Austin v. Coface Seguro de Credito Mexico, S.A. de C.V.

506 S.W.3d 707, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 13173, 2016 WL 7212587
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 2016
DocketNO. 01-15-00760-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 506 S.W.3d 707 (Austin v. Coface Seguro de Credito Mexico, S.A. de C.V.) 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
Austin v. Coface Seguro de Credito Mexico, S.A. de C.V., 506 S.W.3d 707, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 13173, 2016 WL 7212587 (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION ON REHEARING

Jane Bland, Justice

In this appeal, we determine whether differences in naming conventions nullify notice of an abstract of judgment. A bank obtained a judgment in Mexico and later registered it in Texas state court, using the debtor’s full name, which includes a first and a second surname. The bank then abstracted the authenticated judgment in the county records; the county clerk indexed the judgment using the second surname of the debtor and included the first surname among the debtor’s other first names. Later, the bank determined that the debtor owned a home in Texas and had sold the home to a third-party buyer.

The bank sought foreclosure of the home in satisfaction of its judgment lien. The buyer contests the bank’s lien, contending that the bank was obligated to secure an index under the first surname listed in the abstract of judgment to enforce their lien on the property because the warranty deed that conveyed the property named the seller by his first name and first surname only. The bank responds that the chain of title for the property includes the debtor’s full name as it is contained in the abstract of judgment. On cross-motions for declaratory relief, the trial court found in favor of the bank.

Carolyn Austin, the buyer, has moved for rehearing and en banc determination. We deny rehearing, withdraw our opinion and judgment of September 15, 2016, and issue the following in their stead. We dismiss as moot Austin’s motion for en banc determination.1 Because the abstract of judgment meets the statutory requirements and the debtor’s full name is also found in the property’s chain of title as indexed under both surnames, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

The judgment debtor is Rafael Augusto Martin Ojeda Miranda. The bank’s agent seeking to enforce the judgment lien is Coface Seguro de Crédito Mexico, S.A. de C.V. as Attorney by Endorsement for Ban-co Monex, S.A., Institución de Banco Multiple and Monex Grupo Financiero (“Co-[710]*710face”). The facts .are undisputed, placed along this timeline:

In October 2011, Ojeda Miranda purchased a house located at 3614 St. Tropez Way in Houston, Harris -County, Texas. He is named in the warranty deed as “Rafael Ojeda.”

In July 2012, Coface filed a notice of lis pendens in Harris County, which described a pending lawsuit styled In Coface Seguro de Credito Mexico, S.A. de C.V., et al. v. Miranda in Harris County District Court. The notice describes the lawsuit as one that “involves the enforcement of an encumbrance against real property located at 3614 St. Tropez Way, Houston, Texas 77082.” The notice names “Rafael Augusto Martin Ojeda Miranda” as the defendant. The then-pending lawsuit alleged that Oje-da Miranda had converted funds from a Mexican bank and used them to purchase the St. Tropez Way property.

That same month, Ojeda Miranda’s former business associate, Sarens Bestuur, N.V., filed its own notice of lis pendens in Harris County pertaining to the-3614 St. Tropez property. That notice names the defendant as “Rafael Ojeda a/k/a Rafael Miranda a/k/a Rafael Augusto Martin Oje-da Miranda.”

In October 2012, Saarens Bestuur filed a release of this lis pendens in the real property records. Like the lien, the lien release named the defendant as “Rafael Ojeda a/k/a Rafael Miranda a/k/a Rafael Augusto Martin Ojeda Miranda.”

In April 2013, Coface registered a Mexican judgment in Bexar County, Texas against “Rafael Augusto Martin Ojeda Miranda” in the principal amount of $1,149,627.61.

In May 2013, Coface filed an abstract of the registered foreign judgment in Harris County, naming “Rafael Augusto Martin Ojeda Miranda” as the judgment debtor. The abstract recites that Ojeda Miranda is a Mexican national with a last known address at 3614 St. Tropez Way in Harris County, Texas.

The Harris County Clerk indexed the abstract of judgment under the last name “Mirandas,” instead of “Miranda;” thus, the real property record index recited “Mi-randas Rafael Augusto Martin Ojeda.” The Harris County Clerk did not cross-index the judgment under the “Ojeda” paternal surname. The Harris County Clerk averred in an affidavit that, in ordinary practice, a clerk in his office checks for compliance with the statutory requirements for an abstract of a judgment lien, records the abstract if the abstract appears to meet these requirements, and then indexes the abstract according to the last surname of a natural person. He averred that the index listing the judgment debtor’s last surname as “Mirandas” rather than “Miranda” was an error, but that any search under “Miranda” would reveal the existence of the abstract of judgment.

In July 2013, Austin purchased the St, Tropez Way house from Ojeda Miranda, who conveyed the property by a warranty deed naming “Rafael Ojeda and wife, Liyi-an E. Cordova” as grantors. Ojeda Miranda produced his Mexican passport as identification at the pre-closing meeting, which contained his full name, “Rafael Au-gusto Martin Ojeda Miranda.” Austin’s title insurer also discovered Sarens Best-uur’s notice of lis pendens against Ojeda Miranda, styled “Rafael Ojeda a/k/a Rafael Miranda a/k/a Rafael Augusto Martin Oje-da Miranda” and its similarly identified release of lien, indexed under Rafael Oje-da.

The title insurer did not search the real property records using either the name “Miranda” or “Rafael Augusto Martin Oje-da Miranda.” Neither Austin nor her title [711]*711insurer discovered Coface’s judgment lien before closing on the house.

In August 2014, Coface obtained a writ of execution from a Bexar County District Court and sent written notice of its intent to foreclose on its lien on the St. Tropez Way house to Austin’s title insurer. Austin then brought this suit, seeking a declaration that Coface’s lien does not encumber the St. Tropez Way property.

On cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court denied Austin’s relief and granted Coface’s requested relief, declaring that:

(1) Coface’s Abstract of Judgment, duly recorded with the Harris County Clerk on May 6, 2013 ... perfected a lien on the real property located at 3614 St. Tropez Way ... and
(2) [W]hen Carolyn P. Austin acquired said real property in July 2013 she took the property subject to Co-face’s lien.

DISCUSSION

Austin contends that Coface’s lien is invalid against the St. Tropez Way property because the abstract of judgment, as indexed, does not notify potential purchasers that a judgment lien existed against “Rafael Ojeda,” as he is listed on the warranty deed. She further contends that she was not required to search under names beyond the name on the face of the warranty deed conveying the property to her, and that the deed did not include the name “Miranda.” Coface, on the other hand, maintains that it complied with the Texas Property Code’s requirements for abstracting a judgment lien, it used Ojeda Miranda’s full name in its abstract of judgment, and the Harris County real property records in the chain of title for this property contain Ojeda Miranda’s full name as it appears in the abstract of judgment. Thus, it contends, the trial court properly upheld the validity of its judgment lien on the property.

I. Standard of Review

Both parties filed traditional motions for summary judgment seeking declaratory relief.

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Bluebook (online)
506 S.W.3d 707, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 13173, 2016 WL 7212587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-coface-seguro-de-credito-mexico-sa-de-cv-texapp-2016.