Bonnie Allen-Pieroni v. Marc John Pieroni

538 S.W.3d 631
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 26, 2016
Docket05-15-00774-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 538 S.W.3d 631 (Bonnie Allen-Pieroni v. Marc John Pieroni) 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
Bonnie Allen-Pieroni v. Marc John Pieroni, 538 S.W.3d 631 (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Reverse and Render in part; Affirm and Opinion Filed July 26, 2016

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-15-00774-CV

BONNIE ALLEN-PIERONI, Appellant V. MARC JOHN PIERONI, Appellee

On Appeal from the 199th Judicial District Court Collin County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 199-02065-2014

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Wright, Justice Bridges, and Justice Lang Opinion by Justice Bridges Bonnie Allen-Pieroni appeals the trial court’s judgment declaring Marc Pieroni’s

homestead free and clear of any lien filed by Bonnie and awarding Marc $98,438 in damages and

$41,982 in attorney’s fees. In four issues, Bonnie argues the trial court erred in (1) awarding

Marc attorney’s fees because his pleadings did not seek declaratory judgment; (2) applying the

wrong measure of damages for slander of title; (3) awarding damages to Marc for slander of title

because there was no evidence or insufficient evidence to show Bonnie acted with malice; and

(4) denying Bonnie a fair trial by imposing time limits at trial. We reverse the trial court’s award

of attorney’s fees and render judgment that Marc take nothing on his claim for attorney’s fees.

In all other respects, we affirm the trial court’s judgment. Bonnie and Marc were married for approximately ten years and divorced on September

11, 2009. Among other things, the divorce decree ordered Marc to pay Bonnie $10,000 per

month for fifty months in exchange for Marc’s being awarded the family business. The decree

further ordered that the obligation to make these payments was a judgment in favor of Bonnie,

but execution on the judgment was suspended while payments were being made or otherwise

satisfied and not more than sixty days delinquent.

On March 31, 2010, Marc purchased a home in Collin County which he considered to be

his homestead. On June 2, 2010, Bonnie filed with the Collin County District clerk an abstract

of judgment reflecting the September 11, 2009 judgment was entered in favor of Bonnie against

Marc for $500,000. Marc filed an application for residential homestead exemption on January

18, 2011.

On September 24, 2011, the trial court signed a memorandum in response to competing

petitions for modification from Bonnie and Marc. Among other things, the memorandum

imposed a permanent injunction enjoining Bonnie from “filing any abstract of judgment she has

with respect to the remaining approximate sum of $220,000 owed to her on the $500,000

suspended judgment referenced in the decree of divorce, without first filing an appropriate

motion showing cause by sworn affidavit why an abstract should be filed, and attaching the

proposed exact form of abstract she seeks permission to file, and obtaining relief from the Court

on that motion.” Marc was never more than sixty days delinquent in making the $10,000 per

month payments, and he paid Bonnie the full $500,000.

In March 2014, Marc entered into a contract to sell the home, and the sale was scheduled

to close on or about May 1, 2014 for a sale price of $285,000. At the time, the mortgage balance

on the home was $205,000. In preparing for the closing, Marc learned for the first time of the

June 2010 abstract of judgment. The title company and Marc’s attorney called Bonnie to request

–2– that she release the lien, but she refused. Because of the abstract of judgment filing, Marc was

unable to close on the sale of the home. At the same time, Marc was obligated to close on the

purchase of a new home which he had contracted to purchase after entering into the contract to

sell his home in March 2014.

On May 30, 2014, Marc filed a lawsuit against Bonnie seeking to quiet title and asserting

a cause of action for slander of title. Under the heading “Count One: Suit to Quiet Title,” the

petition asked the trial court to “declare that Marc’s interest in the subject property is free and

clear of any lien by Bonnie.” In addition, Marc sought actual and exemplary damages and

attorney’s fees. Marc’s original petition described Marc’s obligation under the divorce decree to

pay $10,000 per month for fifty months and Bonnie’s filing of an abstract of judgment creating

“a lien on all property owned by Marc in Collin County, Texas.” The petition alleged that,

“[u]nbeknownst to Marc, the moment he purchased the [subject] Property, the lien created by the

Abstract of Judgment immediately encumbered the Property.” When Marc contracted to sell the

property and discovered the abstract of judgment, the title company drafted a release of judgment

lien that Marc’s attorney delivered to Bonnie. The petition alleged Bonnie emailed Marc’s

attorney on April 30, 2014 and said “she would not be signing the Release of Judgment Lien”

because “Marc had not paid her the full $500,000.00 as required by the divorce decree.” The

petition alleged Marc had paid in full by that time. However, Bonnie refused to sign the release,

and the purchasers of the property refused to close. At the time of the filing of the petition, it

alleged, Marc still owned the property. The petition asserted causes of action for suit to quiet

title and slander of title.

At a trial before the court in March 2015, Marc presented evidence he had incurred

$98,438.28 in actual damages from the loss of the sale of the property and payments and

expenses associated with the property following the lost sale and $41,982 in attorney’s fees.

–3– Bonnie, who represented herself at trial, testified Marc still owed $63,000 in “deficiencies” in the

$10,000 payments awarded in the divorce decree. Bonnie testified some of the deficiencies were

“self-help, where Marc just didn’t pay [her] at his leisure; and others were when the courts had

wrongfully redistributed [her] marital assets.” The trial court asked Bonnie to clarify which

payments were missed. Bonnie presented a spreadsheet showing payments made from July 2009

through June 2012, and claimed a $63,416.70 balance remained unpaid. Bonnie’s testimony in

response to the trial court’s request for clarification amounted to a month-by-month recitation of

what the spreadsheet showed. Bonnie did not address what payments Marc did or did not make

after June 2012. Bonnie’s testimony concerning the spreadsheet came to an end when the trial

court informed her she was out of time. She did not object.

Marc’s attorney cross-examined Bonnie concerning an affidavit she had introduced into

evidence earlier. The affidavit was sworn to by Rex Billings, chief financial officer of Marc’s

company, and stated Billings prepared the checks each month for the payments Marc owed to

Bonnie. Attached to Billings’s affidavit was an accounting of all payments made by Marc to

Bonnie, showing a total of $500,000 paid between July 2009 and August 2013. Marc’s attorney

cited the deficiencies on Bonnie’s spreadsheet and compared them with corresponding payments

marked “Repayment to BC” on the accounting. Bonnie conceded she saw that the deficiencies

she claimed corresponded with the “Repayment to BC” payments. As Marc’s counsel proceeded

with this line of questioning, the trial court once again informed counsel that time was up.

Bonnie asked if there was “any other testimony that [she could] share,” and the trial court

responded as follows:

No. Because that’s what I kept telling you, don’t waste your time, because I wanted to make sure you had time to tell me what you wanted to tell me.

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