Aneita J. Weaver v. John Jamar

383 S.W.3d 805, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 8920, 2012 WL 5333007
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 2012
Docket14-11-00516-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 383 S.W.3d 805 (Aneita J. Weaver v. John Jamar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aneita J. Weaver v. John Jamar, 383 S.W.3d 805, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 8920, 2012 WL 5333007 (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

JEFFREY V. BROWN, Justice.

This is a contract dispute between appellant Aneita J. Weaver and her nephew, appellee John Jamar. It arises from a loan Weaver made to Jamar enabling him to purchase a townhouse, which he was to renovate and ultimately resell for profit. Following a bench trial, the trial court awarded title of the property and attorney’s fees to Weaver while awarding construction expenses to Jamar — all at five-percent post-judgment interest. The trial court also held Jamar liable for unpaid taxes and fees related to the property. Weaver appeals. We affirm as modified in part.

I

On August 11, 2008, Jamar approached Weaver with a written loan agreement, which the parties modified and signed without legal representation. In full, the agreement provides:

I, Aneita J. Weaver, agree to lend $193,000, to John Jamar to purchase property described as
18142 Bal Harbour Dr., Nassau Bay, Harris County Texas, Lot 9, Block 3, of Bal Harbour Cove, presently owned by Michael Schwendeman, on this day, August 11, 2008. The Loan is dated August 11, 2008.
The money is loaned at the rate of eight percent (8%), for a period of one year from the date of the loan.
John Jamar will make monthly loan payments of $1,400.00 to Aneita J. Weaver in the form of a bank check until [The remainder of this line is blacked out.]
This property is being purchased by John Jamar with the intention of improving the property and selling it by Jan. 1, 2010.
Improvements and costs of all improvements shall be mutually agreed on and signed off on by each party prior to funds being expended. John Jamar will handle all improvements, including labor and materials.
John Jamar will be responsible for the cost of Home Owners Insurance on the property, Home Owners Association expenses, State and local taxes for the period prior to the sale of the property. When the property is sold, John Jamar will repay the balance of the loan to Aneita J. Weaver.
Any net profit after payment of all expenses for the sale of property to a third *809 party and repayment of the loan to Aneita J. Weaver will be divided as follows:
Aneita J. Weaver will receive 20% of the net profit from the sale after all improvement expenses to the property are deducted from the net sale price. That is, any money over and above the sale price after improvement expenses, will be split as follows: John Jamar: 80% and Aneita J. Weaver, 20%.

The loan agreement also includes an addendum, which reads:

If the above described property does not sell, by the time set out, the following shall be in effect:
1. Aneita J. Weaver has the right to assume the title to the property free and clear from John Jamar, for the balance of the loan
OR
2. If agreed by Aneita J. Weaver, John Jamar will continue to pay monthly loan installments to Aneita Weaver, in the amount of $1,438.19, until the property is sold, with the same terms as set out for a sale prior to January 1, 2010.

On the same day on which the parties signed the agreement, Weaver loaned Jamar $198,000, and Jamar purchased the property. He received a general warranty deed in his name only.

Despite his obligations under the agreement, Jamar neither completed renovations nor sold the property by January 1, 2010. Additionally, he made only two of his required payments: the first was a $1,400 payment to Weaver in October 2008; the second was to the homeowners’ association (“HOA”) in 2010, which he made in an effort to deter foreclosure of the HOA’s lien on the property. Jamar owes more than $9,000 for unpaid charges, maintenance assessments, and attorney’s fees to the HOA, as well as more than $30,000 in unpaid taxes to Harris County and Clear Creek Independent School District.

Weaver sued, seeking specific performance under the loan agreement and money judgments for the amounts of the liens on the property, the unpaid interest, and attorney’s fees. Jamar did not file a counterclaim.

At trial, Ted Hirtz appeared as Weaver’s attorney, and Jamar represented himself. Weaver testified that the townhouse was “in total disarray” and “in a state of half or third rebuilt.” She also submitted billing records showing total attorney’s fees of $60,415. Hirtz testified and acknowledged that the legal fees in this case “are extraordinarily high,” which he attributed, in large part, to Jamar’s uncooperative behavior. Jamar testified that he spent over $50,000 for labor and materials to renovate the townhouse. He also submitted a document titled “18142 Bal Harbour balance” in which he calculated the projected income from the sale of the property and included the notation: “Paid: $62,000.00— construction.”

In a judgment signed May 10, 2011, the trial court (1) ordered Jamar to convey title and possession of the property to Weaver; (2) found Jamar liable for any unpaid HOA expenses, as well as any state and local taxes accrued as of the date of the judgment; (3) decreed that Jamar would no longer be liable under the loan agreement after transferring title to Weaver; (4) awarded Jamar “the reasonable value of work performed and materials furnished in the amount of $62,000”; and (5) awarded Weaver “$36,500 for necessary and reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses.” The trial court further ordered that all amounts bear post-judgment interest of five percent per annum, citing section 504 of the Texas Finance Code. *810 Upon Weaver’s request, the trial court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law. Weaver then appealed.

II

On appeal, Weaver argues the trial court erred by: (1) awarding any money to Jamar absent a counterclaim; (2) effectively rewriting the loan agreement; (3) awarding $62,000 to Jamar in the absence of evidence showing that Weaver agreed in writing to those improvements or that the improvements increased the value of the property; (4) failing to enforce the eight-percent interest rate mandated by the loan agreement; (5) cancelling the balance of the loan in consideration for transferring the encumbered title to Weaver; (6) failing to award Weaver a money judgment in the amount of the unpaid taxes and fees; (7) interpreting the contract as one to purchase real property rather than as a loan agreement and issuing misleading findings of fact; (8) failing to award a single money judgment to Weaver as required by Rule 302 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure; and (9) failing to award Weaver the full amount of the attorney’s fees she demonstrated.

Several of Weaver’s issues overlap such that resolution of one issue is dispositive of another. Specifically, our holdings on her third, fourth, and sixth points of error are dispositive of the issues in Weaver’s first, second, fifth, seventh, and eighth points. Therefore, we do not separately examine the latter issues.

III

Weaver’s third and fourth issues both relate to interpretation of the loan agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
383 S.W.3d 805, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 8920, 2012 WL 5333007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aneita-j-weaver-v-john-jamar-texapp-2012.