Betty Jean Spears v. Alford Haynes

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 2020
Docket09-18-00147-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Betty Jean Spears v. Alford Haynes (Betty Jean Spears v. Alford Haynes) 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
Betty Jean Spears v. Alford Haynes, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-18-00147-CV __________________

BETTY JEAN SPEARS, Appellant

V.

ALFORD HAYNES, Appellee

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 60th District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. B-197,505 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Betty Jean Spears appeals from a summary-judgment ruling where the trial

court found Spears lost the property she owned after the property was sold in a non-

judicial foreclosure sale that occurred in 2015.1 The property at issue in the dispute

1 A non-judicial foreclosure occurs under state laws that allow them when the sale of property occurs without court supervision. See Obduskey v. McCarthy & Holthus LLP, ____ U.S. ___, 139 S.Ct. 1029, 1034 (2019). 1 is located in Beaumont, Texas. The suit subject to appeal began when Spears sued

Alford Haynes, the individual who purchased the property from the entity that

acquired it at foreclosure. Haynes moved for summary judgment on Spears’s claims

alleging she owned the property. He also moved to dismiss or to grant his request

for summary judgment on Spears’s claim alleging she had the right to continue living

on the property as a tenant.

For the reasons explained below, we affirm the judgment in part, and we

reverse the judgment in part.

Background

In July 1999, Associates Financial Services Company of Texas, Inc.

(Associates Financial) loaned Spears $47,311 2 under the terms of a written, home-

equity loan. Spears signed a deed of trust to support the loan, mortgaging the

property at issue in the appeal.

Between 1999 and November 2013, four separate entities, or holders in due

course, acquired Spears’s note. One of these, Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., sued Spears

in 2012 to foreclose when Spears defaulted on the obligation she had to make the

2 To simplify the numbers referred to in the opinion, we have rounded them to the nearest whole number. 2 monthly payments required by her note.3 We discuss the suit between Spears and

Wells Fargo in some detail because Haynes argues in his motion for summary

judgment that Spears lost her rights in the property at issue after Wells Fargo

foreclosed on Spears’s note. In his motion for summary judgment and the documents

attached to it, Haynes showed Wells Fargo, in its suit against Spears, asked the 136th

District Court for the following: (1) to issue a declaratory judgment that it owned the

property described in the deed of trust that Spears had signed when she collateralized

her home-equity loan; (2) to reform the legal description of the property as it is found

in the deed of trust; 4 (3) to reform the property descriptions in the various

assignments that had been made over the years when the entities acquired Spears’s

note; and (4) to declare that Wells Fargo’s lien on the property was valid, given the

3 Spears appealed from the judgment issued by the 136th District Court. But she subsequently notified the Court of Appeals that her appeal had become moot. This Court dismissed the appeal in 2016. Spears v. Wells Fargo Bank N.A., No. 09- 13-00485-CV, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 405, at *1 (Tex. App.—Beaumont, Jan. 14, 2016, no pet.). In the appeal now before us, Spears suggests the dismissal of her appeal vacated the judgment Wells Fargo obtained against her in 2013. We disagree. The Rules of Appellate Procedure authorize appellate courts to “vacate the trial court’s judgment and dismiss the case” or “dismiss the appeal.” Tex. R. App. P. 43.2(e), (f). We dismissed Spears’s appeal as moot, without reference to the merits. See Tex. R. App. P. 43.2(f). Consequently, our dismissal left that judgment intact. 4 The document that we refer to in the opinion as the deed of trust is titled “TEXAS HOME EQUITY SECURITY INSTRUMENT.” It includes the agreements typically found in deeds of trust. 3 terms in the deed of trust. To establish Spears no longer owned the residence, Haynes

included certified copies of the home-equity loan documents and the document that

Spears signed pledging the residence as collateral with his motion for summary

judgment. The loan documents Spears signed are file stamped, and the stamps reflect

the documents were duly filed in real property records that are maintained in

Jefferson County.

In 2013, the 136th District Court issued a final judgment in the Spears/Wells

Fargo suit. In its judgment, the trial court found Spears “in default.” The 136th

District Court also found Wells Fargo to be “the beneficiary of [the] agreement on

the property made the basis of [the] lawsuit.” The judgment contains language that

reformed the property descriptions in the documents relevant to Spears’s note and

the various assignments relevant to Wells Fargo’s lien. Finally, the 136th District

Court’s judgment expressly allowed Wells Fargo to enforce its lien “by a non-

judicial foreclosure action [as allowed under the Texas Constitution and Property

Code].” 5

While Wells Fargo obtained the above-described judgment in its suit against

Spears, it did not then follow up on the judgment and sell Spears’s property in a non-

5 See generally Tex. R. Civ. P. 735-736.

4 judicial foreclosure sale. Instead, Wells Fargo chose to assign its rights to Spears’s

loan and in the judgment to Bayview Loan Servicing, LLC (Bayview). At Bayview’s

request, the substitute trustee posted the property for sale in 2015. The property was

then sold by the substitute trustee in a non-judicial foreclosure sale conducted in

2015.

Bayview, the entity that held Spears’s note in 2015, was the successful bidder

at the sale. Afterward, the substitute trustee signed a substitute-trustee’s deed that

conveys legal title in the property to Bayview. The recitations in the substitute-

trustee’s deed state that Bayview purchased the property from the substitute trustee

for $56,070.

In 2015, Haynes purchased the property from Bayview, and Bayview gave

Haynes a special warranty deed evidencing the transaction.6 Copies of the

documents relevant to Haynes’s transaction with Bayview are attached to Haynes’s

motion for summary judgment. After purchasing the property, Haynes sued to evict

Spears from the property. While Haynes and Spears both mention eviction

proceedings in their pleadings, neither party filed pleadings relevant to the eviction

case in the case at issue in this appeal. After Haynes sued Spears in a justice court to

6 The special warranty deed includes several reservations. But none of these are relevant to the issues that Spears has raised in her appeal. 5 evict her from the property, Spears sued Haynes in the 60th District Court, alleging

Haynes had slandered the title to her property, clouded its title, and damaged her by

wrongfully suing her for eviction.

Just over two years after Spears sued Haynes, Haynes moved for summary

judgment or to dismiss Spears’s claims. With respect to the claims that involved who

owned the property, Haynes’s motion alleges Spears lost her rights to the property

at foreclosure. As to her wrongful eviction claim, Haynes asked the trial court to

dismiss the claim on two grounds, arguing that justice courts, not district courts, have

exclusive jurisdiction over that type of claim. And Haynes also claimed that the

judgment of eviction, which he claimed the justice court issued, resolved whether

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