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                                                    MDL No. 08-0956
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                            IN RE PETROLEUM WHOLESALE L.P. LITIGATION

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                  ON REVIEW BY THE MULTIDISTRICT LITIGATION PANEL
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PRESIDING JUDGE PEEPLES delivered the opinion of the MDL Panel.

         In 2008, three class action cases were filed in Ellis, Galveston, and Harris Counties,

alleging that the defendants engaged in illegal gasoline pricing. At the defendants’ request, we

stayed the proceedings and in February 2009 granted their motion seeking appointment of a

pretrial MDL judge.1 In May the plaintiffs notified us that the Ellis and Galveston cases had

been nonsuited; they asked us to withdraw the stay and, in effect, to rescind our MDL order.

They argued that with only one case pending there was no longer any basis for MDL

proceedings. In June, we agreed with their request and rescinded our MDL order. Because we

had not at that time named a pretrial judge, the one remaining case is still pending in Harris

County, where it was filed. Defendants have made several arguments in opposition to the

plaintiffs’ request that we set aside our MDL ruling.

         Defendants first argue that Rule 13 does not authorize the MDL Panel to rescind a

transfer order. The rule in fact does not speak to this issue one way or the other. In certain




         1 For other details about the litigation and the parties, see In re Petroleum Wholesale Litig., 2009 WL 887988 (Tex. M.D.L. Panel
2009).
circumstances, it does authorize us to retransfer cases from one pretrial judge to another,2 but it

says nothing about rescinding a transfer order and returning cases to the original trial court. In

the absence of guidance from Rule 13, we think we have inherent power to rescind a transfer

order, at least in the situation before us, where no pretrial judge has been named and no case has

left any trial court. Courts have inherent power over the orders they have issued, except as that

power has been validly modified by constitution, statute, or rule.                                                  See Eichelberger v.

Eichelberger, 582 S.W.2d 395, 398 n.1 (Tex. 1979); A. F. Jones & Sons v. Republic Supply Co.,

246 S.W.2d 853, 855 (Tex. 1952).                          We leave for another day the question whether we could

rescind a completed transfer order, taking cases away from a named pretrial judge and

transferring them back to a trial court. The plaintiffs are correct in saying that with only one case

pending in Texas there are no longer any “related cases,” which Rule 13 requires before we

assess issues of convenience, efficiency, and justice and transfer anything to a pretrial court.

           Next, the defendants make two arguments that rest on possible future events—that the old

cases might be refiled and that new tag-along cases3 might later be filed. They suggest that if we

rescind our order the plaintiffs might later simply re-file the cases in Ellis and/or Galveston

Counties (or ask those courts to reinstate them). Plaintiffs say they will not do this, and because

of their assurances and because the gamesmanship of refiling would be so obvious, we consider

the likelihood of refiling to be minuscule. Defendants’ other argument is that similar tag-along


           2 “[T]he MDL Panel may order cases transferred from one pretrial court to another pretrial court when the pretrial judge has died,
resigned, been replaced at an election, requested retransfer, recused, or been disqualified, or in other circumstances when retransfer will promote
the just and efficient conduct of the cases.” TEX. R. JUD. ADMIN. 13.3(o).


           3 Rule 13 defines tag-along cases as follows: “Tag-along case means a case related to cases in an MDL transfer order but not itself the
subject of an initial MDL motion or order.” See TEX. R. JUD. ADMIN. 13.2(g) (emphasis in original). The term seems not to apply to potential
future filings in this matter because there is no longer an MDL transfer order.
cases might be filed in the future, and that a pretrial court would then be needed to take them. In

some situations that might be a real prospect. But with the potential state-wide class action

already pending in a Harris County district court, together with the MDL history in this matter, it

seems unlikely that related cases will be filed in other venues. If we are mistaken, and related

cases are filed in the future, there is nothing to prevent the defendants from filing another motion

to transfer and again placing the matter in our hands.

       Defendants’ final argument concerns the remaining issues in the Ellis and Galveston

County trial courts. They say that issues of costs, sanctions, and attorneys’ fees are still pending

in those counties. Whatever may be the status of such issues, they have no bearing on our

decision to rescind our MDL order. Nothing that we have said or done in this matter has

removed those issues from the trial courts. In February, we granted the MDL motion, but we did

not take the next step of ordering the cases transferred to a particular pretrial judge. The cases

therefore have remained pending in the original trial courts. Those courts still have jurisdiction

to grant the nonsuits and sign dismissal orders and also to dispose of any claims for affirmative

relief that may be pending, subject to the rules of trial court jurisdiction and procedure after a

notice of nonsuit has been filed. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 162; In re Bennett, 960 S.W.2d 35, 38 (Tex.

1997); University of Texas Medical Branch v. Estate of Blackmon, 195 S.W.3d 98, 100-101

(Tex. 2006). We intimate nothing about the extent of plenary power remaining or how those

courts might exercise their discretion. We simply say that the issues remaining in the trial courts

have no relevance to our decision to set aside our MDL order.
      For the reasons stated, the stay order and order of transfer are rescinded.

JUSTICES STONE, MCCLURE, WRIGHT, and BROWN concur.

                                                             _____________________________
                                                                 David Peeples, Presiding Judge

OPINION DELIVERED: August 5, 2009
