DocketNumber: No. 08-0956.
Judges: McCLURE Justice.
Filed Date: 2/10/2009
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 3/2/2020
In a case of first impression, this Panel must consider whether three1 pending causes in Harris County, Galveston County, and Ellis County — all of which include class action allegations — should be transferred to a pretrial court for consolidated and coordinated pretrial proceedings. The defendants, Petroleum Wholesale, L.P.; PWI GP, LLC; Petroleum Wholesale, Inc.; Sunmart, Inc.; Sun Petroleum, LLC; and Sun Development, L.P. (collectively Petroleum), suggest that all three lawsuits contain allegations of violations of the Deceptive Trade Practices Act (DTPA) and all three seek restitution on behalf of affected consumers for innumerable transactions all over Texas.
Rule 13 authorizes us "to transfer ``related' cases from different trial courts to a single pretrial judge if transfer will (1) serve the convenience of the parties and witnesses and (2) promote the just and efficient conduct of the litigation."See In re Ad Valorem Tax Litigation,
• Cause No. 59, 498, pending in County Court at Law Number One of Galveston County, filed by John Marroney and Adrian Oatis, which includes class action allegations seeking to represent all customers who purchased gasoline at any of Petroleum's Texas stations within a four-year period.
• Cause No. 2008-45087, pending in the 334th District Court of Harris County, filed by Allison Snoddy, Stefanie Brigance and Charles Ziegler, seeking certification of a class of all consumers who purchased gasoline at Petroleum's unlawfully calibrated pumps in Texas over a four-year period.
• Cause No. 77015, pending in the 40th District Court of Ellis County, filed by Joe C. Webster, seeking to represent all customers who purchased gasoline by credit card from one or more of Petroleum's miscalibrated pumps in Texas from July 21, 2004, forward.
The essential allegations in each suit are that Petroleum (1) misrepresented statewide that the posted or advertised price per gallon was the true price; and (2) concealed statewide that Petroleum or its agents had calibrated the pumps at the station to deliver less product than lawfully allowed and less product than it had represented would be delivered. Petroleum contends that all three lawsuits allege violations of the Deceptive Trade Practices Act, seek restitution on behalf of affected consumers, rely upon Operation Spotlight's report of calibration errors, and seek the same type of damages on behalf of the same consumers. The Harris County plaintiffs, joined by the Galveston and Ellis County plaintiffs, respond that (1) transfer would be "premature before class certification discovery", (2) Petroleum has not established that a common question of fact permeates the cases, or (3) transfer would promote the just and efficient conduct of the lawsuits.
*Page 408• The integrity of the data maintained by the Department of Agriculture;
• The testing methodology employed by the inspectors and the accuracy of the results;
• The bias of Department officials to inspectors in the field;
• The bias of Department officials in applying more stringent standards to Petroleum than any other company;
• Whether the "60-percent" rule was properly promulgated as a rule or is void for not having been properly promulgated;
• Whether Petroleum reasonably relied on assurances from independent third-party service technicians that their pump devices were properly calibrated;
• Whether there was an organized effort to alter the proper calibration of Petroleum's fuel dispensers;
• Whether Petroleum profited from any calibration errors;
• Whether plaintiffs were injured by any calibration errors; and
• The methods for calibrating and inspecting fuel service dispensers.
Although this Panel has not previously addressed MDL consolidation of putative class actions, the federal courts have. Just weeks ago, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana considered a motion for class certification by plaintiffs in multi-district litigation.In re FEMA Trailer Formaldehyde Products LiabilityLitigation, No. MDL 071873,
The Court is presently faced with the issue of whether or not this litigation should be certified and managed as a class action, or, more specifically, as six separate subclasses.2 If the Court chooses not to certify a class, then this matter will proceed as a mass joinder in the MDL.
Id. at *2. The court explained that the federal rules require numerosity, commonality, typicality and adequacy.Id. at *3. The first two requirements focus on the characteristics of the class while the latter two focus on the desired characteristics of the class representatives.Id. Texas state court procedure is substantially similar. See TEX.R.CIV.P. 42(a).
Clearly, there is a nexus between commonality for class certification purposes and relatedness for consolidation purposes. "The test of commonality is not demanding . . . The interests and claims of the various plaintiffs need not be identical. Rather, the commonality test is met when there is at least one issue whose resolution will affect all or a significant member of the putative class members." In reFEMA Trailer at *4. Ultimately, the court denied class certification, finding that the plaintiffs alleged dozens of different manufacturing companies manufactured products that caused harm, with some manufacturers providing multiple models.See also, In re Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc. Tires,
We conclude that the cases involve common issues of fact and are related within the meaning of Rule 13. We should not be heard to say that putative class action lawsuits asserted against the same defendant should automatically receive MDL treatment. But consolidation is certainly appropriate here.
If they reach conflicting results on similar factual records, lengthy appeals are a certainty. Even if the trial court rulings are identical, the potential still exists for duplicative appeals. A single pretrial judge is necessary, and is justified under Rule 13.
Petroleum also argues that in the absence of transfer, the proverbial race to the courthouse for class certification will ensue. We agree. Each putative class will be competing to represent consumers with regard to the same pumps in the same counties. Duplicative claims for damages on behalf of the same consumers for the same set of transactions is inherently tied to just and efficient trial management. For all of these reasons, we grant Petroleum's motion to transfer these cases to a pretrial court.
The motion to transfer is granted and a pre-trial judge will be appointed by separate order.
Presiding Judge PEEPLES, Justices LANG, HANKS, and STONE concur.