Armstrong DLO Properties, LLC v. Todd A. Furniss and Heather E. Furniss

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 21, 2015
Docket05-13-01581-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Armstrong DLO Properties, LLC v. Todd A. Furniss and Heather E. Furniss (Armstrong DLO Properties, LLC v. Todd A. Furniss and Heather E. Furniss) 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
Armstrong DLO Properties, LLC v. Todd A. Furniss and Heather E. Furniss, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Affirm in part; Reverse and Render in part; Opinion Filed January 21, 2015.

Court of Appeals S In The

Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-13-01581-CV

ARMSTRONG DLO PROPERTIES, LLC, Appellant V. TODD A. FURNISS AND HEATHER E. FURNISS, Appellees

On Appeal from the 101st Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-12-11883-E

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Lang, Brown, and Whitehill 1 Opinion by Justice Lang

Appellant Armstrong DLO Properties, LLC (“ADLO”) appeals the trial court’s order

granting summary judgment that ADLO take nothing in favor of appellees Todd A. Furniss and

Heather E. Furniss (“the Furnisses”). The order also awarded the Furnisses $40,670 in attorney’s

fees against ADLO. The controversy brought before us is respecting title to a portion of a

continuous strip of real property situated between two homes located on Armstrong Parkway in

the Town of Highland Park, Dallas County, Texas.

In five issues on appeal, ADLO contends the trial court reversibly erred by (1) granting

the Furnisses’ “no-evidence and traditional motion” for summary judgment, (2) acting “sua

1 The Honorable Kerry P. FitzGerald, Retired Justice, was a member of the panel at the time this case was submitted, but due to his retirement from this Court on December 31, 2014, he did not participate in deciding this case. He was replaced on the panel by Justice Bill Whitehill in accordance with the rules of appellate procedure. See TEX. R. APP. P. 41.1. sponte” in “consider[ing] evidence and grounds not presented to the [trial court]” and “making

conclusions as to the veracity and credibility” of ADLO’s summary judgment evidence, and (3)

“granting [the Furnisses] attorney’s fees contrary to Texas jurisprudence.”

We decide against ADLO on its first through fourth issues. ADLO’s fifth issue is

decided in its favor. We reverse the portion of the trial court’s order awarding the Furnisses

attorney’s fees against ADLO and render judgment denying the Furnisses’ request for attorney’s

fees. In all other respects, the trial court’s order is affirmed. Because all dispositive issues are

settled in law, we issue this memorandum opinion. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.2(a) 47.4.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The real property in question is described by the parties as a portion of a continuous strip

of real property situated between the home located at 4236 Armstrong Parkway, which home is

owned by the Furnisses, and the home located at 4242 Armstrong Parkway. The continuous strip

in its entirety is approximately sixteen feet wide and two-hundred feet in length. The back

portion of the strip, running from the rear of the properties to a patio in the approximate center of

the strip, is referred to by the parties as the “dogleg.” The front portion of the strip, from the

patio forward to Armstrong Parkway, constitutes the real property in question and is referred to

as the “front strip.” 2

ADLO filed this lawsuit in October 2012, asserting causes of action against the Furnisses

for “Trespass to Try Title/Suit to Quiet Title” and “Declaratory Judgment Relief.” Specifically,

ADLO stated in its petition (1) the front strip 3 was conveyed to ADLO in 2012 by David Lee

Obenchain (“Obenchain”), the sole owner of ADLO and a former owner of the home located at

4242 Armstrong; (2) ADLO is the owner of the front strip; and (3) “[d]espite the foregoing, [the

2 Because the parties’ arguments range broadly, we recount the procedural and evidentiary histories in great detail. 3 Additionally, ADLO’s petition included claims asserting ownership of the dogleg. However, the record shows ADLO non-suited all requests for relief pertaining to the dogleg on August 14, 2013, prior to the trial court’s order complained of.

–2– Furnisses] have recently made verbal claims to the [front strip].” ADLO requested the trial court

to declare ADLO the owner of the front strip, “order [the Furnisses] to cease to assert any

claims” to that property, and award ADLO attorney’s fees pursuant to the Texas Uniform

Declaratory Judgments Act. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. §§ 37.001–37.011 (West

2008). Additionally, ADLO’s petition contended in part (1) Obenchain and his predecessors in

title “have paid the ad valorem taxes assessed against the [front strip] for years and years”; (2)

the Furnisses and their predecessors in title to 4236 Armstrong “have never paid the ad valorem

taxes assessed against the [front strip]”; (3) the front strip “has been under the open, undisputed,

and unchallenged possession and control” of ADLO’s predecessors in title “since at least 1949”;

(4) the Furnisses’ claims of ownership to the front strip are “apparently” based on a certain

warranty deed purportedly executed in 1949 that was filed in 1971 (the “1949 warranty deed”);

and (5) the 1949 warranty deed “was not filed of record until over twenty-two (22) years after it

was purportedly executed,” “was not properly executed in accordance with the laws of the State

of Texas” because it “was not executed in front of a notary public,” “should not have been

recorded in the deed records because of the improper acknowledgment,” “was never

acknowledged by [the Dallas Central Appraisal District],” and “was not known to have been

filed until the recently completed sale of 4242 [Armstrong].”

The Furnisses filed a general denial answer and asserted affirmative defenses and

counterclaims. The Furnisses’ affirmative defenses included, in part, (1) ADLO’s claims are

barred by the statute of limitations, (2) “[ADLO’s] claim for declaratory relief is barred as the

purported dispute is the determination of title to well-defined parcels of land for which a trespass

to try title suit is the mandated cause of action,” and (3) “[the Furnisses] hold full title to the

subject property through adverse possession and by limitations.” In their counterclaims, the

Furnisses’ sought (1) a declaratory judgment “validating” the 1949 warranty deed and declaring

–3– that the Furnisses hold fee simple title to the front strip pursuant to that warranty deed and

subsequent conveyance instruments and (2) fee simple title to the front strip pursuant to certain

sections of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code pertaining to adverse possession. See id.

§§ 16.024–.029. Further, the Furnisses requested attorney’s fees pursuant to the declaratory

judgments act. See id. §§ 37.001–37.011.

On June 13, 2013, the Furnisses filed a “first amended no-evidence and traditional

motion for partial summary judgment” (the “amended summary judgment motion”). 4 In that

amended motion, the Furnisses stated in part (1) they are the owners of “the single family

residential tract commonly known as 4236 Armstrong Parkway . . . . (the “Property”)”; (2) “[t]he

width of the lot is 121.1 feet by deed description”; and (3) “[t]he disputed area at issue,” i.e. the

front strip, is a portion of the Property and has been “an integral part of the Property without

exception from 1949 to the present day.” Specifically, according to the Furnisses, (1) in 1929,

Rosa L. Goodwin, a widow, became the owner of a 115-foot wide residential lot (the “Original

Tract”) on which the Furnisses’ homestead is now located; (2) in 1945, Thomas H. Obenchain,

Sr. and Scotta Goodwin Obenchain, individually and as independent executors and trustees under

the will of Rosa L. Goodwin, conveyed the 115-foot wide Original Tract, less ten feet of width,

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Armstrong DLO Properties, LLC v. Todd A. Furniss and Heather E. Furniss, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-dlo-properties-llc-v-todd-a-furniss-and-heather-e-furniss-texapp-2015.