Ann D. Gardner and Jane Lee Davis v. the Estate of Herbert C. Trader and 7T Property Management

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 27, 2010
Docket08-09-00292-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Ann D. Gardner and Jane Lee Davis v. the Estate of Herbert C. Trader and 7T Property Management (Ann D. Gardner and Jane Lee Davis v. the Estate of Herbert C. Trader and 7T Property Management) 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
Ann D. Gardner and Jane Lee Davis v. the Estate of Herbert C. Trader and 7T Property Management, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ ANN D. GARDNER AND JANE LEE DAVIS, § No. 08-09-00292-CV

Appellants, § Appeal from

v. § 143rd District Court

THE ESTATE OF HERBERT C. § of Reeves County, Texas TRADER AND 7T PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, § (TC # 08-0319037-CVR)

Appellees. §

OPINION

This appeal arises from an action brought pursuant to Texas Property Code § 29.001.

Appellants Ann D. Gardner and Jane Lee Davis appeal the trial court’s judgment in favor of

Appellees, the Estate of Herbert C. Trader and 7T Property Management. We reverse and render

judgment denying Appellees’ petition for a forced sale of Appellants’ property.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

Appellees filed suit against Appellants pursuant to Chapter 29 of the Texas Property Code

which permits a party to seek the forced sale of an owner’s interest in certain real property as

reimbursement for property taxes paid by a co-owner on the owner’s behalf. TEX .PROP .CODE ANN .

§ 29.001-.004 (Vernon 2000 & Vernon Supp. 2010). The parties agreed to submit the case to the

trial court on stipulated facts because the facts were undisputed and the case turned on statutory

interpretation. The parties stipulated to the following facts:

1. Appellees and Appellants are the co-owners of undivided interests in real property described as AB2183, Blocks 54 and 55, Section 10, T&P, E/2, Reeves County, Texas, containing 320 acres.

2. Appellants each own a 1/16 interest in the property, received by inheritance. Appellees received their interest through inheritance.

3. Appellees have timely paid ad valorem taxes on Appellants’ interest in the above stated real property from 1994 to 2007 and made timely demand on Appellants for reimbursement of same before filing suit.

4. Appellees paid $223.26 in ad valorem taxes for each Appellant in the years 1994- 2007.

5. The suit was filed on March 11, 2008, pursuant to Texas Property Code § 29.004. Appellees request that the subject property be divested and transferred to them.

6. After suit was filed and Appellants were served with citation, Appellants, tendered payment of $1,000 into the registry of the trial court.

The trial court entered judgment in favor of Appellees, erroneously reciting that Appellees had met

the statutory elements of Section 29.003 of the Tax Code rather than Section 29.003 of the Property

Code. Appellants filed a timely motion for new trial on the following grounds:

1. The trial court erred in ruling that Appellees had met the statutory elements of Tax Code § 29.003 when the applicable statute is Texas Property Code § 29.003.

2. The trial court erred by failing to rule that the Appellants’ tender of $1,000 into the registry of the court precluded Appellees from prevailing pursuant to Texas Property Code § 29.003(3) which required the Appellees to prove at the hearing that it had not been paid more than 1/2 of the amount of taxes owed.

3. The court erred by failing to rule that equity prohibited a forfeiture of Appellants’ interest to Appellees because Appellees made an excessive demand prior to filing suit.

The trial court did not rule on the motion for new trial, but the court issued a judgment nunc pro tunc

correcting the statutory citation to Section 29.003 of the Texas Property Code. Appellants filed

notice of appeal.

JURISDICTION

Before reaching the merits of Appellant’s arguments on appeal, we must first resolve a jurisdictional issue raised by Appellees involving the timeliness of Appellants’ notice of appeal. The

trial court signed the original judgment on May 29, 2009. On June 25, 2009, Appellants timely filed

a motion for new trial. See TEX .R.CIV .P. 329b(a)(requiring motion for new trial to be filed prior to

or within thirty days after the judgment or other order complained of is signed). Because the motion

for new trial sought a substantive change in the judgment, it extended both the time for filing the

notice of appeal and the trial court’s plenary power to grant a new trial, or to vacate, modify, correct,

or reform the judgment. See TEX .R.APP .P. 26.1(a)(1); TEX .R.CIV .P. 329b(e); Lane Bank Equipment

Co. v. Smith Southern Equipment, Inc., 10 S.W.3d 308, 313 (Tex. 2000)(holding that only a motion

seeking a substantive change in a judgment will extend the appellate deadlines and the trial court’s

plenary power). The trial court’s plenary power to grant a new trial or to vacate, modify, correct, or

reform the judgment was extended to thirty days after the motion for new trial was overruled by a

written order or by operation of law, whichever occurred first. See TEX .R.CIV .P. 329b(e).

Appellants’ notice of appeal was due to be filed on August 27, 2009. See TEX .R.APP .P. 26.1(a)(1).

In the absence of a ruling, the motion for new trial would have been overruled by operation

of law on August 13, 2009. The trial court did not rule on the motion, but on July 31, 2009, the

judge signed a nunc pro tunc judgment correcting the statute recited in the judgment from Section

29.003 of the Tax Code to Section 29.003 of the Property Code. Appellants filed notice of appeal

on October 29, 2009.

Appellees argue that the trial court’s correction of the statutory citation in the nunc pro tunc

judgment did not restart the appellate timetable because it corrected a clerical error. To be clerical

in nature, the error must be one that is not the result of judicial reasoning, evidence, or determination.

Andrews v. Koch, 702 S.W.2d 584, 585 (Tex.1986). The trial court has plenary power to correct a

clerical error made in entering final judgment, but it cannot correct a judicial error made in rendering a final judgment. Jenkins v. Jenkins, 16 S.W.3d 473, 482 (Tex.App.--El Paso 2000, no pet.), citing

Escobar v. Escobar, 711 S.W.2d 230, 231 (Tex. 1986). When deciding whether a correction is a

judicial or a clerical error, we look to the judgment actually rendered, not the judgment that should

or might have been rendered. Jenkins, 16 S.W.3d at 482. The court can only correct the entry of a

final written judgment that incorrectly states the judgment actually rendered. Id. Simply stated, even

if the court renders incorrectly, it cannot alter a written judgment which precisely reflects the

incorrect rendition. Id. We conclude that the trial court’s misrecital of the applicable statutory

authority in its May 29, 2009 judgment nunc pro tunc is a clerical error. See Koch, 702 S.W.2d at

585.

Rule 316 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure permits a trial court to correct clerical

mistakes in a judgment after notice has been provided to the interested parties. TEX .R.CIV .P. 316;

see Jenkins v. Jenkins, 16 S.W.3d 473, 476 (Tex.App.--El Paso 2000, no pet.). Rule 329b(h)

provides that “[i]f a judgment is modified, corrected or reformed in any respect ” the appellate

timetable runs from the date of the new judgment. TEX .R.CIV .P. 329b(h)(emphasis added); Lane

Bank Equipment Co., 10 S.W.3d at 313. Any change to a judgment made by the trial court while it

retains plenary jurisdiction will restart the appellate timetable under Rule 329b(h). Lane Bank, 10

S.W.3d at 313.

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