OPINION
A.E. Johnson, appellant in this case, filed suit alleging appellees sold inferior gasoline which damaged his equipment. The trial court rendered judgment in favor of Johnson, who then filed a motion for new trial which the trial court denied. In five points of error Johnson contends the trial court erred (1) in not granting his motion to recuse; (2) in failing to file *672 findings of fact and conclusions of law, as requested by appellant; (3) in failing to grant his motion to “reinstated [sic] the ease on the trial court docket, or to increase the judgments;” (4) in failing to set an oral hearing on appellees’ motion for partial summary judgment; and (5) in failing to act on his requests for findings and conclusions. Because the trial court failed to act on a motion to recuse, we will reverse and remand as to their point.
Appellant filed a motion to recuse on May 20, 1997. The record contains no indication that the trial court ever acted on this motion in any way.
“One of the most fundamental components of a fair trial is ‘A neutral and detached judge.’ ”
Metzger v. Sebek,
When a motion to recuse is filed, a trial court has only two options: recusal or referral of the case to the presiding judge for a determination as to its merits. Tex.R. Civ. P. 18a(c);
In re Rio Grande Valley Gas Co.,
In the present case, Johnson filed a motion to recuse, but the trial court took no action on the motion. Regardless of the sufficiency of the motion, this was error.
Brosseau,
We also find this to be true, despite the fact that our record shows that the trial court ruled on a motion to recuse four days earlier.
1
Even if appellant merely refiled his previously filed motion to re-cuse, “the court does not have the option of doing nothing.”
Rio Grande Valley Gas,
Because appellant’s second, third and fifth points of error complain of actions taken by the trial court after the motion to recuse was filed, those points are denied as moot. This leaves only appellant’s contention that the trial court erred by not granting his motion to compel oral argument on a defense motion for partial summary judgment. While the docket sheet indicates this motion was granted before appellant’s motion to recuse was filed, this motion is not included in the record before us. However, the omission does not matter because appellant is not entitled to an oral hearing on a motion for summary judgment.
See Martin v. Martin, Martin & Richards Inc.,
The judgment of the trial court is otherwise reversed and the cause remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. This motion to recuse does not appear in our record. Although a hearing was held about the time the trial court referred the recusal motion to a presiding judge, appellant did not timely file a reporter’s record.
