Angela Faye Seals v. Virgil Lee Seals, III

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 4, 2023
Docket03-22-00310-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Angela Faye Seals v. Virgil Lee Seals, III (Angela Faye Seals v. Virgil Lee Seals, III) 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
Angela Faye Seals v. Virgil Lee Seals, III, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-22-00310-CV

Angela Faye Seals, Appellant

v.

Virgil Lee Seals, III, Appellee

FROM THE 200TH DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-FM-11-001977, THE HONORABLE JESSICA MANGRUM, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Angela Faye Seals, appearing pro se, attempts to appeal from three orders of the

trial court rendered in connection with the petition of her ex-husband, Virgil Lee Seals, III, to

partition the parties’ former marital residence (the Property).1 Angela challenges the following

orders: (1) the December 16, 2021 Agreed Order on Petition for Partition by Sale (Agreed

Order), (2) the March 3, 2022 Order of Enforcement by Contempt (Contempt Order), and (3) the

May 4, 2022 Order on Motion for Court to Order Sale of Property (Sale Order). For the

following reasons, we dismiss the portion of Angela’s appeal pertaining to the Agreed Order;

deny the portion of her appeal that we construe as a petition for writ of mandamus challenging

the Contempt Order; and affirm the portion of the appeal pertaining to the Sale Order.

1 Because the parties have the same surname, for convenience and clarity we refer to them by their first names. BACKGROUND

The parties were divorced by final decree in 2012. Angela was awarded an

undivided 60% interest in the Property and Virgil was awarded an undivided 40% interest. Per

the decree, Angela was allowed to continue residing in the Property, with Virgil ordered to pay

the monthly mortgage and utilities payments as spousal maintenance until the earliest of June 1,

2020; the death of either party; Angela’s remarriage; or further orders of the court affecting the

spousal-maintenance obligation.

In July 2021, Virgil filed an original petition for partition by sale of the Property,

asserting that he had asked Angela to agree to sell the home and divide the proceeds as provided

in the decree but that she had not agreed. Angela was still residing in the Property and Virgil

was residing in California. Virgil requested that the court order Angela to move out of the

Property in preparation of its sale and that the court appoint a receiver or commissioners to carry

out the partition. He also requested reimbursement of the mortgage and related expenses he had

paid for the property since July 2020.

Virgil’s petition was set for a final hearing on October 27, 2021. At the hearing

and during initial arguments, the following issues arose: whether Angela would be afforded an

opportunity to purchase the property, the extent to which Virgil was entitled to reimbursement

for some or all of the mortgage payments since July 2020 and for his attorney’s fees, and when

or whether Angela should be required to vacate the home prior to its listing for sale. The court

briefly recessed the hearing to allow the parties an opportunity to settle these matters. After the

recess, Virgil’s attorney informed the court that the parties had reached the following agreement

(Rule 11 Agreement), which he recited on the record in open court:

2 [B]eginning on November 1st of 2021 [Angela] will make the full mortgage payment for the home that’s the subject of this suit, each month moving forward until an agreement is reached between the parties that where she buys my client out or the house is sold. The parties will agree to list the home on December 1st, 2021, with a realtor that is either agreed upon or that the Court chooses.

Now, [Angela’s attorney] and I have agreed that we will work to try and get an agreement by November 5th. If we are unable to [agree] we will each submit two realtors to [the court] and let [the court] choose one so that they can get started a month before the listing should go.

...

The house will be listed with a realtor on the first of December. They will choose one by November 5th and [Angela] will make the mortgage payments beginning November 1st moving forward.

See Tex. R. Civ. P. 11 (allowing parties to make agreements “touching any suit pending” made

in open court and entered of record). The court asked Angela’s attorney whether such recitation

of the Rule 11 Agreement was correct and complete, to which Angela’s attorney replied in the

affirmative. The court then swore in both parties to confirm whether the Rule 11 Agreement

represented their agreement and whether they were seeking rendition thereon; each party testified

in the affirmative. The court tasked Virgil’s attorney with drafting an order memorializing the

parties’ agreement, sending it to Angela’s attorney for approval, and setting the matter for a

hearing to enter the agreed order.

The appellate record does not contain a reporter’s record of the hearing set for

December 16, 2021, on Virgil’s Motion to Enter Agreed Order on Petition for Partition by Sale,

but the court’s docket sheet and signed order reflect that such hearing did occur, and the trial

court signed the Agreed Order on that date. The day before the hearing, Angela’s attorneys filed

a motion to withdraw from representing her for “good cause” in that Angela “no longer wishe[d]

to retain” them because, according to Angela, her attorneys were “failing to or unable to act in

3 her best interest.” The court did not grant the motion to withdraw until December 20, 2021, and

thus Angela’s attorneys continued to represent her at the hearing to enter the Agreed Order.

On January 18, 2022, Angela—now appearing pro se—filed a motion for new

trial arguing, among other things, that (a) she has a meritorious defense to the Agreed Order

because no evidence was heard at the October hearing, (b) Virgil’s attorney made a “confusing

and conflicting opening statement of hearsay, [with] misleading and incomplete statements

without any burden of proof, no testimony, cross-examination, or documentation,” (c) she had

“no idea that this was an alleged agreed hearing and her, now, discharged counsel neglected her

duties of proper communication and representation,” and (d) the trial court’s Agreed Order,

as drafted by Virgil’s attorney, contained a “reckless tag on” requiring the parties to “follow

the recommendations of the Realtor” when such additional language is “contrary to law” and

unsupported by the evidence. The trial court denied Angela’s motion for new trial, finding

that the motion “should be DENIED as untimely.” The court also denied Angela’s subsequent

motion for reconsideration and amended motions for reconsideration and new trial.

Meanwhile, in mid-January 2022, Virgil filed a Petition for Enforcement of

Property Division by Contempt, in which he alleged that Angela had not complied with the

Agreed Order by failing to “list the home for sale no later than December 1, 2021 [and] by

refusing to follow the recommendations of the Realtor.” Angela was ordered to appear for an

early March 2022 hearing on Virgil’s contempt petition, after which the trial court signed its

Contempt Order ordering Angela to, among other things, vacate the home by a specified date;

sign the listing agreement with the appointed realtor; and follow all recommendations of the

realtor. The trial court denied Angela’s subsequent motion for new trial challenging the

Contempt Order.

4 In mid-April 2022, Virgil filed a Motion for Court to Order Sale of Property

alleging, among other things, that the parties had received a cash offer for the property in an

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Angela Faye Seals v. Virgil Lee Seals, III, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angela-faye-seals-v-virgil-lee-seals-iii-texapp-2023.