Azeb Ruder v. William Jordan D/B/A William Davis Realty, William Davis Real Estate Services, LLC D/B/A William Davis Realty and Kathy Jabri

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 2, 2018
Docket05-16-00742-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Azeb Ruder v. William Jordan D/B/A William Davis Realty, William Davis Real Estate Services, LLC D/B/A William Davis Realty and Kathy Jabri (Azeb Ruder v. William Jordan D/B/A William Davis Realty, William Davis Real Estate Services, LLC D/B/A William Davis Realty and Kathy Jabri) 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
Azeb Ruder v. William Jordan D/B/A William Davis Realty, William Davis Real Estate Services, LLC D/B/A William Davis Realty and Kathy Jabri, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion Filed February 2, 2018

Court of Appeals S In The

Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-16-00742-CV

AZEB RUDER, Appellant V. WILLIAM JORDAN D/B/A WILLIAM DAVIS REALTY, WILLIAM DAVIS REAL ESTATE SERVICES, LLC D/B/A WILLIAM DAVIS REALTY AND KATHY JABRI, Appellees

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 4 Collin County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 004-01346-2014

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Lang, Brown, and Whitehill Opinion by Justice Whitehill A jury awarded damages and attorney’s fees to William Jordon D/B/A William Davis

Realty, William Davis Real Estate Services, LLC D/B/A William Davis Realty and Kathy Jabri

(collectively, Appellees) after finding that Azeb Ruder breached a listing agreement that required

payment of a brokerage commission to her agent Jabri. The damages were offset by attorney’s

fees and costs awarded to Ruder on an earlier TCPA motion to dismiss.1

In thirteen issues that can be generally distilled to three, Ruder argues that: (i) the trial court

failed to apply the proper standard in awarding mandatory costs and attorney’s fees under the

1 The Texas Citizens Participation Act, TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 27.009(a)(1). TCPA because the evidence showed that she billed more time and expenses than were awarded

and the trial court improperly included “equitable and just” considerations in determining the

amount to award; (ii) the judgment on the contract claim should be reversed as a matter of law

because she lost title to the property through no fault of her own; and (iii) the trial court erred by

denying her motion for new trial because Appellees’ counsel made incurable jury argument.

We conclude that (i) the trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining and awarding

reasonable attorney’s fees and costs under the TCPA because the evidence is sufficient to support

the award and there is no indication that the court included “equitable and just” considerations in

its determination; (ii) Ruder was not entitled to judgment on the breach of contract claim as a

matter of law because there was evidence Ruder caused the transaction to not close; and (iii) the

jury argument was proper because it did not violate the court’s limine order and invited the jury to

draw a reasonable inference from the evidence. Moreover, even if the argument was improper, it

was not incurable. We thus affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

Ruder and her husband were divorced in 2009, and the court awarded her sole ownership

of the couple’s house in Plano (the Property).

In 2013, Ruder decided to sell the Property so she could move to Frisco and enroll her

children in school there. Her ex-husband was upset when he learned of her plans because he did

not want Ruder to move. So on August 18, 2013, he initiated another divorce proceeding alleging

a common law marriage. On September 19, 2013, the court conducted a hearing in the divorce

case and issued an order allowing Ruder to sell the house.

In January 2014, Ruder met with Jabri and signed a residential real estate agreement (the

Listing Agreement). The Listing Agreement provides that Ruder is the seller and William Davis

Realty (the Company) is the broker. Jabri is the Company’s agent. Section Five of the agreement

–2– provides that Ruder will pay the Company 5% of the sales price when the Company procures a

buyer for the Property.

Ruder did not disclose the pending divorce proceeding on the seller’s disclosure

accompanying the Listing Agreement. She said she did not disclose it because she owned the

house and she had a court order saying she could sell it.

Jabri marketed the Property and procured a buyer in February, 2014. The sales agreement

between Ruder and the buyer provided that Ruder would make certain repairs on the Property,

including replacing the roof at least seventy-two hours before the March 14, 2014 closing.

The day after the sales contract was signed, Ruder changed her mind about the roof,

contacted Jabri, and demanded that the buyer pay for part of the roof replacement. When Jabri

explained that there was a binding contract, Ruder told her that her ex-husband did not want her

to sell and would create a way for her to get out of the contract.

After Jabri confirmed that the buyer would not contribute to the roof replacement, Ruder

told her she did not want to sell. She asked Jabri to forward the sales agreement to her attorney

for review. After she consulted with her attorney, however, Ruder advised Jabri that she would

proceed with the sale.

On February 19, 2014, the title company asked Jabri if Ruder’s ex-husband would sign off

on the deed in light of the pending divorce proceeding. Although Ruder claimed she told Jabri

about the pending divorce before she signed the Listing Agreement, Jabri testified that the

February 19 title company communication was the first she heard of it. On cross-examination,

Ruder said that she told Jabri about the divorce proceeding around February 2 (three weeks after

the Listing Agreement was signed).

Eileen Fisher, the title company representative, communicated with Ruder about the title

issue that the pending divorce proceeding caused and the steps needed to resolve the issue. Fisher

–3– told Ruder that she needed to provide either a ruling from the divorce court or have her ex-husband

sign off on the deed. But Ruder did not send the title company any documents and said she did

not want her ex-husband to sign off on the deed.

When the matter was not resolved by March 13, the title company sought an extension on

the closing date from the buyer. The buyer refused, and on March 14, terminated the sales

agreement because Ruder had not replaced the roof or resolved the cloud on the Property’s title.

Ruder later posted an unfavorable review of Jabri on Zillow.com. Jabri demanded that

Ruder pay her commission, but Ruder refused. Thereafter, Jabri and the Company sued Ruder for

defamation and breach of contract.

Ruder answered, and filed a TCPA motion to dismiss the defamation claim seeking

attorney’s fees and costs. The trial court denied the motion, and Ruder appealed. This court

reversed the trial court’s order and remanded for a determination of attorney’s fees and costs.

Ruder submitted her attorney’s affidavit on costs and attorney’s fees, and Appellee’s

counsel filed a controverting affidavit. Although Ruder requested $30,380.00 in attorney’s fees

and $5,464.70 in costs, the trial court awarded $9,000 for attorney’s fees and $600 for costs.

The parties tried the breach of contract claim to a jury. The jury found that the broker’s

commission in the Listing Agreement was payable. Thereafter, the court awarded Appellees

$10,750 in damages and $41,560 in attorney’s fees, offset by the $9,600 in TCPA attorney’s fees

and costs awarded to Ruder.

II. ANALYSIS

A. Issues One, Two, Three, and Four: Did the trial court err in determining the TCPA attorney’s fees award amount?

Ruder’s first four issues complain about the amount of her TCPA attorney’s fees award.

Specifically, she argues that: (i) the trial court erred by failing to award reasonable attorney’s fees,

costs, and expenses under the TCPA; (ii) the $9,000 attorney’s fees award was unreasonable in –4– light of the time counsel expended researching, drafting, preparing for hearings, and successfully

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Azeb Ruder v. William Jordan D/B/A William Davis Realty, William Davis Real Estate Services, LLC D/B/A William Davis Realty and Kathy Jabri, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/azeb-ruder-v-william-jordan-dba-william-davis-realty-william-davis-real-texapp-2018.