JETALL COMPANIES, INC. v. JPG WACO HERITAGE LLC
No. 10-21-00135-CV
Tenth Court of Appeals
December 1, 2021
STEVE SMITH, Justice
From the 74th District Court, McLennan County, Texas, Trial Court No. 2019-4557-3
OPINION
Appellant, Jetall Companies, Inc. (“Jetall“), filed a motion, under the Texas Citizens Participation Act (“TCPA“), to dismiss counterclaims filed by appellee, JPG Waco Heritage, LLC (“JPG“). See
Background
This dispute arose from a purported agreement under which JPG allegedly contracted to sell to Jetall real property located at 215 Washington Avenue in Waco, Texas. See, e.g., Jetall Cos., Inc. v. JPG Waco Heritage, LLC, No. 07-20-00126-CV, 2020 Tex. App. LEXIS 4860, at *1 (Tex. App. - Amarillo June 30, 2020, pet. denied) (mem. op.). Jetall later learned that JPG intended to sell the property to a third party. Id. Based on this information, Jetall filed a notice of lis pendens. Id. The trial court expunged the lis pendens and temporarily enjoined Jetall, Ali Choudhri, and those entities they own and control from filing additional notices of lis pendens.1 Id.
Jetall then filed suit against JPG, alleging breach-of-contract, fraud, and fraudulent-inducement claims. JPG counterclaimed, asserting claims for tortious interference with an existing contract and a fraudulent lien based, in part, on Jetall‘s filing of an October 10, 2019 notice of lis pendens. JPG specifically alleged that Jetall‘s October 10, 2019 notice of lis pendens caused the termination of a pending sale of the property for $8 million and resulted in JPG having to pay the third-party buyer $40,000 for failing to close the sale of the property due to Jetall‘s tortious interference.
Thereafter, Jetall filed a motion to сompel arbitration, which the trial court denied. Jetall appealed. The Seventh Court of Appeals modified the temporary injunction
After the Seventh Court of Appeals issued its opinion, JPG amended its counterclaims twice, with the second amendment being filed on September 9, 2020. In its third amended counterclaim, JPG alleged additional facts in support of its claims for tortious interference with an existing contract and a fraudulent lien, including allegations that Jetall had filed four notices of lis pendens in an attempt to prevent the property from being sold.
Jetall answered JPG‘s amended counterclaims and asserted a privilege and immunity affirmative defense. In addition, as relevant to this case, Jetall filed a TCPA motion to dismiss. See
The trial cоurt conducted a hearing on Jetall‘s TCPA motion to dismiss. However, the trial court did not issue a ruling on the motion to dismiss within thirty days of the
Timeliness of Jetall‘s TCPA Motion to Dismiss
In its sole issue on appeal, Jetall complains that the trial court erred by denying its TCPA motion to dismiss. Specifically, Jetall contends that: (1) the TCPA motion to dismiss was timely filed and heard within the statutory time frame; (2) the TCPA applies to tortious-interference-with-a-contract claims based on a notice of lis pendens; and (3) the notice of lis pendens cannot give rise to a tortious-interference-with-contract claim as a matter of law. We first address the timeliness of Jetall‘s TCPA motion to dismiss.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo a trial court‘s denial of a motion to dismiss under the TCPA. Schmidt v. Crawford, 584 S.W.3d 640, 646-47 (Tex. App.—Houstоn [1st Dist.] 2019, no pet.) (citing Holcomb v. Waller County, 546 S.W.3d 833, 839 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2018, pet. denied)); see Johnson-Todd v. Morgan, 480 S.W.3d 605, 609 (Tex. App.—Beaumont 2015, pet. denied). In reviewing the trial court‘s ruling, we consider the pleadings and the evidence the trial court considered at the time the ruling occurred.
DISCUSSION
On appeal, Jetall argues that its TCPA motion to dismiss was timely filed because the deadline to file the TCPA motion to dismiss was extended by JPG‘s filing of its secоnd and third amended original answer and counterclaims. See
The Texas Supreme Court has stated the following regarding the TCPA and the Act‘s timeliness requirements:
The TCPA was designed to protect both a defendant‘s rights of speech, petition, and association and a claimant‘s right to pursue valid legal claims for injuries the defendant caused. To accomplish this objective, the Act provides a three-step process for the dismissal of a legal action to which it applies. First, the defendant must dеmonstrate that the legal action is “based on or is in response to” the defendant‘s exercise of the right of speech, petition, or association. Second, if the defendant meets that burden, the claimant may avoid dismissal by establishing by clear and specific evidence a prima facie case fоr each essential element of the claim in question. Finally, if the claimant meets that burden, the court still must dismiss the legal action if the defendant establishes an affirmative defense or other grounds on which the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
In deciding whether a legal action should be dismissed, the trial court must consider the pleadings and evidence . . . stating the facts on which the liability or defense is based. For each step, the Act provides
specific procedures and deadlines for filing, responding to, hearing, ruling on, and appealing the dismissal motion. The dismissal motion itself must be filed not later than the 60th day after the date of service of the legal action. The Act expressly defines a legal action to mean a lawsuit, cause of action, petition, complaint, cross-claim, or counterclaim or any other judicial pleading or filing that requests legal, declaratory, or equitable relief. As we recently observed, this definition is undeniably broad and encompasses any procedural vehicle for the vindication of a legal claim.
Montelongo v. Abrea, 622 S.W.3d 290, 295-96 (Tex. 2021) (internal citations & quotations omitted).
The Montelongo Court further noted:
Although we have not previously addressed this issue, Texas courts of appeals have addressed it in numerous cases. The courts have consistently agreed that an amended or supplemental pleading does not constitute or assert a new legal action if it asserts the same legal claims or causes of action by and against the same parties based on the same essential factual allegations. If, however the new pleading adds a new party as a claimant or defendant, the courts have agreed that the pleading asserts a new legal action and starts a new sixty-day period to file a dismissal motion, but only as to the claims asserted by or against the new party. And the courts have also consistently agreed that an amended pleading constitutes or asserts a new legal action if it includes new еssential factual allegations that were not included in the prior pleading, allowing a new sixty-day period to seek dismissal of claims to the extent they are based on those new factual allegations.
We agree with these holdings. . . .
We agree, of course, that an amended petition, pleading, or filing is a petition, pleading, or filing, and in thаt sense, we conclude that every amended or supplemental petition falls within the broad definition of a legal action. But we cannot agree that the claimant‘s service of any amended or supplemental petition, pleading, or filing triggers a new sixty-day period for filing a dismissal motion. We cannot construe the Act to
grant a new deadline for legal actions that have previously been served, because doing so would render the Act‘s deadlines meaningless . . . . Construing the Act to permit a defendant to file a dismissal motion after the claimant files a new pleading asserting the same claims by and against the same parties and based on the same essential facts would negate the sixty-day deadline completely. . . . Although an amended petition that adds no new parties, claims, or essential factual allegations is, of course, a petition that asserts a cause of action and constitutes a pleading or filing that requests relief, it merely reasserts the same legal action to which the deadline has already applied. We agree with the courts that have held that such an amended petition constitutes and asserts only the same legal action to which the deadline has already applied, and thus does not trigger a new sixty-day period for filing a dismissal motion.
We also agree with the courts that have held that an amended or supplemental petition that adds new parties or new essential factual allegations does assert a new legal action and starts a new sixty-day period as to the new parties and the claims based on the new factual allegations. Like an amended petition that involves the same claims, parties, and factual allegations, an amended petition that includes new parties or new essential factual allegations is a petition and a pleading or filing that requests . . . relief, and thus qualifies as a legal action, but it is not the same legal action to which the deadline has already applied.
Id. at 297-99 (internal citations & quotations omitted).
As relevant here, JPG filed its first amended original answer and counterclaims on November 14, 2019. In this filing, JPG asserted that Jetall tortiously interfered with an existing contract to sell the property in question by “contacting the third-party buyer directly and threаtening the third-party buyer with legal action and financial harm should they continue with the purchase of the Property.” JPG also argued that Jetall and
As statеd above, JPG later filed a second and third amended original answer and counterclaims against Jetall. The third amended original answer and counterclaim, in particular, was filed on September 9, 2020, and asserted the same two causes of action—tortious interference with an existing contract and a fraudulent lien—as the first amended original answer and counterclaims with additional facts supporting the causes of action, including references to four notices of lis pendens filed by Jetall and Choudhri involving the property and Jetall‘s purported violation of a temporary injunction entered by the trial court.
Jetall contends that the addition of new facts in the third amended original answer and counterclaims constitutes a new legal action that restarts the sixty-day period for filing a TCPA dismissal motion. We disagree.
JPG‘s third amended original answer and counterclaims did not assert new claims or new parties. Further, the first amended original answer and cоunterclaims and the third amended original answer and counterclaims allege essentially the same facts and do not change the essential nature of the action—that Jetall and Choudhri engaged in acts, including the filing of alleged fraudulent notices of lis pendens, designed to thwart the purchase of the property in question by a third-party buyer. See id. at 297-99; TV Azteca, S.A.B. de C.V. v. Ruiz, 611 S.W.3d 24, 31 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 2020, no pet.)
Because JPG‘s first and third amended original answer and counterclaims constitute the same legal action, and because the filing of the second and third amended original answer and counterclaims did not trigger a new sixty-day period for filing a TCPA motion to dismiss, we use the filing date of the first amended original answer and
Conclusion
We affirm the ruling by operation of law that denied Jetall‘s TCPA motion to dismiss.
STEVE SMITH
Justice
Before Chief Justice Gray,
Justice Johnson,
and Justice Smith
Affirmed
Opinion delivered and filed December 1, 2021
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[CV06]
