In this episode, hosts Todd Smith and Jody Sanders share their list of crowdsourced “pet issues” that appellate courts could address to make practitioners' lives easier. Their goals, Todd explains, are to both identify areas for improvement and also to give them an opportunity to flesh out those topics in later episodes. If you’re a practitioner with thoughts about everything from modernizing the outdated civil docketing statement to standardizing sealed record procedures to adding a cross-appeal rule, chances are that Todd and Jody have thoughts, too. Tune in as they break down issues and suggest possible solutions. “If any judges, rules committee people, anybody ever wants to come on and talk about these, please let us know,” Jody says. “We would love to have other perspectives on it.”
Connect and Learn More
☑️ Todd Smith | LinkedIn | X
☑️ Jody Sanders | LinkedIn | X
☑️ Texas Appellate Law Podcast on LinkedIn | X | Instagram
☑️ Texas Appellate Counsel PLLC
☑️ Kelly Hart & Hallman, LLP | LinkedIn
☑️ Subscribe Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music | YouTube
Produced and Powered by LawPods
Sponsored by Court Surety Bond Agency and Proceed (formerly Counsel Press).
Welcome to the Texas
Appellate Law Podcast,
Speaker:the show that takes you inside the
Texas and federal appellate systems.
Speaker:Through conversations with judges, court
staff, top trial and appellate lawyers,
Speaker:academics and innovators,
Speaker:we provide practical insights to help
you become a more effective advocate.
Speaker:Whether you're handling
appeals or preparing for trial,
Speaker:you'll discover strategies to sharpen
your arguments, innovate your practice,
Speaker:and stay ahead of the latest
developments. And now here are your hosts,
Speaker:Todd Smith and Jody Sanders.
Produced and powered by LawPods.
Speaker:Welcome back to the Texas Appellate
Law Podcast. I'm Todd Smith.
Speaker:And I'm Jody Sanders.
Speaker:So Jody and I are going to visit today
about a topic that we've publicized a
Speaker:little on social media, and that
is, I guess to set the topic up,
Speaker:maybe we should just recount the fact
that we spent a lot of time on this show
Speaker:talking about ways that practitioners
can make the court's lives easier,
Speaker:make it easier for the
judges to do their jobs.
Speaker:And that's a valid topic of discussion
and certainly that's one that our judges
Speaker:like to talk about. And I would
too if I were in their position,
Speaker:but we thought we might flip the question
around and cover some topics that
Speaker:we've come up with and that some of our
listeners have sent in about the things
Speaker:that the courts can do.
Speaker:The courts have the power to influence
or change that could make the appellate
Speaker:practitioner's job easier
or better in some way.
Speaker:And we've each come up with a list.
Speaker:I have a list of probably half a
dozen pet issues or so, and Jody,
Speaker:I know you've got at least
that many or about that many.
Speaker:Not that we have grievances
per se with our court system.
Speaker:It's just things that we've identified
that maybe could make our lives go a
Speaker:little smoother.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:this is not going to be our Festivus
episode where we're airing our grievances.
Speaker:That exact thought and phrase entered
my brain when I first came up with this
Speaker:topic because I was
jokingly wanting to title it
Speaker:things the courts can do to improve the
experience of appellate practitioners or
Speaker:something like that. And I guess that is
sort of the general idea, but we also,
Speaker:like I said, we had some listener
suggestions that were really good,
Speaker:and so we'll cover some of
those too as we have time now,
Speaker:the fact that we've probably got
a list of, gosh, at least 20,
Speaker:maybe it is a little like Festivus, I
think some folks kind of decided, Hey,
Speaker:this is my chance to air it out
because of the size of the list,
Speaker:we're not going to have a lot of
time to spend on any one topic,
Speaker:but I think there's some things
in here that we can mention,
Speaker:make a few comments on,
Speaker:and then if there's any
discussion to be had between us,
Speaker:we'll do that and then we can always
cover any one of these in more detail in a
Speaker:later episode. But I think our
goal here was just to, for one,
Speaker:just identify the areas in which the
court system could be potentially
Speaker:improved for practitioners,
Speaker:and I'll include clients within that
group as well. And then secondly,
Speaker:give us an opportunity if we want to
later to flesh those topics out and spend
Speaker:some more time talking about 'em.
Speaker:So what I'm going to do is I'm going
to kick us off with one of my favorite
Speaker:topics as far as things that could be
done to make the practitioner's life
Speaker:better, and that is to revisit the whole
concept of a civil docketing statement.
Speaker:In civil appeals, if you
practice appellate law in Texas,
Speaker:you know that as the appellant
and sometimes as the appe,
Speaker:the courts require you to
file a docketing statement,
Speaker:which is these days a fillable PDF
form available for download on all the
Speaker:intermediate courts of appeals websites.
I always found it a little odd that you
Speaker:don't have to do one for amend damage,
whereas you do for an ordinary appeal.
Speaker:I remember the days when these statements
were even less modern than they are
Speaker:now that I think all the courts basically
had their own version at one point,
Speaker:and about 10 or 12 years ago,
maybe a little bit longer,
Speaker:there was this effort
to standardize the form,
Speaker:which was a step in the right
direction. But it's still,
Speaker:that much time has gone
by, and as we all know,
Speaker:technology has evolved significantly.
And so just for context,
Speaker:the real purpose that I always understood
of a docketing statement was just as
Speaker:an administrative tool to help the
court make sure that it had all the
Speaker:information that needed about the case.
Speaker:So if you go through the
form that can be downloaded,
Speaker:identifies all the lawyers,
identifies the court reporter,
Speaker:the clerk asks them basic
questions about the case,
Speaker:if you're going to file
an affidavit of indigency,
Speaker:if you're going to supersede the
judgment, if you're going to,
Speaker:or if there was a motion
or action extending the
timetable for appeal and that
Speaker:sort of thing. And that's all fine and
good really because I do understand that
Speaker:courts,
Speaker:I think one of the things that happens
is that the clerks get these and do sort
Speaker:of a jurisdictional check,
Speaker:which ought to happen if the court sees
a problem with jurisdiction that ought
Speaker:to be easily identified.
Speaker:But the form itself in the age of
fillable forms online and the kinds
Speaker:of tools that we have available
software wise, I'll just say it,
Speaker:is horrifically outdated to have to go in.
Speaker:And if it is in fact a fillable PDF,
Speaker:you've got to deal with
formatting problems and what
if the text doesn't fit in
Speaker:the space that you're allowed?
Speaker:And there's a few things like that
that I think could be made easier.
Speaker:I've already mentioned it, but I
think my idea on this is really,
Speaker:this ought to be basically an
online fillable form. It is
Speaker:administered through the
office of court administration.
Speaker:I don't know that any of the justices
on any court or anybody on the Supreme
Speaker:Court ever actually sees it. So
it seems to me that just the form,
Speaker:if you will,
Speaker:of the form is something
that if the courts are going
to continue to require it,
Speaker:it ought to be updated
and pretty substantially.
Speaker:And using some of the tools that are
available now in: Speaker:it was the two thousands,
maybe early: Speaker:early to mid 2010s when this
form was updated the last time,
Speaker:and it seemed like a big step forward
for it to be even a fillable PDF
Speaker:as I remember.
Speaker:Well, and for example,
Speaker:you have to put in the identity of
all counsel upfront for both sides.
Speaker:Then in the end you have to put the
identity of everyone that you serve in a
Speaker:separate part of the form.
Then when you're setting up,
Speaker:if you're the appellant for instance,
Speaker:you have to put in all that information
on the e-filing system to be able to
Speaker:serve them in a new appeal.
Speaker:So that's now three times that you're
effectively putting in the same
Speaker:information, which seems
kind of to your point,
Speaker:couldn't we do it all online somewhere
where you only have to do it once?
Speaker:Exactly, exactly. And we were e-filing
at the time this form was updated,
Speaker:but I mean the e-filing system's
gotten better I think since then.
Speaker:To your point about identifying
the parties that you're serving,
Speaker:the rule has changed a couple of years
ago to remove the need to even serve
Speaker:appellate court documents on parties.
Speaker:And so maybe I'm a little bold,
Speaker:but many times I won't list the names
of the parties that I'm serving.
Speaker:And I'll note in the area where there's
a certificate of service that the
Speaker:certificate of service is no
longer required under the rules.
Speaker:That hasn't got us anywhere so far,
Speaker:but I have not had much blow back
on that if any of all the times
Speaker:I've filled out this form. I mean there
are some legitimate purposes it serves.
Speaker:You would think part of
me wants to say, Hey,
Speaker:can't they get this all from what's in
the trial courts file? A lot of it, yes.
Speaker:And in the age of AI,
Speaker:could you have a bot scrape the trial
courts file for all this information?
Speaker:Not quite all of it, but the court
reporter is that sort of thing.
Speaker:It won't say whether you've made
arrangements with the clerk or the court
Speaker:reporter. You won't know without
a form or something like this,
Speaker:whether there's a bond that's expected
to be filed or extraordinary relief,
Speaker:it's going to be pursued.
Speaker:It does have also the sections for
the courts that participate in this on
Speaker:both the A DR mediation programs
of those courts and also the
Speaker:state bar appellate
section pro bono program.
Speaker:So those are worthwhile bits
of information to gather,
Speaker:but there's nothing about this old
style PDF that wouldn't allow that
Speaker:information to be gathered another way.
Speaker:So I'm just going to make a call for OCA,
Speaker:which I know there's somebody new at the
helm as far as the technology director
Speaker:of OCA.
I'll have to bend that person's ear,
Speaker:but I know in keeping with the
overall theme of this episode,
Speaker:this is something that
getting some direction from
the courts themselves and not
Speaker:just from the administrative
offices, the OCA technology folks,
Speaker:they don't have a dog in the hunt.
Speaker:The people that have a dog
in the hunt are the clerks,
Speaker:the intermediate appellate
courts primarily in the lawyers.
Speaker:And so I would love to see the
courts clerks and lawyers work
Speaker:together to come up with another option
for gathering what needs to be gathered
Speaker:administratively to help the
court process. Its appeals.
Speaker:And so I'm just going to suggest that
that discussion started. Okay, so alright,
Speaker:that's probably the closest to
festive this I'll get. We'll see,
Speaker:but what do you got, Jay?
Speaker:So one of mine has to do with sealed
records and it's not necessarily a
Speaker:criticism of a court or
practitioners, it's more of just a,
Speaker:I don't think people recognize the
impact of sealing documents and what that
Speaker:creates on an appeal.
Speaker:So the Fifth Circuit is
extremely narrow in terms of what
Speaker:they permit to be sealed regardless
of what the district court did,
Speaker:and they require district courts to go
through a pretty thorough analysis in
Speaker:federal courts, state
courts aren't the same.
Speaker:Certainly Rule 76 has specific
procedures that you have to go through,
Speaker:but I think different
courts, different clerks,
Speaker:different court reporters all handle
sealed evidence and camera evidence
Speaker:differently.
Speaker:So when you're coming to actually
preparing the record that creates issues,
Speaker:then getting it to the court of appeals,
Speaker:then being able to access it as the
party trying to access the right,
Speaker:there's not really any standardization
and it just makes it more difficult I
Speaker:think for everybody on each
side, practitioners, courts,
Speaker:the people preparing the records. And
so I don't know if there's a way to sort
Speaker:of streamline that process.
Speaker:And then also this is just sort
of a caution for attorneys.
Speaker:Certainly there are things
that need to be sealed,
Speaker:there's no question about
that, but think carefully.
Speaker:If you have a case that you think is going
to go up on appeal about how and what
Speaker:you seal, are you sealing an entire
motion? Are you sealing pages?
Speaker:Are you sealing exhibits? Are
you just going line by line?
Speaker:There's reasons to do
each of those things,
Speaker:but think carefully is all I'm going
to say because it really does create
Speaker:headaches for every participant in
the system when you start doing it.
Speaker:I want to say that the Supreme Court
Advisory Committee is looking at
Speaker:trying to update Rule 76 A.
Speaker:I don't know exactly what the scope of
that is and based on our conversation
Speaker:with Rich Phillips,
Speaker:I suppose I should say the Supreme Court
is looking at that and has asked Scac
Speaker:to study it.
Speaker:But that's a great point and certainly
would hope that that's part of what SC is
Speaker:looking at in making any recommendations
on changing 76 A because you do have
Speaker:the issue sometimes if somebody gets a
little overaggressive on what they think
Speaker:should be sealed and we definitely need
the procedures have to do what they're
Speaker:supposed to do, which is
to protect confidentiality,
Speaker:but there's a balance in there somewhere
and we don't want them to be more than
Speaker:wieldy than they need to be.
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:Okay, that's a good point.
Speaker:I'm going to resume a little bit of a
gripe about some things that I've seen
Speaker:that the Supreme Court
of Texas in recent times,
Speaker:I was super proud of our Supreme
Court when it became a pioneer in
Speaker:broadcasting oral arguments
live the YouTube channel.
Speaker:I was very proud of the court,
I was proud of St. Mary's,
Speaker:my law school for helping the court get
that started and for many years that was
Speaker:a great partnership between St.
Speaker:Mary's and the Supreme Court and
that's continued. Thankfully.
Speaker:I think that's one of the things that
really does make our lives better is I can
Speaker:sit here in my office and watch if
there's a case I'm interested in the oral
Speaker:argument in real time on my
computer and they're available
Speaker:24 7. I can go back and look at other
arguments and I think just think that's a
Speaker:tremendous benefit to lawyers and the
public just in being in favor of as much
Speaker:transparency is reasonable for the court
because we've talked about on the show
Speaker:before for the public to have
confidence in our courts,
Speaker:transparency is one of the biggest tools
that the courts can use to help move
Speaker:that along. And so not too long ago when
we were talking about the changes to
Speaker:the petition for review system,
Speaker:I went on a little rant about the
internal operating procedures paper no
Speaker:longer being posted on
the court's website.
Speaker:I still think that or an equivalent ought
to be there just for kind of the same
Speaker:reason that you don't want to be perceived
as hiding the ball and that's not
Speaker:what I think is happening
with the court specifically,
Speaker:but if you're going to
have a paper like that,
Speaker:and admittedly it needs to be updated
in light of the changes to the petition
Speaker:process. And as I've also acknowledged,
Speaker:the court did add some procedural notes
on the end of the order approving the
Speaker:rule change that I think
are helpful, but boy,
Speaker:what a tool that I paper was way
back in the day before January one
Speaker:or when it was still posted on the
court's website because you could look at
Speaker:that paper and kind of
figure out, all right,
Speaker:when should I start looking for a
ruling on my petition for review based
Speaker:on the way they explained the votes
and how that all fits in the court's
Speaker:conference schedule. You can look at the
court's conference calendar online and
Speaker:say, okay, my petition's been there
for X number of days or however long,
Speaker:and you could kind of make a guesstimate
as to when you might really start
Speaker:watching the orders closely. And I'm sure
all those rules are largely the same,
Speaker:but we've heard that there's going to be
faster decisions made on petitions for
Speaker:review now under the new rule.
Speaker:And so it would be really nice if there
was one unified document that included
Speaker:all the voting information,
Speaker:the number of votes to take
certain actions of the court.
Speaker:I think we can go and find that,
Speaker:but having it all in one place
that's a click away is just super
Speaker:helpful.
Speaker:But that's really not what I wanted
to mention today specifically.
Speaker:I will still call for the paper to
be updated and added to the website,
Speaker:but what I wanted to mention today that's
in keeping with the two things that I
Speaker:mentioned earlier is the Supreme
Court's former practice of in
Speaker:advance of oral argument, like
the week of oral argument,
Speaker:sending out emails with a list of the
cases being argued, case summaries,
Speaker:who the lawyers were and
links to the docket. Yes,
Speaker:that's all public information that can
be obtained from looking at the court's
Speaker:website, but that was again,
Speaker:one of the things that I thought
was just a tremendous tool.
Speaker:I relied on that email just
like the Friday orders email,
Speaker:even though I know orders
come out every Friday,
Speaker:that Friday orders email would tell me,
Hey, I need to go look at these orders.
Speaker:This was the same.
Speaker:I mean if I was tracking a specific
case and already knew about it,
Speaker:I could get that information
and know when the argument was,
Speaker:but if maybe there was one that got
past me and I wanted to check out that
Speaker:case,
Speaker:check out the argument or it's one that
I just didn't know about and wasn't
Speaker:tracking the issue in a specific case,
Speaker:but it affects one of my other cases
and it just hadn't come to my attention
Speaker:yet. That was a tool that I thought
was just extremely helpful. Now,
Speaker:I'll give Adam Schneiderman credit
because I think Adam and I have had some
Speaker:online conversations about this and
he writes his Substack page 14th and
Speaker:Colorado, I believe is what it's called.
Speaker:I think Adam has tried to
pick up the ball on this some,
Speaker:and I don't mean to say to him
that he shouldn't keep doing that,
Speaker:but really when it came
straight from the court,
Speaker:it was just a tremendous resource that
I would really encourage the court to
Speaker:start doing again,
Speaker:just again for purposes of
maintaining as much transparency as
Speaker:possible and really being very,
Speaker:in other ways customer service oriented
for lack of a better term. I mean,
Speaker:we know as practitioners that the
court's not there to serve us.
Speaker:I mean the court's there to do its job,
Speaker:but they're just little things like
that that I think really can make a
Speaker:difference in not only how we as
practitioners perceive the court,
Speaker:but how the public perceives it.
Speaker:And you could forward that email
to your client and say, Hey,
Speaker:this case in the Supreme
Court that we're tracking,
Speaker:here's the update on it
prepared by the court.
Speaker:Check out this information
and let's talk about it.
Speaker:That was just a tremendous service that
the court was providing and I would sure
Speaker:like to see it come back.
Speaker:So my next one also has
to do with records and
Speaker:it's that every court clerk and court
reporter kind of has their own schedule of
Speaker:fees that they charge for clerk's
records, reporters records,
Speaker:and that's sometimes across counties
and there just is no standardized cost,
Speaker:and I recognize that's a big ask and
probably requires a legislative fix,
Speaker:but from an access to justice perspective
and just an ability to estimate
Speaker:perspective to try and help clients,
Speaker:it would be good to have some kind of
standardized cost structure. I mean,
Speaker:I recognize obviously the size of the
record is going to impact the cost,
Speaker:but when you don't even know what the
per page charge or the preparation of the
Speaker:reporter's record charges are
going to be, I don't know.
Speaker:It would just be nice if there was
some way to kind of come up with that
Speaker:standardized formula to be able to
predict going forward what it would be.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:I remember the days of the clerk would
give you an estimate of clerk's record
Speaker:was going to cost and before e-filing,
Speaker:those numbers were really big seemingly
because somebody actually had to
Speaker:physically go and copy the page
and create a paper stack that was
Speaker:actually filed in the court of appeals
and bound together with candle wax seal
Speaker:and the.
Speaker:Ribbon and gold stickers, which
couldn't be cheap. Obviously.
Speaker:It made it difficult to get a copy unless
you wanted to pay for a full fledged
Speaker:copy. Well.
Speaker:It did. You had to go check
it out and bring it back.
Speaker:That's right. And don't
break the seal by the way.
Speaker:That's also right. You can't
take it apart to copy it.
Speaker:So those days are over and have been,
Speaker:I've been pleased that I think the cost
of getting clerk's records in my cases
Speaker:I've found have never been,
at least in recent times,
Speaker:have not been quite as shocking
as they were in the beginning,
Speaker:which was they were just as expensive as
they were when they were getting paper
Speaker:files. The court reporter
stuff depends on the case,
Speaker:but I've seen court
reporters records that,
Speaker:I won't say that they rivaled
the attorney's fees in an appeal,
Speaker:but sometimes they were in the same
universe for appellate attorney's fees.
Speaker:And so trying to get that across to a
client that just getting the record is
Speaker:going to cost sometimes tens
of thousands of dollars is
Speaker:difficult and yeah, I'm with you. I mean,
Speaker:some kind of standardization
would be nice.
Speaker:I also am aware that court reporters
specifically have a very strong lobby in
Speaker:our state and it's difficult If it were
going to be some kind of broad change
Speaker:on this, it would be difficult to achieve.
Speaker:But that's another one of
those industries where,
Speaker:or professions where just like
law generative AI you would
Speaker:think would pressure the
cost downward on that.
Speaker:I hope nobody wants to egg my truck
after I say that out loud on the podcast,
Speaker:but it's just, again, that's Todd Smith.
Speaker:He's in Austin.
Speaker:Texas. Again,
Speaker:there are a lot of factors that go
into appeals being so expensive.
Speaker:That's the one,
Speaker:and that's generally the
first one that an appellant
Speaker:sees in a case.
Speaker:And so it's good to flag it good for be
good to raise it for further discussion,
Speaker:not something you or I could solve
here today. It's out of our hands,
Speaker:but just something to be mindful of.
Speaker:That's right.
Speaker:Another one I came up with is this
is I suppose relatively minor,
Speaker:but our Supreme Court has been so
active in changing rules lately.
Speaker:I just want to throw
this out for discussion,
Speaker:and that is we don't have a cross appeal
rule in our state, in the state rules.
Speaker:And I first came across this
issue probably 15 years ago,
Speaker:and I had a case where there was going
to be a cross appeal and I was like,
Speaker:why do I have to file three
briefs or I've got to file
Speaker:as the appellant, I've got to file
my appellant's brief and reply brief,
Speaker:and as the appe, I've got
to file the appe brief.
Speaker:I do just two and combine those together.
Speaker:And we don't have a rule that
specifically allows that.
Speaker:Now there are local rules.
Speaker:I know I happen to know that El Paso
has one doing more work in El Paso these
Speaker:days and happened to be working on cross
appeal. And it reminded me, oh yeah,
Speaker:would it be good if our rules of appellate
procedure just made this uniform?
Speaker:And there are actually
more than one court,
Speaker:intermediate court that
has a local rule on this.
Speaker:Typically what they do is they factor in
the word count from all the briefs that
Speaker:would otherwise have to be filed,
Speaker:basically handling two
parallel concurrent appeals.
Speaker:And so you've got to meet
all these deadlines and it's
like having two separate
Speaker:appeals, literally what
the local rules tend to do.
Speaker:And I was able to handle this by motion,
and this was not my original idea,
Speaker:so I can't take credit for it,
Speaker:but I was able to essentially adopt the
structure that the cross appeal rules
Speaker:that exist in our court of appeals local
rules to where essentially the appe
Speaker:brief would be a combined
appe cross appellate's brief,
Speaker:and then everybody gets one reply. And
so you would take the overall number of
Speaker:briefs filed in a cross appeal
case down from six to four,
Speaker:and you might have the same
substantive arguments either way,
Speaker:but just the act of having to prepare
the other document and brief it
Speaker:separately on a separate timetable is
inevitably going to cost the client more
Speaker:money. I thought, well,
Speaker:this is a good time to throw this out
there that I would love for the Supreme
Speaker:Court to ask sc, I
think this has happened.
Speaker:Maybe I need to go back and
look at the Stack Archives,
Speaker:but to at least revisit
the idea that, hey,
Speaker:we're trying to clean some
things up in our rules.
Speaker:Let's make it uniform about cross appeals.
Speaker:I think the court could essentially look
to those cross appeal local rules as
Speaker:the model and adopt something that would
make a whole lot of sense and make it
Speaker:really easy for the parties. Because
if you don't have a local rule,
Speaker:then you are put in a position of having
to try and agree with opposing counsel
Speaker:on a motion to adjust the briefing
deadline and the content of briefs to
Speaker:accommodate this.
Speaker:I've had success with courts that
didn't have local rules granting those
Speaker:motions, and so it works out.
Speaker:But maybe even if we could just remove
that step and just make it again,
Speaker:we're sort of talking about in this
episode making things uniform across the
Speaker:practice in Texas, that would be good.
Speaker:This is another one that again, is not
necessarily a specific court issue,
Speaker:I think probably requires
a legislative fix,
Speaker:but Texas should consider allowing
the recovery of supersedeas bond
Speaker:premiums as a court cost in the
federal system. That is a possibility.
Speaker:In Texas it isn't,
Speaker:and I think it could really
eliminate or minimize a
Speaker:lot of the satellite litigation that
goes over securing a judgment. I mean,
Speaker:understandably, you get a
big judgment against someone,
Speaker:you have some leverage over them for
settlement purposes if they're going to
Speaker:have to pay for the cost of a bond or
they're going to have to fight about net
Speaker:worth, and I completely understand that.
Speaker:But the flip side of that is if you go
and you get the judgment reversed or the
Speaker:judgment reversed and rendered or
whatever it is two years down the road,
Speaker:it is not outside the realm of possibility
that your client has paid tens or
Speaker:even hundreds of thousands of dollars
in supersedeas bond premiums to secure a
Speaker:judgment that never should have been
entered in the first place. And there's no
Speaker:remedy for that. They're
just out. And I don't know,
Speaker:I think having it as a potentially
recoverable court cost solves some of that
Speaker:problem because it incentivizes both
parties to work out those issues.
Speaker:Maybe there's a way to secure
the judgment alternatively,
Speaker:maybe there's just a
security by agreement,
Speaker:but I think it cuts out those attorney's
fees, it cuts out costs potentially,
Speaker:and it gives the court of appeals even
some discretion on how to do that,
Speaker:I think because they can tax costs how
they want to tax costs on that kind of
Speaker:stuff.
Speaker:But I think that that's worth considering
and at least leave it as something
Speaker:that's within the court's discretion to
award as a cost and maybe not in every
Speaker:case,
Speaker:but I think that putting that component
in is one thing that's missing right now
Speaker:that could solve a bunch of problems or
at least help streamline the process.
Speaker:Yeah, that's a great point.
Speaker:Well, as you're talking,
Speaker:you've got me thinking maybe there's
even a process that's sort of similar to
Speaker:what we do in trial courts with
discovery. You've got a level one,
Speaker:a level two or a level three case in
terms of scheduling the briefing and maybe
Speaker:it makes sense that, okay,
this is a level one case.
Speaker:This is a one issue summary judgment
appeal from a discreet record,
Speaker:it's due within 30 days, 45
days. This is a level two,
Speaker:it's a little bit more complicated,
Speaker:so it's going to be the initial 60
day deadline. Level three is, oh,
Speaker:this is a cross appeal. Hey,
we've got multiple briefs.
Speaker:We really just need to enter into an
agreed briefing schedule. Let's do that.
Speaker:I don't know, maybe there's a process to
have something like that at the outset,
Speaker:which kind of goes with what Justice
Gunn was talking about a few weeks ago.
Speaker:Maybe that's the status conference.
Speaker:Maybe that's when you have a
status conference with the court,
Speaker:the record gets filed,
Speaker:you get a status conference set
within a couple of weeks or a month.
Speaker:All the parties come in, you talk to the
court about here's what this is about,
Speaker:here's what the record is,
Speaker:here's what we think some of the general
buckets of issues are going to be.
Speaker:Here's what we think we need to do to be
able to brief it and get it submitted.
Speaker:I don't know, maybe that's
how that all fits together.
Speaker:I like that. And no, that
was an intriguing idea that
Justice Gunn threw out,
Speaker:and I think as I said,
when he did, I was like,
Speaker:this is something that
ought to be studied.
Speaker:It also makes me think your comment
just now also made me think of the Fifth
Speaker:Circuit mediation program when
your clock's not even ticking
Speaker:yet.
Speaker:The court has screened the case ideally
with very useful information gathered
Speaker:through a new docketing
statement that's fillable online,
Speaker:imagine.
Speaker:And now do they create a mediation
staff attorney like the Fifth Circuit
Speaker:has the whole office? I think maybe,
Speaker:but if you really want to facilitate
resolution of cases on appeal, I mean,
Speaker:I think there are plenty of cases
that settle through that program.
Speaker:And so rather even before the parties
even commit the time and expense it takes
Speaker:to brief a case,
Speaker:they know what the issues are usually in
a case and they know more or less what
Speaker:the risks are, at least as they exist
coming out of the trial court. Now,
Speaker:the appellate lawyer should be adding
value to that and either increasing or
Speaker:decreasing the risk of there being
a different outcome on appeal.
Speaker:But I do think that overall thing,
Speaker:the overall scheme that we just
went through has appeal to it,
Speaker:no pun intended.
Speaker:No, we need to intend that pun. Sorry.
Speaker:No, yeah, we can't help ourselves.
But no, seriously, think about it.
Speaker:I mean you get better information
upfront through the docketing statement.
Speaker:You get parties can agree maybe
on whether it's a level one,
Speaker:two or three equivalent,
Speaker:and maybe that does change the initial
briefing deadline and you get potentially
Speaker:the input of a staff attorney.
Speaker:And the trick would be do they handle
this court by court or how does that work?
Speaker:Because your three judge courts are going
to have fewer resources than say the
Speaker:Dallas or the Houston courts of appeals.
Speaker:But it's something I think
worth exploring. I mean,
Speaker:we just spend a lot of time thinking
about extensions and how to manage our
Speaker:workload,
Speaker:and this would be something that I think
would be a big benefit overall if it
Speaker:could all pieced together into a way
that really takes into account the case
Speaker:itself and not just
treats all cases the same,
Speaker:all non-accelerated
appeals, I suppose the same.
Speaker:Right. Well,
Speaker:and maybe there's a whole different set
of rules for accelerated appeals and
Speaker:that makes sense. I don't know.
Speaker:There's a solution in there that somebody
probably smarter than us can figure
Speaker:out,
Speaker:but there is room for improvement across
the board on that because all appeals
Speaker:aren't created equally.
Speaker:But right now our rules kind
of treat 'em as if they are.
Speaker:Yeah, good point.
Speaker:This is an issue that is difficult,
but a lot of times in cases,
Speaker:sometimes in the trial court,
sometimes at the appellate briefing,
Speaker:sometimes in both places,
Speaker:there's bad behavior by
counsel that just sort of gets,
Speaker:I don't think it's unnoticed,
but it gets unaddressed.
Speaker:And I'm not saying sanctionable,
Speaker:but I wish courts were a little bit
more open to call out some of that bad
Speaker:behavior in their opinions because when
it goes on and you get your court of
Speaker:appeals opinion and it doesn't really
mention any of that, I understand it,
Speaker:but it is helpful sometimes when you get
the opinion that takes just a minute to
Speaker:kind of say, look, this was in the brief.
Speaker:This shouldn't have happened
or this happened here.
Speaker:This shouldn't have happened
because it discourages it.
Speaker:And I think broad generalization,
Speaker:sometimes it comes up when you have
trial lawyers playing in the appellate
Speaker:courts doing the appellate role,
Speaker:maybe not understanding the
standards of appellate conduct.
Speaker:You get different tone,
Speaker:you get different ways of handling
things that maybe don't fit.
Speaker:And I wish courts were a little bit more
open to gently admonishing that just
Speaker:so that it would serve
as an example. I think.
Speaker:Yeah, I agree. I've seen it
happen the other way though too.
Speaker:I've seen unwarranted
criticism in some opinions.
Speaker:And I think that's the difficulty
is where do you draw the line? But.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:there are times that I wonder if when
I'm reading appellate opinions when the
Speaker:last time was that the authoring
justice represented a real client
Speaker:in a real case.
Speaker:And so that has to be factored
into because I think what
tends to happen is you
Speaker:get into the ivory tower of
being an appellate justice
and you have your one job
Speaker:and it's easy. You kind of get detached,
Speaker:I think from being down here in the
ditch with the rest of us trying to
Speaker:represent clients and do
the best by the clients.
Speaker:But I'm totally with you on there's
conduct that just shouldn't be happening.
Speaker:And yes, trial judges, you do it too.
Speaker:I wouldn't say that's
a frequent occurrence,
Speaker:but if a court is just to
follow a rule, for example,
Speaker:I think that's okay to call it out because
the client from our side of things,
Speaker:the client is entitled to rely on the
court applying the law faithfully.
Speaker:So that's perfectly fine.
Speaker:And then when a lawyer is doing things
that are just outright improper,
Speaker:I've got an appeal going right now
where my trial counsel is after me
Speaker:essentially to try to get the trial
lawyer from doing something in this case,
Speaker:supplementing the record with things
that weren't before the trial judge
Speaker:and thinking that there has
to be a remedy for that.
Speaker:And of course I don't want
give any more detail than that,
Speaker:but if there was a remedy for it
besides say moving to strike the
Speaker:improper supplement,
Speaker:if the court would say something
other than just a generic,
Speaker:we're not going to consider
that on appeal and that's fine,
Speaker:but I think a bit of a bench
slap occasionally is not a
Speaker:bad thing if somebody's acting out bounds.
Speaker:Well, that's right,
Speaker:and I think about the series of AI cases
that have made their way across social
Speaker:media about parties with hallucinated
cases and briefs and stuff.
Speaker:I think courts have done a good job of
explaining how those cases come about,
Speaker:what happens. I think they've done a,
Speaker:and I just wish that happened more in
some more standard kind of civil appeals
Speaker:and trial court things in state court
because I just don't think that that gets
Speaker:done enough. And I'm not
necessarily talking about AI,
Speaker:and I'm also not talking about just
someone has a bad day and makes an off the
Speaker:cuff remark that they shouldn't have or
a judge yells at parties when they're
Speaker:frustrated.
Speaker:It's more there's conduct that clearly
goes over the line of acceptable
Speaker:standards that just kind of gets ignored.
Speaker:This kind of dovetails with the idea
that appellate courts just really don't
Speaker:like sanctions. And so this
gives the court, I think,
Speaker:an option to do something in
air quotes without resorting to
Speaker:sanctions.
Speaker:Although I tend to think that appellate
sanctions are underutilized because I
Speaker:think there are times when there's
just nothing short of the sanction.
Speaker:We'll deal with a certain
behavior. It's the bad stuff.
Speaker:It's not just you didn't cite a case
in your brief or something like that.
Speaker:Things that just where there really
isn't any question that certain conduct
Speaker:ought to draw sanctions,
Speaker:and I'd like to see the courts exercise
their authority to sanction lawyers
Speaker:inappropriate cases. Should
it still be rare? Yes.
Speaker:But if it never happens,
then where's the deterrent?
Speaker:So to that point of
deterrence, okay, well,
Speaker:I've got one or two more and we have still
have a few on the listener suggestion
Speaker:list aside from what you have,
Speaker:but one of the things that I've noticed
really over the last year or more than
Speaker:anything is that it used to be
really easy to go and subscribe
Speaker:to the regular orders list from
intermediate courts of appeals.
Speaker:This is one of the things that the Supreme
Court I've already hinted at this is
Speaker:really great about, you can get
on the email subscription list.
Speaker:I think Sly McCarthy way back
when started it and then when he
Speaker:left, they turned it over or turned
it into a constant contact list.
Speaker:I believe that you can
literally opt into that simply.
Speaker:And so that I think is really, again,
Speaker:one of the things I think the court
really does is making it easy.
Speaker:If you want to get a weekly email
with all the orders and opinions,
Speaker:you just opt in. You do anything
else online, you sign up.
Speaker:There was through the courts of
Appeals official websites at one
Speaker:point a way to do that for orders and
opinions on a court by court basis.
Speaker:And as far as I can tell,
Speaker:that's been broken for a couple of years
and I hope somebody will tell me I'm
Speaker:wrong and I'm just not doing it right.
Speaker:But I remember the last time I
looked at this issue thinking,
Speaker:I really want to get subscribed to
say the third quarter of appeals.
Speaker:I won't give the 15th quarter as an
example. I don't think I tried that,
Speaker:but you get the 15th.
Speaker:I get theirs actually.
Speaker:Yeah, and that's good. I need
to subscribe to that list.
Speaker:But if you're practicing in say, Eastland,
Speaker:and you want to know what the Eastland
court's doing week in and week out,
Speaker:you would think it used to be that
you could get that court's orders and
Speaker:opinions as they came out in real
time in an email rather than, I mean,
Speaker:I guess you could make the argument, well,
Speaker:if you really care about it that much,
just go look at the court's website. Yes,
Speaker:you can get 'em that way, but I'm sorry,
Speaker:it requires me to click a few times
and this ought to be something either I
Speaker:could set an AI agent on my browser
to go and get 'em for me. Yeah,
Speaker:I could probably do that. But again,
in the interest of transparency,
Speaker:make it easy for people to know what
the court's doing, and this might be,
Speaker:I haven't asked anybody at OCA about this
recently. It might be something for me
Speaker:to take up with a new
technology director at OCA,
Speaker:so I will make a point to do that,
Speaker:but if there's anyone listening who has
input on this or has a different take on
Speaker:it, let me know because do I want to
get every order from every court? No,
Speaker:I don't. That would be pretty
overwhelming. Select courts, okay,
Speaker:Jody says the 15th is working,
Speaker:but the third or the Houston courts or
the other courts that I'm in more and
Speaker:more often,
Speaker:that was an extremely convenient thing
when those just arrived in my inbox and I
Speaker:would sure like to see those come
back. The business court, as we know,
Speaker:is making its opinions available
online, but as far as I know,
Speaker:those are not available through
an email subscription either.
Speaker:And so I'll add the business court to
the list of courts that we'd like to see.
Speaker:I mean, they're essentially,
Speaker:that court is treated as if it was an
appellate court just by virtue of its
Speaker:writing opinions.
Speaker:There's lots of things that
are made available publicly
that would be one that I
Speaker:think would be significant to
include in that list as well.
Speaker:And they do a good job on their website
of putting up each case that comes out.
Speaker:They have a public domain
citation format and a summary,
Speaker:and I think that's really helpful.
Speaker:And I know they have different
resources than some other courts do,
Speaker:but it's very user-friendly,
which I appreciate.
Speaker:True. Yeah, that's been my experience too.
Speaker:That's a court things are really starting
to heat up in that court right now.
Speaker:I'm starting to try cases, and
so it's just going to continue.
Speaker:If we could get notified of the orders
and opinions that come out from that
Speaker:court too,
Speaker:that would be tremendous for those of
us that are in that court from time to
Speaker:time.
Speaker:I'm going to lump
together a couple of them.
Speaker:One of 'em is one of mine and another
one is from our listener that I also had
Speaker:on my list,
Speaker:and it's the idea of issue
grants and telling us the issue.
Speaker:So one of them for the
Supreme Court of Texas,
Speaker:I wish that sometimes they would take
cases up only on specific issues. I know,
Speaker:and I've talked to the justices why they
don't necessarily want to do that right
Speaker:now because they feel like they need the
full briefing to be able to know what
Speaker:some of the issues are.
Speaker:I just wonder if as the process changes
and we've got this new petition for
Speaker:review, no more briefed issues if
they're going to start doing that,
Speaker:I think it would be helpful
because a lot of times,
Speaker:especially if maybe both
parties are cross petitioning,
Speaker:there's a lot of briefing that has to
be done for stuff that the court's not
Speaker:really interested in.
So that's kind of thought one.
Speaker:The other one is more
generally for appellate courts,
Speaker:I wish that they would depend
on, in every case maybe,
Speaker:but in some cases at least kind of
send out in advance of oral argument,
Speaker:here's the topics we'd
really like you to discuss.
Speaker:Because in a standard civil appeal
that's got three or four issues and a two
Speaker:week jury trial, and there's a lot of
things to prepare for oral argument,
Speaker:and obviously I want to be able to
prepare and talk about whatever,
Speaker:but if there's two or three things that
the court really wants to know about,
Speaker:I would love to know that so that I can
tailor my time to talk about what they
Speaker:want to talk about.
Speaker:I think it's just in everyone's benefit
to the extent that that's possible.
Speaker:One thing I wanted to bring up
that I think is interesting,
Speaker:the first court of appeals I noticed has
started doing a pilot program. It's not
Speaker:exactly what we're talking about,
Speaker:but in some of their most
recent oral argument notices,
Speaker:they haven't paragraph in there about
a pilot program that says each side's
Speaker:going to be allowed to open with
two minutes of uninterrupted time.
Speaker:Counsel may use the full two minutes
or only part of it or none of it.
Speaker:The purpose is to allow counsel a
chance to prepare an elevator pitch that
Speaker:highlights whatever points counsel deems
worthy of attention and rebuttal will
Speaker:not have any guarantee
of uninterrupted time.
Speaker:I don't know if any Texas
appellate court that's done that.
Speaker:I think the Fifth Circuit does that with
on bog arguments just given the number
Speaker:of justices or judges that are
going to be asking questions.
Speaker:But I kind of like that knowing that
you've got a two minute introduction to
Speaker:kind of orient the court and get 'em on
what you think they need to be talking
Speaker:about. So I think that or that paired
with oral argument kind of topics,
Speaker:boy,
Speaker:that'd be great for everybody because
we could just get in and in 20 minutes
Speaker:have the conversation that
the court wants to have,
Speaker:which we're going to end up doing anyway.
Speaker:But if everybody knows what
that is and is really prepared,
Speaker:you can get into some
great oral arguments.
Speaker:I like that the court wouldn't
be telling the advocates,
Speaker:these are the only things
we're going to talk about.
Speaker:So to the point about issue grants,
Speaker:maybe issue grants are harder to do
now that the rules have changed and the
Speaker:Supreme Court is granting
without full briefs,
Speaker:but it's sort of almost like
a compromise on issue grants.
Speaker:If the court will, when it's
granting and when, well really,
Speaker:when it's setting the
cases for oral argument,
Speaker:letting you know that the principal
issues or issues that counsel should be
Speaker:prepared to argue on, I think
that enhances the oral argument.
Speaker:You hear the story so often that, well,
Speaker:oral argument's not really necessary
in most cases. That may be true,
Speaker:but there's always some issue that could
stand to be a little more fleshed out
Speaker:in a two week jury trial case to have
the lawyers know upfront what are the
Speaker:one or two things that the court
is primarily interested in,
Speaker:not exclusively, but primarily.
Speaker:I think that would really help
make oral argument better. Agreed.
Speaker:And the idea of the
soliloquy is interesting too.
Speaker:I'm not sure I'd know what to do
for two minutes at the lectern.
Speaker:We don't have to have all of
it, but I do kind of like that.
Speaker:It's that kind of strange line between,
Speaker:I definitely don't want to have an oral
argument where I'm the only one that's
Speaker:going to talk to the panel for 20 minutes.
That's no fun. That's just a speech.
Speaker:But it's also hard when
you are 10 seconds in,
Speaker:you said your name and the questions
just start coming to, I don't know.
Speaker:It's kind of nice to
know, okay, I can do this.
Speaker:I can kind of stick my
one minute introduction in
there of here's the things I
Speaker:want to cover and talk about and give
'em a broad overview and then let's go
Speaker:where the court wants to go.
I think that's interesting.
Speaker:I'll be curious to see how that works
in Houston and whether some other courts
Speaker:start to follow that approach.
Speaker:Yeah, for sure. You said
that was in the 14th.
Speaker:First.
Speaker:On the first. Okay. I just filed a brief
on the 14th requesting oral argument,
Speaker:so I guess that won't impact me yet.
We've got more coming on the first,
Speaker:so we'll see.
Speaker:Well,
Speaker:I've got a couple I think quick ones from
the listener's suggestions that again
Speaker:tie into the theme of transparency.
Speaker:One that was suggested that maybe the
courts of appeals could put out case
Speaker:summaries like what the Supreme Court
does. I like that idea of course,
Speaker:and maybe you tie it to the orders
list that we were just talking about.
Speaker:Again, I think the issue
there is well, okay,
Speaker:with what resource for the
court's going to perform this?
Speaker:Do you want to rely on AI to
draft your summaries and check?
Speaker:I've had no comment, I guess, but.
Speaker:Maybe as the starting point,
Speaker:but I think you got to have somebody read
it if the court's going to put it out.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:I mean what the Supreme Court does
is those oral arguments or those
Speaker:case summaries rather,
Speaker:or the starting point to the paper
that the court does keep updated and
Speaker:somebody a justice presents at
basically every appellate CLE,
Speaker:the Supreme Court updates.
Speaker:So you do this little bit of work and
these summaries and it applies and is
Speaker:plugged into this bigger body of
work that I think is very beneficial.
Speaker:You could read that paper exactly what's
happened in the Supreme Court for that
Speaker:particular term.
Speaker:I think the local appellate bars might
help facilitate something like the case
Speaker:summary.
Speaker:I don't know if there's the kind of demand
for that in those intermediate courts
Speaker:of appeals, probably on the urban courts,
but maybe not for the rural courts.
Speaker:But still, it would be nice
if you could subscribe,
Speaker:get the emails of the opinions and orders,
Speaker:and then have a paragraph on each opinion
what it's about and what the outcome
Speaker:was.
That would be, I think, a big benefit.
Speaker:And kind of a semi-related
point again about,
Speaker:I'm just going to keep beating
the drum on transparency.
Speaker:We have some intermediate courts of
appeals including the 15th that comes to
Speaker:mind right away, that also make their
oral arguments available through YouTube.
Speaker:I think there may be more that do
that. And so somebody suggested, well,
Speaker:it'd be nice to have consistency in
having oral arguments available online
Speaker:across the intermediate courts.
Speaker:I think you again run into
resource problems with that.
Speaker:There's not going to be
cameras in every courtroom.
Speaker:It would seem you could
make audio available,
Speaker:very reasonable cost if any cost.
Speaker:So that might be the best
you can do in some courts,
Speaker:at least for the time being. But
I think it's worth mentioning,
Speaker:it would be nice if you had a case,
Speaker:and I'll just pick on
Eastland a little bit more.
Speaker:If you had a case in Eastland that's on
point with yours to be able to go and
Speaker:view the oral argument in that case and
track it would be big and help you do a
Speaker:better job for your clients. I think
we've got a few more on the list.
Speaker:We might be able to
squeeze 'em all in. Jody,
Speaker:if you want to tackle another topic.
Speaker:Sure. Well, I'll tack
onto the transparency one,
Speaker:someone suggested the courts of appeals
start doing like a Domino's Pizza
Speaker:tracker on their website, which I
mean, I don't know how feasible it is,
Speaker:but I kind of love that. But I do, I mean,
Speaker:it's a great suggestion
just because it's fun,
Speaker:but I think that is something
that attorneys and in
particular clients struggle
Speaker:with. And I don't know
what the solution is,
Speaker:but I know talking to
court of appeals justices,
Speaker:they've got criminal
cases that take priority.
Speaker:They've got parental termination
cases that take priority.
Speaker:They've got all sorts of accelerated
interlocutory appeals that take priority.
Speaker:And from an outside perspective, we don't
really know where we fall in the mix.
Speaker:And I think that that's hard because when
you tell the client has oral argument
Speaker:and they say, okay, when do we expect
an opinion? And the answer is, well,
Speaker:it could be a couple of weeks, could be
a few months. And we just don't know.
Speaker:I mean, that is a hard answer to give,
Speaker:and I don't know if there's a way to
have more transparency or what that looks
Speaker:like, but I guess all I can
say is I wish there were.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:I think we had more than one person in
response to the LinkedIn posts make that
Speaker:basic suggestion. A few with, I
wouldn't say colorful language,
Speaker:but maybe descriptive language of
dealing with the black box that
Speaker:is the court of appeals, I
think is how that was described.
Speaker:And we don't want to single
out the courts of appeals.
Speaker:The Supreme Court can
kind of be that way too,
Speaker:although it's less so since they've
been cranking out opinions in all their
Speaker:granted cases every year for a
number of years in a row now.
Speaker:Oh, very much.
Speaker:But yeah, it is really hard to advise a
client when the best you can do is say,
Speaker:well, we just really have no to
know how long it's going to take.
Speaker:My concern with that has
always been undermining.
Speaker:No one's doing it intentionally,
Speaker:but the indirect effect of
that lack of transparency is
Speaker:to undermine the client's confidence
in the appellate lawyer because
Speaker:you're supposed to know, and
we have sources we can turn to.
Speaker:We can look at stats
from OCA, we can look.
Speaker:At, there's general data.
Speaker:We can look at papers that people write
and as far as how long things generally
Speaker:take, but it's kind of
like saying that, Hey,
Speaker:we have a 10% chance of getting our
petition for your review granted in the
Speaker:Supreme Court. Well, yes,
that's statistically true,
Speaker:but is it true in your case?
It doesn't really add much.
Speaker:That number doesn't mean much. And so
those stats to me don't mean a lot.
Speaker:I don't know what the solution is,
Speaker:but if somebody could figure out a way
to install the Domino's Pizza Tracker,
Speaker:I love that.
Speaker:That'd be great. Justice so-and-so
has started preparing your opinion.
Speaker:Staff attorney is checking citations.
Speaker:I'll give credit where
credit is due on that.
Speaker:That was Ryan Owen who came up with that.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So Ryan, if you're listening, thanks
for the visual that I will never forget.
Speaker:That would be really great if it
could happen if's one or two more.
Speaker:Let me tackle one that I think
will resonate with people, and
Speaker:I think this was Rachel Stinson.
I'll call Rachel out. She won't mind.
Speaker:She commented about it publicly online,
but the very infamous one sentence,
Speaker:Manus denial,
Speaker:and I think my comment on this
is for those don't appreciate it,
Speaker:most mandamus are resolved with the
following language, if not exact,
Speaker:very, very close to this in an order.
Speaker:The petition for writ of
mandamus is denied, and that
is it. That's all we hear.
Speaker:The problem with that mandamus
is an extraordinary writ.
Speaker:It's not supposed to be granted frequently
the courts are not required to give
Speaker:their reasons for
denying mandamus, unlike,
Speaker:as we have discussed
recently, permissive appeals.
Speaker:But a mandamus is kind of like a
permissive appeal, and it involves,
Speaker:most often it involves as much
work as an ordinary appeal or a
Speaker:permissive appeal.
Speaker:Perhaps even more.
Speaker:Yeah, it can be more because you have to
compile the record among other things,
Speaker:and it's a difficult standard to meet.
Speaker:So it does require a lot
of good lawyering too.
Speaker:This is another one that falls into the,
Speaker:what am I supposed to tell my client
bucket? Because you tell the client,
Speaker:Hey, yeah, you got a good mandamus.
You're advising them. Yeah,
Speaker:I think the trial court got
it wrong here. And yeah,
Speaker:I think this is an abuse of discretion
and I think we have a decent shot on
Speaker:mandamus.
Speaker:I don't think you get to say it's a
discovery order and you're ordered to
Speaker:produce. There's no remedy at law for
producing say confidential information.
Speaker:Once the cat's out of the bag, it's out.
Speaker:So when you get that particular
type of order in response to the
Speaker:hard work that went into
preparing a petition,
Speaker:it's kind of a gut punch.
I have seen some courts full
Speaker:paragraphs, but those full paragraphs
basically just recite the standard.
Speaker:Well, lemme say when they do this,
Speaker:it is not much better than
the one sentence order,
Speaker:and that is when they simply recite the
standard and conclude that it wasn't
Speaker:met. It would be most helpful.
Speaker:And I'm not sure what the
court's incentive is to do this.
Speaker:The intermediate court's
incentive would be to do this,
Speaker:but it would be most helpful if the court
could give the parties a more specific
Speaker:idea of what it found to be
persuasive or not persuasive about
Speaker:the petition so that
the client would know,
Speaker:so that the lawyer would know,
Speaker:and maybe that would influence how
the lawyer or counsel's clients
Speaker:in the future and influence other
lawyers thinking about bringing mandamus
Speaker:petitions in that court.
Speaker:We're supposed to do our job
representing our clients,
Speaker:and I think it would help us do a
better job if we knew what the court was
Speaker:thinking rather than just as, I think
I'll call Rachel out again on this.
Speaker:I think her comment was,
give us more than that,
Speaker:that proforma sentence. Was it untimely?
Was there an adequate remedy on appeal?
Speaker:The trial judge got the law right
after all. That's a good point.
Speaker:Or the one I was going to
mention specifically is here
is what Rachel said here.
Speaker:Was it raining on a Tuesday?
Speaker:Or you can think of any other
equivalent ridiculous explanations,
Speaker:but we can't tell anything other than
that. It was raining on a Tuesday,
Speaker:and so the court denied the petition.
Speaker:So I've gone on probably longer
than I needed to about that,
Speaker:but I think that's something that the
courts could help practitioners with for
Speaker:sure. You see any others
here that you want to cover?
Speaker:We only have a couple left, I think.
Speaker:No, I think we've got a pretty good list.
I think we've covered a lot of these.
Speaker:Yeah, I'll just throw out another
one. Somebody said the courts,
Speaker:the intermediate courts could rule fast
on unopposed motions like SCO Kotex.
Speaker:I'll praise the Supreme Court for that.
Speaker:Supreme Court does rule fast on
opposed motions usually in a day.
Speaker:And some other courts do too.
Speaker:There are certain courts that I get
really quick rulings on things like that.
Speaker:I've seen some take longer and
it's kind of a mystery as to why,
Speaker:but I thought that was
worth mentioning. And again,
Speaker:tying into the Domino's Pizza
tracker and transparency overall,
Speaker:there were folks that were complaining
about delays in ruling on motions.
Speaker:I think that is going to depend on the
motion. If it's a motion to dismiss,
Speaker:of course it's not going to get ruled on
in a week if it's a contested motion to
Speaker:dismiss. If it's a motion for extension
of time, that's a different story.
Speaker:So I don't think you can generalize
much there, but if you can't tell,
Speaker:I think at least from my perspective,
Speaker:the theme of today is for as much
transparency as the courts can
Speaker:adopt and display,
Speaker:the more the better from
the perspective of the
Speaker:litigants confidence in the courts,
Speaker:from the perspective of the
lawyer's confidence in the courts,
Speaker:and as we've said repeatedly from
the perspective of the lawyer who is
Speaker:advising clients on what
to expect from an appeal.
Speaker:That last statement kind of
starts to sound a little soapboxy.
Speaker:So that's not really what I intend,
Speaker:but this is just a gentle reminder for
those who have not been in practice
Speaker:for a while,
Speaker:that these are the realities that we
deal with day in and day out in our
Speaker:situation as practitioners. And so,
Jody, if you don't have anything to add,
Speaker:I'll just say we appreciate the judges
who are listening this. Thank you.
Speaker:Please take it in the manner in which
it was intended. We don't really.
Speaker:Think, and that's Todd Smith,
Austin, Texas State Bar number.
Speaker:We're not really
intending to call you out,
Speaker:but just I think it is important
that these kinds of issues be
Speaker:aired. And if there's any of
these that need further airing,
Speaker:if we come up with more thoughts on them,
Speaker:then we might follow up
in a different episode.
Speaker:Well, and if anybody, if any
judges, rules committee people,
Speaker:anybody ever wants to come on and
talk about these, please let us know.
Speaker:We would love to have
other perspectives on it.
Speaker:These are just kind of ours from our own
experiences or conversations with other
Speaker:people. So if anyone has thoughts or
wants to come talk about 'em, let us know.
Speaker:Yeah, I would love that.
Speaker:I thought it was very valuable to have
Rich Phillips come on and talk about
Speaker:Stack and the internal processes it
goes through, and the transparency.
Speaker:There's that word again that SC
operates under. And so please,
Speaker:if there's a justice on any intermediate
court or the Supreme Court that wants
Speaker:to come on and challenge us on some of
this stuff, we welcome the opportunity.
Speaker:Or just talk about it. I mean, you
don't even have to challenge us.
Speaker:If you just have thoughts that
are different than ours, come on.
Speaker:We'd love to have a conversation.
Speaker:Maybe we can get Justice Busby to come
talk about why the court doesn't want to
Speaker:do issue. Grant.
Speaker:Todd Smith, Austin, Texas.
Speaker:I only say that. I know that he's talked
about that a little bit in the past.
Speaker:Alright, well, Jody, I think this
is very helpful. Good conversation.
Speaker:I'm enjoying our one-on-one episodes
that we've been doing lately,
Speaker:so let's keep 'em up. And
thanks everybody for listening.
Speaker:Thanks for listening to the
Texas Appellate Law Podcast.
Speaker:If you enjoyed this episode,
Speaker:please share it with your colleagues
and rate and review the show on your
Speaker:favorite podcast platform.
To connect with us,
Speaker:suggest a topic or inquire
about being a guest.
Speaker:Visit texapplawpod.com or
find us on LinkedIn and X
Speaker:at texapplawpod. Produced
and powered by LawPods.
Speaker:The views expressed by the participants
on this podcast are their own and not
Speaker:those of their law firms,
courts, or employers.
Speaker:Nothing you hear on this show establishes
an attorney-client relationship or is
Speaker:legal advice.