16 Tex. Admin. Code § 22.161 - Sanctions
(a) Enforcement of subpoenas or commissions
for depositions. If a person fails to comply with the subpoena or commission
for deposition issued by the presiding officer, the commission or the party
requesting the subpoena or commission for deposition may seek enforcement
pursuant to APA.
(b) Causes for
imposition of sanctions. An administrative law judge, on the administrative law
judge's own motion or on the motion of a party, after notice and an opportunity
for a hearing, may impose appropriate sanctions against a party or its
representative for:
(1) filing a motion or
pleading that was brought in bad faith, for the purpose of harassment, or for
any other improper purpose, such as to cause unnecessary delay or needless
increase in the cost of the proceeding;
(2) abusing the discovery process in seeking,
making or resisting discovery;
(3)
failing to obey an order of an administrative law judge or the
commission.
(c) Types of
sanctions. A sanction imposed under subsection (b) of this section may include,
as appropriate and justified, issuance of an order:
(1) disallowing further discovery of any kind
or a particular kind by the disobedient party;
(2) charging all or any part of the expenses
of discovery against the offending party or its representative;
(3) holding that designated facts be deemed
admitted for purposes of the proceeding;
(4) refusing to allow the offending party to
support or oppose a designated claim or defense or prohibiting the party from
introducing designated matters in evidence;
(5) disallowing in whole or in part requests
for relief by the offending party and excluding evidence in support of such
requests;
(6) punishing the
offending party or its representative for contempt to the same extent as a
district court;
(7) requiring the
offending party or its representative to pay, at the time ordered by the
administrative law judge, the reasonable expenses, including attorney's fees,
incurred by other parties because of the sanctionable behavior; and
(8) striking pleadings or testimony, or both,
in whole or in part, or staying further proceedings until the order is
obeyed.
(d) Imposition
of sanctions by the commission. In addition to the sanctions listed in
subsection (c) of this section that may be imposed by an administrative law
judge, except for Subsection (c)(6), any other presiding officer including the
commission, after notice and opportunity for hearing, may impose sanctions
including:
(1) disallow the disobedient
party's rights to participate in the proceeding;
(2) dismiss the application with or without
prejudice;
(3) institute civil
action; or
(4) impose any other
sanction available to the commission by law.
(e) Procedure. A motion for sanctions may be
filed at any time during the proceeding or may be initiated sua
sponte by the presiding officer. A motion to compel discovery is not a
prerequisite to the filing of a motion for sanctions. A motion should contain
all factual allegations necessary to apprise the parties and the presiding
officer of the conduct at issue, should request specific relief, and shall be
verified by affidavit. A motion shall be served on all parties. Upon receipt of
the motion, a hearing shall be held on the motion. Any order regarding
sanctions issued by a presiding officer shall be appealable pursuant to §
22.123 of this title (relating to
Appeal of an Interim Order and Motions for Reconsideration of Interim Order
Issued by the Commission). Any sanction imposed by the presiding officer shall
be automatically stayed to allow the party to appeal the imposition of the
sanction to the commission.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.