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

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 2015
Docket14-0346
StatusPublished

This text of Barbara D. Cosgrove, Individually and as the Trustee of the Charles and Barbara Cosgrove Family Revocable Living Trust v. Michael Cade and Billie Cade (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, (Tex. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS

════════════ NO. 14-0346 ════════════

BARBARA D. COSGROVE, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS THE TRUSTEE OF THE CHARLES AND BARBARA COSGROVE FAMILY REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST, PETITIONER

v.

MICHAEL CADE AND BILLIE CADE, RESPONDENTS

══════════════════════════════════════════ ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS ══════════════════════════════════════════

JUSTICE BOYD, joined by JUSTICE JOHNSON, JUSTICE GUZMAN, and JUSTICE DEVINE, dissenting in part.

“This deed-reformation dispute . . . .” Ante at ___.

These first four words of the Court’s opinion foretell and ensure its erroneous result. This

case does involve a deed-reformation dispute, and I agree with the Court’s holdings as to that

dispute: because the law charges the Cades with knowledge of the deed they signed, the discovery

rule does not apply and the statute of limitations bars the Cades’ equitable claim to reform the

deed. But as the Court curtly acknowledges at the close of its opinion, this case involves other

claims, including a claim for breach of a separate contractual agreement the parties signed at

closing. I do not agree that the statute of limitations bars the Cades’ claim for breach of the separate closing agreement, because that claim accrued only two months before the Cades filed this suit.

As to that part of the Court’s judgment, I respectfully dissent.

I. Background

In September 2006, the parties entered into a real estate sales contract in which they agreed

that the Cades would sell their home and two-acre lot to the Cosgroves1 but retain the mineral

interests, which they had previously leased to an oil company. At the closing the following month,

the Cades signed and delivered a deed that failed to reserve the mineral interests, contrary to the

terms of the sales agreement. Ms. Cosgrove has never disputed that this was a mistake. At the same

closing, however, the parties also signed a separate closing agreement in which they mutually

promised to “comply with all provisions of the [sales] contract” and 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 [sales] contract.”

During the four years following the closing, the lease operator continued to send shut-in

royalties and notices to the Cades, as if they still owned the mineral interests. The evidence

conclusively establishes, and Ms. Cosgrove does not dispute, that neither the Cades nor the lease

operator had actual knowledge that the deed had mistakenly failed to reserve the mineral interests.

It is not clear when Ms. Cosgrove discovered the mistake, but within weeks after the four-year

anniversary of the closing, she contacted the operator, asserted ownership over the minerals, and

demanded that the operator pay all royalties to her. In December 2010, days after the operator

1 Although the Cosgroves purchased the property through their family revocable living trust, I refer to them personally, rather than to the trust, for clarity’s sake. I refer individually to Ms. Cosgrove when addressing post-closing events because Mr. Cosgrove died after the closing and before the Cades filed this suit.

2 informed the Cades of Ms. Cosgrove’s demand, the Cades asked Ms. Cosgrove to fulfill the

promises she made in the closing agreement, but she refused. Two months later, in February 2011,

the Cades filed this suit, asserting claims for declaratory judgment (which the Court construes as

“in effect a suit to reform the deed,” ante at ___), tortious interference, statutory theft, and breach

of the closing agreement.

The trial court granted Ms. Cosgrove’s motion for summary judgment and denied the

Cades’ cross-motion, finding that the statute of limitations barred all of the Cades’ claims. The

court of appeals unanimously reversed and remanded. 430 S.W.3d 488. In that court’s only opinion

accompanying its judgment,2 Justice Dauphinot concluded that fact issues precluded summary

judgment for either party. Addressing the Cades’ breach-of-contract claim, Justice Dauphinot

explained that “[t]here is no allegation that Cosgrove breached any contract other than the closing

agreement, in which she agreed to cooperate in correcting any errors in any documents executed

in connection with the transaction.” Id. at 506–07. She concluded that Ms. Cosgrove’s alleged

breach of the closing agreement occurred when she refused the Cades’ request to correct the

mistaken deed, two months before they filed this suit, and the claim “was therefore brought within

the limitations period.” Id. at 507. Justice Dauphinot thus concluded that Ms. Cosgrove was not

entitled to summary judgment on the contract claim. But she concluded that the Cades were not

entitled to summary judgment on that claim either, because a “correction deed may be used only

to correct facial imperfections,” and the omission of a reservation of mineral interest is more than

2 Justices Walker and Gabriel concurred “without opinion.” 430 S.W.3d at 508.

3 a facial imperfection. Id. at 507–08 (citing Myrad Props., Inc. v. LaSalle Bank Nat’l Ass’n, 300

S.W.3d 746, 750 (Tex. 2009)).3

II. The Equitable Deed-Reformation Claim

The Court holds today that limitations bars the Cades’ deed-reformation claim, and I agree.

Although the parties agreed in their sales contract that the Cades would retain the mineral interests,

they effectuated that agreement by approving and signing a deed that did not retain those interests.

As we have long recognized, “[w]hen a deed is delivered and accepted as performance of a contract

to convey, the contract is merged in the deed. Though the terms of the deed may vary from those

contained in the contract, still the deed must be looked to alone to determine the rights of the

parties.” Alvarado v. Bolton, 749 S.W.2d 47, 48 (Tex. 1988) (quoting Baker v. Baker, 207 S.W.2d

244, 249 (Tex. Civ. App.—San Antonio 1947, writ ref’d n.r.e.)). Under the merger doctrine, the

Cades conveyed the mineral interests to the Cosgroves, and they cannot rely on the terms of the

sales contract to undo that conveyance.

They can rely, however, on principles of equity. “Despite the merger doctrine, prior

agreements are not merged into a realty deed [that] is signed due to fraud, accident, or mistake.”

Geodyne Energy Income Prod. P’ship I-E v. Newton Corp., 161 S.W.3d 482, 487 (Tex. 2005). In

equity, Texas law would allow the Cades to sue to reform the deed based on mutual mistake, but

they must bring that claim within the four-year statute of limitations. For the reasons the Court

3 The Cades do not contest Justice Dauphinot’s conclusion that a correction deed is unavailable as a remedy in these circumstances, so we need not address that issue. Justice Dauphinot did not, however, affirm the summary judgment in Ms. Cosgrove’s favor on that ground, but instead suggested that the Cades may be entitled on remand to a different form of relief, such as a judgment requiring Ms. Cosgrove “to execute a new instrument conveying the mineral back to them.” 430 S.W.3d at 508.

4 explains, I agree that the law charges the Cades with knowledge of the deed’s contents as of the

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