OPINION ON REHEARING
In response to a motion for rehearing filed by the real parties in interest, we withdraw our opinion of August 30, 2001, and substitute the following in its place.
North American Refractories Company (“NARCO”) seeks a writ of mandamus to compel the Honorable Patrick A. Clark, judge of the 128th District Court of Orange County, Texas, to grant a continuance of a trial originally scheduled to commence on June 25, 2001. The underlying asbestos products liability suit involves over 4000 plaintiffs. This particular trial affects ten plaintiffs 1 designated as the trial group by plaintiffs’ counsel on June 11, two weeks before trial was to begin. NARCO filed its motion for continuance on June 19, on the grounds that lead counsel had a timely vacation letter on file for the week of June 25 and on the grounds that discovery was incomplete. The trial court denied the motion on June 22.
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The relator now suggests the petition may be moot because the week of June 25 passed while our stay order was in effect and before we ruled on the issue before us. Nevertheless, the act complained of in the petition is arguably “capable of repetition yet evading review.”
See General Land Office of the State of Texas v. OXY U.S.A., Inc.,
Although mandamus is generally not available to review the denial of a motion for continuance,
General Motors Corp. v. Gayle,
Legislative continuances are subject to mandamus because a statute makes them mandatory.
Mora v. Ferguson,
Rule 11: Attorney Vacations
a. DESIGNATION OF VACATION. Subject to the provision of subparts b and c of this rule, an attorney may designate not more than four weeks of vacation during a calendar year as vacation, during which that attorney will not be assigned to trial or required to engage in any pretrial proceedings. This rule operates only where lead counsel, as defined by T.R.C.P. 8, is affected, unless the trial court expands coverage to other counsel.
b. SUMMER VACATIONS. Written designation for vacation weeks during June, July, or August must be filed with the district clerk by May 15. Summer vacation weeks so designated will protect the attorney from trials during those summer weeks, even if an order setting the case for trial was signed before the vacation designation was filed.
c. NON-SUMMER VACATIONS. Written designations for vacation in months other than June, July, or August must be filed with the district clerk by February 1. Non-summer vacation weeks may not run consecutively for more than two weeks at a time. Non-summer vacation weeks so designated will not protect an attorney from a trial by an order signed before the date the designation is filed, (emphasis added).
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The Supreme Court approved the adoption of this rule pursuant to its rule-making authority.
See
Mise. Docket No. 96-0006 (Tex. January 8, 1996); see Tex. Const. art. V, § 31; Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. §§ 74.021; 74.046(1), 74.048(c) (Vernon 1998); Tex.R. Civ. P. 3a. Under proper circumstances, a trial court’s violation of a local mandatory rule may be corrected through mandamus.
See Dancy v. Daggett,
The real parties in interest cite
Siegler v. Williams,
The real parties in interest do not contend that denial of the June 25 trial setting deprived them of due process.
See Waites v. Sondock,
The real parties in interest also rely on
Cezeaux v. Libby,
Secondly, the relator contends, both in its motion for continuance and its petition for writ of mandamus, a continuance is necessary in order to conduct additional pre-trial discovery. Since the trial must be reset, the discovery issue should be considered by the trial court in light of the new trial setting.
We conclude that the trial court abused its discretion by denying the relator’s first motion for a continuance. Because the case was not tried the week of June 25, 2001, however, we need not order the trial court to grant the continuance from that trial setting. We decline to conditionally grant the writ of mandamus solely for that reason. We are confident that the trial court will follow the principles set forth in this opinion should these circumstances be repeated. We are also confident that the trial court will grant sufficient time for additional discovery should the need be *395 demonstrated when a new trial date is set. The stay order is lifted.
The motion for sanctions of the real parties in interest is denied.
WRIT DENIED; STAY ORDER LIFTED; MOTION FOR SANCTIONS DENIED.
Notes
. The real parties in interest have been identified as Jim Amison, Jr., Tony Houston Belle, Sr., Richard Deed, George Dudley, Dock Sha-heen Farris, Johnnie Hughes, Joe Daniel Miles, Gene Tunney Saulters, Melvin Curtis Story, and Mardis Bryan Wallis, Jr.
