sanctioned as abusive of the
    discovery process, not the filing of pleadings under Chapter 10. Id. at 370 (citing TEX. R. CIV.
    P. 215.3).
    2.      Presumption of Good Faith
    In considering both Rule 13 and Chapter 10 sanctions, there is a presumption that pleadings
    and motions are filed in good faith. Nath I, 446 S.W.3d at 362; Low, 221 S.W.3d at 614. “The
    party seeking sanctions bears the burden of overcoming this presumption of good faith.” Low, 221
    S.W.3d at 614 (citing GTE Commc’ns Sys. Corp. v. Tanner, 
    856 S.W.2d 725
    , 730 (Tex. 1993)).
    To overcome the good faith presumption, the party must prove that the filing is “the
    conscious doing of a wrong for dishonest, discriminatory, or malicious purposes.” Elkins v. Stotts-
    Brown, 
    103 S.W.3d 664
    , 668–69 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2003, no pet.); see Wenger v. Flinn, 
    648 S.W.3d 448
    , 456 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2021, no pet.).
    3.      Evidence Required
    “As with sanctions under Rule 13, to impose sanctions under section 10.001(1), the trial
    court must hold an evidentiary hearing to make the necessary factual determinations about the
    party’s or the attorney’s motives and credibility.” Gomer, 419 S.W.3d at 480; accord New York
    Underwriters, 856 S.W.2d at 205. The trial court must consider the intent behind the acts or
    omissions of the party to be sanctioned, not merely the legal merits of the pleading or motion.
    Elkins, 
    103 S.W.3d at 668
    ; New York Underwriters, 856 S.W.2d at 205. Intent can be established
    - 21 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    by direct or circumstantial evidence, “but absent direct evidence, the record must reasonably give
    rise to an inference of intent or willfulness.” Brewer, 601 S.W.3d at 718–19.
    “Without hearing evidence on the circumstances surrounding the filing of the pleading and
    the signer’s credibility and motives, the trial court has no evidence to determine that a party or its
    attorneys filed the pleading in bad faith or to harass.” Davila v. World Car Five Star, 
    75 S.W.3d 537
    , 544 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2002, no pet.) (quoting New York Underwriters, 856 S.W.2d
    at 205); see also Orbison v. Ma-Tex Rope Co., Inc., 
    553 S.W.3d 17
    , 36 (Tex. App.—Texarkana
    2018, pet. denied); Gomer, 419 S.W.3d at 480.
    SCOPE OF REVIEW
    In their motion for sanctions, Appellees prayed for sanctions against Reynolds Marketing
    and Reynolds Transportation under Rules 13, 166a(h), and 215 of the Texas Rules of Civil
    Procedure and Chapter 10 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code.
    In the body of their motion, however, Appellees only alleged violations of Rule 13 and
    Chapter 10. Likewise, in its order, the trial court only identified Rule 13 and Chapter 10 as the
    bases for its sanctions. Accordingly, we limit our review to Rule 13 and Chapter 10. See Aldine
    Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Baty, 
    946 S.W.2d 851
    , 852 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1997, no writ)
    (limiting review to the bases used in the sanctions order).
    Our review is further limited to the complaints contained in Appellants’ motion for
    sanctions. Because of constitutional due process concerns, “sanctions may only be imposed when
    the person or party against whom the sanction is sought has received notice and an adequate
    opportunity to respond.” In re Champagne, No. 03-21-00426-CV, 
    2021 WL 4976719
    , at *2 (Tex.
    App.—Austin Oct. 27, 2021, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.) (citing TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE
    ANN. § 10.003); see Clark v. Bres, 
    217 S.W.3d 501
    , 513 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2006,
    pet. denied) (“Imposing sanctions on a party without notice and an opportunity to be heard would
    - 22 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    violate the requirements of due process.”); In re L.A.M. & Assocs., 
    975 S.W.2d 80
    , 83 (Tex.
    App.—San Antonio 1998, orig. proceeding) (quoting Peralta v. Heights Med. Ctr., Inc., 
    485 U.S. 80
    , 84 (1988)). When sanctions are based on a party’s motion, a trial court may not award
    sanctions on grounds not asserted in that motion. Polansky v. Berenji, 
    393 S.W.3d 362
    , 369 (Tex.
    App.—Austin 2012, no pet.); see Mann, 464 S.W.3d at 93; Greene v. Young, 
    174 S.W.3d 291
    ,
    298–301 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2005, pet. denied) (reversing sanctions award because
    parties did not have notice of legal basis or conduct under consideration for sanctions).
    We further limit our review to the record before us. We note that there was no live
    testimony presented at the hearing. So, the record we review consists of the documents the trial
    court based its ruling on as stated in its order: (a) the pleadings and submissions of all parties, (b)
    the exhibits attached to the pleadings which were cited to the trial court at the hearing, and (c) the
    exhibits already on file among the papers of this court and which were incorporated by reference
    in the submission.
    Finally, in our review, we will not consider as evidence arguments the attorneys made in
    support of, or in opposition to, the motion for sanctions; “[m]otions and arguments of counsel are
    not evidence.” In re Barrett, No. 04-23-00928-CV, 
    2023 WL 8793150
    , at *5 (Tex. App.—San
    Antonio Dec. 20, 2023, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.) (quoting McCain v. NME Hosps., Inc., 
    856 S.W.2d 751
    , 757 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1993, no writ)).
    ORDERING SANCTIONS UNDER RULE 13 AND CHAPTER 10
    In their first issue, the Reynolds companies argue that the trial court abused its discretion
    by awarding sanctions against them.
    A.     Reynolds Companies’ Arguments
    Appellants argue that (1) the record contains no proof of groundlessness, bad faith, or
    improper motive, and (2) the trial court’s findings lack evidentiary basis, are wholly conclusory,
    - 23 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    or grant relief not requested in Appellees’ motion for sanctions. Specifically, Appellants contend
    that neither the motion for sanctions nor any document attached to it or referenced in it contain or
    reference any proof that any pleading or document referenced in the court’s order or in the Plains
    companies’ motion for sanctions were groundless or were filed in bad faith or for any improper
    motive at the time any such document was filed.
    B.      Plains Companies’ Arguments
    Appellees argue the trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting the motion for
    sanctions pursuant to Rule 13 and Chapter 10 because the record contains evidence demonstrating
    Appellants’ sanctionable conduct, which included (a) failing to undertake a reasonable inquiry
    before filing pleadings for an improper purpose and which contained allegations lacking
    evidentiary support and (b) serving written discovery responses that were groundless and brought
    in bad faith.
    C.      Plains Companies’ Motion for Sanctions
    To resolve the issues before us, and because a trial court may not award sanctions on
    grounds not asserted, we must first look to Appellees’ sanctions motion. See In re Champagne,
    
    2021 WL 4976719
    , at *2, Polansky, 393 S.W.3d at 369; Clark, 
    217 S.W.3d at 513
    ; Greene, 174
    S.W.3d at 298–301; In re L.A.M. & Assocs., 975 S.W.2d at 83; see also WWW.URBAN.INC. v.
    Drummond, 
    508 S.W.3d 657
    , 675 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2016, no pet.) (a trial court “is
    not authorized to grant sanctions under a statute or rule not identified in the motion for sanctions”).
    1.      Groundless Claim or Contention
    As we noted above, Rule 13 requires evidence of both groundlessness and bad faith or
    improper motive, such as intent to harass. Nath I, 446 S.W.3d at 362–63. Chapter 10 requires
    proof of an improper motive or proof that a pleading lacked legal or factual support or is not likely
    to have evidentiary support. Id. at 362.
    - 24 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    Because “groundless” under Rule 13 is defined as not having a basis in law or fact, both
    Rule 13 and Chapter 10 share the same element. See Mann, 464 S.W.3d at 92; see also TEX. R.
    CIV. P. 13; TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.001. Unlike Rule 13, Chapter 10 is violated
    if a pleading or motion is groundless under any subsection of section 10.001. See Mann, 464
    S.W.3d at 92.
    The relevant time period for both rules is the time when the pleading or document is filed.
    Without evidence of the circumstances surrounding the filing of a pleading, motion or document,
    a trial court abuses its discretion by ordering sanctions. Nath I, 446 S.W.3d at 369; Pace v. Aces
    Autos, LLC, No. 08-23-00127-CV, 
    2024 WL 1237502
    , at *11 (Tex. App.—El Paso Mar. 22, 2024,
    no pet. h.) (mem. op.).
    The trial court also abuses its discretion by awarding Rule 13 sanctions if there is no
    evidence of the signer’s credibility or motive. See Pace, 
    2024 WL 1237502
    , at *10.
    2.       Plains Companies’ Motion for Sanctions
    In their sanctions motion, the Plains companies alleged that the Reynolds defendants and
    their former attorneys violated Rule 13 and Chapter 10 in three respects:
    •     Using Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to Dianna’s Interrogatory
    No. 3 to generate later pleadings and serving deposition notices when Appellants
    and former attorney knew the third amended answers was groundless, without
    evidentiary support, false and made in bad faith for the purpose of harassing.
    •     Opposing Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment with
    (a) Hayes’s false testimony, (b) a sham affidavit of a later de-designated expert,
    and (c) false allegations supported by former counsel’s sworn affidavit that eight
    Plains employees and other people with knowledge of relevant facts had to be
    deposed before the court could consider Plains Marketing’s motion.
    •     Filing a cross-action against Plains Marketing in April 2021 with the intent to
    continue to prosecute the action against Appellees despite clear and
    uncontroverted evidence that Reynolds Energy’s claims were false.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    3.     Exhibits Attached to the Motion for Sanctions
    The Plains companies attached the following exhibits to their motion:
    A.   Transcript of John Hayes deposition on January 28, 2020;
    B.   Transcript of James White deposition on December 3, 2020;
    C.   Reynolds Energy’s and Hayes’s Second Amended Answer;
    D.   Reynolds Energy’s Third Amended Answers to Plaintiff’s First Set of
    Interrogatories;
    E.   Reynolds Energy’s Third Amended Responses to All Parties’ Requests for
    Disclosure and Designation of Experts;
    F.   Plaintiff’s Response to Plains Marketing’s No-Evidence Motion for
    Summary Judgment;
    G.   Plains Marketing’s Reply to Reynolds Energy’s Response to the No-
    Evidence Motion for Summary Judgment;
    H.   String of e-mails to and from the Flores Law Firm and Appellees’ attorney;
    I.   Hayes’s Second Supplemental Responses to Plaintiff’s First Requests for
    Admissions;
    J.   Appellants’ and Hayes’s Third Amended Responses to All Parties’ Requests
    for Disclosure and Designation of Experts;
    K.   Reynolds Transportation’s Objections and Responses to Plaintiff’s First
    Request for Production;
    L.   North Owens Station Logs;
    M.   Attorney’s Fees payments list;
    N.   Reynolds Energy’s and Hayes’s Response in Opposition to Plains
    Marketing’s Motion for Leave to Amend its No-Evidence Motion for
    Summary Judgment;
    O.   An example sanctions order from a case in Fort Bend County;
    P.   Reynolds Transportation’s Responses to Plaintiff’s Requests for Admissions;
    and
    Q.   Reynolds Energy’s Responses to Plaintiff’s Ninth Request for Admissions.
    Keeping in mind that both Rule 13 and Chapter 10 require us to review the evidence
    existing at the time Bair signed the third amended answers to Dianna’s Interrogatory No. 3,
    Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence summary judgment, and Johnson
    - 26 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    signed Reynolds Energy’s cross-action against Plains Marketing, we will first determine what
    those circumstances were.
    D.      Circumstances When the Challenged Documents were Filed
    Dianna’s accident occurred on December 20, 2018. Suit was filed on January 10, 2019,
    against Plains Marketing and Reynolds Energy. On October 22, 2019, Dianna brought Hayes into
    the lawsuit. Between the time Dianna filed her lawsuit and January 8, 2020, the parties exchanged
    discovery responses. The first deposition took place on January 8, 2020, when Charles Mills, the
    other guard at the North Owens site when Dianna fell, was deposed. On January 16, 2020,
    Reynolds Energy served its amended answers to Dianna’s interrogatories. Shortly thereafter,
    Dianna filed her first motion for Reynolds Energy to disclose its theories of liability. On January
    22, 2020, Reynolds Energy’s former attorney and Dianna’s attorney entered into a Rule 11
    agreement to resolve Dianna’s motion to disclose theories of liability. As part of the agreement,
    Reynolds agreed to amend its answer to Interrogatory No. 3 once it received more information on
    the liability theories.
    In an e-mail dated February 5, 2020, to Plains Marketing’s attorney, Reynolds Energy’s
    attorney, Marc Johnson, requested the depositions of two Plains Marketing employees, and asked
    for the identity of the Plains employee who had the most knowledge about the design, installation,
    operation, and maintenance of the LACT unit. Plains Marketing’s attorney responded that same
    day with “My presumption is that will be Mike, but I will check.” The next day, Marc Johnson
    asked Plains Marketing’s attorney to add the name of a third employee to the list.
    Hayes was again deposed on February 21, 2020. Jesse Guerra, a driver who was at the site
    when Dianna fell, was deposed on March 17, 2020.
    On April 7, 2020, Dianna filed a motion to strike the liability theories that Reynolds Energy
    had not disclosed, which motion Plains Marketing later joined. On April 27, 2020, Plains
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Marketing filed its motion for no-evidence summary judgment. Also on April 27, 2020, Reynolds
    Energy and Hayes filed a cross-action for contribution against Plains Marketing.
    On April 28, 2020, Reynolds Energy served its third amended answers to Dianna’s
    Interrogatory No. 3 and included nine theories of liability on the part of Plains Marketing. In that
    same amended answer, Reynolds Energy reserved its right to supplement once Plains Marketing
    produced its employees for depositions. Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers included the
    following language:
    Defendant reserves the right to amend this answer as discovery is ongoing and
    Plains Marketing, LP has refused to provide dates its employees identified herein
    would be made available for deposition, and further, filed motions to quash the
    depositions of these employees noticed by Defendant when no agreement to
    schedule the depositions could be obtained from Plains Marketing, LP.
    On May 29, 2020, Dianna filed a second amended petition bringing into the lawsuit
    Reynolds Transportation, Inc.; Plains All American Pipeline, L.P.; Plains Pipeline, L.P.; Vapor
    Point, LLC; John E. Meador Construction, Inc.; and Quality Pipeline Construction, LLC.
    On June 6, 2020, three days before the response to Plains Marketing’s motion for summary
    judgment was filed and four months after Appellants’ first request for depositions, Appellees’
    attorney wrote an e-mail to Appellants’ former attorneys stating the following:
    Given the number of motions pending for the hearing of June 16 and the addition
    of the new Defendants, I will agree to move my hearing on my No Evidence
    Summary Judgment for a short time to permit depositions of some of the witnesses
    that the parties have requested and as I have previously offered. This
    correspondence shall be my effort to confer with all parties. . . . In the meantime,
    I will make Mike Vargas available for deposition as requested and will provide you
    all with dates in July for same. Ron, Please provide us with dates in July to take
    Jake Thigpen’s deposition.
    Marc Johnson, Appellants’ former attorney, responded on the same day with the following:
    Mary, would you be willing to enter into a Rule 11 agreement to present the Plains
    personnel who are the subject of your motions to quash for deposition? We will
    agree to produce Jake Thigpen thereafter. This is actually the first time you have
    offered to produce anyone from Plains for deposition. Because of our past
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    04-22-00450-CV
    difficulty in getting these witnesses schedule for deposition, we will need a
    mutually acceptable Rule 11 agreement from you setting forth the timing of these
    depositions to avoid having to go back to the court for relief. I would be happy to
    prepare a first draft for your review if you would like.
    To which Appellees’ attorney responded on the same day:
    Marc, if you will please review my emails, you will see that your statement is
    untrue—this is the 4th time I’ve offered some of my people. I will agree to produce
    Mike Vargas first if you will first supplement your disclosure regarding the
    expert(s) and their opinions you reference to respond to my requests for
    production. . . . Then I will work with you on a Rule 11 as to the depositions.
    In response, Marc Johnson wrote this:
    Mary, I have seen all your emails. You have never offered your witnesses for
    deposition. Quite the opposite. You have made some references to maybe being
    willing to offer a Plains representative for deposition if we agree to comply with
    your demands relating to the substance of our discovery responses despite failing
    to cite any rule or case supporting your demand when asked to do so. In effect, you
    have not made any offer at all. You are now doing this again in your email below.
    On June 9, 2020, Bair filed Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence
    motion for summary judgment. The response included Hayes’s deposition testimony, Gehse’s
    affidavit, and Marc Johnson’s affidavit.
    On June 10, 2020, Plains Marketing’s attorney filed a motion for leave to amend its no-
    evidence motion for summary judgment. On June 12, Reynolds Energy responded to Plains
    Marketing’s motion for leave stating there had not been enough time to complete discovery
    because Plains Marketing was not cooperating with scheduling its employees for depositions. On
    June 17, 2020, the trial court denied Plains Marketing’s motion for summary judgment and ordered
    it to produce eight of its employees for deposition. Plains Marketing continued to delay producing
    its witnesses despite the trial court’s order to do so. On September 9, 2020, Reynolds Energy filed
    a motion to compel Plains Marketing to provide adequate dates for the depositions of the eight
    employees the trial court had ordered to be deposed.
    - 29 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    Based on the evidence, we conclude that the circumstances surrounding the signing of
    Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to Dianna’s Interrogatory No. 3, its response to Plains
    Marketing’s motion for summary judgment, and the April cross-action are evidence that discovery
    was ongoing. We base this conclusion on these facts: (a) Plains Marketing had not presented its
    employees for depositions despite requests made by Bair and Johnson, (b) Dianna’s motion to
    strike Reynolds Energy’s liability theories was pending, and (c) Reynolds Energy was preparing
    its evidence to respond to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment, which
    was filed while discovery was ongoing. 5
    We now turn to Appellees’ argument in their sanctions motion (that Reynolds Energy’s
    third amended answers to Dianna’s Interrogatory No. 3 contained groundless theories of liability).
    E.         Reynolds Energy’s Third Amended Answers to Interrogatory No. 3
    Dianna’s Interrogatory No. 3 was a contention interrogatory.                     It requested Reynolds
    Marketing to disclose the identity of someone or some condition or event not in its control which
    Reynolds Marketing contended was the cause of Dianna’s accident.
    1.       Reynolds Energy’s Answer
    In its third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3, 6 Reynolds Energy alleged that Plains
    Marketing was a cause of Dianna’s accident based on the following theories of liability:
    1. Plains was involved in the design, procurement and directed construction of the
    LACT and Scrubber system and gave final approval for same. Any defects or
    5
    Rule 166a(i) addresses a no-evidence motion:
    After adequate time for discovery, a party without presenting summary judgment evidence may
    move for summary judgment on the ground that there is no evidence of one or more essential
    elements of a claim or defense on which an adverse party would have the burden of proof at trial.
    The motion must state the elements as to which there is no evidence. The court must grant the motion
    unless the respondent produces summary judgment evidence raising a genuine issue of material fact.
    TEX. R. CIV. P. 166a(i).
    6
    It is undisputed that Reynolds Energy served its third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3 as a response to
    Dianna’s April 7, 2020 motion to strike undisclosed liability theories.
    - 30 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    problems with the design, construction or operations are the responsibility of
    Plains.
    2. Plains failed to allow for normal operating conditions LACT and Scrubber such
    that the Scrubber jammed up and caused not only the failure of vapor recovery
    system (VRS) but backpressure into the lines on multiple occasions causing a
    shutdown of the VRS.
    3. Plains did not take proper operational precautions (from a simple cap or hanger
    to other options) to prevent the jamming of the Scrubber system in that they
    allowed, after usage by oil tankers, the end of the vapor recovery hose to fall into
    the dirt, mud, water and rocks allowing it to clog and jam the Scrubber system
    which was designed to chemically scrub out hydrocarbons from vapor, not water,
    mud, dirt and rocks.
    4. Plains had created “Plains All American Pipeline-Guidelines for Guards” dated
    June 27, 2016, that the guards were to follow at North Owens. The files of Mills
    and [Dianna] are devoid of any evidence that they were ever trained on these
    requirements or that Plains ever required Timekeepers to do so. We have
    independent evidence verifying multiple failures of the vapor recovery system
    yet Plains has failed to produce a single “observational report” regarding same
    as required by their own Guidelines. This is despite Mike Vargas and James
    Mclntyre of Plains being onsite and personally witnessed problems with the
    vapor recovery system as well as relief valve pop-offs on trucks.
    5. Plains contracted with John Meador Construction to do repairs and some of the
    installation of the LACT and Scrubber but was directed and controlled by Mike
    Vargas of Plains. That would have been a good time to allow for something to
    protect and store the vapor recovery hose.
    6. Plains contracted with Quality Pipeline Construction to do the initial install of
    the LACT, Scrubber and railing. Work invoice says all work is being done as
    directed by Jimmy McKee of Plains. The railing at the point of the accident is
    l6-l8 inches. OSHA requires railing in a pedestrian work area to be much higher
    in range of 30-38 inches so as not to create a trip hazard. The railing in place at
    the time of the accident created a trip hazard. All of the installation was approved
    by Mike Vargas of Plains. If the railing had been at the proper height the accident
    would not have happened.
    7. Plains was the only source of any air that came out of side vent. All pressure in
    the oil tank trailer had equalized and was static. The Vapor Recovery System
    was jammed up and prevented Hayes from loading. Guerra was loading at LACT
    One and was hooked up to the same VRS. The air vapor from his trailer would
    have gone into a piping system connected to T721 and due to the Scrubber being
    jammed the vapor back pressure took the path of least resistance and came out
    the side vent valve. T721 was between Guerra and the Scrubber.
    8. Plains failed to assure that Mills and [Dianna] had the proper training and
    licensure to do their job as noncommissioned security guards. Texas requires
    such licensure and training but neither Mills nor [Dianna] were properly licensed
    or trained.
    - 31 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    9. Plains failed to monitor and supervise Mills and [Dianna] regarding compliance
    and creating documentation in accordance with Plains own policies and
    procedures including but not limited to creating observational reports and
    documenting any problems or concerns that arose with regard to operations or
    safety.
    This second amended answer was followed by the following disclaimer:
    Defendant reserves the right to amend this answer as discovery is ongoing and
    Plains Marketing, LP has refused to provide dates its employees identified herein
    would be made available for deposition, and further, filed motions to quash the
    depositions of these employees noticed by Defendant when no agreement to
    schedule the depositions could be obtained from Plains Marketing, LP.
    Bair signed the amended answer to Interrogatory No. 3. Reynolds Energy did not verify it.
    2.      Plains Companies’ Arguments
    In its sanctions motion, Appellees argued that Appellants’ allegations in the amended
    answer to Interrogatory No. 3 were false, unsupported by any evidence and disproven by evidence
    known at the time or before Reynolds Energy and Bair served the amended answer. They argued
    that the false allegations were the basis of future pleadings, including Dianna’s Second Amended
    Petition, which resulted in a delay of the trial. Therefore, they conclude, the third amended answers
    to Interrogatory No. 3 was in violation of section 10.001 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies
    Code.
    Section 10.001 applies to pleadings and motions but not to discovery. See TEX. CIV. PRAC.
    & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.001; Nath v. Tex. Children’s Hosp. (Nath I), 
    446 S.W.3d 355
    , 369–70
    (Tex. 2014). However, given that Appellees allege that the theories of liability listed in Reynolds
    Energy’s third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3 were incorporated into its response to
    Plains Marketing’s summary judgment motion, which is sanctionable under section 10.001, we
    will review the challenged theories of liability to determine if they were groundless.
    - 32 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    3.      Were Reynolds Energy’s Third Amended Answers to Interrogatory No. 3
    Groundless?
    In support of their argument that the theories of liability delineated in answer to
    Interrogatory No. 3, Appellees relied on (a) Dianna’s Second Amended Petition and her response
    to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment, (b) an April 27, 2020 e-mail
    from Bair, (c) Hayes’s and Guerra’s depositions testimony, (d) a National Weather report of the
    city where the North Owens site is located, (e) OSHA standards, and (f) Texas Department of
    Public Safety licensing records.
    a.      Dianna’s Second Amended Petition, Response to Plains Marketing’s No-
    Evidence Motion
    In her Second Amended Petition, Dianna alleged she was suing other parties because
    Reynolds Energy was shifting blame away from itself “[d]espite the overwhelming evidence that
    this incident resulted from the negligence of Defendants Hayes and Reynolds.”
    At the sanctions hearing, Appellees argued that Dianna sued them only because, within
    twenty-four hours after Dianna fell, Bair told her attorney that he was intending to blame Plains
    Marketing for her injuries. To support their argument, Appellees relied on Dianna’s response to
    Plains Marketing’s no-evidence summary judgment motion. In that response Dianna asserted that
    “even prior to the beginning of this litigation, Defendant Reynolds indicated to counsel for Plaintiff
    its intention to lay blame for this incident on Defendant Plains Marketing, L.P. This representation
    from Defendant Reynolds was the reason that Defendant Plains Marketing, L.P. was included as a
    Defendant in Plaintiff’s Original Petition.” Dianna’s response to Plains Marketing’s motion for
    summary judgment was admitted by the trial court as evidence supporting sanctions.
    We do not agree with Appellees that the contents of Dianna’s petition and response to the
    summary judgment are evidence. Contents of pleadings are not evidence and, as such, they do not
    support Appellees’ claim that Reynolds Energy and Bair violated Rule 13 or Chapter 10 by filing
    - 33 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    the third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3. See In re Elamex, S.A. de C.V., 
    367 S.W.3d 891
    , 898 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2012, no pet.) (citing Laidlaw Waste Sys. (Dall.), Inc. v. City of
    Wilmer, 
    904 S.W.2d 656
    , 660 (Tex. 1995); Americana Motel, Inc. v. Johnson, 
    610 S.W.2d 143
    ,
    143 (Tex. 1980)); see also Vill. Square, Ltd. v. Barton, 
    660 S.W.2d 556
    , 559 (Tex. App.—San
    Antonio 1983, writ ref’d n.r.e.) (ordinarily, pleadings are not evidence). Also not evidence are
    Appellees’ arguments relating to the veracity of the contents in Dianna’s pleadings; arguments of
    counsel are not evidence. See In re Barrett, No. 04-23-00928-CV, 
    2023 WL 8793150
    , at *5 (Tex.
    App.—San Antonio Dec. 20, 2023, orig. proceeding) (mem. op.) (quoting McCain v. NME Hosps.,
    Inc., 
    856 S.W.2d 751
    , 757 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1993, no writ)).
    Based on Dianna’s pleadings alone, Appellees did not meet their burden to show that
    Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3 were groundless.
    We next address Reynolds Energy’s former attorney’s April 10, 2020 e-mail.
    b.       Bair’s April 10, 2020 E-mail
    In their brief, Appellees contend that on April 10, 2020, Ron Bair, Appellants’ former
    attorney, knew that Plains Marketing did not design, install, or maintain the LACT unit and Vapor
    Recovery System. Appellees argue that despite this knowledge, Bair signed the third amended
    answers to Interrogatory No. 3 stating that the Plains companies designed, installed, and
    maintained the LACT unit and the vapor recovery system.
    In support, Appellees introduced an e-mail dated April 10, 2020, where Bair asked for the
    depositions of all the other defendants’ employees. 7 In the e-mail, Bair identified the role each
    defendant played in the lawsuit and the depositions he needed from each. Appellees argued that
    7
    The other defendants included Timekeepers, Inc.; Plains Marketing, L.P.; Plains All American Pipeline, L.P.; Plains
    Pipeline, L.P.; Vapor Point, LLC; Quality Pipeline Construction, LLC; John E. Meador Construction, Inc.; and Dragon
    Products, Inc.
    - 34 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    because Bair identified Vapor Point as responsible for the Scrubber system’s design, installation,
    and maintenance, and Quality Pipeline Construction as having designed and installed the LACT
    unit and the railing, Reynolds knew that Plains did not design, install, or maintain the equipment
    at issue.
    What Appellees fail to bring forward is that in that same e-mail, Bair also asked for the
    Plains companies’ employees who dealt with (a) the initial construction of the LACT and vapor
    recovery system and signed off on the work completed, (b) the design and construction of the
    railing around the LACT, (c) Vapor Point on the installation and maintenance of the vapor recovery
    system, and (d) the review or had any part in the design and construction of the LACT, its railing,
    and the vapor recovery system and the selection of the Scrubber system in question including
    communications with Vapor Point.
    Appellees also failed to note that in Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to
    Interrogatory No. 3, it did not contend that the Plains companies were solely responsible for the
    design and construction of the LACT and Scrubber system; it simply stated that “Plains was
    involved in the design, procurement and directed construction of the LACT and Scrubber system,”
    (emphasis added), which is consistent with Bair’s April 10, 2020 e-mail.
    Based on Bair’s April 10, 2020 e-mail, we agree with Appellees that when Bair signed the
    third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3, Bair had knowledge of Vapor Point and Quality
    Pipeline’s involvement in the design, construction, and installation of the LACT unit and the
    Scrubber system. We don’t agree, however, that Bair’s April 10, 2020 e-mail evidenced Bair’s
    knowledge that the Plains companies were not involved in any aspect of the design, installation,
    or construction of the LACT unit and the Scrubber system.
    Contrary to Appellees’ contention, Bair’s April 10, 2020 e-mail does not support a finding
    that Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3 were groundless.
    - 35 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    c.      Hayes’s and Guerra’s Deposition Testimony
    Appellees argue that Hayes’s and Guerra’s deposition testimony, taken before Bair signed
    the third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3, showed no evidence of problems with the vapor
    recovery system and that Hayes’s theory that either air “regurgitation” or a clog caused the pop-
    off had never occurred before. Because Reynolds Energy knew of Guerra’s testimony before Bair
    signed the third amended answers, Appellees conclude Reynolds Energy’s contentions were
    baseless.
    (1)     Hayes’s Deposition
    At his January 28, 2020 deposition, Hayes testified that, on the day of Dianna’s fall, he was
    able to determine that his truck was not one of the causes of the pop-off. As he left the scene, he
    concluded that the vapor recovery system was full of water, mud, or gunk from the ground.
    Although it had not rained on that day and there was no mud on the ground, it had happened before
    to him. He explained that when the vapor recovery line is filled with mud, it causes a pressure
    buildup that results in a pop-off.
    (2)     Guerra’s Deposition
    Jesse Guerra, a Reynolds Energy driver, arrived at the North Owens site about six minutes
    after Hayes. Hayes was already loading his tanker when Guerra arrived. As Guerra began loading
    his tanker at the other LACT unit, he heard an air release—or pop-off—coming from the LACT
    unit where Hayes was loading, and he saw Hayes underneath his truck. Guerra had never heard
    of air regurgitation or a clog causing a pop-off. But he knew that other drivers experienced
    clogging and could not fill their truck with crude oil. In his opinion, on the night of the accident,
    the cause of the pop-off was a problem with Hayes’s truck. There was nothing going on with the
    Plains companies’ equipment that caused the pop-off.
    - 36 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    (3)     Conflicting Evidence
    Here, Guerra and Hayes had different opinions on what caused the pop-off in Hayes’s
    tanker on the day of Dianna’s fall. Guerra opined that it was Hayes’s tanker. Hayes said that it
    was a clogged vent hose. Both knew, however, that vent hoses clogged up: Hayes because he
    personally experienced it, Guerra because he heard it from other drivers.
    (4)     Reasonable Inquiry into Facts
    To determine whether Reynolds Energy’s liability theories relating to a clogged vent being
    the cause of the air pressure release are groundless based on Guerra’s and Hayes’s differing
    personal opinions, we must ask whether Bair made a reasonable inquiry into the factual basis
    supporting such theories before signing the third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3. See
    Loeffler v. Lytle Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    211 S.W.3d 331
    , 348 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2006, pet.
    denied) (citing In re United Servs. Auto. Ass’n, 
    76 S.W.3d 112
    , 116 (Tex. App.—San Antonio
    2002, no pet.)); see also Bravenec v. Flores, No. 04-11-00444-CV, 
    2013 WL 1149418
    , at *4, *8
    (Tex. App.—San Antonio Mar. 20, 2013, no pet.) (mem. op.) (reasonable inquiry requires amount
    of examination that is reasonable under circumstances). If a factual contention on the theory of
    liability is “likely to have evidentiary support after a reasonable opportunity for further
    investigation and discovery” then under Chapter 10, it is not groundless. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. &
    REM. CODE ANN. § 10.001(3); Nath I, 446 S.W.3d at 369.
    (5)     Facts at Relevant Time
    We previously concluded that when Bair filed Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers
    to Interrogatory No. 3, discovery was ongoing, and the Plains companies were refusing to produce
    their employees for depositions. The record also shows that in the third amended answers to
    Interrogatory No. 3, Bair included a disclaimer to amend the answers on the grounds that discovery
    was ongoing, Plains Marketing had refused to provide dates for its employees to be deposed, and
    - 37 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    it had quashed deposition notices. Guerra testifying to something different than what Hayes
    testified to does not show that either testimony was false or true. We are reminded that in litigation,
    witnesses often give controverting opinions, and it is through the discovery process that the same
    are cleared, confirmed, or rejected.
    We conclude that Bair’s inquiry on the theory of liability regarding the clogged vent hose
    based on Hayes’s testimony was reasonable and likely to have evidentiary support under the
    circumstances. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.001(3); Low v. Henry, 
    221 S.W.3d 609
    , 614 (Tex. 2007).
    d.      Weather Report
    Appellees argue that Hayes’s theory of a mud clog was entirely speculative based on a
    weather report produced at his deposition, which showed it had virtually no rain for months before
    and on the day of Dianna’s fall. In their motion for sanctions, they alleged Hayes’s testimony was
    false.
    As stated above, on January 28, 2020, Hayes testified that in his opinion the recovery
    system was full of water, mud, or gunk from the ground. Although it had not rained on that day
    and there was no mud on the ground, it had happened to him before.
    At Hayes’s February 21, 2020 deposition, Plains Marketing’s attorney showed Hayes a
    copy of the National Weather Report. Hayes agreed that the report showed that on the month
    before Dianna fell, there were only two days of rain that totaled almost an inch and-a-half. Hayes,
    however, explained that mud would build up inside the hoses with vapor from the trucks and that
    the hoses would have to be cleaned to remove that buildup. He did not know how they were
    cleaned, how often they were cleaned, or who was responsible for the cleaning.
    Hayes’s testimony shows another reason for the clogging: the vapor from the trucks.
    Therefore, the weather report alone does not show how the vapor hoses could have been clogged.
    - 38 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    But a determination of whether Reynolds Energy’s liability theories relating to a clogged vent are
    groundless because of the weather report requires us to ask whether Bair made a reasonable inquiry
    into the factual basis that supported those theories.
    At the time Bair signed the third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3, discovery was
    ongoing. In those amended answers, Bair reserved the right to amend the answers on the grounds
    that discovery was ongoing, Plains Marketing had refused to provide dates for its employees to be
    deposed, and it had quashed deposition notices.
    We conclude it was reasonable under the circumstances for Bair to rely only on Hayes’s
    testimony that the clogged vent hose could have been a cause of the accident. We conclude that
    those theories were likely to have evidentiary support at the time and under the existing
    circumstances when Bair signed Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3.
    See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.001(3); Low, 221 S.W.3d at 614.
    e.      Dianna’s License as a Guard
    In the third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3, Reynolds Energy asserted the
    following theory of liability against the Plains companies:
    Plains failed to assure that Mills and [Dianna] had the proper training and licensure
    to do their job as a noncommissioned security guards. Texas requires such licensure
    and training but neither Mills nor [Dianna] were properly licensed or trained.
    Appellees argue that Reynolds Energy’s liability theories are not supported because the
    evidence showed Dianna and Mills were not employed by Plains, that Plains had no duty to train
    them, and that Dianna was properly licensed as a noncommissioned officer. Had Appellants
    exercised due diligence before making the allegation, a search in the Texas Department of Public
    Safety’s website would have shown Dianna was properly licensed and trained.
    - 39 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    We will separately analyze the issues of training and licensing.
    (1)    Training
    Contrary to Appellees’ contention, Reynolds Energy did not assert that Mills and Dianna
    were employed by Plains Marketing or that it was Plains Marketing’s duty to train them. Instead,
    Reynolds Energy’s liability theory was based on Plains Marketing failure to “assure Mills and
    [Dianna] had the proper training.”
    At the time Bair signed Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3,
    he had available Appellees’ “Guidelines for Guards” and Mills’s deposition testimony.
    Plains All American Pipeline’s “Guidelines for Guards” required Timekeepers, the
    company that hired Mills and Dianna, to follow safety procedures at all times. The contract
    between Timekeepers and Plains All American Pipeline required Timekeepers to ensure that all
    operations were conducted in a safe manner, and to promptly correct and report to Plains’
    employees all hazards or unsafe conditions. Despite the concern with safety, according to Mills’s
    testimony, he never participated in a Plains Marketing safety meeting, and the only training he and
    Dianna received from Timekeepers was to wear hard hats and a neon reflective vest, how to fill
    out paperwork, and who to call in the event of an emergency. There is no evidence in the record
    that Plains Marketing took any steps to “assure” safety procedures were being followed by the
    guards.
    We conclude that Bair reasonably investigated Reynolds Energy’s theory of liability that
    the Plains companies did not assure that Dianna and Mills were trained. Therefore, that theory is
    not groundless.
    (2)    Licensing
    Appellees argue that Bair failed to exercise due diligence before making the licensing
    allegation. They argue that a search in the Texas Department of Public Safety’s website would
    - 40 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    have shown Dianna was properly licensed and trained. They do not argue, however, that the same
    search would have shown that Mills was also licensed.
    To determine whether Bair’s legal theory that Plains Marketing did not assure that Dianna
    and Mills had the required licensing is groundless, we once again look at the evidence available to
    Bair at the time he signed the third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3.
    The record shows that, at the time of Mills’s deposition, Bair had Dianna’s and Mills’s
    personnel files from Timekeepers. Mills testified that when they started working for Timekeepers,
    they took a test for a Texas security license through the Department of Homeland Security. But
    Veronica, their supervisor at Timekeepers, did not receive the licenses.
    Appellants argue that because it was later confirmed that Mills did not have a license, their
    theory of liability was not groundless. However, as stated throughout our opinion, we will only
    consider the evidence Bair had at the time he signed Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to
    Interrogatory No. 3. That evidence shows Bair knew from Mills’s testimony that both Mills and
    Dianna had taken the test for a Texas license for security guards. The evidence also shows that
    Bair knew Timeshares did not have their licenses on file.
    The evidence also shows that from January 18, 2020, when Mills was deposed, through
    April 28, 2020, it would have been reasonable for Bair to inquire through any source whether either
    had a Texas license as noncommissioned officers. Therefore, a statement that Dianna and Mills
    were not properly licensed was groundless.
    f.      Guardrails Violated OSHA Standards
    In its third amended answers to Dianna’s Interrogatory No. 3, Reynolds Energy’s OSHA
    theory of liability was this:
    Plains contracted with Quality Pipeline Construction to do the initial install of the
    LACT, Scrubber and railing. Work invoice says all work is being done as directed
    by Jimmy McKee of Plains. The railing at the point of the accident is l6-l8 inches.
    - 41 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    OSHA requires railing in a pedestrian work area to be much higher in range of 30-
    38 inches so as not to create a trip hazard. The railing in place at the time of the
    accident created a trip hazard. All of the installation was approved by Mike Vargas
    of Plains. If the railing had been at the proper height the accident would not have
    happened.
    Appellees argue that Bair’s theory that guardrails at the North Owens site violated OSHA
    standards was not supported by the evidence because OSHA standards did not apply and, despite
    Reynolds Energy’s claim that Dianna tripped over a guardrail, no one saw how Dianna fell.
    Our review of the record shows that when Bair signed Reynolds Energy’s third amended
    answers to Interrogatory No. 3, Mills, Guerra, and Hayes had testified they did not see how Dianna
    fell. Hayes testified he saw Dianna lying on the ground inside the railing of LACT2 and was
    bleeding from her head. A state Worker’s Compensation Claim in which a notation of how the
    accident occurred stated that “The employee [Dianna] was tripped by or fell over a railing hitting
    her head.” A Plains Marketing’s incident report written by Paul Paget, Plains Marketing’s safety
    manager, dated December 20, 2019, stated that when the pressure release in Hayes’s truck caused
    a loud noise, Dianna jumped back “and made contact with the railing, causing her to fall over
    backwards striking the back of her head.”
    We are again reminded that discovery was ongoing at the time Bair signed Reynolds
    Energy’s third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3. Based on the information available to
    Bair at the time he filed the amended answers, he had factual support to assert an OSHA violation
    theory. He reserved his right to amend that answer in the event other information surfaced as
    discovery progressed.
    We conclude that Bair made a reasonable investigation on the OSHA standards that applied
    based on Plains Marketing’s accident report and the worker’s compensation claim. Therefore, we
    conclude that Reynolds Energy’s OSHA theory of liability was not groundless.
    - 42 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    We next address Appellees’ allegations in their motion for sanctions that Bair signed
    Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s No-Evidence Motion for Summary Judgment
    in violation of Rule 13 and Chapter 10.
    F.     Reynolds Energy’s Response to Plains Marketing’s No-Evidence Motion
    On April 27, 2020, Plains Marketing filed its motion for no-evidence summary judgment
    against Dianna’s claims. On June 9, 2020, Reynolds Energy filed its response to that motion. On
    June 10, 2020, Plains Marketing filed an amended motion for no-evidence summary judgment. As
    stated, discovery was ongoing at that time, and Plains Marketing had refused to produce its
    employees for deposition and had quashed at least eight deposition notices despite the requests
    made by Bair as early as February 5, 2020.
    1.      Grounds in Plains Marketing’s Motion for Sanctions
    In their sanctions motion, Appellees argued that Appellants and Bair violated Rule 13 and
    Chapter 10 when Bair signed the response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary
    judgment because that response was supported by (a) Hayes’s false deposition testimony, (b) a
    sham affidavit by a later de-designated expert, and (c) the affidavit that was signed by Reynolds
    Energy’s other attorney, Marc Johnson, was filed with the purpose of delaying the litigation.
    a.      Hayes’s False Deposition Testimony
    In their motion for sanctions, Appellees contended that when Hayes was deposed on
    January 28, 2020, and on February 21, 2020, he was not truthful. Specifically, Appellees argued
    that Hayes falsely testified that (a) the vent line was clogged when the line was not clogged, (b) he
    reported to his employer that the vent was clogged, when there was no such report, (c) he routinely
    “vented to the air” despite that being a known EPA violation, (d) the guards authorized him “not
    to use the vapor recovery system, not to call Reynolds, not to advise Reynolds that the equipment
    - 43 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    wasn’t working and to vent to the atmosphere[,]” when that did not occur, and (e) he had no
    criminal convictions when subsequent evidence showed he did.
    Appellees argued that despite Appellants and Bair knowing that Hayes testimony was false
    and amounted to perjury, Appellants included that testimony to oppose Plains Marketing’s motion
    for summary judgment in violation of Rule 13 and Chapter 10.
    In Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion, Bair’s reliance
    on Hayes’s testimony was limited as follows:
    Further evidence of Plains negligence and premises liability are the two depositions of
    John Hayes, attached as Ex. 8. Reynolds’ points specifically to pp. 186 line 3 - 187
    line 17, in which he testified that he believed that Plains’ vapor hose was defective. On
    page 218 line 9-13, he testified that he saw Ms. Marable laying inside the railing where
    she fell. On Page 413 line 1-21 he describes how the Plains vapor hose was left in the
    mud and would become clogged with mud and dirt. He further describes that the Plains
    vapor recovery system is a system that’s not maintained well. It’s left in the mud and
    the dirt over a period of time and continually takes on water and mud over a series of
    days, events, and people using it, hooking it to the back of their trailers, the air shoving
    it down in the system. (See, Ex. 8, page 415, line 8-17). Mr. Hayes further explained
    that it would be Plains responsibility to provide caps for the tip of the hose to keep mud
    and debris out, and to provide hooks so the hose does not just lay in the mud. (See, Ex.
    8, page 425, line 16-25).
    Contrary to Appellants contention, Bair did not include Hayes’s testimony relating to
    reporting a clogged vent, routinely venting the air, guards authorizing him “not to use the vapor
    recovery system, not to call Reynolds, not to advise Reynolds that the equipment was not working
    and to vent the atmosphere” or that he had no criminal record to support Reynolds Energy’s
    response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment. Therefore, we will
    limit our review to the testimony cited in Reynolds Energy’s response to the summary judgment
    motion (that the vents were clogged with mud and dirt).
    In their sanctions motion, Appellees relied on the following evidence to support their
    contention that Hayes lied about the clogged vents: (a) Plains Marketing’s station logs, (b) an e-
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    04-22-00450-CV
    mail from the Flores Law Firm acknowledging that Hayes’s deposition statements were false, and
    (c) Hayes’s Responses to Requests for Admission signed by the Flores Law Firm.
    Having previously concluded that, based on Hayes’s and Guerra’s testimony alone,
    Hayes’s testimony that a cause of the accident was a clogged vent hose was not groundless. Now,
    based the evidence Appellants raised in their sanctions motion, we must determine whether that
    testimony is groundless, and if so, whether Rule 13 and Chapter 10 were violated.
    (1)     Station Logs
    The station logs show that from 3:00 a.m. on the day of Dianna’s fall until 2:48 a.m. the
    following morning, fifty-eight drivers other than Hayes continuously loaded their tankers at the
    North Owens Station either before or after Hayes loaded his.
    The record shows Bair had in his possession Plains Marketing’s station logs when he filed
    Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment.
    The station logs themselves do not prove that because fifty-eight drivers continuously loaded their
    trucks before and after Hayes loaded his, Hayes’s testimony was false. The logs only show there
    was a continuous stream of trucks loading crude oil before and after Hayes stopped loading his
    truck and that that continuous stream stopped when Hayes’s turn came up and resumed after
    Dianna’s fall.
    The issue for our determination is whether, based on the logs, Bair should have further
    investigated the validity of Hayes’s testimony before filing Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains
    Marketing’s motion for summary judgment.
    As stated throughout our opinion, when Bair signed the response to the motion for
    summary judgment, discovery was ongoing. Bair made several attempts to investigate the validity
    of Hayes’s theory of liability by asking for and noticing the depositions of Plains Marketing’s
    employees, which its attorney either ignored or filed motions to quash.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    For these reasons, we conclude that the station logs alone fail to prove that Hayes’s
    testimony was false and groundless.
    (2)   Flores Law Firm’s E-mail
    The e-mail, dated June 24, 2021, was a Rule 11 agreement from the Flores Law Firm to
    Appellees’ attorney. In the e-mail, the Flores Law Firm agreed not to oppose a second motion for
    summary judgment Appellees were contemplating filing. The e-mail was not an acknowledgement
    that Hayes lied, as Appellees assert.
    Because the e-mail was sent more than a year after Bair stopped representing Appellants
    and more than a year after Reynolds Energy’s response was filed, the e-mail does not reflect the
    circumstances surrounding the signing of Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s no-
    evidence motion for summary judgment.
    The Flores Law Firm’s e-mail alone does not prove Hayes lied at his deposition as
    Appellees assert or that Bair knew about it. It does not prove that Bair did not have the factual
    support for Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s summary judgment motion and was
    therefore groundless.
    (3)   Hayes’s Responses to Requests for Admission
    As with the Flores Law Firm’s June 24, 2021 e-mail, Hayes responded to Appellants’
    requests for admission more than a year after Bair signed Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains
    Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment.
    It is true that Hayes’s admissions showed he was not truthful in his deposition about his
    criminal record. But such admissions were not relevant to the clogged vents and, even if they were
    relevant to his credibility, they were made more than a year after Bair signed Reynolds Energy’s
    response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment, and Hayes’s responses
    do not reflect the circumstances surrounding Bair’s inclusion of Hayes’s testimony in that motion.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    We conclude that the only evidence presented by Appellees that reflect the time and the
    circumstances surrounding the signing of Reynolds Energy’s response to the motion for summary
    judgment were the station logs. The logs alone do not prove that Hayes’s testimony was false.
    b.      Expert’s Alleged Sham Affidavit
    (1)    Expert’s Affidavit
    Reynolds Energy provided an affidavit from Richard A. Gehse dated June 9, 2020. It stated
    in part as follows:
    This affidavit is based on preliminary information known and available to me
    at this time through my investigation and through documents and other materials
    reviewed by me. I reserve the right to supplement or amend this affidavit, or the
    statements and preliminary opinions made herein, based on additional information,
    including information that may become available from witnesses and other parties
    as this dispute proceeds.
    Gehse’s affidavit was dated the same day that Reynolds Energy filed its response to Plains
    Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment. As stated, at that time, discovery was
    ongoing.
    (2)    Allegation of Sham Affidavit
    In its motion for sanctions, Appellees contended that Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains
    Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment included Gehse’s “sham affidavit,” which
    contained nothing but false and unsupported allegations including (a) improper grading at the site
    that could cause water to accumulate or someone to fall, (b) a vapor recovery system hose that had
    design defects that caused the hose to clog, and (c) railing around the unit that did not conform to
    OSHA standards.
    To support their contentions relating to Gehse’s affidavit, Appellees offered the following
    evidence: (a) Reynolds Transportation’s June 30, 2021 responses to 239 requests for production,
    (b) Appellants and Hayes’s responses to requests for admission and Appellants’ de-designation of
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Gehse as an expert, (c) photographs of the area showing there was no uneven surface, and (d)
    weather precipitation reports that showed that virtually no rain fell in the area for the three months
    prior to Dianna’s fall. In further support, they asserted that OSHA standards on railing systems
    were not applicable because the undisputed evidence was that no one saw Dianna fall.
    (3)     Gehse’s Affidavit was Not a Sham Affidavit
    Appellees argued that Appellants’ production of documents and their admissions made on
    June 30, 2021, proved that Gehse’s affidavit was a sham.
    A sham affidavit is one in which the affiant creates a fact issue with a statement that is
    contrary to affiant’s prior sworn statement and made for the purpose of preventing a summary
    judgment. Lujan v. Navistar, Inc., 
    555 S.W.3d 79
    , 85, 61 (Tex. 2018). In this instance, there is
    no evidence that Gehse contradicted any prior sworn statement. Therefore, we will not label
    Gehse’s affidavit as a sham affidavit.
    (4)     Reynolds Energy’s June 30, 2021 Responses to Plains Marketing’s
    Discovery Requests and De-Designation of Gehse
    Appellees contended that Gehse’s statements were false or unsupported by the evidence
    because he relied on facts that Appellants and Hayes later admitted were false. The record reflects
    that Appellants’ and Hayes’s admissions were made a year and days after Bair filed Reynolds
    Energy’s response to the motion for summary judgment.
    As stated, we agree that Hayes’s admissions made on June 28, 2021, showed he was not
    truthful in his deposition. It is also true that Reynolds Transportation’s admissions dated June 30,
    2021, show Appellants did not have a cause of action against the Plains companies and that they
    de-designated Gehse as an expert. But such evidence does not prove that at the time Bair signed
    Reynold Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s motion for summary judgment he knew that
    Hayes’s testimony was false. The record contains no evidence of such knowledge. Appellants’
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    04-22-00450-CV
    admissions and expert de-designation simply do not reflect the circumstances surrounding Bair’s
    inclusion of Hayes’s testimony when he signed Reynolds Energy’s opposition to Plains
    Marketing’s motion for summary judgment.
    Admissions made more than a year after Bair signed Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains
    Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment do not show the circumstances
    surrounding the signing of that response. Such admissions do not take into consideration that at
    the time it was signed, discovery was ongoing, and Plains Marketing had stalled in presenting its
    witnesses for deposition. Most importantly, such admissions are not evidence that Reynolds
    Energy’s response was not factually supported and groundless, or that Bair acted in bad faith or
    for harassment or delay purposes.
    For the same reasons, requests for production made a year after Bair signed the response
    to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment are not evidence of the
    circumstances surrounding Bair’s signing the response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion
    for summary judgment.
    (5)     Surface Grading, Weather Report, OSHA Standards
    The Plains companies contended that Gehse made false statements in his affidavit because
    photographs of the area showed there was no uneven surface; the weather reports showed that
    virtually no rain had fallen in the area in the three months prior to Dianna’s fall; and OSHA
    standards on railing systems were not applicable because the undisputed evidence is that no one
    saw Dianna fall.
    We are reminded again that at the time Gehse signed his affidavit, discovery was ongoing,
    Plains Marketing had refused to produce its employees for deposition despite requests by Bair, and
    Gehse affirmed that his opinions were based on preliminary information to be supplemented or
    amended as additional information became available.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    In his affidavit, Gehse opined that “the North Owens site grading was improper, increasing
    the risk that someone would lose their balance and fall.” Appellees argue that photographs of the
    site show otherwise. We disagree.
    Photographs of the North Owens station admitted by the trial court show different surface
    gradings surrounding the valve system. Some show even grading, others show loose gravel
    mounds around the valve system and its vicinity, and others show unleveled grading. Some
    photographs were admitted into evidence, and others were produced at depositions.
    Based on the photographs, Appellees’ conclusion that Gehse’s opinion on improper
    grading was false or unsupported by evidence is refuted by the evidence.
    Appellees contended that Gehse’s opinion was also false because at the time he signed his
    affidavit, Bair had the weather precipitation reports available to him that showed virtually no rain
    had fallen at the site for three months preceding Dianna’s fall.
    In reviewing the affidavit, we note that Gehse’s affidavit did not state that Dianna fell as a
    result of rain. Instead, his opinion dealt with a failure to maintain walking and working surfaces
    that resulted in improper grading when “the tanker truck loading areas would accumulate rainwater
    creating mud puddles resulting in uneven and difficult walking and working surfaces and trip
    hazards.”
    Based on Gehse’s affidavit alone, Appellants’ conclusion that Gehse’s opinion was false
    because the weather reports showed it had not rained at the site is not supported.
    Appellants further contended that the evidence at the time Gehse signed his affidavit
    showed that no one saw Dianna fall, but Gehse falsely wrote that Dianna tripped over the guardrail.
    As we previously stated, Plains Marketing’s records show that Dianna “tripped by or fell over a
    railing hitting her head” or that Dianna jumped back “and made contact with the railing, causing
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    04-22-00450-CV
    her to fall over backwards striking the back of her head.” Hayes’s uncontroverted testimony places
    Dianna’s body inside the railing after her fall.
    Based on Appellees’ own evidence, Appellees’ argument that Gehse’s affidavit is false
    because the OSHA standards did not apply as no one saw Dianna fall is not supported by the
    evidence available at the time Gehse gave his opinions.
    Appellees further contended that Gehse falsely testified that Plains Marketing’s vapor
    recovery system hose had design defects that caused the hose to clog. Gehse opined that vapor
    recovery system hoses were exposed to the entry of dirt, mud, or other non-vapor materials because
    (a) Plains did not have a hanger mechanism to store the hose elevated and off the ground and (b)
    when not in use, hoses were allowed to rest on the ground. Gehse further opined that hoses did
    not have an end cap to prevent foreign material from entering the vapor recovery system.
    Photographs of the North Owens stations taken on December 17, 2018, show the absence
    of a mechanism to store the hoses off the ground and show recovery hoses on the ground. Other
    undated photos admitted into evidence show the same recovery hoses on the ground and no storing
    mechanism. Appellees’ contention that Gehse’s opinion was false is not supported by the
    photographs in evidence.
    We conclude that Gehse’s affidavit was not a sham and that his opinions had factual
    support and were not false.
    c.      Johnson’s Affidavit
    Marc Johnson signed an affidavit on June 9, 2020, to support Reynolds Energy’s response
    to Plains Marketing’s motion for summary judgment. The affidavit stated in part as follows:
    Plains’ Motion for No-Evidence Summary Judgment is premature as significant
    amount of discovery remains yet to be conducted, including specifically the
    deposition of at least eight employees of Plains that Plains has sought to quash. . . .
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Reynolds has been requesting depositions of certain Plains employees since as early
    as February 5, 2000. To date, Plains has refused to present any witnesses for
    depositions, despite the fact that Plains has identified the following witnesses as
    person with knowledge of relevant facts in their Responses to Requests for
    Disclosure:
    [Names of persons]
    . . . . After Plains refused to voluntarily set any depositions of Plains’ employees,
    Reynolds[] noticed depositions of eight Plains employees on April 20, 2020. Plains
    filed a Motion to Quash those depositions. Reynold[s] filed a response and Motion
    to Compel those depositions. Those Motions are set for hearing on June 16, 2020.
    Thus, Reynolds has exercised due diligence [in] seeking the depositions and other
    evidence required for supporting its contentions against Plains and which is needed
    to respond to Plains Motion for Summary Judgment.
    In its motion for sanctions, Appellees contended that this affidavit was written “in an effort
    to obstruct summary judgment” and to delay trial.
    We previously concluded that at the time the response to the summary judgment motion
    was signed, discovery was ongoing. Our conclusion was supported by the string of e-mails dated
    from February 5, 2020, to June 6, 2020, between Appellees’ attorney and Reynolds Energy’s
    attorneys, Bair and Johnson, which showed that Bair and Johnson asked to depose Plains
    Marketing’s employees. The record also showed Plains Marketing did not produce its employees
    for deposition even after being ordered to do so by the trial court. We therefore conclude that
    Johnson’s affidavit was not filed for delay purposes, but as evidence that discovery was ongoing.
    G.     Reynolds Energy’s April 27, 2020 Cross-Action against Plains
    On April 27, 2020, the same day Plains Marketing filed its no-evidence motion for
    summary judgment, Reynolds Energy and Hayes filed a cross-action against Plains Marketing.
    The cross-claim, signed by Johnson, sought a contribution claim against Plains Marketing under
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Chapters 32 and 33 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, the doctrine of comparative
    causation, and all applicable statutes and common law. 8
    1.       Parties’ Arguments
    Appellants contend that Appellees had no proof of groundless, bad faith, or improper
    motive on any of the pleadings challenged in Appellees’ motion for sanctions.
    In their sanctions motion, Appellees contended the cross-claim filed by Johnson was
    frivolous and malicious and filed in contravention of Rule 13 because it was based on false
    allegations. In support, Appellees argue that on April 16, 2021, Appellants and Hayes nonsuited
    their cross actions.
    The sanctions motion does not identify the “false allegations” relied on by Appellees. In
    their brief, however, Appellees contend that the cross-claim was not supported by the facts since
    no one saw Dianna fall and that any opinion that the vapor recovery hose was clogged with mud
    or debris was pure speculation. In support, Appellees identify (a) Appellants’ nonsuit filed by the
    Flores Law Firm, and (b) the depositions of Hayes, James White, and Charles Mills.
    In their motion, the Plains companies only asserted a violation of Rule 13. Therefore, we
    will limit our review to that rule.
    2.       The Nonsuit
    Appellees’ reliance on Appellants’ nonsuit, alone, does not prove that, at the time Johnson
    filed the cross-actions he acted in bad faith, with an improper motive, or filed the document for
    harassing purposes.
    8
    The clerk’s record shows that Reynolds Transportation filed two other cross-claims on February 2, 2021: one against
    Plains American Pipeline and the other against Plains Pipeline. But these cross-claims were not included in the Plains
    companies’ sanctions motion. Nonetheless, these cross-claims are identical to the one filed in April.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Evidence that a party subsequently nonsuited its claims against another party does not
    evidence what transpired at or near the time Johnson filed the cross-actions. See Cherry Peterson
    Landry Albert LLP v. Cruz, 
    443 S.W.3d 441
    , 454 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2014, pet. denied)
    (plaintiff’s act of nonsuiting action, standing alone, is not evidence action is brought in bad faith
    since any party has the right to nonsuit without consideration to the merits of the case); see also
    Barnes v. Kinser, 
    600 S.W.3d 506
    , 510 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2020, pet. denied) (noting a judge may
    not impose sanctions based on the legal merit of a pleading or motion, instead, the focus is on the
    conduct of the party or lawyer at the time the pleading was filed).
    Therefore, there being no evidence that Johnson filed the April 27, 2020 cross-action in
    bad faith or for harassing purposes, we conclude that the nonsuit alone does not support Appellees’
    contention that the cross-claim was filed in violation of Rule 13.
    3.       Depositions of Hayes, White, and Mills
    White was deposed in December of 2020, months after Johnson filed the April 27, 2020
    cross-action.   Accordingly, White’s testimony does not shed light on the circumstances
    surrounding the signing of the April 27, 2020 cross-claim. For this reason, we will not consider
    White’s testimony.
    As to Hayes’s deposition testimony on the clogged vent hose, we previously concluded
    that his testimony was not groundless. Here, we conclude that, based on Hayes’s and Mills’s
    depositions, there is no evidence that Johnson acted in bad faith or for harassing purposes when he
    filed Reynolds Energy’s and Hayes’s April 27, 2020 cross-action.
    H.     Conclusions
    For the reasons stated above, and considering the circumstances surrounding the signing
    of the third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3, the response to Plains Marketing’s no-
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    04-22-00450-CV
    evidence motion for summary judgment, and the April 27, 2020 cross-claim, we reach the
    following conclusions.
    •   Reynolds Energy’s liability theory in its third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3
    that Plains Marketing was liable because Mills and Dianna were not licensed is
    groundless. By attaching Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to Interrogatory
    No. 3 as an exhibit to Reynolds Energy’s response to the summary judgment, Bair
    violated section 10.001(3) of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, but only to
    the extent that it asserted that Mills and Dianna were not licensed. We further conclude
    that the evidence was legally insufficient to show that by incorporating this theory of
    liability to Reynolds Energy’s response to the summary judgment, Bair acted in bad
    faith or for harassing purposes. Therefore, we conclude that Bair did not violate Rule
    13.
    •   Reynolds Energy’s other liability theories challenged by Appellees were not
    groundless. 9 Therefore, Bair did not violate Chapter 10 of the Texas Civil Practice and
    9
    Reynolds Energy’s the theories of liability contained in Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to Interrogatory
    No. 3 were:
    1. Plains was involved in the design, procurement and directed construction of the LACT and Scrubber system
    and gave final approval for same. Any defects or problems with the design, construction or operations are the
    responsibility of Plains.
    2. Plains failed to allow for normal operating conditions LACT and Scrubber such that the Scrubber jammed
    up and caused not only the failure of vapor recovery system (VRS) but backpressure into the lines on multiple
    occasions causing a shutdown of the VRS.
    3. Plains did not take proper operational precautions (from a simple cap or hanger to other options) to prevent
    the jamming of the Scrubber system in that they allowed, after usage by oil tankers, the end of the vapor recovery
    hose to fall into the dirt, mud, water and rocks allowing it to clog and jam the Scrubber system which was designed
    to chemically scrub out hydrocarbons from vapor, not water, mud, dirt and rocks.
    4. Plains had created “Plains All American Pipeline-Guidelines for Guards” dated June 27, 2016, that the guards
    were to follow at North Owens. The files of Mills and Marable are devoid of any evidence that they were ever
    trained on these requirements or that Plains ever required Timekeepers to do so. We have independent evidence
    verifying multiple failures of the vapor recovery system yet Plains has failed to produce a single “observational
    report” regarding same as required by their own Guidelines. This is despite Mike Vargas and James Mclntyre of
    Plains being onsite and personally witnessed problems with the vapor recovery system as well as relief valve pop-
    offs on trucks.
    5. Plains contracted with John Meador Construction to do repairs and some of the installation of the LACT and
    Scrubber but was directed and controlled by Mike Vargas of Plains. That would have been a good time to allow
    for something to protect and store the vapor recovery hose.
    6. Plains contracted with Quality Pipeline Construction to do the initial install of the LACT, Scrubber and
    railing. Work invoice says all work is being done as directed by Jimmy McKee of Plains. The railing at the point
    of the accident is l6-l8 inches. OSHA requires railing in a pedestrian work area to be much higher in range of 30-
    38 inches so as not to create a trip hazard. The railing in place at the time of the accident created a trip hazard.
    All of the installation was approved by Mike Vargas of Plains. If the railing had been at the proper height the
    accident would not have happened.
    7. Plains was the only source of any air that came out of side vent. All pressure in the oil tank trailer had
    equalized and was static. The Vapor Recovery System was jammed up and prevented Hayes from loading. Guerra
    was loading at LACT One and was hooked up to the same VRS. The air vapor from his trailer would have gone
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Remedies Code when attaching the other theories set forth in Reynolds Energy’s third
    amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3 as an exhibit to Reynolds Energy’s response
    to the motion for summary judgment. We further conclude that the evidence was
    legally insufficient to show that by incorporating the other theories of liability to
    Reynolds Energy’s response to the summary judgment, Bair acted in bad faith or for
    harassing purposes. Therefore, we conclude that Bair did not violate Rule 13.
    •    The facts Gehse relied on for his opinion were not groundless. Therefore, Bair did not
    violate section 10.001 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code by including
    Gehse’s affidavit in support of Reynolds Energy’s response to the motion for summary
    judgment. We further conclude that the evidence was legally insufficient to show that
    by incorporating Gehse’s affidavit into Reynolds Energy’s response to the summary
    judgment, Bair acted in bad faith or for harassing purposes. Therefore, we conclude
    that Bair did not violate Rule 13.
    •    We conclude that Johnson’s affidavit was not groundless. Bair did not violate section
    10.001 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code by including Johnson’s affidavit
    in support of Reynolds Energy’s response to the motion for summary judgment. We
    further conclude that the evidence was legally insufficient to show that by incorporating
    Johnson’s affidavit into Reynolds Energy’s response to the summary judgment, Bair
    acted in bad faith or for harassing purposes. Therefore, we conclude that Bair did not
    violate Rule 13.
    •    We conclude that the April 27, 2020 cross-claim was not groundless. Because the
    evidence was legally insufficient to show that when Johnson filed the April 27, 2020
    cross-claim he acted in bad faith or for harassing purposes, we conclude that Johnson
    did not violate Rule 13.
    We now turn to the trial court’s order and findings.
    TRIAL COURT’S ORDER
    The trial court’s order sanctions Reynolds Energy and Reynolds Transportation for
    violations of Chapter 10 and Rule 13. The order provides in part as follows:
    The court’s ruling and this Order are based on the court’s review of the
    pleadings and submissions of all parties including review of those exhibits attached
    into a piping system connected to T721 and due to the Scrubber being jammed the vapor back pressure took the
    path of least resistance and came out the side vent valve. T721 was between Guerra and the Scrubber.
    8. Plains failed to assure that Mills and [Dianna] had the proper training and licensure to do their job as
    noncommissioned security guards. Texas requires such licensure and training but neither Mills nor [Dianna] were
    properly licensed or trained.
    9. Plains failed to monitor and supervise Mills and [Dianna] regarding compliance and creating documentation
    in accordance with Plains own policies and procedures including but not limited to creating observational reports
    and documenting any problems or concerns that arose with regard to operations or safety.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    to the pleadings which were cited to this court and the exhibits already on file
    among the papers of this court which are incorporated by reference in the
    submissions. . . .
    ....
    Accordingly, upon review of the submitted documents as previously stated and
    upon hearing arguments of counsel, this court agrees with counsel for PLAINS that
    certain filings, including but not limited to the REYNOLDS’[s] Original and
    Amended Answers, Response to PLAINS’ Motion for Summary Judgment and its
    attendant affidavits, REYNOLDS’[s] discovery requests and responses and
    REYNOLDS[’s] Rule 11 Agreement, that its allegations against PLAINS were
    unsupported by any evidence, and that such conduct during the pendency of the
    litigation is subject to sanctions pursuant to TRCP 13 and TCPRC 10. Accordingly,
    after considering Cross-Plaintiff, PLAINS, et al’s Motion for Sanctions with
    Exhibits, Defendants’ and their attorney’s response, PLAINS’ Reply, and the
    evidence and arguments presented at oral hearing, the Court GRANTS the motion
    and AWARDS sanctions against REYNOLDS in the amounts, and for the reasons,
    set forth below:
    1.     The Court awards sanctions to PLAINS against REYNOLDS . . . in the
    amount of $428,895.92 . . . which number was calculated from February 1,
    2020, which date the documents reflect REYNOLDS’[s] unsupported
    frivolous and unmeritorious claims against PLAINS. . . . [G]ood cause exists
    to impose these sanctions from that date, as explained below.
    The trial court’s order also contains twenty-one findings; each is discussed separately below.
    A.     Parties’ Arguments
    Appellants argued that each finding lacks an evidentiary basis, is conclusory, or grants
    relief not requested in the motion for sanctions. Appellants also argue that because Reynolds
    Transportation was not a party at the time the challenged documents were signed or filed, sanctions
    against it were not proper.
    Appellees argue the trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting the sanctions motion
    pursuant to Chapter 10 and Rule 13 where the record contains evidence demonstrating Reynolds
    Energy’s sanctionable conduct, including (a) failing to undertake a reasonable inquiry before filing
    pleadings for an improper purpose that contained allegations lacking evidentiary support, and (b)
    serving written discovery responses that were groundless and brought in bad faith.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Appellees further argue that Reynolds Transportation waived any contention that it was
    not a party. According to Appellees, Appellants waived such contention because (a) the Flores
    Law Firm responded to the motion for sanctions and collectively referred to the two entities as the
    “Reynolds Defendants” and (b) at the sanctions hearing, Appellees did not argue the entities were
    distinct. Appellees conclude that the collective reference to the Reynolds entities is warranted as
    both entities were represented by the same defense counsel, and both relied on the same defensive
    theories.
    B.     Exhibits Admitted at Sanctions Hearing
    At the sanctions hearing, the trial court admitted the following documents and exhibits
    contained within those documents:
    •    The deposition transcripts of James White, Jesse Guerra, Charles Mills, Mike Vargas,
    and John Hayes.
    •    Reynolds and Hayes’s second amended answer and cross-claim against Plains
    Marketing signed by Reynolds Energy’s former attorneys.
    •    Reynolds Energy’s discovery responses, including the third amended answers to
    Dianna’s Interrogatory No. 3, signed by Bair.
    •    Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s motion for no-evidence summary
    judgment and its opposition to Plains Marketing’s motion for leave to amend its no-
    evidence motion for summary judgment, all signed by Bair.
    •    Reynolds Energy’s cross-claim for contribution against the Plains pipeline companies
    signed by Johnson.
    •    Hayes’s June 28, 2021 responses to requests for admission signed by the Flores Law
    Firm.
    •    Reynolds Transportation’s June 30, 2021 admissions in which it acknowledged that
    “there were no issues of any kind at the [the Plains location] that in any way caused or
    contributed to [Dianna]’s claims,” which admissions were signed by the Flores Law
    Firm.
    •    Reynolds Transportation’s responses to Plaintiff’s 9th set of requests for admission
    signed by the Flores Law Firm.
    •    Reynolds Energy’s third amended responses to requests for disclosure and designation
    of experts signed by the Flores Law Firm.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    •    Hayes and Reynolds Energy’s amended responses to discovery signed by the Flores
    Law Firm.
    •    Plains Marketing’s station logs and table of payments made to various entities.
    •    Plains Marketing’s Motion for Summary Judgment and exhibits (only Reynolds Energy
    and Hayes parties).
    •    Plaintiff’s Original Petition (sued Reynolds Energy and Plains Marketing)
    •    Plaintiff’s Second Amended Petition (added more defendants, including Reynolds
    Transportation).
    •    Plaintiff’s response to Plains Marketing’s motion for summary judgment.
    •    David Smith’s and Dagmar Buzerman’s expert reports dated June 25, 2021.
    •    Plains Marketing’s guidelines on guardrails.
    •    Photographs of the site.
    •    Plains Marketing’s answers to Reynolds Energy’s first set of interrogatories.
    •    John E. Meador Construction invoices.
    •    Quality Pipe Construction’s invoices.
    C.     Applicable Law
    Rule 13 only applies to the party or the attorney signing a pleading, motion, or other paper
    and an attorney representing a party. TEX. R. CIV. P. 13. A non-party is not amenable to sanctions
    under Rule 13. Exoxemis, Inc. v. Seale, No. 04-95-00673-CV, 
    1996 WL 471271
    , at *6 (Tex.
    App.—San Antonio Aug. 21, 1996, no writ) (mem. op., not designated for publication); see Tex.
    Attorney Gen.’s Office v. Adams, 
    793 S.W.2d 771
    , 775 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1990, no writ).
    Under Chapter 10, sanctions can be imposed on the person signing the pleading, a party
    represented by the person, or both, but monetary sanctions cannot be awarded “against a
    represented party for a violation of Section 10.001(2).” TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN.
    § 10.004.
    A party should not be sanctioned for its attorney’s conduct “unless the party is implicated
    apart from having entrusted its legal representation to counsel.” Loeffler v. Lytle Indep. Sch. Dist.,
    
    211 S.W.3d 331
    , 349 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2006, pet. denied).
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Under Rule 13, the trial court may not impose sanctions unless there is “good cause, the
    particulars of which must be stated in the sanction order.” TEX. R. CIV. P. 13. The particularity
    requirement requires the trial court to include its findings in the order. Graves v. Diehl, No. 01–
    00–00412–CV, 
    2006 WL 1699527
    , at *3 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] June 22, 2006, pet.
    denied) (mem. op.) (citing Murphy v. Friendswood Dev. Co., 
    965 S.W.2d 708
    , 709 (Tex. App.—
    Houston [1st Dist.] 1998, no pet.)); see Loeffler, 
    211 S.W.3d at 349
    .
    The same requirement is found in Chapter 10, under which “[a] court shall describe in an
    order imposing a sanction under this chapter the conduct the court has determined violated Section
    10.001 and explain the basis for the sanction imposed.” TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN.
    § 10.005 (emphasis added); see Loeffler, 
    211 S.W.3d at 349
    .
    A trial court’s finding that only recites the ultimate conclusion, without the facts that
    support that conclusion, is conclusory and does not support the “particularity” or “explanation”
    required under Rule 13 and Chapter 10. See Spitaleri v. Estate of Dominguez, No. 04-04-00441-
    CV, 
    2005 WL 2988732
    , at *3 (Tex. App.—San Antonio Nov. 9, 2005, pet. denied) (mem. op.);
    Dolcefino v. Randolph, 
    19 S.W.3d 906
    , 930 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2000, pet. denied)
    (“A conclusory statement is one that does not provide the underlying facts to support the
    conclusion.”); Overman v. Baker, 
    26 S.W.3d 506
    , 511–12 (Tex. App.—Tyler 2000, no pet.).
    Finally, as we stated above, imposing sanctions on a party on grounds not asserted in a
    motion for sanctions violates that party’s due process rights. See In re Champagne, No. 03-21-
    00426-CV, 
    2021 WL 4976719
    , at *2 (Tex. App.—Austin Oct. 27, 2021, orig. proceeding) (mem.
    op.); Clark v. Bres, 
    217 S.W.3d 501
    , 513 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2006, pet. denied); In
    re L.A.M. & Assocs., 
    975 S.W.2d 80
    , 83 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1998, orig. proceeding); see
    also Polansky v. Berenji, 
    393 S.W.3d 362
    , 369 (Tex. App.—Austin 2012, no pet.); Greene v.
    Young, 
    174 S.W.3d 291
    , 298–301 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2005, pet. denied).
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    04-22-00450-CV
    D.      Reynolds Transportation Not a Party
    We first address Appellants’ contention that Reynolds Transportation was not a party at
    the time Reynolds Energy signed the challenged documents.
    In her second amended petition, Dianna sued Reynolds Transportation, Inc.; Plains All
    American Pipeline, L.P.; and Plains Pipeline, L.P. She filed her second amended petition on May
    29, 2020. Reynolds Transportation did not make an appearance until July 13, 2020, when it filed
    its answer to Plaintiff’s Second Amended Petition. Plains All American Pipeline and Plains
    Pipeline did not answer the lawsuit until August 3, 2020.
    Reynolds Energy’s attorneys signed the challenged documents as follows: (a) the third
    amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3, on April 28, 2020; (b) the response to Plains Marketing’s
    no-evidence summary judgment motion, on June 9, 2020; and (c) the cross-action, on April 27,
    2020.
    Because Rule 13 and Chapter 10 only apply to parties, and Reynolds Transportation was
    not a party at the time the challenged documents were filed, we conclude that the trial court abused
    its discretion by imposing sanctions on Reynolds Transportation. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 13; TEX.
    CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.001, .004. For the same reasons, we conclude the trial court
    abused its discretion by awarding sanctions to Plains All American Pipeline and Plains Pipeline.
    TEX. R. CIV. P. 13; TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.001.
    We turn now to the trial court’s findings.
    E.      Trial Court’s Findings
    Appellants suggest we first address the trial court’s last twenty findings. We agree. For
    clarity, we will address each separately.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Finding 2: Pleadings that Violated Rule 13 and Chapter 10
    The second finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    2.      The Court finds that the following pleadings, writings and motions filed
    with this Court violated Rule 13 and Chapter 10:
    a. REYNOLDS Response to PLAINS’ Motion for Summary Judgment, exhibits and,
    the affidavits filed in support thereof;
    b. REYNOLDS’ 2nd Amended Original Answer;
    c. REYNOLDS’ Responses to PLAINS’ written discovery requests;
    d. REYNOLDS’ Answer and affirmative defenses against PLAIN’S counterpetition;
    e. REYNOLDS, Answer to Plaintiff’s 2nd set of Interrogatories
    f. REYNOLDS’ 2nd Supplemental Responses to Plaintiff’s interrogatories
    Appellants argue the trial court was not authorized to impose sanctions on pleadings or
    documents not challenged in the sanctions motion.          Appellants contend Appellees did not
    challenge Reynolds Energy’s second amended original answer, Reynolds Energy’s responses to
    Plains Marketing’s written discovery requests, Reynolds Energy’s answers and affirmative
    defenses against Plains Marketing’s counterpetition, Reynolds Energy’s answer to Plaintiff’s
    second set of interrogatories, and Reynolds Energy’s second supplemental answer to Dianna’s
    interrogatory.
    Appellees respond that with respect to “REYNOLDS’ 2nd Supplemental Responses to
    Plaintiff’s interrogatories” the order has a typographical error; instead of “2nd” it should have been
    “3rd.” They argue that Appellants were on notice that Appellees were moving for sanctions on
    Reynolds Energy’s third supplemental answer to Interrogatory No. 3, which at the sanctions
    hearing was offered and admitted into evidence. Appellees conclude that Reynolds cannot
    “sincerely argue it was not on notice” that Appellants were moving for sanctions on the third
    amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3.
    We agree with Appellees that their sanctions motion included Reynolds Energy’s third
    amended answers to Dianna’s Interrogatory No. 3, and we conclude that the trial court’s order has
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    04-22-00450-CV
    a typographical error. Appellees’ sanctions motion dealt with the third amended answers and at
    the hearing, the parties made reference to only those answers. 10
    But we also agree with Appellants that the following documents were not included in
    Appellees’ sanctions motions: Reynolds Energy’s second amended original answer, Reynolds
    Energy’s responses to Plains Marketing’s written discovery requests, Reynolds Energy’s answer
    and affirmative defenses against Plains Marketing’s counterpetition, and Reynolds Energy’s
    answer to Plaintiff’s second set of interrogatories.
    A trial court cannot sanction a party on a basis not identified in a motion for sanctions. In
    re Champagne, 
    2021 WL 4976719
    , at *2; Clark, 
    217 S.W.3d at 513
    ; In re L.A.M. & Assocs., 975
    S.W.2d at 83; see also Mann v. Kendall Home Builders Construction Partners I, LTD, 
    464 S.W.3d 84
    , 93 (Tex. App—Houston 14th Dist. 2015, pet. denied); Polansky, 393 S.W.3d at 369; Greene,
    174 S.W.3d at 298–301. Therefore, the trial court had no authority to sanction Reynolds Energy
    based on those documents.
    We conclude the trial court only had the authority to sanction Reynolds Energy for (1)
    Reynolds Energy’s Response to Plains Marketing Motion for Summary Judgment, and the exhibits
    and affidavits filed in support of that motion, and (2) Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers
    to Dianna’s Interrogatory No. 3.
    Our analysis does not end here. In Finding 2, the trial court failed to describe with
    particularity the conduct that violated Rule 13 and Chapter 10 associated with the response to
    Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment and Reynolds Energy’s third
    amended answers to Dianna’s Interrogatory No. 3. Instead, the trial court’s Finding 2 only recites
    the ultimate conclusion without supporting facts. See Spitaleri, 
    2005 WL 2988732
    , at *3.
    10
    We note that the trial court did not include Reynolds Energy’s April cross-action in its order.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Therefore, we conclude that Finding 2 is conclusory to the extent that it finds that Reynolds
    Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment and Reynolds
    Energy’s third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3 violated Rule 13 and Chapter 10.
    Finding 3: Witnesses Who Gave False Testimony at Depositions, Served False Errata
    Sheets, and Relied on False Testimony When Responding to All Parties’
    Written Discovery
    The trial court’s third finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    3.      The Court finds that REYNOLDS’[s] witnesses, Hayes, Thigpen, and
    White, offered testimony at their depositions which they knew to be false.
    REYNOLDS also knew that their testimony was false. Thigpen, Hayes and White
    served and signed errata sheets which did not correct the false testimony. Hayes
    and White attested that the vapor recovery system at the PLAINS North Owens
    station “never worked”, forcing them to vent to the atmosphere. These statements
    are contradicted by their own actions and deposition testimony. REYNOLDS
    adopted these false statements when responding to all parties’ written discovery
    requests. The Court finds that REYNOLDS ratified the declarations described
    above knowing that they contained multiple untrue statements. Sanctions are
    appropriate for this misconduct pursuant to Chapter 10 and Rule 13.
    Appellants argue that Appellees’ sanctions motion does not refer to Thigpen’s and White’s
    testimony and to false errata sheets. We agree with Appellants. The errata sheets were not
    challenged or mentioned in the sanctions motion and were also not introduced into evidence at the
    sanctions hearing. Thigpen’s and White’s deposition testimony was not challenged in Appellees
    motion for sanctions. See In re Champagne, 
    2021 WL 4976719
    , at *2; Clark, 
    217 S.W.3d at 513
    ;
    In re L.A.M. & Assocs., 975 S.W.2d at 83; see also Polansky, 393 S.W.3d at 369; Greene, 174
    S.W.3d at 298–301. Therefore, the trial court had no authority to include Thigpen’s or White’s
    deposition testimony and the errata sheets in its sanctions order. The only deposition testimony
    referenced in Finding 3 that was at issue in Appellees’ sanctions motion was Hayes’s testimony.
    In addition, any reliance by the trial court on Thigpen’s and White’s deposition testimony
    is misplaced since their depositions took place months after the response to the summary judgment
    and the third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3 were filed. Only those facts that evidence
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    04-22-00450-CV
    the circumstances surrounding the signing of those documents are considered when assessing
    sanctions under Rule 13 and Chapter 10.
    Appellants next argue that the “all the parties’ written discovery requests” were also not
    raised in Appellees’ sanctions motion. We again agree with Appellants. The only written
    discovery at issue in the sanctions motion was Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to
    Interrogatory No. 3. Accordingly, the trial court had no authority to include Appellants’ responses
    to “all the parties’ written discovery requests” in its sanctions order.
    As to the third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3, we previously concluded that filing
    Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3 was not sanctionable under
    Chapter 10 because it was not a pleading or a motion. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN.
    § 10.001. Therefore, the trial court had no authority to sanction Appellants for violations of
    Chapter 10 regarding the third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3.
    As to the trial court’s finding that Hayes’s statement that the vapor recovery system at the
    North Owens station “never worked,” forcing him to vent to the atmosphere, we previously
    concluded that this statement was not included in Reynolds Energy’s response to the motion for
    summary judgment. Therefore, the trial court had no authority to sanction Appellants for violation
    of Chapter 10 based on this statement.
    Lastly, the trial court’s finding that Appellants ratified the “declarations described above
    knowing they contained multiple untrue statements” is not supported by any facts and is therefore
    conclusory. See Loeffler, 
    211 S.W.3d at 349
    .
    We conclude the trial court abused its discretion in making Finding 3.
    Finding 4: Hayes Falsely Testified Regarding His Past Criminal Convictions
    The trial court’s fourth finding reads in its entirety as follows: “REYNOLDS’ driver,
    Hayes, testified falsely regarding past criminal convictions.”
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    04-22-00450-CV
    In their sanctions motion, Appellees contended that Hayes was not truthful about his past
    criminal convictions because on June 28, 2021, Hayes responded to requests for admission where
    he admitted he had criminal convictions.
    However, for purposes of the trial court’s sanctions order, Hayes is not being sanctioned,
    only Appellants are. So, this finding should only apply if followed by an explanation and factual
    support on how it impacted the signing of Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to
    Interrogatory No. 3 or Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion for
    summary judgment. Because such an explanation was not made, we conclude that Finding 4 does
    not meet the particularity requirement of Rule 13 and the explanation requirement under section
    10.005. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 13; TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.005; Alpert v. Crain,
    Caton & James, P.C., 
    178 S.W.3d 398
    , 411 (Tex. App—Houston [1st Dist.] 2005, pet. denied)
    (citing Rudisell v. Paquette, 
    89 S.W.3d 233
    , 237 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg 2002, no
    pet.)).
    Finding 5: Reynolds Failed to Reasonably Investigate the Law and Facts Regarding
    Certain Allegations
    The trial court’s fifth finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    5.      Reynolds failed to reasonably investigate the law and facts asserted in
    several material respects. The evidence shows that REYNOLDS alleged that
    PLAINS failed to properly train and confirm the licensure of the Guard One
    employee prior to her injury. Such allegation is completely false: The evidence
    showed that REYNOLDS knew in January 2020 at Mills[’s] deposition that
    [Dianna] had been trained by her employer and was fully licensed as a non-
    commissioned security guard. Not only had this evidence been documented
    through discovery, licenses such as that held by [Dianna] were posted on line and
    could be verified, as was shown to REYNOLDS by PLAINS. Failure to investigate
    the law and the facts concerning [Dianna] justified the imposition of sanctions
    against REYNOLDS under Chapter 10 and Rule 13. Indeed, these kinds of
    inquiries are precisely the kind of “reasonable inquiry” required by Chapter 10 and
    Rule 13.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Although not noted in the trial court’s order, this finding is based on one of the theories of
    liability found in Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3, which alleged
    that “Plains failed to assure that Mills and [Dianna] had the proper training and licensure to do
    their job as noncommissioned security guards. Texas requires such licensure and training but
    neither Mills nor [Dianna] were properly licensed or trained.”
    As stated previously, only Rule 13 applies because interrogatories are not pleadings or
    motions. TEX. R. CIV. P. 13; TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.001. Therefore, to the
    extent the trial court’s award was made pursuant to Chapter 10, the award is not valid.
    Under Rule 13, failure to make an inquiry alone is not sanctionable. To be sanctionable,
    Rule 13 requires an additional finding of groundless and bad faith or for an improper purpose. We
    previously concluded that Reynolds Energy’s liability theory that Plains Marketing failed to assure
    that Mills had the proper training and licensure to do their job was not groundless. But we also
    concluded that Reynolds Energy’s liability theory that neither Mills nor Dianna was licensed was
    groundless.
    But Rule 13 also requires a finding of bad faith or improper purpose. There was no
    evidence that Bair acted in bad faith or for an improper purpose. Therefore, we conclude there is
    legally insufficient evidence to support the trial court’s Finding 5.
    Finding 6: Signing of Pleadings and Motions that Plains was Liable for Dianna’s
    Injuries
    The trial court’s sixth finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    6.       Signing of pleadings and motions repeating the same untrue claims (that is,
    that PLAINS was liable for injuries to [Dianna]) that had been alleged by Plaintiffs
    in their original Petition, which—according to Plaintiff’s pleadings—had been pled
    because, on the same night as the injury, Plaintiffs’ counsel was told that
    REYNOLDS’ [sic] was going to blame PLAINS. REYNOLDS never developed
    any evidence to support that allegation and had not undertaken any investigation or
    examination on the night of the injury that would justify making such a claim.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Accordingly, sanctions against REYNOLDS are appropriate under Chapter 10 and
    Rule 13.
    In their motion for sanctions, the only pleadings Appellees challenged were Reynolds
    Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment and Reynolds
    Energy’s and Hayes’s April 27, 2020 cross-action against Plains Marketing. Accordingly, the trial
    court was not authorized to include all of Reynolds Energy’s other pleadings and motions in
    Finding 6. See In re Champagne, 
    2021 WL 4976719
    , at *2; Clark, 
    217 S.W.3d at 513
    ; In re L.A.M.
    & Assocs., 975 S.W.2d at 83; see also Polansky, 393 S.W.3d at 369; Greene, 174 S.W.3d at 298–
    301.
    We previously concluded that Dianna’s pleadings were not evidence. See In re Elamex,
    S.A. de C.V., 
    367 S.W.3d 891
    , 898 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2012, no pet.). Therefore, the trial court
    was not authorized to consider any contents in Dianna’s pleadings in support of its sanctions.
    Without such evidence, the trial court’s finding that Appellants failed to develop evidence and
    failed to undertake any investigation on the night of the accident lacks the particularity requirement
    of Rule 13 and the explanation requirement of section 10.005. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 13; TEX. CIV.
    PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.005. Therefore, the trial court’s Finding 6 is conclusory because
    it lacks the factual support to sanction Appellants.
    Moreover, we previously concluded that the circumstances surrounding the signing of
    Reynolds Energy’s response to the motion for summary judgment and the April 27, 2020 cross-
    action included ongoing discovery and Plains Marketing’s refusal to produce its witnesses for
    deposition. Reynolds Energy’s response to the motion for summary judgment asserted such
    events. Section 10.001(3) specifically provides that the conduct is not sanctionable if alleged facts
    “are likely to have evidentiary support after a reasonable opportunity for further investigation or
    discovery.” See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.001(3). Therefore, it was reasonable
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    04-22-00450-CV
    for Reynolds Energy to oppose the motion for summary judgment and file the cross-claim based
    on the facts available to it at the time Bair and Johnson signed those documents.
    As we previously concluded, there is no evidence to support a finding that Bair filed the
    response and Johnson filed the cross-action in bad faith, for an improper motive, or that these
    documents were groundless and brought for harassing or delay purposes. Accordingly, there is
    legally insufficient evidence to support the trial court’s finding that Appellants violated Rule 13.
    Finding 7: Reynolds Energy’s Former Attorney Signed Pleadings and Discovery
    Repeating a Claim that Reynolds had Identified Drivers and Documents that
    Would Support Their Claims and References to False Statement by Thigpen
    The trial court’s seventh finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    7.      Additionally, REYNOLDS counsel signed pleadings and discovery
    repeating a claim that REYNOLDS had identified drivers and documents that
    would support the false claims they were asserting against PLAINS but never
    produced either. For example, when REYNOLDS claimed that its drivers had
    submitted reports that the vapor recovery system at PLAINS never worked,
    REYNOLDS’[s] manager Thigpen, who signed the discovery, had to testify that
    there were no such reports. REYNOLDS knew there were no such reports when
    this false statement was made as PLAINS had produced all of its station logs
    showing that no driver had experienced such a problem. Thereafter, REYNOLDS
    and its counsel continued to assert this claim in pleadings and responses to
    discovery, which forced PLAINS to file its first Motion for Summary Judgment
    which only REYNOLDS opposed. The Court finds, based on REYNOLDS’[s]
    own admissions, that counsel signed these amended pleadings knowing that this
    claim lacked a legal basis. Sanctions against REYNOLDS are appropriate under
    Section 10.001(2) and Rule 13 for continuing to assert a claim that was
    acknowledged as lacking merit.
    The only pleadings and discovery Appellees challenged in its sanctions motion were
    Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment,
    the April 27, 2020 cross-action, and its third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3.
    Accordingly, the trial court was not authorized to include all of Appellants’ pleadings and
    discovery in Finding 7. See In re Champagne, 
    2021 WL 4976719
    , at *2; Clark, 217 S.W.3d at
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    04-22-00450-CV
    513; In re L.A.M. & Assocs., 975 S.W.2d at 83; see also Polansky, 393 S.W.3d at 369; Greene,
    174 S.W.3d at 298–301.
    The trial court’s finding that sanctions against Appellants are appropriate under section
    10.001(2) is unfounded.     Section 10.001(2) provides that a “claim, defense, or other legal
    contention in the pleading or motion is warranted by existing law or by a nonfrivolous argument
    for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law or the establishment of new law.” TEX.
    CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.001(2). But Chapter 10 expressly prohibits monetary
    sanctions against a represented party based on the legal contentions in a pleading. Id. § 10.004(d)
    (“The court may not award monetary sanctions against a represented party for a violation of
    Section 10.001(2).”). Accordingly, the trial court could not have properly awarded sanctions
    against Appellants for a groundless response to Plains Marketing’s motion for summary judgment,
    the April 27, 2020 cross-action, or the third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3.
    Sanctions under Rule 13 are also not appropriate. The trial court’s reliance on Manager
    Thigpen’s deposition is unfounded. Thigpen’s deposition was not introduced at the sanctions
    hearing and was not included as an exhibit in Appellees’ motion for sanctions. More importantly,
    his testimony was not challenged by Appellees in their motion for sanctions. Therefore, the trial
    court was not authorized to rely on Thigpen’s deposition testimony to support its Rule 13 sanction.
    See In re Champagne, 
    2021 WL 4976719
    , at *2; Clark, 
    217 S.W.3d at 513
    ; In re L.A.M. & Assocs.,
    975 S.W.2d at 83; see also Polansky, 393 S.W.3d at 369; Greene, 174 S.W.3d at 298–301.
    As to the discovery signed by Thigpen and Appellants’ admissions, the only discovery in
    evidence signed by Thigpen and the only admissions made by Appellants were dated more than
    eight months after Appellants’ then-attorneys signed the third amended answers to Interrogatory
    No. 3, the response to Plains Marketing’s motion for summary judgment, and the April 27, 2020
    cross-action. We previously concluded that such responses were not evidence of the circumstances
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    04-22-00450-CV
    surrounding the time the challenged documents were signed. As stated, at the time Bair and
    Johnson signed the challenged documents, discovery was ongoing, and Plains Marketing had
    refused to produce its employees for depositions.
    We conclude that the evidence is legally insufficient to support Rule 13 sanctions against
    Appellants. The evidence of the circumstances surrounding the signing of the three challenged
    documents fail to show that reliance on driver reports was groundless at that time and that
    Appellants acted in bad faith or for harassing purposes.
    Finding 8: Failure to Investigate Regarding Its Assertion that Plains Failed to Comply
    with OSHA Standards Regarding the Rail at the Loading Site and Finding
    that There Is No Relevant OSHA Standard
    The trial court’s eighth finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    8.     Reynolds failed to investigate the law and the facts concerning
    REYNOLDS’[s] on-going assertion that PLAINS failed to comply with OSHA
    standards with regard to the dimensions of its guardrail and continued to make this
    claim even though (1) there was no guardrail at the PLAINS’ station and (2) there
    is no OSHA standard, including the standard improperly cited by REYNOLDS,
    that applied to the PLAINS’ station. Again, sanctions against REYNOLDS are
    appropriate under section 10.001(2) and Rule 13.
    As we stated above, Chapter 10 expressly prohibits monetary sanctions against a
    represented party based on the legal contentions in a pleading. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE
    ANN. § 10.004(d). Therefore, the trial court could not have properly awarded sanctions against
    Appellants for a groundless response to Plains Marketing’s motion for summary judgment or the
    April 27, 2020 cross-action for a violation of section 10.001(2).
    Sanctions under Rule 13 are also not appropriate. We previously determined that Bair’s
    legal theory against Plains based on guardrails not complying with OSHA standards was not
    groundless. We conclude the evidence was legally insufficient to support Rule 13 sanctions
    against Appellants.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Finding 9: Reynolds Failed to Investigate its Allegations that the Vapor Recovery
    System was Blocked by Mud and that the Design of the Site was Defective
    for Failing to Provide Storage for the Hoses
    The trial court’s ninth finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    9.      REYNOLDS failed to investigate the law and the facts concerning
    REYNOLDS’[s] claim that the vapor recovery hose was blocked by mud, rocks
    and other debris, rendering its use impossible. Hayes, REYNOLDS’[s] own driver,
    extolled this claim but admitted that he had not examined the hose and had no
    evidence of such a blockage. Yet REYNOLDS claimed that PLAINS failed to
    provide a storage rack for the hose to keep it out of the mud. Not only do such
    storage racks not exist, the testimony of REYNOLDS’[s] own drivers was that the
    hoses were hung over the LACT unit when use was completed. REYNOLDS own
    handbook made the care and storage of PLAINS’ property the responsibility of their
    drivers. Sanctions against REYNOLDS are appropriate under section 10.001(2)
    and Rule 13.
    Finding 9 fails to identify the pleadings or discovery challenged. Therefore, Finding 9
    lacks the particularity requirement of Rule 13 and the explanation requirement of section 10.005.
    See TEX. R. CIV. P. 13; TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.005.
    Finding 9 also is not legally appropriate because, as we stated above, Chapter 10 expressly
    prohibits monetary sanctions against a represented party based on the legal contentions in a
    pleading. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 10.004(d). Therefore, the trial court could
    not have properly awarded sanctions against Appellants for a groundless response to Plains
    Marketing’s motion for summary judgment, the April 27, 2020 cross-action, or the third amended
    answers to Interrogatory No. 3 for a violation of section 10.001(2).
    Sanctions under Rule 13 are also not appropriate. The record shows that Hayes’s only
    admissions regarding the blocked hose were in his responses to requests for admission, which we
    previously ruled were not evidence of the circumstances surrounding the signing of Reynolds
    Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s motion for summary judgment. They were presented
    more than a year after Bair filed Reynolds Energy’s response to the motion for summary judgment
    and the third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3, and Johnson filed the April 27, 2020 cross-
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    04-22-00450-CV
    action.     We previously concluded that these later admissions were not evidence of the
    circumstances surrounding the signing of the challenged documents.
    We also previously concluded that Hayes’s testimony that the hoses were clogged was not
    groundless. Therefore, we conclude that Rule 13 was not violated.
    We conclude that the trial court’s award of sanctions under Rule 13 against Appellants was
    not supported by legally sufficient evidence. We also conclude that the trial court was without
    authority to award sanctions against Appellants under section 10.001(2) of the Texas Civil Practice
    and Remedies Code.
    Finding 10: Testimony that the Hoses Might be Blocked by Mud and Other Debris,
    Findings that Plains Gave Reynolds Records from the National Weather
    Service Which Refuted Claims that Mud Could be Clogging the Hoses, or
    They Could be Blocked
    The trial court’s tenth finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    10.     Despite REYNOLDS’[s] own admissions contradicting the presence of
    vapor recovery hose blocked by mud, rocks and other debris, REYNOLDS
    continued to assert this claim. As further evidence that REYNOLDS failed to
    investigate the law and the facts regarding this claim, REYNOLDS was given
    records in January 2020 [from] the National Weather Service that, from October 1,
    2018 through the date of the incident, only 15/100th of an inch of rain had fallen at
    the PLAINS’ station. Neither REYNOLDS’[s] manager nor its drivers could
    provide any support as to how mud could accumulate when there was virtually no
    water, nor could they explain how some 60 trucks a day, for more than two years,
    successfully filled their rigs and only Mr. Hayes experienced such an alleged clog.
    By signing pleadings and discovery making allegations that lacked any factual
    support, REYNOLDS and its counsel violated both Rule 13 of the Rules of
    Procedure and Chapter 10 of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code, justifying
    sanctions.
    In Finding 10, the trial court again considers Appellants’ “own admissions contradicting
    the presence of vapor recovery hose blocked by mud, rocks and other debris” that Appellants
    “continued to assert.” In their sanctions motion, Appellees only challenged the response to the
    motion for summary judgment, the answers to Interrogatory No. 3, and the April 27, 2020 cross-
    action. Therefore, the trial court was without authority to consider any other document where
    - 73 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    Appellants allegedly continued to assert the same claim. See In re Champagne, 
    2021 WL 4976719
    ,
    at *2; Clark, 
    217 S.W.3d at 513
    ; In re L.A.M. & Assocs., 975 S.W.2d at 83; see also Polansky, 393
    S.W.3d at 369; Greene, 174 S.W.3d at 298–301.
    Finding 10 also references “admissions.” We previously concluded that Hayes and
    Reynolds Energy’s subsequent responses to requests for admission, which were served over a year
    after the former attorney signed the documents challenged by Plains Marketing, were not evidence
    of the circumstances surrounding the signing of the challenged documents.
    Finding 10 also references “Reynolds’[s] Manager and its drivers.” At the time the
    challenged documents were filed, only three witnesses had been deposed: Mills, Hayes, and
    Guerra. Reynolds Energy’s manager and other drivers had not been deposed. As we have
    repeatedly stated and concluded, the circumstances surrounding the signing of the challenged
    documents showed that discovery was ongoing and that Appellees had refused to present their
    witnesses for deposition. Therefore, only the deposition testimony of Mills, Hayes, and Guerra
    are relevant to the issue of ventilation hoses being blocked by mud, rocks, or other debris.
    In Finding 10, the trial court awarded sanctions under Chapter 10 against Appellants for
    signing pleadings and discovery. Sanctions under Chapter 10 are only proper for pleadings and
    motions. Therefore, by including discovery in its finding, the trial court acted outside its authority.
    See In re Champagne, 
    2021 WL 4976719
    , at *2; Clark, 
    217 S.W.3d at 513
    ; In re L.A.M. & Assocs.,
    975 S.W.2d at 83; see also Polansky, 393 S.W.3d at 369; Greene, 174 S.W.3d at 298–301.
    We previously concluded that Hayes’s testimony on clogged vent hoses was not groundless
    based on the following evidence: (a) Guerra’s and Mills’s deposition testimony, (b) the weather
    report, and (c) the station logs. Therefore, section 10.001 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies
    Code was not violated at the time Bair filed Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to
    Interrogatory No. 3 and Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s no-evidence motion
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    04-22-00450-CV
    for summary judgment, and Johnson filed Reynolds Energy’s April 27, 2020 cross-action. There
    being no evidence of Bair’s or Johnson’s bad faith or harassing, for the same reasons, Rule 13 was
    also not violated.
    Finding 11: Findings Relating to the Affidavit of Reynolds Energy’s Expert that Court
    Found to be a Sham Affidavit
    The trial court’s eleventh finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    11.     REYNOLDS’[s] failure to make a reasonable inquiry into the facts
    underlying this lawsuit, coupled with the multiple false declarations REYNOLDS[]
    and its expert swore out in support of their pleadings, caused the Court to deny
    PLAINS’ Motion for Summary Judgment. REYNOLDS submitted a sham
    affidavit from REYNOLDS’[s] engineering expert, Gehse, whose opinions had no
    evidentiary foundation. Rather than correct the false and misleading claims in
    subsequent pleadings and discovery, REYNOLDS forfeited the opportunity to cure
    the harm caused by REYNOLDS and its expert and continued to assert the untrue
    claims—claims that the Court finds by the evidence that REYNOLDS knew to be
    groundless and false when made. By signing the discovery responses,
    REYNOLDS certified that, to the best of its knowledge, information, and belief,
    the factual contentions therein were true. As discussed, a “reasonable inquiry” into
    these factual assertions would have proven otherwise.
    Finding 11 lacks the particularity requirement of Rule 13 and the explanation requirement
    of Chapter 10 for four reasons: (1) it fails to notify Appellants under what rule they are being
    sanctioned, (2) it fails to identify the document in which Reynolds Energy swore to in support of
    their pleadings, (3) it fails to identify the discovery responses that Appellants signed, and (4) it
    fails to identify the “subsequent pleadings and discovery.” In their sanctions motion, the only
    discovery Appellees challenged was Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to Interrogatory
    No. 3. Accordingly, the trial court was not authorized to include all of Appellants’ discovery
    responses and subsequent pleadings in Finding 11.
    As to Gehse’s affidavit, the record before us does not show it was produced with Reynolds
    Energy’s third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3. Therefore, the trial court’s finding that
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Reynolds Energy should be sanctioned for filing the third amended answers to Interrogatory No. 3
    is without factual support.
    Finding 12: Findings That Sanctionable Conduct Prolonged the Litigation
    The trial court’s twelfth finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    12.      This sanctionable conduct inappropriately prolonged the litigation. As a
    result, PLAINS incurred more than $428,895.92 in documented attorneys’ fees to
    compel the production of evidence, to independently secure such evidence when
    REYNOLDS failed its duty to produce same and to ultimately obtain summary
    judgment. REYNOLDS’[s] new counsel would not stand on the unmeritorious
    claims and defenses REYNOLDS had previously asserted. This Court reviewed
    testimony, pleadings and exhibits from the Plaintiff’s counsel stating that there was
    no evidence supporting REYNOLDS’[s] claims against PLAINS and that PLAINS
    would never have been named as a Defendant in the case had REYNOLDS not
    claimed on the very night of the accident, without inspection or investigation, of its
    intent to blame PLAINS. The Court finds that REYNOLDS’[s] violation of Rule
    13 and Chapter 10 resulted in PLAINS being forced to incur legal fees and costs
    long after it was apparent in January 2020 that PLAINS never belonged in this
    litigation. The Court finds that the difference between what PLAINS would have
    incurred in legal fees and costs if REYNOLDS had been truthful and what PLAINS
    was forced to spend in legal fees because of REYNOLDS’[s] false allegations and
    groundless claims is the appropriate measure of sanctions on these facts.
    The trial court’s finding that Reynolds failed its duty to produce evidence was not raised
    in Appellees’ sanctions motion. Therefore, the trial court was without authority to make this
    finding.
    The trial court’s finding that “REYNOLDS’[s] new counsel would not stand on the
    unmeritorious claims and defenses REYNOLDS had previously asserted” is not legally supported
    by the evidence. First, the Reynolds’ defendants’ new counsel did not testify at the sanctions
    motion. Second, the only evidence submitted by Appellees in support of this finding was an e-
    mail where new counsel agreed not to challenge a second motion for summary judgment. Nothing
    in that e-mail stated that new counsel “would not stand on the unmeritorious claims and defenses”
    Reynolds Energy asserted.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Further, we previously concluded that the e-mail did not reflect the circumstances
    surrounding the signing of the three documents Appellees challenged in their sanctions motion.
    For these reasons, the trial court’s findings are legally insufficient.
    The trial court’s review of Plaintiff’s testimony, pleadings, and exhibits stating that there
    was no evidence supporting Reynolds Energy’s claims against the Plains companies was also
    without authority. Plaintiff did not testify at the sanctions hearing. The only evidence introduced
    by Appellees in support of their sanctions motion were Dianna’s first and second amended
    petitions and her response to Plains Marketing’s motion for summary judgment. We previously
    concluded these documents were not evidence. Therefore, the trial court’s finding that Reynolds
    Energy violated Rule 13 and Chapter 10 based on such documents is legally insufficient.
    The trial court’s finding that it was apparent that in January 2020 that Plains Marketing
    began to incur fees and costs because of Reynolds Energy’s violations of Rule 13 and Chapter 10
    lacks the particularity requirement of Rule 13 and the explanation requirement of Chapter 10. The
    finding does not specify what event in January 2020 triggered the alleged violations of Rule 13
    and Chapter 10. Therefore, we conclude the trial court’s Finding 12 was conclusory.
    Finding 13: Findings About the Lawsuit’s Reliance on “Demonstrably False Claims”
    The trial court’s thirteenth finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    13.      Good cause exists to impose sanctions because this entire lawsuit involving
    PLAINS was premised on a series of demonstrably false claims, and it was filed to
    harass PLAINS and to unnecessarily delay the case and increase the costs of
    litigation. The Court finds that a reasonable inquiry of its own witnesses and
    documents in REYNOLDS’[s] possession would have shown there was no factual
    basis for the claims and defenses that REYNOLDS made in this lawsuit against
    Plains. The Court further finds that REYNOLDS failed to make reasonable
    inquiries into the factual basis for the claims and defenses asserted and on which
    they would bear the burden of proof for the April 2020 counter-claim they filed
    against PLAINS and their defense of contributory negligence. None of the nine
    contentions asserted by REYNOLDS in discovery in April 2020 had evidentiary
    support (apart from the uncorroborated, solicited and contradicted testimony
    offered by REYNOLDS’[s] officer Thigpen and its drivers) or could have been
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    04-22-00450-CV
    shown to have truthful evidentiary support. REYNOLDS’[s] RESPONSE
    opposing PLAINS’ first Motion for Summary Judgment was thus without merit,
    spurious, and brought in bad faith. This Court therefore concludes that
    REYNOLDS’[s] cross-claims and discovery allegations against PLAINS were
    brought for improper purposes, including harassment of PLAINS for exercising its
    legitimate rights and as actions which needlessly increased the costs of litigation.
    Sanctions are therefore appropriate against REYNOLDS under Section 10.001(1)
    of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code for presenting pleadings for an improper
    purpose.
    In their sanctions motion, Appellees contended the cross-claim signed by Johnson was
    frivolous and malicious and filed in contravention of Rule 13 because it was based on false
    allegations. Accordingly, the trial court was without authority to order sanctions under section
    10.001(1).
    Finding 14: Findings that Reynolds Failed to Exercise Due Diligence by Involving
    Plains in the Lawsuit
    The trial court’s fourteenth finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    14.      Reynolds failed to exercise due diligence in involving Plains in this lawsuit.
    Because REYNOLDS’[s] involving Plains was premised on a series of
    demonstrably false statements, the Court concludes that its claims and defenses
    were without merit. Likewise, the lack of merit underlying REYNOLDS’s claims
    demonstrates that REYNOLDS failed to investigate either the law or the facts
    before advising Plaintiff of its intent to assert its false claims. REYNOLDS also
    ignored the meritless nature of REYNOLDS’[s] claims even after their many
    falsehoods came to light, continuing to litigate the case as if no false testimony had
    been offered by Hayes at his first deposition in January 2020. REYNOLDS’[s]
    failure to exercise due diligence is sanctionable under Section 10.002(c) of the Civil
    Practice and Remedies Code, which provides that a Court may award a party
    prevailing on a sanctions motion all costs for inconvenience, harassment, and out-
    of-pocket expenses incurred or caused by the subject litigation.
    The trial court’s conclusion that Reynolds Energy’s claims and defenses were without
    merit fails to identify the pleading where Reynolds Energy asserted claims and defenses. The only
    pleading challenged by Appellants where claims and defenses were set forth is Reynolds Energy’s
    April 27, 2020 cross-action. Therefore, the trial court erred in including any other pleading that
    contains Reynolds Energy’s claims and defenses. See In re Champagne, 
    2021 WL 4976719
    , at
    - 78 -
    04-22-00450-CV
    *2; Clark, 
    217 S.W.3d at 513
    ; In re L.A.M. & Assocs., 975 S.W.2d at 83; see also Polansky, 393
    S.W.3d at 369; Greene, 174 S.W.3d at 298–301.
    In their sanctions motion, Appellees contended the cross-claim signed by Johnson was
    frivolous and malicious and filed in contravention of Rule 13 because it was based on false
    allegations.
    We previously concluded that Reynolds Energy’s April 27, 2020 cross-action against
    Plains Marketing was not groundless and that there was no legally sufficient evidence that Johnson
    acted in bad faith or for harassing purposes.
    The trial court’s finding does not identify Hayes’s false testimony at his January 28, 2020
    deposition. Moreover, as stated previously, there is no evidence that Reynolds Energy or its former
    attorneys had knowledge of any false testimony when they signed the four documents challenged
    in the Plains companies’ motion for sanctions. Finally, there is no evidence that Reynolds Energy
    failed to exercise due diligence with respect to the challenged documents. The trial court’s finding
    that Reynolds Energy failed to exercise due diligence by involving the Plains companies in the
    lawsuit is not supported by the evidence.
    Finding 15: Reynolds and Its Counsel Acted Together and Intentionally
    The trial court’s fifteenth finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    15.     This Court finds that REYNOLDS and its counsel acted together and
    intentionally, causing PLAINS to incur needless attorney’s fees and costs in
    defending against REYNOLDS’s claims and prosecuting its own claims against
    REYNOLDS.
    The trial court’s finding fails because (a) it is not part of Plains Marketing’s challenges in
    its sanctions motion, (b) the finding is not limited to the documents challenged by the Plains
    companies, and (c) there is no evidence to support the finding of the intentional state of mind of
    Reynolds Energy and its former attorneys. Accordingly, the trial court acted without authority.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Finding 16: Reynolds Wasted Plains’ Time and Resources and the Court’s Time and
    Resources
    The trial court’s sixteenth finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    16.    As a result of the conduct described above, REYNOLDS wasted PLAINS’
    time and resources and also wasted this Court’s time and resources.
    We interpret this finding to include each of the trial court’s prior findings. Because we
    concluded that either the trial court did not have authority to make its prior finding or there was no
    legally sufficient evidence to support them, we conclude that the trial court’s Finding 16 was an
    abuse of discretion.
    Finding 17: A Direct Relationship Between the Sanctions and the Offending Conduct,
    Reference to False and Misleading Allegations in Reynolds’s Petition and
    Motions
    The trial court’s seventeenth finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    17.      The Court finds that these sanctions are just, appropriate, necessary, and
    limited to an amount sufficient to deter similar misconduct by REYNOLDS and
    other who learn of this Order. There is a direct relationship between the sanctions
    and REYNOLDS[’s] offensive conduct. Due to the frivolous claims of
    REYNOLDS’[s] cross-claims, PLAINS was forced to incur more than $428,89592
    [sic] in legal fees and costs that it would have not incurred but for the many false
    and misleading allegations made by REYNOLDS in their petitions and motions.
    PLAINS produced evidence to show that it incurred the cost to retain additional
    counsel to represent the Guard company that employed [Dianna], to respond to the
    frivolous pleadings and to engage in extensive discovery practice, including the
    production of their employees both in and out of state for lengthy depositions.
    Because we previously concluded that neither Reynolds Energy nor its former attorneys
    violated Rule 13 or section 10.001 as alleged by Appellees in their motion for sanctions, we
    conclude that the trial court abused its discretion by finding that the Plains companies were entitled
    to sanctions.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Finding 18: Knowingly Presenting Groundless Claims and Bad Faith
    The trial court’s eighteenth finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    18.     Among the factors considered by this Court in arriving at the appropriate
    amount of the sanctions were the demonstrated bad faith of REYNOLDS in
    knowingly presenting groundless claims, the reasonableness and necessity of the
    legal fees and expenses incurred by PLAINS as a result of REYNOLDS[’s]
    violations of Rule 13 and Chapter 10, the burdens on the court system attributable
    to the misconduct, including consumption of the Court’s resources, and the degree
    of willfulness in the repeated false statements that REYNOLDS offered to the
    Court.
    Because we previously concluded that neither Reynolds Energy nor its former attorneys
    violated Rule 13 or section 10.001 as alleged by Appellees in their motion for sanctions, we
    conclude that the trial court abused its discretion by finding that the Plains companies were entitled
    to sanctions.
    Finding 19: Suborning Perjury and “Repeatedly” Presenting the Trial Court with False
    Statements and “Untrue Declarations”
    The trial court’s nineteenth finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    19.    The sanctions imposed by this Court are limited to what the Court has
    determined is sufficient to deter repetition of REYNOLDS’[s] misconduct or
    comparable conduct by others similarly situated. REYNOLDS’[s] violations of
    Chapter 10 and Rule 13 described above forced PLAINS to needlessly defend itself
    in a lawsuit in which there were no real controversies, either in law or in fact,
    Moreover, despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, this court does not find
    that REYNOLDS has demonstrated any remorse for suborning false statements
    from its witnesses, much less acknowledged that they repeatedly have presented
    this Court with untrue declarations in their pleadings and motions and discovery
    throughout the litigation. Therefore, this sanction is not arbitrary but is more than
    appropriate, given the harm suffered by PLAINS and the deterrent effect this
    sanction may have on REYNOLDS going forward.
    Because we previously concluded that neither Reynolds Energy nor its former attorneys
    violated Rule 13 or section 10.001 as alleged by Appellees in their motion for sanctions, we
    conclude that the trial court abused its discretion by finding that the Plains companies were entitled
    to sanctions.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    Finding 20: Evidence Showing that Reynolds Endorsed or Encouraged Its Counsel’s
    Actions
    The trial court’s twentieth finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    20.     The court observes that the sanctions are permissible and appropriate as
    against REYNOLDS as permitted under the Rules and that the evidence shows that
    REYNOLDS endorsed, encouraged, ratified and otherwise cooperated fully in the
    actions of Bair without basis, evidence or support therefore.
    Because we previously concluded that neither Reynolds Energy nor its former attorneys
    violated Rule 13 or section 10.001 as alleged by Appellees in their motion for sanctions, we
    conclude that the trial court abused its discretion by finding that the Plains companies were entitled
    to sanctions.
    Finding 21: The Reasonableness of the Sanctions
    The trial court’s twenty-first finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    20.    The sanctions imposed hereunder are intended both to reimburse PLAINS
    for having to incur unnecessary attorney’s fees and costs and to deter similar
    misconduct by REYNOLDS in the future. This sanction is no more severe than
    necessary to promote full compliance with the Texas Rule[s] of Civil Procedure.
    Because we previously concluded that neither Reynolds Energy nor its former attorneys
    violated Rule 13 or section 10.001 as alleged by Appellees in their motion for sanctions, we
    conclude that the trial court abused its discretion by finding that the Plains companies were entitled
    to sanctions.
    Finding 1: The Trial Court Awards Sanctions for Conduct Starting February 1, 2020
    The trial court’s first finding reads in its entirety as follows:
    1.     The Court awards sanctions to PLAINS against REYNOLDS for violations
    of Rule 13 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure (“Rule 13”) and Chapter 10 of the
    Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code (“Chapter 10”), in the amount of
    $428,895.92 (Four Hundred Twenty-Eight and Eight Hundred and Ninety-Five and
    92/100 Dollars[)] which number was calculated from February 1, 2020, which date
    the documents reflect REYNOLDS’[s] unsupported frivolous and unmeritorious
    claims against PLAINS. The court finds that the evidence documents that PLAINS
    incurred fees and costs from December 2018 (when [Dianna] was injured) through
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    04-22-00450-CV
    the date of this order but PLAINS seeks recovery from February 2020 (when the
    pleadings and discovery clearly document REYNOLDS’[s] knowledge that their
    claims against PLAINS were unmeritorious) through present. As such, good cause
    exists to impose these sanctions from that date, as explained below.
    Because we concluded that neither Reynolds Energy nor its former attorneys violated Rule
    13 or section 10.001 as alleged by Appellees in their motion for sanctions, we conclude that the
    trial court abused its discretion by finding that the Plains companies were entitled to sanctions.
    We also conclude that the trial court abused its discretion by setting a time frame for the sanctions,
    which had no evidentiary support.
    CONCLUSIONS
    We conclude the trial court abused its discretion by basing its findings on either (a) an
    erroneous view of the law or (b) legally insufficient evidence, in the following particulars:
    1.      By imposing sanctions on Reynolds Transportation, Inc. when it was not a party
    when the challenged documents were filed.
    2.      By awarding sanctions to Plains All American Pipeline, L.P. and Plains Pipeline,
    L.P. when they were not parties when the challenged documents were filed.
    3.      By imposing sanctions on Appellants for violations of Rule 13 where evidence of
    bad faith or harassment was legally insufficient.
    4.      In its Findings 2, 3, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 14, and 15, by imposing sanctions on pleadings
    or documents not challenged in the sanctions motion, in violation of Appellants’
    due process rights.
    5.      In its Findings 4 and 7, by relying on evidence not introduced at the hearing and
    not included in Appellees’ motion for sanctions.
    6.      In its Findings 13 and 14, by imposing sanctions under Chapter 10 when in their
    motion for sanctions, Appellees only asked for sanctions under Rule 13.
    7.      In its Findings 3, 10, and 11, by imposing sanctions for statements or documents
    not included in Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to Dianna’s
    Interrogatory No. 3, Reynolds Energy’s response to Plains Marketing’s motion for
    summary judgment, or Reynolds Energy’s and Hayes’s April 27, 2020 cross-action
    against Plains Marketing.
    8.      In its Findings 3 and 6, by making findings not supported by legally sufficient
    evidence.
    9.      In Finding 6, by considering the statements contained in Dianna’s pleadings as
    evidence that Reynolds Energy’s violated of Chapter 10 and Rule 13.
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    04-22-00450-CV
    10.     In its Findings 2, 3, 6, 7, 9, 10, and 11, by not limiting its review to circumstances
    surrounding Bair’s or Johnson’s filings of the documents challenged in the Plains
    companies’ motion for sanctions.
    11.     In its Findings 2, 4, 9, 10, 11, and 14, by failing to describe with reasonable
    particularity the conduct that violated Rule 13 and to explain such conduct as
    required under Chapter 10.
    12.     In its Findings 3, 5, and 10, by sanctioning Appellants under Chapter 10 for
    Reynolds Energy’s third amended answers to Dianna’s Interrogatory No. 3, when
    Chapter 10 only applies to pleadings and motions.
    13.     In its Findings 7 and 8, by imposing sanctions against Appellants for violations of
    section 10.001(2) given that section 10.004(d) prohibits sanctions against a
    represented party for violation of section 10.001(2).
    14.     In its Finding 16, by concluding that Appellants wasted the Court’s and Appellees’
    resources where (1) the evidence was legally insufficient, (2) the sanctions were
    based on documents not raised in the motion for sanctions, or (3) the sanctions were
    not based on the circumstances surrounding the signing of the challenged
    documents.
    15.     In its Findings 17, 18, 19, 20, and 21, by finding that Plains was entitled to
    sanctions.
    We conclude the trial court abused its discretion as stated above and by ordering sanctions
    under either Rule 13 or Chapter 10, or both, against Appellants. Accordingly, we reverse the trial
    court’s order, and we render judgment that Appellees take nothing on their motion for sanctions.
    Reynolds Energy’s arguments that the trial court abused its discretion (1) by not granting
    the Reynolds companies’ motion to reconsider and (2) by awarding sanctions not supported by
    legally or factually sufficient evidence are moot.
    We tax costs of court for this appeal against Appellees.
    Patricia O. Alvarez, Justice
    - 84 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 04-22-00450-CV

Filed Date: 6/28/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/2/2024