The CITY OF HOUSTON, Appellant v. ATSER, L.P., Appellee
No. 01-10-00240-CV
Court of Appeals of Texas, Houston (1st Dist.)
Jan. 31, 2013
354
Ernest Butch Boyd, Eric Michael Adams, Mehaffy Webber, P.C., Bertrand L. Pourteau II, The City of Houston Legal Department, Houston, TX, for Appellee.
Panel consists of Justices KEYES, SHARP, and MASSENGALE.
OPINION ON SECOND MOTION FOR REHEARING
EVELYN V. KEYES, Justice.
Appellant, the City of Houston (the “City“), moved for en banc reconsideration of our August 30, 2012 opinion. We construe the motion as a motion for rehearing and grant the motion for rehearing.1 We withdraw the August 30, 2012 majority opinion, judgment, and concurring and dissenting opinion on rehearing, and we issue this opinion and judgment in their stead.
This is a case stemming from allegations of the City‘s breach of a contract between the City and appellee, ATSER, L.P. (“ATSER“). The City appeals from an interlocutory order denying its no-evidence and traditional motion for partial summary judgment against ATSER in which the City states it asserted challenges to the trial court‘s jurisdiction. In two issues, the City contends that: (1) ATSER‘s breach of contract allegations do not fall within the limited waiver of immunity set forth in
We construe the City‘s summary judgment motion, which raises the same immunity arguments as its previously-denied plea to the jurisdiction, as a motion to reconsider the trial court‘s denial of the plea. We dismiss the City‘s appeal in its entirety for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Background
In 1999, the City and ATSER entered into a construction contract (the “1999 Contract“) which required ATSER to provide the labor, materials, and supervision necessary to complete various construction projects. In 2003, the parties amended the contract to require ATSER to implement a computerized “Project Management System” for the construction projects (the “2003 Amendments“). In 2006, the parties entered into a contract for software technical support and programming services (the “2006 Contract“).
Eventually, the City and ATSER disagreed about the parties’ duties under these contracts. Their disagreements initially centered around a former ATSER employee who had come to work for the City. ATSER believed that this employee had misappropriated trade secret information and had begun using the information to ATSER‘s detriment and the City‘s benefit. ATSER brought suit against this employee. ATSER later substituted the City as a defendant and pled claims for breach of the 1999 Contract, the 2003 Amendments, and the 2006 Contract, as well as claims for quantum meruit and unjust enrichment. ATSER alleged that the trial court had jurisdiction over its claims pursuant to
The City answered ATSER‘s petition and pled, among other defenses, immunity from both suit and liability. The City then filed two sets of special exceptions to ATSER‘s claims.
In its first set of special exceptions, the City claimed that
In response, ATSER filed a second amended petition. The City then filed special exceptions to ATSER‘s second amended petition. In those special exceptions, the City claimed that ATSER‘s pleadings were so devoid of facts as to deny the City fair notice of ATSER‘s claims, and it claimed that ATSER had failed to adequately plead jurisdiction, despite being given the opportunity to do so. The City also argued that ATSER failed to plead the maximum amount of damages sought, failed to plead special damages, and failed to prove that the damages sought were recoverable under
In its third amended petition, ATSER claimed that: (1) it has valid, enforceable contracts with the City; (2) it has standing to sue the City; (3) the City has waived its sovereign immunity pursuant to
The City filed a plea to the jurisdiction in response to ATSER‘s third amended petition. The City alleged that the only exceptions to governmental immunity that ATSER could plead were provided by
After discovery proceeded in the lawsuit and ended in January 2010, the City filed a “No-Evidence and Traditional Motion for Partial Summary Judgment” (“Partial Motion for Summary Judgment“). The “no-evidence” section of the Partial Motion for Summary Judgment asserted that ATSER had presented no evidence of one or more essential elements of its claim for breach of contract. The “traditional” part of the Partial Motion for Summary Judgment argued that the City was entitled to judgment as a matter of law on ATSER‘s breach of contract claim. Within the traditional part of this Partial Motion for Summary Judgment, the City also claimed that one portion of ATSER‘s breach of contract claim “fails as a matter of law because the Legislature did not waive the City‘s immunity for the types of damages ATSER seeks.” The City contended, as it did in its first and second set of special exceptions and in its plea to the jurisdiction following the filing of ATSER‘s third amended petition, that it was entitled to dismissal because ATSER‘s claims did not fall within the parameters of
The trial court denied the City‘s Partial Motion for Summary Judgment. The City filed a notice of appeal from the denial of its Partial Motion for Summary Judgment as an accelerated appeal under Civil Prac-
Interlocutory Appellate Jurisdiction
The City claims that, despite the fact that there is no final judgment or order in this case, it can appeal the interlocutory denial of its Partial Motion for Summary Judgment on the basis that this motion was actually a challenge to the trial court‘s subject matter jurisdiction. We disagree.
As a general rule, appeals may be taken only from final judgments or orders. See
An exception to this rule, however, is found in Civil Practice and Remedies Code
In order for a party to be entitled to an interlocutory appeal,
However, in City of Houston v. Estate of Jones, the Texas Supreme Court has recently held that when a governmental entity, like the City, files a plea to the jurisdiction or other procedural vehicle raising the same grounds as it did in a plea to the jurisdiction previously denied by the trial court, the renewed plea is “substantively a motion to reconsider the denial of [the original] plea” and that “[t]he court of appeals [does] not have jurisdiction to consider any part of the merits of the interlocutory appeal.” 388 S.W.3d 663, 667 (Tex. 2012) (per curiam).
In Estate of Jones, Jones sued the City of Houston for breach of a settlement agreement. Id. at 665. The City of Houston filed a plea to the jurisdiction, arguing, among other things, that
In holding that the court of appeals lacked interlocutory appellate jurisdiction over the City of Houston‘s appeal, the Texas Supreme Court noted that parties may appeal certain interlocutory orders, including the denial of a governmental unit‘s plea to the jurisdiction, but that the interlocutory appeal statute, which must be “strictly construe[d]” as a “narrow exception to the general rule that only final judgments are appealable,” requires the party to file a notice of appeal within twenty days of the date the challenged order was signed to invoke interlocutory appellate jurisdiction. Id. at 666-667 (citing
The court reasoned that allowing an interlocutory appeal in this circumstance—where the trial court denied the City of Houston‘s plea to the jurisdiction, the City of Houston failed to take advantage of its ability to challenge that ruling via interlocutory appeal, the City of Houston subsequently filed an amended plea raising the same immunity argument, and the trial court also denied the amended plea—“would effectively eliminate the requirement that appeals from interlocutory orders must be filed within twenty days after the challenged order is signed.” Id. at 667; see also Bally Total Fitness Corp. v. Jackson, 53 S.W.3d 352, 358 (Tex.2001) (stating, in class decertification context, “Allowing interlocutory appeals whenever a trial court refuses to change its mind . . . would invite successive appeals and undermine the [interlocutory appeal] statute‘s purpose of promoting judicial economy“). The court concluded that because the City of Houston did not assert a new ground of immunity in its amended plea, the amended plea was “substantively a motion to reconsider the denial of its [original] plea.” Estate of Jones, 388 S.W.3d at 667. The supreme court held that the court of appeals “did not have jurisdiction to consider any part of the merits of the interlocutory appeal.” Id.
Application of Law to Facts
Here, ATSER alleged in its third amended petition that
On February 11, 2010, the City filed its Partial Motion for Summary Judgment, in
To the extent that the City argued in its Partial Motion for Summary Judgment that governmental immunity barred the $5 million claim, the City merely restated the same grounds as it did in its plea to the jurisdiction; namely, that under the facts of this case,
We conclude that because the City did not assert a new ground or basis for immunity in its Partial Motion for Summary Judgment, this motion was “substantively a motion to reconsider” the trial court‘s earlier denial of the City‘s plea to the jurisdiction. Estate of Jones, 388 S.W.3d at 667. Because the City did not file a notice of interlocutory appeal within twenty days of the trial court‘s order denying its original plea to the jurisdiction, we hold that we lack interlocutory appellate jurisdiction to consider any part of the merits of the City‘s interlocutory appeal.2 Id.
Conclusion
We dismiss the City‘s appeal for lack of appellate jurisdiction.
Justice MASSENGALE, concurring.
