Archive for the ‘Civil Procedure’ Category

Legal Information

Friday, November 28th, 2008

Plea to the Jurisdiction – The proper direct attack for want of subject matter jurisdiction is a “plea to the jurisdiction,” not a “motion to dismiss” as in federal court.  A motion for summary judgment may also be used to raise a lack of subject matter jurisdiction.  Plaintiff can appeal from a trial court’s determination of lack of subject matter jurisdiction and the resultant dismissal and, if successful, the appellate court will remand for a full trial.  If however, the tiral court erroneously asserts jurisdiction, defendant’s only remedy is an appeal after final judgment.

No waiver – Subject matter jurisdiction cannot be waived.  It can be raised on the first time in appeal.  A court without jurisdiction may not transfer the case, but can only dismiss so that the case can be refiled.  Subject matter jurisdiction is not limited to the amount in controversy.  A court lacks SMJ when the plaintiff lacks standing, when the suit is not yet rip for decision, and when the defendant is immune from suit.

Zones of Evidence

Sunday, November 23rd, 2008

Texas civil procedure law features 5 zones of evidence. Zone 1 is no evidence or only a scintilla of evidence while zone 5 is conclusive evidence. Both enable a court to issue summary judgment.

Zone 1 – No evidence. Did the movant in a sj that the person with BOP has no evidence or no duty? Generally, this means there will be a judgment for the non-movant. Ex P has burden and sues but trial court has no evidence, judgment for D

Zone 5 – Conclusive evidence. P comes in with conclusive evidence and if trial court agrees they enter in a judgment for the person with the burden

Zone 2 – Insufficient evidence – some evidence but not enough to support a judgment for the person with the bop. Remedy here is new trial if there was actually some evidence on appeal. 2 or above so it gets to go to jury. If jury finds for the P. Then the other side comes in and says there was insufficient evidence to support a judgment for P. If judge agrees, grants a new trial.

Zone 3 – Jury will not be reversed.

Zone 4 – Great weight of preponderance. The jury finds against the person with the BOP. Really what they’re saying is there is no or insufficient evidence. P argues that this case is really a 4 or 5. You have to ignore jury’s verdict, you have to enter a judgment for me. If judge finds the verdict is against weight of evidence, then can order a new trial.