ON MOTION FOR REHEARING
Our opinion dated June 16, 1987, is hereby withdrawn. The following is now our opinion.
This is a suit involving fire damage to real properly that was owned by Radelow-Gittens Real Property Management, and leased to Pamex Foods d/b/a Pancho’s Mexican Foods. The lawsuit was originally brought against Pamex by Glenn Grant
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Company and Sleep Shop d/b/a Slumber-land, whose property was also damaged by the fire. Radelow-Gittens, the landlord, intervened and assumed the posture of a plaintiff; it then brought in Texas Fire & Safety, Inc. as a third party defendant. After Pamex answered, it filed a motion for partial summary judgment, contending that the lease agreement between Pamex and Radelow-Gittens required Radelow-Git-tens to repair the premises at its sole expense. The trial court agreed and granted partial summary judgment in favor of Pa-mex. That judgment stated that Radelow-Gittens’ claim against Pamex was barred by the lease agreement. Radelow-Gittens subsequently filed a second and, later, a third amended petition; neither of these amended petitions contained any claim against Pamex despite the fact that each continued to use the style of the case, including the name Pamex. Radelow-Git-tens proceeded to trial solely against the remaining defendant, but a judgment against Radelow-Gittens disposed of that last defendant. At that point all issues in the lawsuit were disposed of, hence, all prior orders by the trial court became final.
Runnymede Corporation v. Metroplex Plaza, Inc.,
Radelow-Gittens now appeals from the partial summary judgment which was granted in favor of Pamex prior to the filing of the second and third amended petitions. In three points of error, Rade-low-Gittens claims that the trial court erred in granting Pamex’s motion for partial summary judgment because (1) Pamex was not a co-insured under the fire insurance policy referenced in the lease agreement; (2) even if Pamex were a limited or a special insured, then Pamex is only an insured to the extent of its leasehold and personal property interest; and (3) the lease agreement attached to the motion for partial summary judgment was not sworn to or certified as required by the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. The third point of error was abandoned by Radelow-Gittens’ counsel in oral argument before this court because the lease agreement attached to the motion had been stipulated to by the parties as a true and correct copy of the agreement.
In its first counterpoint, Pamex argues that Radelow-Gittens cannot complain of the granting of the partial summary judgment in favor of Pamex because Radelow-Gittens abandoned its claims against Pa-mex when it amended its pleadings. We agree and dismiss the appeal.
An amended pleading supercedes and supplants all previous pleadings. TEX.R.CIV.P. 65;
Johnson v. Coca-Cola Company,
We agree with the reasoning of the Do-lenz court and are persuaded that it applies to the instant case. When Radelow-Gittens amended its petition, it abandoned all claims against Pamex and waived error, if any, by the trial court in rendering the summary judgment for Pamex.
Another case which is analogous is
Chamberlain v. McReight,
Therefore, we hold that Radelow-Gittens may not now complain on appeal of the trial court’s action in granting the motion for partial summary judgment in favor of Pamex.
Dolenz,
Interlocutory judgments by the trial court are merged into the final judgment and thus become final for purposes of appeal, whether or not the interlocutory judgment is specifically named within the final judgment.
Webb v. Joms,
The appeal is dismissed.
