Brian D. Moneyhon and Cheryl Parrish-Moneyhon v. Patricia Moneyhon

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 12, 2009
Docket14-06-00873-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Brian D. Moneyhon and Cheryl Parrish-Moneyhon v. Patricia Moneyhon (Brian D. Moneyhon and Cheryl Parrish-Moneyhon v. Patricia Moneyhon) 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
Brian D. Moneyhon and Cheryl Parrish-Moneyhon v. Patricia Moneyhon, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Reversed and Rendered and Opinion filed February 12, 2009

Reversed and Rendered and Opinion filed February 12, 2009.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-06-00873-CV

BRIAN D. MONEYHON AND CHERYL PARRISH-MONEYHON, Appellants

V.

PATRICIA MONEYHON, Appellee

On Appeal from the 412th District Court

Brazoria County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 37527

O P I N I O N


A husband and wife appeal a judgment from the trial court ordering the couple to convey title to a home, which the couple shared with the husband=s mother, to the husband=s mother.  In five issues, the couple complains that (1) the judgment imposing a constructive trust on the home based on an alleged breach of fiduciary duty is improper because the judgment does not comport with the pleadings; (2) the trial court=s judgment cannot be affirmed on any other basis; (3) the mother is precluded from seeking judicial assistance to re-acquire title to the home that allegedly was fraudulently conveyed; (4) injunctive relief is improper; and (5) the home was a gift from the mother to the son.  We reverse and render.

I.  Factual and Procedural Background

Before appellant Brian Moneyhon=s marriage to appellant Cheryl Parrish-Moneyhon,  Brian lived with appellee, his seventy-five-year-old mother, Patricia Moneyhon in a Houston home referred to by the parties as ABash Place.@  By her own admission, Patricia was dependent on Brian=s care, and had been for many years, because she was not in good health.[1]  Patricia sold Bash Place, and proceeds from that sale were used to purchase a home in Lake Jackson.  The title to the Lake Jackson home was transferred to Brian alone.  Brian and Patricia moved to the home in Lake Jackson, which is the home at issue in this case.

Brian and Cheryl were married shortly after he and Patricia moved to Lake Jackson.  Cheryl moved into the Lake Jackson home with Brian and Patricia.  In the months that followed, Brian and Cheryl=s relationship with Patricia deteriorated, which the couple attributed to Patricia=s declining health and growing demands.  The couple believed it was in Patricia=s best interest for her to live in a facility that was better-equipped to meet her needs, and they served Patricia with a notice of eviction in hope that she would move to an assisted-living facility.  Upon receiving the eviction notice, Patricia sued Brian and Cheryl, seeking an injunction against the couple to prevent her eviction.

Patricia petitioned the district court to determine ownership of the home and to declare a constructive trust.  In her petition for injunction, Patricia made the following factual allegations:


$                   Patricia agreed to sell her Bash Place home and purchase the Lake Jackson home.

$                   The proceeds from the sale of Bash Place were dispersed to Patricia and Brian, with the bulk of the proceeds transferred to a title company in Lake Jackson.

$                   Patricia received roughly $49,000 by check, which was endorsed by Brian and deposited in a bank.  Brian subsequently withdrew or spent the money to Patricia=s damage.

$                   Patricia and Brian discussed the purchase of the Lake Jackson home with the understanding that they would reside there together.  Each of them continuously have lived together at the Lake Jackson home since moving to the home in November 2004.

$                   Brian used the proceeds of the sale of Bash Place to purchase the Lake Jackson home.  All of the money used for the purchase of the Lake Jackson home was Patricia=s.

$                   Brian, by deed transfers, purposely transferred an undivided one-half interest in the Lake Jackson home to Cheryl, which was done without Patricia=s consent or approval to Patricia=s damage.

$                   In March 2006, the couple gave Patricia a thirty-day eviction notice, requesting her to vacate the premises of the Lake Jackson home.

Patricia also petitioned for the district court to declare a constructive trust, based on the following allegations:

$                   Patricia sold her Bash Place home.  Unbeknownst to Patricia, Brian and Cheryl arranged for the purchase of the Lake Jackson home using entirely the proceeds from the sale of the Bash Place home.  Brian took title to the Lake Jackson property.

$                   The couple, through a series of conveyances, transferred the home to each other.  The couple obtained the property in complete disregard to Patricia=s rights by promising or representing to Patricia that Patricia would own the property, but Aif anything ever happened@ to Patricia, Brian would receive the property.  Brian promised to let Patricia live the rest of her life at the Lake Jackson home.

$                   After Patricia learned of the couple=s Aplan to dispossess [her] and own the property,@ Brian promised Patricia that he would convey the property to her. The couple did not convey the Lake Jackson home to Patricia.


$                   Brian=s promises were material representations because Patricia did not agree that Brian would own the property to Patricia=s exclusion.  The couple=

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Brian D. Moneyhon and Cheryl Parrish-Moneyhon v. Patricia Moneyhon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brian-d-moneyhon-and-cheryl-parrish-moneyhon-v-pat-texapp-2009.