in Re: ASICS America Corporation ( 2023 )


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  • CONDITIONALLY GRANT and Opinion Filed January 20, 2023
    S   In The
    Court of Appeals
    Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
    No. 05-22-00994-CV
    IN RE ASICS AMERICA CORPORATION, Relator
    Original Proceeding from the 134th Judicial District Court
    Dallas County, Texas
    Trial Court Cause No. DC-22-06193
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Before Justices Molberg, Pedersen, III, and Garcia
    Opinion by Justice Garcia
    Relator ASICS America Corporation (“ASICS”) and real party in interest
    Shoebacca, Ltd. (“Shoebacca”) are currently litigating breach of contract claims in
    California and in the 160th District Court in Dallas, Texas. The latter case was stayed
    and abated, deferring to the California court as the first-filed forum for claims
    between the parties.
    This original proceeding arises from an ancillary action ASICS filed in the
    134th District Court to enforce a subpoena issued by the California court. ASICS
    seeks mandamus relief from the 134th Court’s refusal to strike or abate Shoebacca’s
    substantive claims from the ancillary action. After reviewing the petition, the parties’
    responses, and the mandamus record, we conditionally grant the writ.
    BACKGROUND
    ASICS is an international athletic brand that designs and manufactures shoes,
    clothing, and accessories. Shoebacca is a local Texas retailer of discount footwear.
    In June 2010, ASICS entered into a Master Retailer Agreement (the “Master
    Agreement”) with Shoebacca, along with a related credit agreement setting the terms
    for Shoebacca’s purchase of goods on credit. Under those agreements, Shoebacca
    purchased “close-out” products, also known as “hash” goods, from ASICS. In
    December 2018, the parties executed a separate “Hash Agreement” for the exclusive
    sale of ASICS’ hash shoes to Shoebacca.
    On April 1, 2020, ASICS sued Shoebacca in California for breach of the
    Master Agreement, alleging that Shoebacca failed to pay for hash and non-hash
    products. ASICS also filed a declaratory relief claim regarding the application of an
    assurance provision in the Master Agreement to the Hash Agreement (the
    “California Case”).
    Three months later, Shoebacca sued ASICS in the 160th District Court in
    Dallas for alleged breach of the Hash Agreement, alleged failure to sell hash
    footwear as defined in the Hash Agreement, and ASICS’ purported sale of hash
    footwear to third parties. Shoebacca later amended its breach of contract claim to
    allege ASICS’ wrongful termination of the Hash Agreement.
    ASICS moved to stay the 160th District Court action on comity grounds.
    Opposing the stay, Shoebacca argued that the two distinct actions would never
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    conflict and that Shoebacca was barred from bringing its claims in California
    because of an arbitration provision. The 160th District Court initially denied the stay.
    ASICS later renewed its motion to stay, arguing that changed circumstances
    demonstrated both actions involved the same contract issues and that all disputes
    could be heard and resolved in the California Case. Specifically, ASICS explained
    that Shoebacca had (i) withdrawn its arbitration defense in the California Case, (ii)
    amended its answer in the California Case to assert affirmative defenses based on
    ASICS’ alleged breach of the Hash Agreement, and (iii) filed motions for summary
    judgment in the 160th District Court seeking judgment on the same contractual
    interpretation issues it had conceded were properly decided in the California Case.
    During the hearing on the renewed motion to stay in the 160th District Court,
    ASICS represented that it would allow Shoebacca to file all its counterclaims in the
    California Case and would not move to arbitrate any of them. Shoebacca has
    attempted to file and serve a cross-complaint on ASICS in the California Case, but
    the cross-complaint and subsequent versions were rejected for technical defects.
    According to ASICS, the defects have yet to be cured. On December 10, 2021, the
    160th District Court entered an order staying the action in favor of the first-filed
    California Case.
    Meanwhile, in the California Case, ASICS began seeking discovery from
    Shoebacca related to ASICS’ affirmative claims and Shoebacca’s putative cross-
    claims. Specifically, ASICS sought certain communications between Shoebacca
    –3–
    representative Braden Wayne—the Dallas attorney representing Shoebacca in
    connection with the Hash Agreement—and a third party. ASICS eventually
    subpoenaed Wayne directly for such information. To do so, ASICS obtained a
    commission for the out-of-state subpoena from the California Superior Court and
    served the subpoena on Wayne in Dallas.
    ASICS believed Wayne was only partially responsive to the subpoena and
    lodged untimely or baseless objections. As a result, ASICS filed a Rule 201.2
    petition for recognition and enforcement of the subpoena and requested that the court
    compel compliance pursuant to Rule 215.1. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 201.2, 215.1. This
    proceeding was randomly assigned to the 134th District Court of Dallas County.
    On June 19, 2022, the 134th District Court entered an order granting ASICS’
    motion to compel. Shoebacca filed a motion for reconsideration. Shortly thereafter,
    Shoebacca filed an intervention petition and request for disclosures. The intervention
    petition asserted claims for (1) breach of contract based on ASICS’ termination of
    the Hash Agreement; (2) breach of duty of good faith based on allegations that
    ASICS manufactured grounds to terminate the Hash Agreement and made arbitrary,
    capricious, excessive, invasive, and unreasonable demands for financial
    information; and (3) a declaratory relief claim to establish that the materials sought
    by ASICS are privileged from disclosure. Shoebacca also requested injunctive relief
    enjoining ASICS from selling hash footwear to any purchaser other than Shoebacca.
    These same claims were previously asserted in the fourth amended petition in the
    –4–
    160th District Court and in the California cross-complaint that was served on ASICS
    but rejected for filing.
    ASICS then filed a notice of related case under Dallas Local Rules 1.06–1.08
    in both the stayed case in the 160th District Court and the subpoena enforcement
    proceeding in the 134th District Court. The notice also sought transfer of the
    subpoena enforcement action to the 160th District Court to ensure enforcement of
    the latter court’s stay order.
    ASICS also filed a motion to strike, abate, or dismiss Shoebacca’s
    intervention petition and plea in abatement in the subpoena enforcement action. The
    motion, supported by affidavit and other evidence, argued that Texas law prohibits
    Shoebacca from using a petition in intervention as a mechanism to assert substantive
    claims in an ancillary discovery action, that Shoebacca’s intervention violates the
    doctrines of interstate comity and dominant jurisdiction because Shoebacca already
    has a pending suit in a different Dallas County District Court asserting virtually the
    same claims, that the intervention violates the stay in 160th District Court, and that
    the intervention is untimely because it was filed last minute to unjustifiably delay or
    complicate a proceeding.
    The 134th District Court granted Shoebacca’s motion for reconsideration of
    ASICS’ motion to compel and advised that it would hear argument regarding the
    motion at a later date.
    –5–
    Shoebacca’s California counsel subsequently confirmed in court that
    Shoebacca possessed the documents ASICS had been seeking through the Wayne
    subpoena. Thus, ASICS withdrew its subpoena for Wayne and nonsuited its petition
    to enforce it in the 134th District Court.
    Shoebacca filed a response to ASICS’ motion to strike its intervention
    petition, and ASICS replied. ASICS’ reply noted that the ancillary proceeding to
    enforce the subpoena against Wayne had been nonsuited and argued that the nonsuit
    rendered Shoebacca’s privilege claim moot.
    The 134th District Court heard argument on ASICS’ motion to strike and on
    September 7, 2022, issued an order denying ASICS’ motion without explanation.
    The court set Shoebacca’s claims for trial in July 2023. ASICS petitioned this Court
    for mandamus relief from the September 7 order and requested that we stay the
    underlying proceeding in the 134th District Court pending resolution of the writ. We
    entered an order staying the case until further order of this Court.
    ANALYSIS
    ASICS argues the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to strike or abate
    Shoebacca’s substantive claims from the underlying subpoena action because: (i) the
    160th District Court retains jurisdiction and Shoebacca is not entitled to proceed on
    claims that are materially identical to those pending in and stayed by that court, (ii)
    interstate comity requires that the court strike Shoebacca’s intervention because the
    parties can obtain the same relief in the first-filed California Case, and (iii) an
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    intervenor is not entitled to assert substantive claims in an ancillary discovery action.
    ASICS further argues that the court should have dismissed Shoebacca’s request for
    declaratory relief based on privilege because the Wayne subpoena was withdrawn
    and the motion to enforce it was nonsuited, rendering Shoebacca’s request moot.
    To obtain mandamus relief, relators must show both that the trial court has
    clearly abused its discretion and that they have no adequate appellate remedy. In re
    Prudential Ins. Co., 
    148 S.W.3d 124
    , 135–36 (Tex. 2004) (orig. proceeding). We
    conclude that ASICS meets these requirements here because a Rule 201.2
    proceeding is ancillary and incident to another proceeding and does not constitute
    an independent lawsuit in which claims may be adjudicated on the merits. We further
    conclude that ASICS has no adequate remedy by appeal.
    Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 201.2 provides that if a court of record in
    another state or foreign jurisdiction issues a mandate, writ, or commission that
    requires a witness’s testimony in Texas, “the witness may be compelled to appear
    and testify in the same manner and by the same process used for taking testimony in
    a proceeding pending” in Texas. TEX. R. CIV. P. 201.2; accord TEX. CIV. PRAC. &
    REM. CODE ANN. § 20.002. There is no Texas authority addressing whether an
    intervenor may assert substantive claims in an action brought under Rule 201.2 to
    enforce an out-of-state subpoena. Accordingly, we examine the scope of the court’s
    authority in such actions, as well as in analogous ancillary proceedings.
    –7–
    Texas courts have held that the out-of-state court with jurisdiction over the
    underlying case in a Rule 201.2 action is generally charged with determining the
    relevancy and materiality of evidence sought by a party seeking a deposition in
    Texas, while the Texas court has the obligation to protect the witness’s legal rights.
    These rights include the witness’s right to avoid compelled production of privileged
    evidence. See Centennial Psychiatric Assocs. v. Cantrell, No. 14-17-00391-CV,
    
    2017 WL 6544283
    , at *6 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Dec. 21, 2017, no pet.)
    (mem. op). Thus, in deciding whether to execute an out-of-state discovery request,
    a Texas court may not consider the requested discovery’s relevance or materiality to
    the lawsuit pending in the other state, because those matters are to be determined by
    the out-of-state court with jurisdiction over the underlying litigation. See In re
    Issuance of Subpoenas for the Depositions of Bennett, 
    502 S.W.3d 373
    , 377–78
    (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2016, no pet.) (“requests for relief based on the
    scope of discovery are properly addressed to [the out-of-state] court”).
    A court’s authority to protect a witness’ legal rights, such as to avoid
    compelled production, relates to a court’s discretion under Rule 201.2 to execute a
    foreign discovery request. The adjudication of claims on the merits, however, bears
    no relationship to that discretion. It follows that, like the determination of relevance
    and materiality, the merits of a case are to be determined by the out-of-state court
    with jurisdiction over the underlying action.
    –8–
    Cases involving other types of ancillary actions further inform our analysis.
    An ancillary proceeding is one that aids another proceeding considered as principal.
    See Ramsey v. Gardner, 
    279 S.W.2d 584
    , 590 (Tex. 1955) (orig. proceeding). For
    example, “[a] Rule 202 proceeding to conduct pre-suit discovery from a party
    against whom a claim is contemplated is ancillary to the contemplated claim; it is
    ‘in aid of’ and incident to the anticipated claim.” Bennett v. Zucker, No. 05-19-
    01445-CV, 
    2021 WL 3701365
    , at *4 (Tex. App.—Dallas Aug. 20, 2021, pet. denied)
    (mem. op.) (citing In re Clapp, 
    241 S.W.3d 913
    , 917 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2007, orig.
    proceeding)). Thus, “a party filing a Rule 202 petition does not assert a substantive
    claim or cause of action.” 
    Id.,
     (citing Houston Tennis Ass’n, Inc. v. Thibodeaux, 
    602 S.W.3d 712
    , 718 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2020, no pet.).
    Our sister court has considered whether an intervenor may assert substantive
    claims in a matter commenced through a Rule 202 petition for pre-suit discovery.
    See Rodriguez v. Cantu, 
    581 S.W.3d 859
    , 869 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–
    Edinburg 2019, no pet.). In that case, the trial court denied respondent’s motion to
    strike intervenor’s substantive claims, but the appellate court granted mandamus
    relief, holding that it was “improper[ ] [to] attempt[ ] to use a pending Rule 202
    proceeding to institute substantive claims for relief.” 
    Id.
     The court explained that a
    Rule 202 proceeding “is not a separate independent lawsuit but is instead in aid of
    and incident to” another suit that is yet to be filed. Id. at 868. A Rule 202 proceeding
    “does not place unfiled claims before the trial court for adjudication on the merits.”
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    Instead, a Rule 202 petitioner “simply acquires the right to obtain discovery” and
    “does not seek or contemplate further relief from those third parties.” Id. at 866
    (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Because a Rule 202 proceeding
    “d[oes] not constitute an independent lawsuit,” an intervenor may not raise
    substantive claims within such a proceeding. Id. at 869.
    Likewise, this case involves an ancillary discovery proceeding. It is not an
    independent lawsuit. In terms of whether substantive claims are permissible, we see
    no distinction between proceedings initiated under Rule 201.2 and those initiated
    under Rule 202. Indeed, the nature of an ancillary discovery proceeding is such that
    no claims are before the trial court for adjudication on the merits. To conclude
    otherwise would effectively allow the transfer of litigation first filed in another state
    to Texas when a party seeks discovery enforcement in Texas. Allowing such an
    application defeats rather than serves the purpose of the Rule. See Ex parte Godeke,
    
    355 S.W.2d 701
    , 704 (Tex. 1962) (orig. proceeding) (Rules of Civil Procedure
    construed to promote harmony not discord).
    We are further guided by the language of the Rule itself. The same rules of
    construction that govern the interpretation of statutes govern the interpretation of the
    rules of civil procedure. Norvelle v. PNC Mortg., 
    472 S.W.3d 444
    , 447 (Tex. App.—
    Fort Worth 2015, no pet.). We rely on the plain meaning of the text unless a different
    meaning is supplied by definition, is apparent from the context, or the plain meaning
    would lead to a nonsensical or absurd result. See id.; Lenz v. Bank of Am., N.A., 510
    –10–
    S.W.3d 667, 669 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2016, pet. denied). We presume the
    Texas Supreme Court said what it meant when it promulgated the Rules of Civil
    Procedure. Rule 201.2 makes no reference to substantive claims, but rather, only to
    the execution of an out-of-state discovery request. Had the Supreme Court wished
    to allow the adjudication of substantive claims pending in a first filed foreign case
    within a Rule 201.2 proceeding, it would have so stated in the Rule.
    Because a Rule 201.2 proceeding provides no mechanism for the adjudication
    of substantive claims, we conclude the trial court abused its discretion by refusing
    to strike Shoebacca’s intervention.
    We next consider whether ASICS has an adequate appellate remedy. See
    Prudential, 148 S.W.3d at 135–36. An appellate remedy is “adequate” when any
    benefits to mandamus relief are outweighed by the detriments. Id. at 136.
    Interventions by uninvited participants have the potential to disrupt suits. In
    re Union Carbide Corp., 
    273 S.W.3d 152
    , 156 (Tex. 2008) (orig. proceeding) (per
    curiam). In Union Carbide, the trial court refused to strike an intervention, and the
    court of appeals denied the petition for mandamus. The Texas Supreme Court,
    however, concluded that the intervention was improper and there was no adequate
    remedy by appeal. In so concluding, the court noted that the error allowed the
    intervenors to circumvent the rule for random assignment of cases and select the trial
    court in which to assert their claims. 
    Id. at 157
    .
    –11–
    Weighing the detriments and benefits of mandamus relief, the court found
    significant benefit in granting relief because procedures for the assignment of cases
    are designed to prevent forum shopping, and practices that subvert such procedures
    breed disrespect for and threaten the integrity of the judicial system. 
    Id.
     On the other
    hand, the court found there would be insignificant detriment to either party or the
    judicial system if mandamus relief was granted because the intervenors’ claims had
    also been filed in a separate suit. 
    Id.
    Similarly, Shoebacca’s attempt to assert claims pending in the California Case
    in the underlying proceeding is tantamount to forum shopping. Forum shopping and
    erroneous application of the Rules of Civil Procedure are detrimental to the judicial
    system. Moreover, the erroneous inclusion of substantive claims in the underlying
    proceeding disrupts and unnecessarily complicates the case, particularly when the
    subpoena enforcement has been nonsuited.
    Conversely, there is insignificant detriment, if any, to either party or the
    judicial system if mandamus relief is granted. There is no detriment from proper
    application of Rule 201.2, and Shoebacca can pursue its claims in the pending
    California Case. We therefore conclude that ASICS lacks an adequate remedy by
    appeal and is entitled to mandamus relief.
    CONCLUSION
    We lift the stay imposed by this Court’s November 28, 2022 order. We
    conditionally grant ASICS’ petition for writ of mandamus and direct the trial court
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    to enter a written order within fifteen (15) days of the date of this opinion: (i)
    vacating its September 7, 2022 order denying relator’s motion to strike and (ii)
    striking Shoebacca’s intervention. We are confident the trial court will comply, and
    the writ will issue only if it fails to do so.
    /Dennise Garcia/
    DENNISE GARCIA
    JUSTICE
    220994F.P05
    –13–