OPINION
Appellant Jack Jones Hearing Centers, Inc. filed suit, seeking declarations that its contract with Eschaton, Inc. d/b/a Aidright Hearing Aids (Aidright) was void as against public policy because it violated certain provisions of the Texas Occupations Code and related rules promulgated by the State Committee of Examiners in the Fitting and Dispensing of Hearing Instruments (the Committee). See generally Tex. Occ.Code Ann. §§ 402.001-.553 (West 2004 & Supp.2011). The trial court granted a plea to the jurisdiction filed by the Committee and then granted summary judgment in favor of Jack Jones against Aidright. Jack Jones now appeals from the trial court’s order granting the Committee’s plea to the jurisdiction. Because we lack subject-matter jurisdiction over the appeal, we dismiss it for want of jurisdiction.
This controversy arises from an alleged contract between Jack Jones and Aidright. Jack Jones is in the business of fitting and dispensing hearing instruments in Texas, which is regulated by the Committee. See generally id. §§ 402.001-106. According to the original petition, Jack Jones purchased an ongoing fitting and dispensing business in Austin, Texas, and subsequently learned that at the time of its purchase the prior business had a referral contract in place with Aidright. Under the referral contract, Aidright advertises on the Internet for patients in Texas, provides information to assist prospective patients in selecting a hearing instrument, and then refers prospective patients to licensed providers, such as Jack Jones. In exchange, Aidright collects a referral fee for each hearing aid sold. When Aidright approached Jack Jones about renewing and modifying the contract, a dispute arose concerning the validity of the agreement.
Allegedly concerned that certain provisions in the referral contract would violate the Texas Occupations Code, Jack Jones challenged the referral contract in district court. Specifically, Jack Jones sued both Aidright and the Committee seeking declarations that (1) the contract violates chapters 102 and 402 of the Texas Occupations Code as an illegal referral and (2) performing the contract would violate the prohibition in chapter 402 and the Committee’s rules on aiding in the unauthorized practice of fitting and dispensing. Id. §§ 102.001(a), .008(a) (West 2004) (prohibiting payments for the solicitation of patients to or from person licensed, certified, or registered by state health care regulatory agency); id. §§ 402.201, .451(b)(2), .501(6), (21) (West Supp.2011) (prohibiting non-license holder from representing authority to fit and dispense hearing instruments, prohibiting purchase of solicitation list compiled by non-license holder); 22 Tex. Admin. Code § 141.2(15) (2011) (defining “fitting and dispensing”). The Committee responded to the lawsuit by filing a general denial and a plea to the jurisdiction.
In its plea to the jurisdiction, the Committee argued that the trial court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over Jack Jones’s claims against the Committee for two reasons. First, the Committee asserted that the claims were barred by sovereign immunity, and second, the Committee asserted that Jack Jones lacked standing with respect to the claims against it. Jack Jones filed traditional and no-evidence motions for summary judgment against both the Committee and Aidright. The Committee responded to both of Jack Jones’s motions, and Aidright responded to Jack Jones’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment. Subsequently, the trial court granted the Committee’s plea to the jurisdiction and, the same day, granted Jack Jones’s motions for summary judgment against Aidright alone. 1
DISCUSSION
In its sole issue on appeal, Jack Jones asserts that the trial court erred when it granted the Committee’s plea to the juris
Subject-matter jurisdiction is essential to the authority of a court to decide a case.
Texas Ass’n of Bus. v. Texas Air Control Bd.,
Standing is limited to those cases involving a distinct injury to the plaintiff and a live controversy between the parties that will actually be determined by the judicial determination sought.
Id.; Texas Ass’n of Bus.,
Even in those cases in which standing exists, a case may become moot on appeal if a controversy ceases to exist or the parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome.
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Hallman,
The dispute in this case centers on the validity of the alleged contractual obligations between two private parties, Jack Jones and Aidright. Jack Jones sought a declaration that the referral contract is void as against public policy because it violates chapters 102 and 402 of the occupations code and the Committee’s related rules. While Jack Jones’s request for declaratory relief implicates the occupations code, Jack Jones did not seek a declaration construing any statute.
See Texas
In light of this grant of summary judgment, Jack Jones has failed to explain, and we fail to see, how the trial court’s granting of the Committee’s plea to the jurisdiction has adversely affected any legally recognized interest of Jack Jones.
See County of El Paso v. Ortega,
Any controversy, to the extent it ever existed between the Committee and Jack Jones in the Aidright contract, ceased to exist when the trial court declared that the Aidright contract is void. Accordingly, any action taken by this Court on the merits of Jack Jones’s appeal would be purely advisory, and we dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction.
Having determined that Jack Jones lacks standing to' bring this appeal, we dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction.
Notes
. According to the trial court’s summary judgment, Aidright failed to appear at the hearing on Jack Jones’s motions for summary judgment, despite having been served with notice of the hearing. Further, Aidright did not file a response to Jack Jones's traditional motion for summary judgment, and Aidright’s response to Jack Jones’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment was not considered by the court because it was filed and signed by a non-lawyer on behalf of the corporate defendant.
See Simmons, Jannace & Stagg, L.L.P. v. Buzbee Law Firm,
