1502 Augusta, Dr., Suite 100, Houston, TX 77057

18756 Stone Oak Pkwy, Suite 200, San Antonio, TX 78258

  1341 West Mockingbird Lane, Suite 600W, Dallas, TX  75247

  1990 N. California Blvd., Suite 755, Walnut Creek, CA  94596-7258

Lopez Administrator

Lopez Administrator

Monday, 25 January 2021 19:02

Appellate Law

 

What is Appellate Law?

Although the vast majority of civil cases are handled and resolved at the trial-court level, if the losing party chooses to appeal an adverse jury verdict, a final trial-court judgment, or challenge an interlocutory (non-final) order to a higher court, or if the winning party wants to preserve their victory after an appeal has been filed to a higher court, that higher court is called the appellate court. Appellate law is different from trial law in that, once a case goes up to the appellate court, the trial-court record is generally closed so that the appeal primarily revolves around a review and analysis of that trial-court record, rather than conducting a new trial in the appellate court.

At the trial-court level, civil litigation involves investigating the case from the beginning by developing the facts and gathering evidence for the trial-court record by talking to clients, witnesses, and experts, and taking depositions before proceeding to motion practice, mediation, and/or trial in front of a single trial judge or the jury, if it proceeds to trial, at the trial-court level. By contrast, appellate law is different from trial law because appellate law mainly involves researching the applicable case law, applying it to the trial-court record to draft appellate arguments in briefs and, if necessary, then advocating during oral arguments in front of appellate judges. While most appeals on the merits arise from a final trial-court judgment after a dispositive motion (a motion that disposes of the entire case such as through a motion to dismiss or for summary judgment) or after a bench/jury trial, there are also interlocutory appeals, which arise from non-final, but appealable trial-court orders, or mandamus petitions, which can be thought of as a type of interlocutory appeal, but from non-appealable trial-court orders.

 

What Are the Advantages of Retaining LLG for Your Appellate Law Needs?

If your appellate law need arises directly from one of our firm’s cases, we will naturally have the advantage of having already become familiar with all of the pleadings, motions, correspondence, other documents, parties, witnesses, expert reports, and site inspections in the trial-court record, and the case law research involved, giving us the advantage of not having to waste time getting up to speed on the trial-court record. Then we will be able to quickly decide whether we can file a motion to dismiss the appeal, if we are defending a non-appealable trial-court judgment, or if we are defending/challenging an appealable final trial-court judgment, what types of arguments may be more successful in an appellate brief and then file that brief for you.

However, if your appellate law need arises from a non-LLG case, our firm has the combined trial and appellate litigation experience to help provide you the information necessary for you to make an informed decision on whether an appeal or a mandamus petition is the right decision to take and more likely to result in a successful appeal. We can help you preserve hard-fought jury verdicts or final trial-court judgments or help you challenge adverse final trial-court judgments on appeal or non-appealable orders through a mandamus petition.

Examples of our appellate experience include successfully moving to dismiss a non-appealable interlocutory order in a commercial construction defect case, successfully defending against an appeal of a non-appealable final judgment in a professional liability case, and successfully opposing a motion for new trial seeking to overturn and expand a limited jury verdict on damages after trial in a personal injury case. See Town & Country P’ship v. Dyad Construction, L.P. and Tex. Ext. Sys., LLC, No. 14-21-00162-CV, 2021 WL 2252142, at *1 (Tex. App.—Houston (14th Dist.) June 3, 2021, no pet.) (granting Texas Exterior System, LLC’s motion to dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction); Hernandez v. Vazquez, No. 08-18-00223-CV, 2020 WL 6867065, at *3 (Tex. App.—El Paso (8th Dist.) Nov. 23, 2020, no pet.) (dismissing appeal for lack of jurisdiction).

Thursday, 07 May 2020 15:45

Charles Harmon

Charlie is a Partner at Lopez Law Group (LLG).

Charlie graduated from Baylor Law School cum laude in February of 2020 and began his career at LLG the same year.  Charlie's writing skills and attention to detail quickly promoted him to the Senior Associate position, then Partner.

Charlie has experience representing clients in both commercial litigation and personal injury litigation. He successfully prevented the issuance of a temporary injunction that would have stopped construction on a multi-million-dollar housing development through effective cross-examination, direct examination, presentation of evidence, and oral argument before the court in an adverse hearing. He successfully defeated a toxic tort claim on a motion for summary judgment by conclusively negating causation and obtaining a dismissal of all claims with prejudice.

Charlie helped a water and wastewater operation company set aside a default judgment preventing the forced sale of property to cover the default judgment and giving the client the ability to contest the case on its merits through the successful use of a Bill of Review.

Charlie has helped real estate professionals by responding to a TREC complaint and obtaining a favorable finding for the clients. While representing a large Houston real estate business, he negotiated a favorable settlement despite claimed DTPA violations.

While representing a Houston fire protection company, Charlie helped to negotiate a favorable settlement in a claim involving a defective component that resulted in major flooding.

Charlie has overseen the development and certification of three continuing education courses for claims professionals.

Charlie completed his undergraduate studies at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where he graduated cum laude with a BA in history and political science. While doing his undergraduate work at the University of New Mexico, he served as an Infantryman in the New Mexico Army National Guard and coached high school soccer. After completing his service, he was honorably discharged from the New Mexico Army National Guard in 2017. Charlie and his wife moved to Waco in 2017 to attend law school.

While at Baylor, Charlie earned a spot on the Baylor Law Review and was promoted to Executive Editor. As an Executive Editor, he worked with and mentored fellow students on their journey to creating publishable writing.

When Charlie is not working, he spends time with his wife and enjoys hobbies such as fishing and soccer.

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