Barbara D. Cosgrove, Individually and as the Trustee of the Charles and Barbara Cosgrove Family Revocable Living Trust v. Michael Cade and Billie Cade

468 S.W.3d 32
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 2015
Docket14-0346
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 468 S.W.3d 32 (Barbara D. Cosgrove, Individually and as the Trustee of the Charles and Barbara Cosgrove Family Revocable Living Trust v. Michael Cade and Billie Cade) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barbara D. Cosgrove, Individually and as the Trustee of the Charles and Barbara Cosgrove Family Revocable Living Trust v. Michael Cade and Billie Cade, 468 S.W.3d 32 (Tex. 2015).

Opinion

Justice Willett

delivered the opinion of the Court, in which

Chief Justice Hecht, Justice Green, Justice Lehrmann, and Justice Brown joined.

This deed-reformation dispute resolves whether a mistaken-but-unmistakable omission in an unambiguous warranty deed is the type of injury to which the “discovery rule,” a limited exception to statutes of limitations, should apply. .As the court of appeals opinion lamented, “we have no guidance from the Texas Supreme Court on how to apply [the discovery rule’s inherently undiscoverable injury] standard to the body of law on deed reformation.” 1 The stakes are high, as the reliability of record title contributes mightily to the predictability of property ownership that is so indispensable to our legal and economic systems.

Today we expressly hold what we have suggested for almost half a century: Plainly obvious and material omissions in an unambiguous deed charge pai'ties with irrebuttable notice for limitations purposes. 2 Also disputed in this case is whether Property Code section 13.002— “[a]n instrument that is properly recorded in the proper county is ... notice to all persons of the existence of the instrument” — provides all persons, including the grantor, with notice of the deed’s contents as well. 3 We hold that it does. Parties to a deed have the opportunity to inspect the deed for mistakes at execution. Because section 13.002 imposes notice of a deed’s existence, it would be fanciful to conclude that an injury stemming from a plainly evident mutual mistake in the deed’s contents would be inherently undiscoverable when any reasonable person could examine the deed and detect the obvious mistake within the limitations period.

A grantor who signs an unambiguous deed is presumed as a matter of law to *35 have immediate knowledge of material omissions. Accordingly, this grantors’ suit was untimely, and we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment.

I. Background

Respondents Michael and Billie Cade sued Petitioner Barbara Cosgrove over two acres of land that Cosgrove purchased from the Cades in 2006 through a trust. The first condition listed under the “Special Provisions” clause of the parties’ Real Estate Contract states, “Sellers to retain all mineral rights.” But the notarized deed, which the Cades either initialed or signed on each page, granted the land in fee simple. The deed was signed and recorded in October 2006. One of the closing documents, the “Acceptance of Title and Closing Agreements,” a form agreement prepared by the title company, bound both parties to “fully cooperate, adjust, and correct any errors or omissions and to execute any and all documents needed or necessary to comply with all provisions of the above mentioned real estate contract.” It is undisputed that the deed mistakenly — -but unambiguously— failed to reserve mineral rights.

Prior to entering into the contract, the Cades leased the mineral estate to Dale Resources, LLC, and soon thereafter Chesapeake Energy became operator of the lease. In 2009 and 2010, Chesapeake sent the Cades shut-in checks, which enabled Chesapeake to keep the non-producing lease in force by the payment of a shut-in royalty. In October 2010, Chesapeake sent a letter to the Cades informing them of their rights as royalty owners. That December, Michael Cade contacted Chesapeake to inquire about his royalty payments, and a Chesapeake representative responded there was a “problem” with the deed’s mineral reservation. Within days, the Cades sent a demand letter to Cosgrove asking Cosgrove to issue a correction deed. Cosgrove replied that the statute of limitations barred any claims the Cades might have over the deed.

In February 2011, the Cades sued Cosgrove for a declaratory judgment that the Cades owned the mineral interests — in effect a suit to reform the deed. They also brought actions for breach of contract (that Cosgrove refused to execute a correction deed in contravention of the Acceptance of Title and Closing Agreements), fee forfeiture, civil theft, and tortious interference with contractual relationship. The tortious interference claim has a two-year limitations period. 4 The remaining claims each have a limitations period of four years. 5 A four-year period also applies to deed-reformation claims. 6 Cos-grove counterclaimed for a declaratory judgment that the Cades’ claims were barred by limitations and the merger doctrine, and sought attorney fees.

Both parties moved for summary judgment. The Cades urged the trial court to declare as a matter of law that the 2006 deed did not convey mineral rights. They also argued that Cosgrove breached the sales contract by refusing to execute a correction deed. Cosgrove asserted that limitations and the merger doctrine barred the Cades’ claims. The trial court ruled that the Cades’ claims were time-barred and also denied their deed-reformation and breach-of-contract arguments. Cosgrove then sought attorney fees, which the trial court denied.

*36 Both parties appealed. The court of appeals reversed the grant of summary judgment for Cosgrove, affirmed the denial of summary judgment for the Cades, and overruled Cosgrove’s appeal for attorney fees as moot. Notably, while the court of appeals’ judgment was 3-0, two justices declined to join the authoring justice’s opinion, which stated the discovery rule delayed the accrual of limitations for a deed-reformation claim because “a mutual mistake in a deed is a type of injury for which the discovery rule is available.” 7 Cosgrove then appealed to this Court.

II. Discussion

A. The Discovery Rule Does Not Apply in Plain-Omission Cases

There is generally a rebuttable presumption that a grantor has immediate knowledge of defects in a deed that result from mutual mistake. 8 The court of appeals plurality correctly notes that “[a]p-plication of the presumption means that the limitations period on a claim to reform an incorrect deed begins to run as soon as the deed is executed because ... the grantor has actual knowledge that the deed is incorrect.” 9 This Court has not strictly applied the presumption of knowledge rule because, as we noted many years ago, “[njumerous exceptions are as well established as the rule itself.” 10

The court of appeals plurality did not apply the rebuttable presumption but instead applied the discovery rule, which defers accrual of a claim until the injured party learned of, or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have learned of, the wrongful act causing the injury. 11

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Bluebook (online)
468 S.W.3d 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbara-d-cosgrove-individually-and-as-the-trustee-of-the-charles-and-tex-2015.