TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
NO. 03-25-00083-CV
Wei Jin, Appellant
v.
Dr. Wendy Cutler and Austin Diagnostic Clinic, Appellees
FROM THE 353RD DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY
NO. D-1-GN-24-001022, THE HONORABLE ERIC SHEPPERD, JUDGE PRESIDING
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Wei Jin sued Dr. Wendy Cutler and Austin Diagnostic Clinic for medical
malpractice, alleging negligence. Since she identified a health care liability claim, she was
required to, and did, submit an expert report under the Texas Medical Liability Act. Tex. Civ.
Prac. & Rem. Code § 74.351(a). But because Jin failed to designate any testifying expert witness
before the Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 190.3 deadline, Dr. Cutler and ADC filed a no-evidence
motion for summary judgment, which the trial court granted. Tex. R. Civ. P. 190.3, 195.2(a). In
one issue on appeal, Jin argues that the Rule 190.3 deadline Dr. Cutler and ADC calculated (and
the trial court implicitly relied on) did not account for the discovery stay provided for in the Texas
Medical Liability Act. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 74.351(s). We agree. Because the
deadline for designating testifying experts had not passed when the trial court granted the no-evidence motion for summary judgment, we reverse the order and remand the cause for
proceedings consistent with this court’s opinion.
Discovery rules infuse the factual background for this case, so we first set out that
legal background, then we turn to the factual background, and then the analysis.
LEGAL BACKGROUND
Under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 190.3, all discovery must be conducted during
the discovery period, which begins when the first initial disclosures are due and continues until the
earlier of: (i) 30 days before the date set for trial; or (ii) nine months after the first initial disclosures
are due. Tex. R. Civ. P. 190.3(b)(1)(A). A party must make the initial disclosures within 30 days
after the filing of the first answer. Id. R. 194.2(a). In addition, a party seeking affirmative relief
must designate testifying experts—and provide the information required by Rule 195.5(a)—
90 days before the end of the discovery period. Id. R. 194.3, 195.2(a).
In health-care lawsuits the plaintiff must, early on, serve an expert report
summarizing how each defendant violated standards of care and caused the plaintiff injury. Tex.
Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 74.351(a). The requirement of the report is designed to separate
frivolous or premature claims from meritorious claims. In re Jorden, 249 S.W.3d 416, 420 (Tex.
2008) (orig. proceeding). Until the plaintiff serves that expert report, discovery is limited to the
acquisition of information related to the patient’s health care. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code
§ 74.351(s). The exception to the discovery stay is only for information related specifically to the
subject patient’s health care—the patient’s chart and medical records—and is intended to fill in
the factual gaps necessary to properly proffer an opinion as to what went wrong in a specific case.
In re LCS SP, LLC, 640 S.W.3d 848, 854 (Tex. 2022) (orig. proceeding). The plain terms of the
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statute stay all other discovery. In re Jorden, 249 S.W.3d at 420; see Tex. R. Civ. P. 192.1(a)(1)
(setting out “Forms of Discovery” and including, at top of its list of permissible forms of discovery,
“required disclosures”).
The provisions of Chapter 74—including the stay provisions of Subsection
74.351(s)—control over any conflicting provisions found in “another law, including a rule of
procedure or evidence or court rule.” Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 74.002(a). With these
provisions in mind, we turn to the facts of the case.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
In October 2021, Jin experienced pain in her genital area when urinating. Jin saw
a urologist who diagnosed her with vestibulodynia and hypertonic pelvic floor muscle dysfunction.
In January 2022, Jin saw Dr. Cutler for the same pain and informed Dr. Cutler of
the urologist’s prior diagnosis. With a vaginosis panel pending, Dr. Cutler diagnosed Jin with a
fungal infection and prescribed antifungal medication. Jin applied the medication as instructed
and her symptoms grew worse and more painful. She let Dr. Cutler know and Dr. Cutler advised
her to wait several weeks for the condition to subside. It did not. The panel came up negative for
a fungal infection. Dr. Cutler told Jin to see a dermatologist. Jin later asked Dr. Cutler about
compensation from ADC for her injuries. Dr. Cutler told Jin she had to leave Dr. Cutler’s practice.
On February 9, 2024, Wei Jen filed an original petition alleging negligence. She
asserted Dr. Cutler and ADC breached their duty of care—via misdiagnosis, prescribing of
inappropriate medication, improper follow-up care, and unilateral termination of the doctor-patient
relationship—causing injuries. She alleged she has been in pain ever since and is still being treated
for injuries.
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On March 8, 2024, Dr. Cutler and ADC filed an original answer containing a
general denial.
On July 1, 2024, Dr. Cutler and ADC were served with Jin’s expert’s report.
On October 14, 2024, Dr. Cutler and ADC filed a no-evidence motion for summary
judgment, alleging Jin had failed to designate a testifying expert before the Discovery Level
2 deadline to do so had passed. 1 Dr. Cutler and ADC asserted that under Texas Rules of Civil
Procedure 190.3 and 195.2, with the answer filed on March 8, 2024, the discovery period began
on April 8, 2024 (a Monday), when the initial disclosures were due, and ended 9 months later on
January 8, 2025, making Jin’s deadline for designating a testifying expert 90 days before that, or
by October 10, 2024. They argued that because that deadline had passed without Jin designating
testifying experts, Jin had no evidence that Dr. Cutler or ADC had breached any applicable
standard of care, or that any alleged breach proximately caused her injury.
On October 16, 2024, Jin filed a response and a motion for a Level 3 Discovery
Control Plan Order under Rule 190.4(a). Jin said she had provided the information required by
Rule 195.5(a) multiple times by way of the expert’s report which was first served on Dr. Cutler
and ADC on July 1, 2024. She pointed out that Dr. Cutler and ADC had not filed their initial
disclosures until August 30, 2024 (five months late under Dr. Cutler and ADC’s calculated due
date of April 7, 2024; one month late under Jin’s calculated due date of July 31, 2024). Jin asserted
that discovery had been stayed—under the Texas Medical Liability Act—until she had served the
expert report on Dr. Cutler and ADC.
1 Wei Jin had not asked for a custom Docket Control Order—making this a Discovery
Level 2 case. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 190.3(a) (establishing default level 2 discovery control plan and stating that “[u]nless a suit is governed by a discovery control plan under Rules 190.2 [Level 1] or 190.4 [Level 3], discovery must be conducted in accordance with this subdivision”).
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Jin supported her response with three exhibits: Jin’s expert’s report; Dr. Cutler and
ADC’s initial disclosures and exhibits; and Dr. Cutler and ADC’s answer.
On November 12, 2024, Dr. Cutler and ADC filed two pleadings. First, they filed
a reply to Jin’s response to their no-evidence motion for summary judgment. In it, they argued
that Jin’s expert’s report (filed under Section 74.351) is not an expert designation, citing Baize
v. Scott & White Clinic, No. 03-05-00780-CV, 2007 WL 135956, at *7 (Tex. App.—Austin
Jan. 22, 2007, pet. denied) (mem. op.); that the report did not include the complete information
required by Rule 195.5(a)(4); and that Jin had still not designated any testifying experts in
compliance with Rule 195. They also argued that although the statutory stay prevents the parties
from obtaining discovery until the 120-day report is served, it does not apply to required
disclosures (that is, automatic obligations) and therefore does not have any logical connection to
the start of the discovery period.
Second, Dr. Cutler and ADC filed objections and a motion to strike the expert’s
report and its own initial disclosures and exhibits as unsworn hearsay and incompetent
summary-judgment evidence.
A summary-judgment hearing was held the same day, on November 12, 2024.
On November 15, 2024, the trial court sustained the objections, struck the exhibits,
granted Dr. Cutler and ADC’s Rule 166a(i) no-evidence motion for summary judgment, and
ordered Jin’s claims against Dr. Cutler and ADC dismissed with prejudice. It denied “[a]ny other
pending motions” and had the parties bear their own costs.
On December 11, 2024, Jin filed a motion for reconsideration and new trial arguing,
among other things, that under Subsection 74.351(s), all discovery (with exceptions that do not
apply here) was stayed until the expert report was served on Dr. Cutler and ADC, moving the
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deadline for designating a testifying expert to January 31, 2025. And she claimed that she
designated her expert at least in her October 16, 2024 response to Dr. Cutler and ADC’s
no-evidence summary judgment motion, when she made clear that the expert who drafted the
expert report would be her testifying expert. The new-trial motion was overruled by operation
of law.
ANALYSIS
Dr. Cutler and ADC moved for no-evidence summary judgment on the sole ground
that Jin failed to designate expert witnesses by the statutory deadline. Jin argues that the deadline
had not yet passed when the trial court granted the motion on that sole ground.
A no-evidence summary-judgment motion will be sustained when (a) there is a
complete absence of evidence of a vital fact, (b) the court is barred by rules of law or of evidence
from giving weight to the only evidence offered to prove a vital fact, (c) the evidence offered to
prove a vital fact is no more than a mere scintilla, or (d) the evidence conclusively establishes the
opposite of the vital fact. Lozada v. Posada, 718 S.W.3d 262, 266 (Tex. 2025). “To preclude
no-evidence summary judgment in a medical malpractice case, the plaintiff must offer expert
testimony on the essential elements of its claim, including the standard of care, breach, and
causation.” Cunningham v. Columbia/St. David’s Healthcare Sys., L.P., 185 S.W.3d 7, 10 (Tex.
App.—Austin 2005, no pet.). Without a properly designated testifying expert, a plaintiff in a
health-care liability case has no competent evidence to raise a genuine issue of material fact on
these challenged elements. Id. We review a trial court’s granting of summary judgment de novo.
Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett, 164 S.W.3d 656, 661 (Tex. 2005).
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The discrete issue here is whether the discovery stay under Chapter 74 applies to
the requirement to designate testifying experts.
We agree with our sister court in Houston that it does. See Harvey v. Kindred
Healthcare Operating, Inc., 525 S.W.3d 281, 283, 285 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2017,
no pet.). The defendant medical provider in that case had argued, as Dr. Cutler and ADC do here,
that because the designation of testifying experts is a required disclosure—a mandatory obligation
that must be fulfilled without awaiting a discovery request—the disclosure is not “discovery”
subject to the stay. Id. at 285–86. The court disagreed, noting “docket control orders manage
discovery” and that includes setting deadlines for designating expert witnesses. Id.
In Harvey, the trial court’s docket-control order setting deadlines for designating
expert witnesses conflicted with the Chapter 74 discovery stay. The court held that in such a
case—where there is a conflict between Chapter 74 and a trial court’s docket-control order—
Chapter 74 controls. Id. (citing Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 74.002(a)). The court reversed
the trial court’s summary judgment:
We conclude that because the discovery stay was in effect when Kindred filed its
motion for summary judgment and the stay superseded the trial court’s expert
witness designation deadline, the trial court erred in granting summary judgment
on the sole ground raised in the motion for summary judgment: that appellants
failed to designate experts before the trial court’s deadline.
Id. at 286.
The background facts are slightly different here, because the stay was no longer in
effect when the trial court granted the no-evidence summary judgment motion. But, because the
deadline for designating testifying experts had not yet passed, the result is the same. Dr. Cutler
and ADC’s original answer was filed on March 8, 2024. Jin timely served the expert report on
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July 1, 2024, before the 120-day deadline of July 6, 2024. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code
§ 74.351(a) (requiring health-care-liability claimant to serve report “not later than the 120th day
after the date each defendant’s original answer is filed”). Just as Chapter 74 controls over a trial
court’s docket control order, it controls over Level 2 discovery deadlines set out in Rule 190.3. Id.
§ 74.002(a). Thus discovery—with exceptions not relevant here—was stayed until July 1, 2024.
Id. §§ 74.002(a), 74.351(s). Dr. Cutler and ADC’s initial disclosures were due thirty days later,
on July 31, 2024. Tex. R. Civ. P. 194.2(a). The discovery period began July 31, 2024, and, without
a trial date, ran nine months until April 30, 2025. Id. R. 190.3(a). The designation was due 90 days
before the end of the discovery period, or by January 31, 2025. Id. R. 194.3, 195. The trial court
could not, on November 15, 2024, grant the no-evidence summary judgment motion on the single
ground raised in the motion for summary judgment: that Jin failed to designate experts before the
Rule 190.3 deadline. The trial court erred in granting the motion for summary judgment on the
ground that Jin’s deadline for designating expert witnesses had passed when it had not. McConnell
v. Southside Indep. Sch. Dist., 858 S.W.2d 337, 341 (Tex. 1993) (“A motion must stand or fall on
the grounds expressly presented in the motion.”). We sustain Jin’s sole issue on appeal.
CONCLUSION
Having sustained Jin’s sole issue on appeal, we reverse the trial court’s order
granting summary judgment and remand the cause for proceedings consistent with this
court’s opinion.
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Chari L. Kelly, Justice
Before Chief Justice Byrne, Justices Kelly and Ellis
Reversed and Remanded
Filed: June 30, 2026
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