Friday, January 29, 2021

Top 10 from Texas Bar Today: Assembly Lines, Traps, and Backdoors

Originally published by Joanna Herzik.

To highlight some of the posts that stand out from the crowd, the editors of Texas Bar Today have created a list from the week’s blog posts of the top ten based on subject matter, writing style, headline, and imagery. We hope you enjoy this installment.

10. Documenting Your Claim: Preparing for Litigation During Claims Handling – Daniel Ballard of Merlin Law Group @MerlinLawGroup

9. New to Texas? Consideration for Moving Your Business to the Lone Star StateCleve Clinton of Gray Reed & McGraw @GrayReedLaw in Dallas

8. Get that Paper (As Long as You Do It for Your Coworkers, Too)Paige Melendez of Law Office of Rob Wiley, P.C. in Dallas

7. Do Texas landlords have to install smoke detectors?Wyatt Law Firm @WyattLawFirm in San Antonio

6. Maintenance, Cure and Unearned Wages: The Ancient Protections for SeamenEdward Festeryga of by Abraham, Watkins, Nichols, Agosto, Aziz & Stogner @AbrahamWatkins in Houston

5. Law Firm Marketing: 12 Reasons You Should Be BloggingCordell Parvin @cordellparvin in Prosper

4. Quick Hits – assembly line edition.Richard Hunt of Hunt Huey PLLC in Dallas

3. Tips and Traps When Recovering Appellate Attorney FeesSmith Law Group LLLP @dtoddsmith in Austin

2. Solar Beats Minerals in a Texas Accomodation Doctrine BattleCharles Sartain and David Leonard of Gray Reed & McGraw, P.C. @GrayReedLaw in Dallas

1. What Is an Encryption Backdoor? – Peggy Keene of Klemchuk LLP @K_LLP in Dallas

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Documenting Your Claim: Preparing for Litigation During Claims Handling

Originally published by Daniel Ballard.

Below is a conversation I have all too often with insureds: Insured: I just received a letter from the carrier that they are denying my claim. Attorney: I am sorry to hear that. What was the basis for the denial? Insured: The basis for the denial was _____. However, the insurance adjuster told me that… Continue Reading

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Get that Paper (As Long as You Do It for Your Coworkers, Too)

Originally published by Paige Melendez.

20201124_104652-203x300For an employee in Texas there are very few protections because Texas is an at-will employment state. An employer can fire an employee for any reason or no reason, and it is protected under Texas state law. The only thing an employer cannot do is terminate someone or take an adverse action against them for an illegal reason where their motivation is based on an employee’s protected characteristic. On that backdrop, it would seem that an employee has no recourse against an employer who is treating employees poorly, but not illegally. However, the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) does more than protect unions, it also creates an avenue for employees to raise concerns about the terms and conditions of their employment. The NLRA was meant as a way for workers to advocate for themselves, which most of the time takes the form of creating a union, but the protection is not limited to union members. Section 7 (aptly named “Rights of Employees”) states that “employees shall have the right…to engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection.”  This provision is given teeth by a later section which states that things like an employer’s interference with or restraint of these Section 7 rights is an unfair labor practice. The NLRA even created the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), which is an independent Federal agency that operates to enforce these provisions. Based on this history and structure, the NLRA gives employees a toolbox that can be used to approach an employer about their employment and have that activity protected by law. 

 

First, because it is worth repeating, Section 7 protects almost all employees, regardless of their union membership. The protection extends when there is “concerted activity.” Concerted activity can be as simple as one employee, Laura, speaking with a group of employees at the lunch table about how it really stinks that Walmazon does not pay an adequate wage, and proposes that the employees should approach their manager, Paul, about the issue. On a basic level, the concerted activity has to be two or more employees that are trying to act together to achieve a goal related to their employment. In my example, it was Laura speaking to the group about an issue related to the terms of their employment, their pay rate, and trying to organize the group to take action i.e. speaking to management. Another example would be that same employee, Laura, speaking with a group of her coworkers at the lunch table about the lack of safety protocols at the Walmazon warehouse, but instead of trying to convince the group to take action together, Laura steps up and says “I’ll go to management about our concerns.” In this alternate example, Laura approaching management on behalf of the group of employees to express their concerns is also protected under the NLRA. 

The second key part of the above example, other than Laura stepping up to act for the group or the group acting collectively is that the issue they were discussing is an issue of “mutual aid or protection.” The mutual aid or protection issue Laura brought up in the first example was the amount of pay employees were receiving and in the second example it was the safety protocols. These issues refer to the terms and conditions of their employment at Walmazon and are both protected topics under the NLRA. 

The last tool of the NLRA-protection toolbox limits the way the first two tools can be utilized. For the NLRA to apply, the concerted activity for mutual aid or protection must be done through “legitimate means.” The legitimate means part is tricky because it constrains how employees can carry out their objective. For example, if Laura spray-painted the side of the Walmazon warehouse with, “Pay Us More!” she would not receive the protection of the NLRA. While, as discussed above, her actions are on behalf of the group and for the mutual aid of her coworkers, her defacement of company property in this situation would not be a legitimate means. If Laura instead had approached her manager, Paul, in his office, sat down, and shared her concerns about the pay rate on behalf of the group of her co-workers, then Laura’s method would likely qualify as a legitimate means and receive NLRA protection.

In sum, the NLRA is meant to be construed broadly to protect workers’ ability to advocate for themselves with or without union membership, however there are limitations to that protection. If an employee brings up concerns about the terms and conditions of employment to management, then the issues may qualify for protection. Collective employee action or the use of a spokesperson to advocate on behalf of the group based on these issues is part of this protected activity as long as it is through legitimate means. This article outlines what protected activity is under the NLRA and how employees can speak to their employers without legal retribution, but employers do not always adhere to the law. Therefore, if you believe that an employer has retaliated against you based on protected activity under the NLRA I encourage you to reach out to a Dallas Employment Lawyer for a consult to explore any options you may have.        

The post Get that Paper (As Long as You Do It for Your Coworkers, Too) appeared first on Dallas Employment Lawyer Blog.

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New to Texas? Consideration for Moving Your Business to the Lone Star State

Originally published by Cleve Clinton.

Texas state flag waving in the wind

If you’re new to Texas, you’re not the first from California to sing about it. In their 1964 album, The Beach Boys sang about being a “Long Tall Texan.” Nowadays, there’s a lot more about moving to Texas than just singing a song. This is the first of a series addressing tips to moving the entirety of your business and you into the Lone Star State.

If you intend to continue to conduct business in your home state, you should strongly consider having two separate and distinct entities, books, employees and accounting systems. Generally speaking, it’s easier to start a business in Texas than it is to terminate your business ties in your departing state – together with the on-going payment of all of the attendant departing state’s taxes and fees. You should strongly consider the following:

 

1. Disconnect Your Existing Company Entity

Identify all business connections with your departing state.

  • Identify all State Permits, Licenses and Reporting – These may include, among others:
    1. General Business License– An annual license issued by the city or county to allow a business to operate legally within an area.
    2. Professional License– Some professionals must be licensed, such as builders or contractors, barbers, accountants and doctors.
    3. Seller’s Permit– Businesses selling taxable goods or services.
    4. Use Tax Account– May be required under certain conditions.
    5. Health Permit– Businesses selling products that people consume or that touch the human body need a local health permit and annual inspections.
    6. Signage Permit– Some county and city zoning laws require sign permits.
    7. Home Occupation Permit– For businesses that operate out of their home.
    8. California Labor & Workforce Development Agency and the Employment Development Department– If you have employees, timely and fully address all LWDA requirements.
    9. California Franchise Tax Board– If you are required to file a federal income tax return and received income above a certain amount from a California source.
  • Taxes, Fees and Related Charges, Penalties and Interest
    1. Pay all Taxes Current and in Full
    2. File a Final Report– Typically, a Final Report is different from and in addition to your annual report.

2. Form Your Texas Entity

Best to determine from the moment you move whether your Texas entity will be the same “old state” entity and whether you will attempt to have your “old state” company authorized to conduct business in Texas or if you will elect to form a new Texas entity.

  • You can continue your “old state” company in the old state and register as a foreign entity doing business in Texas (undertake foreign qualification in Texas). However, there are a couple of things to note:
    1. Ongoing State Fees– If you keep both entities, you will pay duplicative annual report and/or franchise taxes, and sometimes complicated tax filings for the entity and its owners – most probably continuing to report to all of the entities identified above.
    2. Delaware or Nevada– If your company was incorporated in Delaware or Nevada, you are probably foreign qualified in your “old state”. You may choose to eliminate your “old state” qualification to do business and register your Delaware or Nevada entity as being qualified to do business in Texas. Please note that more is required to cut ties with your “old state”.
    3. Jurisdiction for Litigation– If you retain your “old state” company domiciled in your current state, any litigation filed against your “old state” company, will almost certainly be filed in your “old state” and your company will be required to defend itself in and under the laws of your “old state” – even if most or all of your employees, business and activities were moved to Texas.
  • Reorganize – You can undergo a reorganization, forming an entity in the new state and merging the old company into the new.
    1. Conversion– Depending upon your departing state, you may be able to follow a conversion process to morph the “old state” business into a Texas entity – assuming that your company name is available using a Texas Comptroller’s search.
    2. Merger– If a conversion is not permitted by your departing state, a merger of the “old state” entity into a new Texas entity may be a preferred course of action. Again, the company name that you select must be available through the Texas Comptroller’s office. And, when properly done, this can be entirely tax-free for a C corporation.
  • Liquidate – You can liquidate your “old state” company and form a new entity in Texas.
    1. This may result in federal tax issues if you have a C corporation, but not likely if you have a limited liability company.
    2. For any company entity, there are state mandated formalities if you dissolve your business, depending upon the state, often at least requiring document preparation (dissolution papers), filing and paying any outstanding taxes and dissolution fees.

3. Consider Your Company’s Legal Documents

  • Contracts with Customers and Vendors – Legal jurisdiction is now in Texas, not your departing state; it makes sense for your documents to choose Texas law. Texas law treats at least some contract provisions differently. Moreover, depending upon the claim and the attentiveness paid to your contracts and relationships, you may still find yourself defending a lawsuit in your “old state,” especially if your company is still shown as being domiciled there. Get a checkup on your legal documents, both those with your customers and those with your vendors.
  • Employee handbook – Many aspects of your employee handbook, whether off the internet or tailored to suit your company, are different in Texas. My partner Michael Kelsheimer offers a free “Employer Handbook” with easy to understand Texas-specific answers to frequent employment questions.

4. Change Your Address with the Government – Federal, State & Local Agencies

  • The IRS requires no document change, like your employer ID number (EIN), but you must complete Form 8822-Change of Address (Part II) and designate if only changing mailing address or also changing notifications for business income, excise, employment, and other tax matters.
  • The Texas Secretary of State requires company registration to do business in Texas perhaps necessitating amending organization documents (Articles of Incorporation for a corporation or Articles of Organization for a limited liability company) and notification of any address change. If you elect to be organized in one state and registered to do business in another, you must maintain registered agents in each state and complete each state’s filing and reporting requirements. California, for example, imposes a franchise tax on every corporation or LLC that is registered to do business there.

Tilting the Scales in Your Favor 

Whether you are moving your business across the United States or across the street, it’s about time that you double check your company structure, your state of domicile, your ongoing contacts and responsibilities with your “old state,” and the possible pitfalls that staying domiciled in your “old state” may present.  In subsequent articles, I’ll cover more of the legal issues affecting both your company’s contracts and the rights and privileges of your personal life – personal traps and opportunities that you may want to consider as you settle into being a Long, Tall Texan. Who knows, you might even buy a big white horse?

Finally, WELCOME! I hope that you find our great Lone Star State to be everything that you hoped … perhaps, with the possible exception of the weather.

Related Articles:   Moving to Texas or Across the Street? Top 5 Company Considerations

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Tips and Traps When Recovering Appellate Attorney Fees

Originally published by D. Todd Smith.

 

TALP 48 | Appellate Attorney Fees

 

For over a decade, the Texas Supreme Court has tightened the proof necessary to recover attorney fees in Texas. That, coupled with Legislative expansion of fee shifting, makes understanding the standard even more important. This is particularly true about appellate fees, which, unlike federal court, must be estimated and proven before the appeal. This week, Todd Smith and Jody Sanders discuss the evolution of attorney-fee proof in Texas and ways attorneys can make the best record for both trial and appellate fees.

Listen to the podcast here:

Tips and Traps When Recovering Appellate Attorney Fees

We’ve gone quite some time without having an episode that was the two of us. We thought that this topic that we’re going to cover about attorney’s fees would be one that we could have a conversation about. We could talk through some of the things that we’ve been in our practices, and focusing to some degree on the appellate side of things because that’s our area of expertise. It seems like we’re seeing attorney’s fees being litigated more and more often these days. Why do you think that is?

There are a couple of reasons. Number one is the amounts of attorney’s fees in a lot of cases now exceeds sometimes the recovery. That’s a huge reason. Number two is as litigation gets more sophisticated, you have a lot more facts and things that bear on attorney’s fees. No longer is it just you pick up the file, see how thick it is and say, “This is a case that’s ought to cost about X.” You’ve got many hours of preparation. The third thing and this is what we’re going to spend a lot of our time talking about is the Texas Supreme Court and state court cases has continued to tighten the standards for attorney fee recovery. You can’t show up and say a reasonable fee is $50,000. It’s like what we tell our kids when we’re doing math homework, “You have to show your work to the end result.” You can’t come in with the answer and not back your way into it, or the appellate courts are not going to let you get away with that.

Litigation has timed up. There’s a lot of pressure on law firms to try to recover for their clients and make them whole. The businesspeople are experiencing a lot of pressure to try to get back as much money as they can if they’re going to lay out money to prosecute a commercial case where there’s a breach of contract at issue, and there’s a provision that anything through the contractor, through the statute that provides for the recovery of attorney’s fees. In different practice areas, it’s a little different. In the PI practice, you’re almost never going to be able to recover attorney’s fees for a straight up PI situation.

Although we’ve seen the creative use of the Declaratory Judgements Act to try and do that. It’s at least a legally defensible, if not correct approach in certain circumstances like an uninsured, under-insured motorist claim against the carrier. The economics of litigation and the sophistication of litigation have driven a lot of efforts to try and find ways to recover attorney’s fees to shift them as it were to the other side. Our state follows the American rule, which is most sides bear their own attorney’s fees unless there is a contract or a statutory mechanism for switching or shifting the fees to the other side. In a PI case, if you don’t have that mechanism or in any case, to the extent you get recovery, the fees have to be carved out from that recovery to pay the lawyer.

Fee shifting in itself is a hugely important facet of our justice system if we think about who ought to pay when someone’s at fault. We see that a lot in largely commercial litigation. We see it in some insurance litigation where the statutes provide for the recovery fees. There are any numbers that you could do, the DPA and family law cases. That’s the first question that a lawyer ought to ask if they’re getting ready to bring an action, “What are my prospects for recovering attorney’s fees for the benefit of my client?”

TALP 48 | Appellate Attorney Fees

Appellate Attorney Fees: You can’t just come in with the answer and not back your way into it. The appellate courts are not going to let you get away with that.

 

I thought of another area where we see a lot more litigation of it. The legislature has put in fee-shifting in places where you wouldn’t have had it traditionally. In a contract claim, the prevailing party can win their fees depending on how that goes. In places like the Citizens Participation Act, Rule 91a, there are a lot more opportunities for somebody to get their fees in a situation outside of a normal plaintiff whose defendant plaintiff wins gets their fees in a contract case deal. Especially in the last several years, as you saw the TCPA ramp up and take over the court system, when you had a mandatory loser-pays attorney fee deal there, there was so much litigation on attorney’s fees in addition to the statute itself. You have that now still out there in a limited extent. You still have it in Rule 91a. There are a lot more of those that have come in where there’s a sanctions element to it, and a loser pays element to it in those vehicles as well.

What’s the proliferation of these statutes? It does take on a loser pays air to it, even though the legislature over the past few sessions has not been able to enact a strict loser pays law. This statutory scheme does provide a substitute it seems. For the party who’s bringing the lawsuit, that’s one thing. As you point out in the TCPA and 91a contexts, they can benefit what traditionally would be the defendant in the case. You could even go far as to say that if you are not aware of the possible avenues of obtaining attorney’s fees for your client, whichever side of the docket you’re on, you need to study it up because you’re either missing out or you’re going to be facing a malpractice claim.

Responding to TCPA motion can get expensive. I haven’t done one under the new statute and it may be a bit more streamlined now, but under the old one, there was so much uncertainty in the laws, whether it applies or not. You had that avenue, then you had to deal with the evidence part of it. It was almost like a whole summary judgment proceeding before you even get to discovery, which can ramp up everybody’s fees regardless of who wins that motion.


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That’s a good reminder that litigation is expensive. It underscores the idea that whoever it is, whichever side of the docket you’re on, you need to be looking at what your means of recovering fees from the other side are. Before we jump too far further in on this, it might be useful to talk generally about the differences between attorney’s fee recovery in state court versus federal court. State court practitioners are going to be familiar with this because the basic rule is that you’ve got to prove up your fees to the factfinder at the time of trial, your hearing, or whatever it may be before the final judgment to get your fees. Because the rule is different in federal court, I sometimes see federal court practitioners struggle with this a bit.

To cover the differences, in federal court, unlike a state court, you can wait until the case is over. You’ve litigated the final judgment even until after appeal to prove up your trial fees and any appellate fees. That’s not the case in state courts. In federal courts, the district judge determines the fee to file an application for attorney’s fees or something styled similarly to that. The case law is developing in Texas and we’ve had a seat change with a couple of Supreme Court cases like going back to 2019. The federal courts have been working under fee-shifting and this lodestar type analysis for a long time. Even a number of US Supreme Court opinions talk about the lodestar largely in the labor and employment context. It’s interesting that it’s how the law has developed.

The one thing that is the biggest difference between the federal and the state systems on how to prove up and recover attorney’s fees is that in a state court in Texas, you have to make a prediction. When you’re at trial, talking to whoever your factfinder is, the jury or the judge, you’ve got to come up with hard and fast numbers as conditional awards for appellate attorney’s fees. The federal court system can be more accurate because you’re looking backwards rather than being predictive and looking forward, and trying and guess what your fee is going to be. You know what’s gone-in to the case and you have ideally your fee statement. You can give a hard and fast number on what the appeal will likely cost. Whereas in state court, you got to make your best guess. That’s something that is a bit mind-boggling.

TALP 48 | Appellate Attorney Fees

Appellate Attorney Fees: People need to be mindful of the traps from the beginning, not only about recovering fees but also the procedural minefields to look out for.

 

It’s an interesting nuance of Texas practice. It comes from Texas’ insistence on the One Final Judgment Rule that you’ve got to have all the pieces in there, which from an efficiency standpoint, makes a lot of sense in terms of let’s let the Court of Appeals sort it all out on the first go. I’ve had cases in federal court where you’ve got your substance of appeal up on appeal to the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals for wherever you are. Later on, you now have an attorney’s fee ruling coming behind it potentially. You have two proceedings instead of one, but the attorney’s fee sometimes can wait until the conclusion of the appeal. You may not have to have a second appeal. There are a lot of advantages there, but if Texas were going to go that way, there have to be changes both at the Texas Supreme Court and probably in the legislature to make that happen. It is interesting that you have to say, “Here’s what we think might happen and how much our fees might be,” with your best educated guess. In some cases, as we’ve seen, just a guess.

The other thing that is interesting and a nuance of Texas practice is, because you are forward-looking in proving up your appellate fees, they have to be conditional. That’s something that people sometimes forget when you’re drafting a judgment is you can’t award appellate attorney’s fees outright because you haven’t incurred them yet. You have to award them conditioned on success on appeal, which is a funny little nuance that can trip people up if you don’t think about it. It’s one of those little tips to keep in the back of your mind.

One thing the Courts of Appeals I’ve noticed to started doing on that though is they’ll fix that easily without a required remand, generally. They’ll modify the clockwork judgment if the court failed to make it conditional. That used to be an “a-ha, got you” years ago, but I don’t think it is much anymore. You mentioned the One Final Judgment Rule. What is holding Texas back from being more like the federal courts in this way on how to go through the recovery of attorney’s fees, particularly appellate fees is that rule. It’s interesting that seems to be a big barrier at this point because we’ve gone far in state practice toward the federal model in many other ways. Our rules of civil procedure are starting to be the same for the rules of appellate procedure.

In the cases that we’re going to talk about in a little more detail, adopting the lodestar method specifically for proving up fees. It does seem like we’re going to hit a wall that we’re not going to be able to go beyond, unless there’s some change to the procedure that we use. We can only go so close to the federal model unless we adopt the model that allows for fees to be dealt with separately. That’s an editorial comment, but it’s also for my observation about the limitations that I’ve seen. It’s going to probably at the least to take a rule change. It very well could take a legislative change to make that happen, but it will be interesting to watch. It won’t be this session that’s for sure. Probably not for several years. It’d be interesting to see how the case law continues to develop and influence whether that’s something that the courts ought to look at.

As we’ve seen and Jerry Butler alluded to, we have been through several sessions where they won’t even change 38.001 to make it where you can recover against entities other than a corporation. The wheels of justice on attorney’s fees tend to move fairly slowly.

You mentioned that little “gotcha” in the statute, we can record five episodes on this topic and dealing with the substance in a detailed way. I want to be upfront with the readers. We can’t possibly impart any great expertise in this short episode, other than we can highlight some of the issues for further discussion and development.

A lot of it is still transitioning. It’s only been the last several years that the Supreme Court has clamped down even more on this. It’s been a trend that’s gone on for about the last several years, but I feel like every two years or so, they come in a bit tighter and a bit tighter on the recovery standards too.

You think it was the Tony Gullo versus Chapa case that started the tightening? Is that the timeframe?

That seems like it. That was in 2010 or somewhere in there. That’s when they started talking about segregation of recoverable and nonrecoverable fees. That seemed to start to do it and then you had the El Apple case and now they Rohrmoos.

You mentioned a couple of the traps, and people need to be mindful of the traps from the beginning. Not only what can I recover fees, but what are the procedural minefields to look for. One of those is the limitation in 38.01 that you pointed out about recovering from anything other than a corporation or an individual. We’ll see if the legislature moves forward on fixing that. There are so many that it’s hard to even make a laundry list to try and cover in one episode, but there have been fortunately some good silly articles written on this topic. I would suggest that folks who are dealing with this issue for the first time, if you need to spend the money on the TexasBarCLE website to view a presentation on appellate fee, you should because there’s so much at stake.

I was going to touch upon some ways to short circuit the differences between federal and state practice. For example, in state court, I’m not sure how advisable it is in many cases to ask the jury to award 6 or 7 figures worth of appellate fees on top of whatever damages you’re asking them to award in a commercial case or worse yet, as you suggested, that the attorney’s fees eclipse the actual damages. You have to think about, is it a good idea to go and ask the jury for more money for the lawyers than they’re going to give the client? One way of getting around that is to try and reach an agreement with your opposing counsel on letting the trial judge decide the issue of attorney’s fees, which is the workaround to bring it closer to the federal model, which is that’s typically what happened in federal court. Not the jury, but the judge is the factfinder deciding fees and doing it in even a separate motion and proceeding.

There are a couple of advantages to doing that. Both sides ought to consider as a general matter. For one thing, you’re going to cut down the time it’s going to take to try your case. You’re going to avoid presenting what can be fairly detailed evidence that your eyes are going to glaze over when you started talking about issues like segregation, and expert testimony on fees, and what’s reasonable and what’s not reasonable. Lay people are going to struggle more with that perhaps than with some issues in a fairly complex commercial case. You run the risk too of seeming greedy.

You also don’t have to have the lawyers testify, which is always a benefit.

That’s a big issue. Maybe people tend to undersell their fees a bit in significant cases because you want to ask your trial lawyer after being cross-examined by the opposing counsel. There are ways to limit the scope of the testimony, but as in any other case, once the genie is out of the bottle, you can’t put them back in after something has happened. You would think that most lawyers wouldn’t wind up in that situation that they would be able to control what they say, and they would argue for a limited scope of the testimony, but it still creates a lot of discomfort among the parties and the lawyer to think about their lawyer testifying as a fact witness.

You’re going to have to have an expert witness and you are. You’re looking outside of your lawyer’s law firm as someone to be an objective expert. I realized this is self-interested, but I happen to think that applies on the appellate side. There are a lot of tricky issues on appeals that most trial lawyers may not be the best-qualified person to present testimony on. That can come back to bite you on appeal if you’re not careful. You can adopt the federal approach in that you can probably do this by affidavit as opposed to having the lawyer testify live. There’s a lot of efficiency in reaching an agreement on handling the fee issues separate from the main trial issues. I would encourage people to look hard at that. There may be some reasons not to do it, but to me, it seems like the reasons to do it are stronger and lead to a lot of efficiency potentially.

One final point is something I’ve seen in quite a few cases is you have the parties reached a stipulation on amount, especially if you’ve got a commercial case where both sides have a fee claim. They sit down and say, “We think our fees are X.” The other side says, “We think they’re Y.” They look at what it’s going to cost to take to try it. They say, “Let’s agree that the winner gets Z and ABC for appellate fees on all the steps.” That’s the stipulation that you now know what the prevailing party gets. That isn’t necessarily appropriate in every case but a lot of times, if you have a big commercial claim with big firms or firms that charge similar rates on both sides, you may be able to sit down and realize the delta between the two is not that much, and come to a compromise that takes that whole step out anyway.

I could see situations where that would be useful. I’m a little skeptical of the inclination of people who agree. You suggest if it’s two firms of a similar station, it very well could work. If it’s small practitioner versus big law, if I’m on the solo side, I don’t think I would ever agree to that with a big law firm. I would be able to poke holes on that all day long, but that’s one perspective. As you suggest, it’s something that you have to consider on a case-by-case basis.

It’s not a one size fits all development.

As part of the overall strategy, evaluate what you could agree to or you might be able to agree to, and what you couldn’t. I always encourage lawyers to work with opposing counsel to see where you can cut out the waste in a trial and avoid unnecessary expense. That is a burden on our justice system. If you can reach agreements, by all means do it. You mentioned the Rohrmoos case and it was decided back in 2019. The Texas Supreme Court, in an opinion written by our previous guest, Justice Paul Green, it’s going to wind up being one of his more significant opinions as a Justice on the Texas Supreme Court.

As we suggested, the court in that case adopted the lodestar method for proving reasonable and necessary attorney fees. The lodestar method essentially is a mathematical calculation. A lot of our readers are going to be familiar with it, but in case you’re not, the way that the Supreme Court described it in Rohrmoos and I’ve seen it in many other cases, is there are two facts that have to be determined by whoever the factfinder is. One is the reasonable hours worked. The second is the reasonable hourly rate for each attorney involved. We can expand that into paralegals because there is a mechanism for recovering for paralegals.

If you’re proven it up, lump that in there because you ought to. It’s not going to hurt you. It’s only going to help you.

The court has said that this analysis applies whenever it’s possible to reach an objective calculation, the reasonable hours worked times the reasonable hourly rate. This has come up often. We’ve seen already, when it comes to trial fees, the Courts of Appeals started citing Rohrmoos early on, and then have applied it many times in the last several years since it was issued. What seems was slower to develop was the question of whether Rohrmoos applied the appellate fees and how that lodestar analysis overlayed with this whole notion of predictive appellate fees. That was the logical disconnect and this is where it gets interesting. How on earth do you calculate reasonable hours worked and a reasonable hourly rate for each attorney or paralegal involved when you don’t know what the time will be, and you don’t know what the tasks are going to be?

That is the hard question out there because it leaves open a lot of variables. It’s the same thing that happens when you have a client come to you to take on an appeal that you haven’t sat down and looked at and they say, “How much is it going to cost?” You say, “Here’s my best guess. Here’s the steps that we have to go through to get there. I haven’t seen the record. I haven’t talked to the trial counsel. I don’t know what happened below other than what you’ve told me.” There are a lot in that same situation there, trying to estimate the closest certainty it can come to.


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You could argue from that appellate lawyers have experience in making these predictions, because at least those who work with the kinds of clients who require budgeting are often asked or they’re told, “Give us the numbers and make them based on principle and not your gut feeling.” Often what has happened in awarding appellate fees is in the jury charge, there would be a blank that says, “What is a reasonable fee for appeal,” or you would ask the trial judge to make that same determination. I can get on my soap box about how too often the numbers were too low in terms of what was awarded on appellate fees. It would be instead of you might have detailed numbers on segments of a trial court proceeding like fees through trial, and then post-trial to appeal, then you might have the appeal.

Often what we see now is when you get up past the Court of Appeals, you’ll see blanks for different segments of the Texas Supreme Court proceeding. Preparation of the petition for review, preparation for opposition of a brief on the merits of the case, and then another blank for preparation and presentation at oral argument. Maybe even another blank for a motion for a hearing or presenting or opposing a motion for a hearing. There are potentially a lot of blanks for a jury to fill out there, but when it comes to that first level appeal, often it seemed like the number would be picked out of thin air. A lawyer would testify as an expert and say, “You might give more detailed testimony on the trial fees.” What would tend to happen is the appeal would get drifted on the analysis because the lawyer wasn’t asked before to say, “What’s a lodestar type analysis going to look like here?”

It would be more often that the lawyer would be asked, “What do you think is the reasonable and necessary fee would be for handling this appeal?” In a decent case, $50,000. That would be the end of the estimate for the most part. Rohrmoos raised the question of, “Is that going to be good enough anymore?” It seemed clear that it wasn’t going to be, but the Supreme Court decided a case called Yowell versus Granite Operating Company. There for the first time, the court decided whether the Rohrmoos framework was going to apply when proving up respective or conditional appellate fees. The court interestingly said no and cited 1 or 2 opinions in that decision where the Courts of Appeals had tried to apply the Rohrmoos framework onto conditional appellate fees.

The court said, “No, it doesn’t work that way for appellate fees in part because they’re unknown and predictive. You can’t ascertain with certainty what the numbers are going to be.” There’s some good language in that opinion to the effect of these appeals at this point are hypothetical. The who, what, when, where and why can’t be known. In my observation, often you’d have one expert who would testify about all attorney fees and give the numbers on the trial fees. That might work and the jury or the judge may accept those numbers, but then also give a number about appeals. All too often, it would be X. In Yowell, what the court reached back to was the statement in Rohrmoos where it said that the lodestar analysis applies to any situation in which an objective calculation of reasonable hours worked times the reasonable hourly rate can be employed.

The courts say, “Because this is predictive and prospective, you can’t use that analysis because you’re not looking backward. You’re not looking at the data that reflect what occurred. It is predictive.” The lodestar method isn’t a complete overlay when it comes to appellate fees. What the court said you have to do, which I consider this to me Rohrmoos light or pointing this idea of a Rohrmoos guess is the court says, “A party seeking to recover conditional appellate fees must provide expert opinion testimony about the services reasonably necessary to defend the appeal and a reasonable hourly rate for those services.” You’re going to have to make a prediction. Predicting the hourly rate is the easy part.

You more or less know who’s going to be on this case. I’m going to have myself and a firm. I might have a junior lawyer doing some research and drafting, and we’re probably going to have a paralegal. Probably at the time this testimony is being given, who’s going to be staffing the case more or less. It gets trickier if you’re going to send the case out to a big firm. Once you get past the hourly rate though, how are we supposed to predict, because I’ve been pulling the tricks out of what we’ve learned from budgeting for clients. We can put a legitimate approach. How are we supposed to predict what an appeal is going to cost if we don’t know what the other party is going to do? How are they going to go about litigating their appeal?

TALP 48 | Appellate Attorney Fees

Appellate Attorney Fees: There are variables that the testifier can look at who to make a reasonably educated guess when it comes to setting appellate fees.

 

It does come back to budgeting the way that you do it. You have to break it down into the stages of the appeal that you know are going to happen because no matter what, you’re going to have to read the record. No matter what you’re going to have to file a brief. Presumably if you’re going to say that you’re the prevailing party, you can figure out what an appellee’s brief would be. If you think you may not be the prevailing party or you’re going to be the appellant, that’s a different consideration. You can work in from that. The benefit the trial lawyer has at this stage in the testimony is you know the issues. You know where you feel like there’s going to be problems on appeal.

This is a place where outside counsel can benefit, if you’re having an outside expert or even if an appellate expert can benefit from talking to the trial lawyer to forecast. By the time you’re at trial or even after trial offering appellate fee testimony, the trial lawyer has a good sense of where they think the issues are going to be on appeal. They can forecast and it doesn’t have to be perfect, but at least you can say, “We think that there are evidentiary issues. We think that there are legal issues that respectfully, your honor, didn’t get correctly decided, or maybe an issue on appeal,” and explain what those are. You do not even have to go that far. We see 3 or 4 big issues.

The level of detail probably depends on the amount of fees that you’re getting because the more fees you ask for, probably the more detail the reviewing court is going to want from you. That’s something that you’re going to have to look at, and then you can forecast from there. You build in some time for oral argument and put that in the calculation. In the times of COVID, you may or may not get oral argument depending on the court. These are all things that someone with some appellate expertise can help walk you through and come up with what are reasonable numbers. I do think it looks like that. You have to sit down and map out the stages and the tasks, and come up with some round numbers to justify what you come to as the final fee, showing your work again and going back to that theme.

What we know after Yowell seems to me is that filling in the blank with something like, “In my years of experience of trying cases, I’ve seen so many appeals go up. I know more or less what an appeal is going to cost. It’s going to be $50,000.” It’s clear from the Yowell opinion that testimony isn’t going to be good enough. You’re going to have to go into that depth of analysis that you described. As a testifier, you are going to be drawing from your experience, but you’re going to have to justify it for the factfinder in a way that’s understandable. A lot of times what the numbers are going to seem large for what goes into an appeal because you’re fighting against the tendency of the juries to a large degree, but sometimes it’s even tougher with trial judges who cut the amount from what’s requested from that to the amount awarded. All too often, we’ve seen appellate fees awarded in these woefully insufficient amounts, $5,000, $10,000 for an appeal, which you can’t even look at an appeal for $10,000 in most cases.

Especially if it’s from a jury trial.

To that point, there are things you can do to give you some indication of how involved and how complex the case is going to be. Knowing that it’s from a jury trial, knowing that there are jury charge issues potentially versus evidentiary error in the admission of evidence versus the legal issue, you get a sense of what the issues are. You can arrive at some educated guesses about what things would cost. You’ve got to build in and review the transcript. If you’ve got a two-week jury trial, you can count on an appeal from that judgment being expensive. There are variables that the testifier can look at to make reasonably educated guesses. These are the things that might drive the broader adoption of flat fees for an appeal, but that doesn’t do you any good. It’s like having a contingent fee agreement that doesn’t do you any good for these purposes.

You’ve got to justify the numbers that you’re presenting to the factfinder regardless of what you’re receiving, getting paid as a lawyer on the other end. There are scientific or mathematical elements you can bring into it, but to some degree too, there’s no substitute for the experience of having handled a number of appeals to know, or at least as a testifying expert, you can rely on things that a fact witness couldn’t rely on. What the testifier ought to do is talk to people who have done these things and have handled a number of appeals, and can get a better feel for what the numbers should be. This is where I start to get a little preachy even. If you don’t ask for enough money, the party that’s damaged in this is your client. We’ve got many fee-shifting mechanisms available now.

One of the objectives of a lawyer ought to be is to put your client in the best position possible, to recover the maximum amount possible provided the law allows it. My personal opinion on this is that it’s a real mistake. Attorney’s fees generally and appellate fees specifically is an afterthought because it can come back to hurt you. What we see, tying this back to the mechanism of appeals, is when it’s treated as an afterthought and when it’s not proved up properly, all too often, even if the merits of the judgment are affirmed, we’ll see a reversal or a remand to go back and fix whatever the defects are in the attorney’s fee evidence. It’s a hollow victory to some degree or a win, but yet have the case not quite be over because you’ve got to go back and fix an issue. If I could encourage lawyers to spend the time and even spend the money on the frontend, there’s a lot of this that can be avoided with some of that front end work.

Don’t be afraid to call your friendly local appellate lawyer even if it’s not to hire him as your fee expert. Talk to him about, “What goes into a typical appeal? What am I looking at here?” It may be that the $50,000 may be a correct figure, you have to be able to explain how you get there and talking about, “Is it a jury trial? Is it a bench trial? What’s the briefing look like? What do we think the record’s going to look like?” These are all things that somebody can sit down and talk with you for twenty minutes and probably come up with a solid figure to justify. You need to take the time and do that to form your opinion if you’re going to be the one testifying to that. Otherwise, if you don’t explain how you get there, the Court of Appeals is going to knock it down. If you’re lucky, they’ll remand it because there’s some evidence of attorney’s fees. If you’re not lucky, they’re going to render it and then your client gets a big goose egg for appellate fees.

It seems like for trial fees, it’s easy to find enough of a nugget of evidence that they’re going to send it back for a new trial. My prediction and this is not anything too controversial, I don’t think, but after Yowell, we’re going to start seeing some rendition of take-nothing judgments on appellate fees. The court has pretty much made it clear what will fly and what won’t fly. That testimony that I described about a reasonable and necessary amount of appellate fees would be blank with no further explanation, be prepared because folks that are giving that testimony if you prevail at trial, that’s going to get reversed on appeal. After Yowell, we’re going to start seeing some renditions on appellate fees. Hurtfully, that should happen because in any other evidentiary area, you don’t get multiple do-overs. You present legally sufficient evidence or you don’t.

This is one of those situations because the court has said, “This is the analysis you go through. You’ve got to make a prediction and justify it.” If you don’t tie those numbers back to the kinds of activities that the court has described in Rohrmoos and Yowell, I think that’s where the conclusory testimony being held to be legally insufficient. In most cases, the amount awarded for an appellate fee is going to be significantly smaller than trial fees, but still you’re talking about failing to make the initial required investment of time and energy. You’re talking about potentially, in a complex case, six figures’ worth of recovering that your client will lose out. It cannot be emphasized enough in my mind that it is a grievous mistake if you treat appellate fees as an afterthought.

You got to at least take it to the level that you described, Jody. At least talk to somebody who’s been through this. Another thing that we’re going to see happen is in Rohrmoos or in some other cases, the Supreme Court has said, “We don’t want to have a lot of satellite litigation over appellate fees.” It’s interesting. It’s like the One Final Judgment Rule. You can say that. You can keep going more towards the federal model but until that rule has changed, you’re talking to litigators. You’re talking to trial lawyers who are looking for any advantage in a case that they can get. If my opponent puts up 3rd-year associate testify about appellate fees, you better believe that the qualifications are going to be challenged.

These are things that trial lawyers are not going to appeal to help themselves, unless they can see the bigger picture and say, “We’re not going to generate a bunch of fees litigating about fees.” We’re going to reach those kinds of agreements that we talked about. Despite the Supreme Court’s best intentions, we are going to see satellite litigation over not only trial fees, but appellate specifically. How many trial lawyers are going to be qualified to stand up and testify about what would be a reasonable fee for appeal based on the kinds of details that the Supreme Court has told that we have to go into to identify those fees? There will be some, but they will tend to be more experienced trial lawyers who maybe handle their own appeals or who work closely with appellate counsel. That would be a reasonable basis for an opinion. We’re not done when it comes to seeing challenges that the attorney’s fees reasonableness and necessity. Appellate fees are the prime target.

We still see lots of challenges on attorney fee segregation, and that’s been the rule for several years. No matter what your fee arrangement is, and this is trial and appellate, whether flat fee contingency or hourly, keep your lodestar records because they say that’s not the ultimate standard and there are ways that you can do it, but assume that’s going to be the standard. That is the precision the Supreme Court seems to want to require. If you have a flat fee or a contingency fee, keep contemporaneous time even though it’s a pain in the butt. It can make or break attorney’s fees recovery in a case if you don’t do it.


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I don’t see any way around it. To try and go back and justify what was done in a case, possibly years after the fact, you’re going to spend more money, either in opportunity cost or actual outlay of money to do that way more than it would take to adopt the practice as much as many of us hated of keeping contemporaneous time records. It’s for the purpose of knowing that you’re going to be asked about this and have to justify the absence of those record when you’re asking for attorney’s fees. That’s a good piece of advice. Segregation has its own error in fees, but we’ve now seen the development with Rohrmoos and before that, going back to some of the others. Rohrmoos and now Yowell, we’re seeing it from a perspective of evidentiary insufficiency, as opposed to segregation. They’re interrelated, but the Tony Gullo point is different from the Rohrmoos point.

With a segregation point, generally you’re going to get a remand if there’s error on appeal. You’re going to get a do-over. Some people may factor that into the calculation and say, “I’m going to prove this up this way. The worst thing that could ever happen to me is I get remand for new trial fees?” If you’re willing to take that risk, there could be situations that justify that. Rohrmoos is different and Yowell is different. You run the risk if you don’t do it right of a take nothing judgment on appellate fees. I would advise folks to be mindful of that as they’re presenting their cases. We’ve covered what I intended to cover. What do you think, Jody?

Raising this issue and pointing out some of the stumbling blocks on it as what we wanted to do to make sure that people are aware that the stuff’s out there, and that simply picking a figure out of the air for an appeal is not going to cut it anymore. Call an appellate attorney to help you out even if it’s an informal consult. We’re happy to do that because we want to make sure that people get it right. There’s nothing worse as the appellate attorney for them coming in and saying, “We may have a little fee issue.” You look at the record and go, “We do have a fee issue,” and there’s nothing you can do about it.

That’s as good a point as any to wrap up.

Disclaimer: This transcript has not been proofread or edited to written-article standards. If you have any questions or see any discrepancies, please let us know by sending an email to hosts@texapplawpod.com.

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Do Texas landlords have to install smoke detectors?

Originally published by ryan.diestler@thomsonreuters.com.

One of the perks of renting an apartment or home is that you typically don’t have responsibility for maintenance. Your landlord generally has to pay for and repair major systems. If the refrigerator stops working or the roof starts leaking, your landlord will be the one who has to cover those costs and arrange for repairs.

When you first moved in, you may not have even bothered to look for smoke detectors in your home because they seem like such a common-sense investment for a landlord to make. It was only after you lost property in a fire or a family member suffered smoke inhalation or burns that you realized your landlord never provided you with smoke detectors. Is there a requirement for them to do so under Texas law?

Landlords should install and maintain smoke detectors

Texas law does make landlords responsible for installing and maintaining smoke detectors in their units. There should be at least one smoke detector outside of each bedroom.

In fact, if a tenant has hearing issues, they have the right to ask their landlord to install a system that will effectively alert them through a method other than sound. Some landlords install the cheapest smoke detectors they can and then promptly forget to do anything about them. A smoke detector with dead batteries or bad circuits will do nothing to keep tenants safe.

You can stand up against a negligent property owner who puts you at risk

If you have any reason to think that the injuries or losses you suffered in the fire would have been preventable with early detection of the fire through a working smoke alarm, you may have grounds to bring a claim against your landlord. Reaching out to the team at Wyatt Law Firm can help you explore your rights.

 

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Law Firm Marketing: 12 Reasons You Should Be Blogging

Originally published by Cordell Parvin.

Hopefully by 2021 you and your colleagues are blogging. If not, here are reasons why you should be blogging:

  1. You will become more visible to your target market. A firm for whom I am working was not on the first ten pages of a Google search for a niche they specialized in until they started blogging. Now the firm’s blog is the second listing on the first page.
  2. You will be able to listen and engage your target market: You will listen for topics and listen for what your clients want to read.
  3. You will create more “weak tie” contacts. Your will have a wider variety of readers than those you send email blast alerts to.
  4. You will be forced to keep up with what is going on that impacts your  clients: You have to keep up to find topics.
  5. You can get material to your clients the moment they want it. When I wrote a monthly magazine column it would take two months from an event happening until my column on it was published.
  6. You will learn to be a better writer. It is humbling if no one is reading what you are writing.
  7. You will learn to be more concise. If you don’t, no one will read what you are writing.
  8. You can blog any time of day and any place including home.
  9. You provide a tool someone referring business to you can give to a potential client.
  10. Your readers will get to know you on a personal level.
  11. It is inexpensive to blog.
  12. You can link to your blog posts on social media sites.

 

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Texas Breach of Contract Claims

Originally published by Brent Perry.

Uncertain economic times always lead to more business litigation. Breach of contract claims are the most common type of business litigation in Texas. The number of these claims will significantly increase in the coming year, as the language of many contracts was not prepared to deal with the extenuating circumstances caused by an international health crisis. When parties to a contract find themselves in a situation where one party fails to uphold its end of the agreement, Texas breach of contract law can provide a variety of legal remedies.

Parties in breach of contract lawsuits must show the following to be successful:

  • That a valid contract exists. The contract, whether oral or written, must have an offer, acceptance of the offer, and consideration.
  • The party claiming a breach performed according to the contract terms.
  • The party being sued failed to meet its obligations under the terms of the contract.
  • The party claiming breach suffered damages because of the breach.

Determining the Validity of a Business Contract

Determining whether the contract at issue is valid is the first step in analyzing a breach of contract claim. Contracts are either valid, void, or voidable. As Houston breach of contract lawyers we can review the circumstances of your situation to see if there is any basis for another party claiming the agreement is void or voidable. Contracts have defining elements under Texas law. Some important considerations include:

  • Contracts must be entered into voluntarily, with both parties having the legal capacity to enter into the agreement.
  • The contract must not require any illegal act. It is void if it does..
  • If the contract includes errors in the terms or subject matter, known as mutual mistakes, the parties may not be required to perform the contract.
  • If one party accepts an alternative form of payment outside of the payment outlined in the contract, this could discharge any payment obligation in the contract.
  • New agreements that replace all or part of the original contract can invalidate or alter the original contract..
  • Contracts with missing pricing, duration, or other important material terms can also be considered invalid.

Forms of Breach of Contract

After establishing the validity of a contract, the complaining party must prove a breach has occurred.. There are many actions that breach a contract. A breach of contract must be material, or substantial enough to make performance impossible or at least more difficult. The party accused of a breach may first attempt to show that its actions did not hinder overall performance on the contract. Most breaches are simple and obvious: the failure to deliver what is required by the contract; the failure to comply with the payment terms; or the occurrence of some outside event that prevents performance. Sometimes the contract may be impossible to fulfill due to uncontrollable circumstances, known as impossibility of performance.

In most lawsuit, the parties disagree about the terms of both performance and payment. Payment or delivery delays where people or businesses fail to deliver or pay for goods or services on time are common. Often, delivered products don’t match what was ordered. Sometimes  a non-party to the contract intentionally interferes with the contract and interrupts or prevents performance. One party may breach a contract in anticipation of another party being unable to perform, known as an “anticipatory breach.” The possibilities are as varied as the different types of business contracts.

Statute of Limitations

Contracts are always governed by state law. Statutes of limitation require parties to bring their breach of contract claims in a reasonable timeframe, usually within four years of the breach. Under Texas law, the terms of a contract can provide for a shorter limitations periodIf the breaching party conceals or lies about the breach, the limitations period can be extended. The moment you believe a breach of contract exists, you should contact an experienced Houston business lawyer to help you navigate the legal process and assess potential damages. You may lose the ability to recover damages resulting from a breach of contract if you do not take the appropriate legal actions within the designated time period.

Damages Available for Breach of Contract

Contractual terms often define the damages that may be recovered in a breach of contract action. The price, quantity, and performance terms are all important in determining damages. In most cases, a judge or jury may assess and award damages. The goal is always to put the parties in a the same position as if the contract had been fully performed. Calculating lost profits, identifying consequential damages, and recovering costs and attorney’s fees are all tasks that require an experience business litigation attorney. Whether specific performance—forcing a party to comply with a contract—is available requires legal analysis. Sometimes, a party is best served by demanding rescission of the contract so that all payments made are returned. Depending on the contract and the severity of the breach, a judge or jury can award consequential damages to compensate victims for their business losses.

Houston Breach of Contract Lawyers

Your best strategy for reaching a successful resolution varies greatly based on your unique circumstances. We negotiate effectively to advance our clients’ interests. Where aggressive litigation is needed to protect your contract rights, we have a proven record of getting serious results in court. You can count on us to work with you to identify the approach that makes the most sense for you.

If you believe you or your company may have a claim for breach of contract in Texas or your business has been accused of breaching an agreement, contact our legal team as soon as possible. Finding knowledgeable legal representation that has extensive experience in business litigation will put you in the best position for a favorable outcome.

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Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Don’t sleep on the product market definition

Originally published by David Coale.

Shah sued about the alleged monopolization of pediatric anesthesiology services in Bexar County. The Fifth Circuit looked to its discussion of market definition in Surgical Care Center of Hammond, L.C. v. Hosp. Serv. Dist. No. 1, 309 F.3d 836, 840 (5th Cir. 2002), which looked for “a showing of where people could practicably go” to obtain the services at issue. Here, Shah failed to satisfy that standard: “He did not even specify individual pediatric anesthesiologists from whom patients could practicably obtain health care services. Rather, he provided tallies, by county, of pediatric anesthesiologists in Texas that fit the anesthesiology requirements of the BHS-STAR Agreement. Moreover, as the BHS parties argue, Shah’s proposed relevant market does not encompass all interchangeable substitute products because it does not include the two non-BHS facilities that the BHS parties contend serve as viable alternatives to BHS facilities. Shah has not provided evidence or any persuasive argument to raise a genuine dispute as to either of those facilities.” Shah v. VHS San Antonio Partners LLC, No. 20-50394 (Jan. 13, 2021).

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What Is an Encryption Backdoor?

Originally published by Peggy Keene.

Encryption-Backdoors.jpeg

Encryption Backdoors: Do They Create More Concerns Than Good?

As technology continues to become increasingly intertwined with a citizen’s daily life, companies continue to push to buy, sell, transfer, and collect personal information.  Today, analytics and information on a consumer is king, and as such, more and more companies push to have access to such data, and with that access, governments and law enforcement agencies have increasingly looked to gain access as well, through encryption backdoors.

Balancing User Privacy, Targeted Advertising, and Encryption Backdoors

Security experts and privacy law proponents have long touted privacy concerns about unintended access or data breaches.  With each new year, company privacy policies or governmental legislation has been rolled out to strike a balance between affording any user a meaningful level of protection without completely denying access to the wealth of personal data collected on consumers.  But while companies often claim that their collection of analytics is at an aggregate level or that any data they do collect is used to curtail the experience of a user through targeted advertising, it still stands that the overall wealth of information collected about users has been increasingly pursued by a number of third parties that often now include government agencies and/or foreign powers.

And as such, while privacy experts have seen a sharp increase in the demand for stronger encryption, there has been a correlating demand for easier access to such data in the form of encryption backdoors.

An encryption backdoor is generally defined as a deliberate weakness created by the service provider to allow for easy access to the encrypted data.  In this case, the backdoor would be purposely coded in to allow for the requesting party, often law enforcement or government agencies in most cases, to have access to encrypted data that may exist on one’s personal devices like laptops or cell phones.

The Resistance Against Backdoors

Many governments and law enforcement agencies have made strong cases for how encryption backdoors can prevent terrorist acts or allow for meaningful intervention by law enforcement agencies. However, privacy experts often warn that encryption backdoors can still have the opposite effect if the weaknesses end up being exploited by foreign hackers or even terrorist cells.

As a result, many high-profile companies have stated that the risk of including an encryption backdoor is too high, and as such, have instead moved to strengthen end-to end encryption in products, which basically renders communications inaccessible to the provider altogether.

Key Takeaways on the Use of Encryption Backdoors

As personal information has become king, there has been increased pressure for service providers to incorporate encryption backdoors for easy access by governments and/or law enforcement agencies.  The response for such calls has been divided which has ultimately resulted in:

  • stronger end-to-end encryption by resistant companies;

  • compliance by some companies that have strong relationships with the requesting agency or government; and

  • an increase in hacking attempts and data breaches as it relates to encrypted data.

For more information on internet law, see our Internet Law & eCommerce Legal Services and Industry Focused Legal Solutions pages.

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Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Supplementation allowed

Originally published by David Coale.

A late discovery supplementation may be allowed if the party shows good cause and a lack of unfair surprise. The Fifth Court reversed a trial court ruling about an expert supplementation when, inter alia: “The record shows (1) Mr. Longeway’s report was based almost entirely on his inspection of the job site’s deactivated electrical lines and (2) the lines’ deactivation could be performed only by the electric delivery company and was not completed until November 30, 2018. Appellants received Mr. Longeway’s report on January 11, 2019, and filed their motion for reconsideration and new trial, with that report attached, several days later. Weekley’s response to the attempted late designation focused only on [another expert’s] report and did not specifically address good cause or unfair surprise or prejudice as to Mr. Longeway.” Paniagua v. Weekley Homes, No. 05-19-00439-CV (Jan. 13, 2021).

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Quick Hits – assembly line edition.

Originally published by Richard Hunt.

Lucille Ball on assembly line

With more than 40 new decisions in the last two weeks it hasn’t been easy getting this blog out.  I’m not the only lawyer with too much to do too fast, as the following cases demonstrate.

The problem with industrial litigation

In a classic episode of “I Love Lucy” she and her friend Ethel get a job in a chocolate factory but find they can’t keep up with the assembly line and have to resort to stuffing chocolates in their mouths and shirts.³ I thought of their predicament when I read Garcia v. Hwangbo, 2021 WL 149086 (C.D. Cal. Jan. 15, 2021), one of hundreds of cases filed on behalf of Orlando Garcia by the “Center for Disability Access.” The problem with an assembly line practice is keeping up with the speed of the line, and Garcia’s lawyers found they couldn’t keep up on January 15 when Judge Olguin dismissed the Hwangbo case under the terms of a docket control order that required the defendants be served within 90 days of filing.

Judge Olguin did the same thing to a different plaintiff in Whitaker v. Anhar Group, Inc., 2021 WL 76711 (C.D. Cal. Jan. 8, 2021). Whitaker is also represented by the Center for Disability Access, which has filed more than a thousand cases on his behalf . In this case the firm had served the defendant and there had been an extension of time to answer, but when time expired on the extension the plaintiff didn’t promptly file for entry of default and the case was dismissed.

Whether Judge Olguin’s docket control order will have long-term consequences for ADA website lawsuits in California will depend on whether other federal judges are unwilling to let plaintiffs and their lawyers file faster lawsuits faster than they can prosecute them.

Johnson v. Simper Investments, Inc.,  2021 WL 179358 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 19, 2021) tells a similar story. Notorious serial filer Scott Johnson sued the owner of a building that was vacant at the time of his alleged visit and had been for several years. Johnson argued that he meant to include other nearby businesses in the same business park, but the Court wasn’t buying. He was given leave to amend so he could find a real defendant, but the case shows how assembly line litigation can fail when the volume isn’t matched by the bona fides of the claims.

Like the plaintiff in Hwangbo, the plaintiff in Grigsby v. Tecomate Corp., 2021 WL 134583 (C.D. Cal. Jan. 14, 2021) had no opposition. The case wasn’t dismissed, but the Court did deny a motion for default because it found the complaint failed to allege all the elements of an ADA claim. Those are worth reviewing because other courts may be equally particular. Under the relevant Ninth Circuit authority a Title III ADA plaintiff must prove:

(1) “he is disabled within the meaning of the ADA”; (2) “the defendant is a private entity that owns, leases, or operates a place of public accommodation”; (3) “the plaintiff was denied public accommodations by the defendant because of his disability”; (4) “the existing facility at the defendant’s place of business [or property] presents an architectural barrier prohibited under the ADA”; and (5) removing the barrier is “readily achievable.”

The Court found the allegations concerning the 4th element were insufficient. The plaintiff alleged that parking and restrooms had barriers to access whose removal was readily achievable, but failed to allege that parking and restrooms were provided by the defendant for customers. Since the ADA Standards only require that a public accommodation provide accessible parking and restrooms where they are provided for customers, the Court found the allegation was deficient. Forcing serial plaintiffs to take the same care that would be taken in any other lawsuit may be the best way to at least slow down the ADA litigation industry.

And to conclude this section, the inevitable Peter Strojnik case. The Court observes in Strojnik v. Kamla Hotels, Inc., 2021 WL 75693, at *1 (S.D. Cal. Jan. 8, 2021) that Strojnik:

“has filed thousands of disability discrimination cases against hotel defendants in state and federal courts,” Strojnik v. Bakersfield Convention Hotel, 436 F. Supp. 3d 1332, 1336 (E.D. Cal. 2020), and based on those filings, has been declared a vexatious litigant in at least the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, see Strojnik v. IA Lodging Napa First LLC, No. 19-CV-03983-DMR, 2020 WL 2838814, at *6–13 (N.D. Cal. June 1, 2020), and the United States District Court for the Central District of California. See Strojnik v. SCG Am. Constr. Inc., No. SACV191560JVSJDE, 2020 WL 4258814, at *8 (C.D. Cal. Apr. 19, 2020)

Strojnik is able to file so many pro se lawsuits (he represents himself because he can no longer practice law) because he doesn’t bother to allege much beyond having seen something that might be a barrier to access. Here he is given leave to amend, but without the necessary detail the case will be dismissed.

Your sales office is a public accommodation.

This entry is based on a newly filed lawsuit¹ that illustrates an unfortunate misunderstanding of the ADA’s requirements. The plaintiff sued because the sales office for a real estate development was not accessible. It was located in a model home that was not accessible, probably because the FHA does not require accessible single family housing. The defense seems to be that some sales offices can be inaccessible if there are accessible offices pretty close. Nothing in the ADA suggests that a business can have some inaccessible locations if it has other accessible locations nearby; the requirement is that all public accommodations be accessible, and every sales office open to the public is a public accommodation. Single family developers need to keep this in mind when using model homes as a sales office.

Mootness no, nexus yes – ADA website defense in the 9th Circuit.

Langer v. The Pep Boys Manny Moe & Jack of California, 2021 WL 148237 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 15, 2021) has a thorough and therefore useful discussion of website mootness and the 9th Circuit’s nexus requirement. Despite the fact that Pep Boys had replaced its entire website with a new one that met WCAG 2.0 standards and the defect complained of no longer existed the Court found the claim was not moot because Pep Boys did not meet the high standard for showing that the website would be accessible forever. This holding was triggered by some of the specific statements in the affidavit supporting the mootness motion, so lawyers aiming for a mootness defense should study it carefully; however, it seems that this particular court is unlikely to ever grant a mootness motion in a website case.

Pep Boys lost on mootness but won on nexus because the plaintiff alleged only an intent to return to the website, not to any Pep Boys store. The Court collects the most relevant decisions from the Ninth Circuit and concludes that the requirement of a nexus between a physical place of business and the website means there is no ADA injury if a plaintiff doesn’t intend to visit the physical place of business. The Court doesn’t discuss the Unruh Act, which some California courts say has no such nexus requirement, presumably waiting to address to see if the plaintiff can amend to state a claim under the ADA.

Website litigation consent decrees

Dozens of Consent Decrees have been entered in ADA website cases from the 2nd Circuit in the last year. I haven’t reported on them because, as private agreements, they don’t necessarily reflect the state of the law. Nonetheless, lawyers involved in defending ADA website cases will want to look at the Decree in  Monegro v. Greenvale Liquors, Inc., 2021 WL 195144 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 19, 2021) as a defendant friendly example of what plaintiffs might agree to. It does what any DOJ regulations should do; that is, it provides compliance measured on real accessibility instead of technical standards and it gives the website operator plenty of penalty free time to make the website accessible.

Hitting the pause button on website litigation in the 11th Circuit.

In Lucius v. Hillstone Restaurant Group, Inc. 2021 WL 199701, at *1 (S.D. Fla. Jan. 19, 2021) the Court granted a stay of a more or less standard website accessibility case pending the 11th Circuit’s ruling in Gil v Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc. I first mentioned Gil v Winn-Dixie in 2016, when it was pending in the District Court for the Southern District of Florida, and it has earned a few blogs since as a leading case in the 11th Circuit; however, during the intervening years most courts and most plaintiffs have assumed the most restrictive view of the ADA’s application to websites was that a nexus to a physical place of business is required. Judge Bloom isn’t jumping to any such conclusions because one issue in the Gil v Winn-Dixie appeal is whether the ADA ever applies to websites. The main influence of her decision seems to be her belief that an 11th Circuit decision is imminent. We’ll see if she’s right and if the 11th Circuit surprises us all.

The accommodation obligation may require more than you think.

I don’t usually blog about prisoner cases under the ADA because they usually turn on non-ADA issues like immunity. However, Carter v. City of Shreveport, 2021 WL 217885, at *7 (W.D. La. Jan. 21, 2021) caught my eye with this statement:

Although plaintiffs usually alert defendants of their disability and request accommodations in direct and specific terms, an individual may prevail by showing that the disability and consequential accommodations were “open, obvious, and apparent.” Windham v. Harris County, Texas, 875 F.3d 229, 236 (5th Cir. 2017).

Mr. Carter’s claims survived a motion to dismiss because the Court found there was at least an issue of fact concerning whether the jailers at the City jail should have known that he needed an accommodation in the form of additional help because he was paralyzed and could not change the bandages on his bedsores. Carter is a Title II case, but the same obligation might be imposed on businesses in a Title III case.

I say “might” because a similar accommodation claim was dismissed in Hayes v. Costco Wholesale Corp., 2021 WL 107189 (E.D. Cal. Jan. 12, 2021) The Court found that it was “not clear what reasonable accommodations were necessary.” The facts are too complicated to summarize, but plaintiff believed she was treated badly (and may have been treated badly) when there was an altercation involving a shopping car collision in the store. She did not request an accommodation based on her vision impairments and diabetes and ended up being detained by the police. The Court seemed unwilling to find that the store should have figured out that she needed something and then provide it. I still believe though that courtesy toward anyone having problems is good business practice, and if you see someone with a disability having trouble in your store or office courtesy may be a statutory requirement.

Covid-19 closures may not moot an ADA claim.

The owner of the Omni Pittsburgh closed its doors indefinately in 2020 due to the Covid-19 pandemic. That was not enough to moot the plaintiff’s ADA claims because, according to the court in Mortland v. Omni Pittsburgh Corp., 2021 WL 101560 (W.D. Pa. Jan. 12, 2021), the hotel was poised to re-open at any time. The Court itself suggested a stay might be appropriate, something the parties, who were deeply committed to their battle, didn’t seem to have thought of. The Court also pointed out that the hotel being closed might give the defendant an opportunity to fix any ADA problems instead of fighting over them, something that also seems to have overlooked by the parties. Both points could apply to any ADA lawsuit against a facility shut down because of the pandemic.

ADA Standards as evidence of negligence

They are not according to Dale v. Virginia CVS Pharm., LLC, 2021 WL 129820 (W.D. Va. Jan. 13, 2021). This isn’t a universally held view so whether ADA violations can also give rise the negligence claims is a question businesses will need to find ADA counsel to answer.²

Arbitration of ADA claims

Gilbert v. Indeed, Inc. 2021 WL 169111 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 19, 2021) tells, as the court says, a brutal story that doesn’t need to be repeated. For our purposes the key discussion concerns arbitration of ADA claims and the conclusion that they are arbitrable just like any other claim.

Declining supplemental jurisdiction of Unruh Act claims.

In  Soto v. Lim, 2020 WL 8027785 (C.D. Cal. Dec. 18, 2020) and Cota v. Sushi Ota Inc., 2021 WL 108640, at (S.D. Cal. Jan. 11, 2021) two different federal judges declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the plaintiff’s state law claims because it appeared filing suit in federal court might be an attempt to evade the procedural requirements imposed on Unruh Act plaintiffs in state court. A quick search for “supplemental jurisdiction” in my earlier blogs will show not all federal courts in California adopt this view. In ADA litigation it is crucial to know about the individual judge assigned to your case because there are many issues that no court of appeal has resolved and on which individual district court judges disagree.

Easy come, easy go, the law of temporary public accommodations.

The plaintiff in  Renowitzky v. Stonebrae Club Partners, LLC, 2021 WL 111487 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 12, 2021) found that the facilities at the defendant private club were not accessible during a public golf tournament. Even private clubs have ADA obligations when they invite the public, so the basic claim was fine. However, when the tournament ended there was no longer any real chance the plaintiff would get to return since he was not a member and no public events were scheduled. With the Court unable to grant meaningful relief his ADA claims disappeared as quickly as they had appeared, along with state law claims over which the Court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction.

Title II entities can’t rely on facially neutral policies to avoid ADA liability.

In Martinez v. County of Alameda, 2021 WL 105771, (N.D. Cal. Jan. 12, 2021) the court refused to dismiss the claims of a blind woman frustrated because county employees would not help her fill out a form. The policy against helping residents was facially neutral and uniformly enforced, but that didn’t mean there was no discrimination. The court observed that:

The Ninth Circuit has “repeatedly recognized that facially neutral policies may violate the ADA when such policies unduly burden disabled persons, even when such policies are consistently enforced.”

Martinez v. County of Alameda, 2021 WL 105771 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 12, 2021). This is a reminder that the ADA is not about equal treatment of those with disabilities; instead it requires unequal treatment in order to create equal opportunity. “I treat everyone the same” is usually not a good defense.

¹ See Man alleges disability discrimination against Ryan Homes

² I summarized the state of the law at the time in Personal injury and the ADA – is every violation per se negligence?, ADA and FHA Quick Hits – is it safe to come out yet edition and Quick Hits – Now is the summer of our discontent edition. Things may have changed in some states, and the coverage isn’t complete.

³ Of course it’s on Youtube. Chocolate Factory

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