Calhoun/Holiday Place, Inc., Artisan/ American Corp., Vernon Young and Elizabeth Young v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Successor-By-Merger to Wachovia Bank, National Association

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 14, 2016
Docket01-14-00872-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Calhoun/Holiday Place, Inc., Artisan/ American Corp., Vernon Young and Elizabeth Young v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Successor-By-Merger to Wachovia Bank, National Association (Calhoun/Holiday Place, Inc., Artisan/ American Corp., Vernon Young and Elizabeth Young v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Successor-By-Merger to Wachovia Bank, National Association) 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.

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Calhoun/Holiday Place, Inc., Artisan/ American Corp., Vernon Young and Elizabeth Young v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Successor-By-Merger to Wachovia Bank, National Association, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 14, 2016

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-14-00872-CV ——————————— CALHOUN/HOLIDAY PLACE, INC., ARTISAN/AMERICAN CORP., VERNON YOUNG AND ELIZABETH YOUNG, Appellants V. WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., SUCCESSOR-BY-MERGER TO WACHOVIA BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Appellee

On Appeal from the 55th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2011-56876

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Calhoun/Holiday Place, Inc., Artisan/American Corp., Vernon Young, and

Elizabeth Young (appellants) appeal from a final judgment, rendered upon trial to

the jury and to the bench, in favor of appellee, Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., successor-by-merger to Wachovia Bank, National Association (Wells Fargo). In

three issues, appellants argue that (1) the trial court erred by admitting evidence of

Wells Fargo’s sale of the property in May 2013 for $675,000; (2) there is legally and

factually insufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding that the property had a

fair market value of $800,000 on the foreclosure date; and (3) the trial court erred

by awarding attorney’s fees to Wells Fargo. We affirm.

Background

Vernon Young and his wife Elizabeth formed Calhoun/Holiday Place, Inc.

(Calhoun) for the purpose of developing a gated, 120-unit residential subdivision in

Houston known as Holiday Place. Calhoun purchased an undeveloped 6.371 acre

tract of land located in central Houston for $950,000 and borrowed $1,590,000 from

Wells Fargo’s predecessor in interest to develop the project for detached townhomes

in 2006 (the Note). The Note was secured by a deed of trust on the undeveloped tract

(the Property) and guaranteed by Artisan/American Corp., and the Youngs.

The infrastructure was in place and the Property’s lots were ready for home

construction by the fall of 2008. Unfortunately, environmental contamination on an

adjacent industrial property owned by CES Environmental Services thwarted

construction plans on the Property for several years. Local, state and federal actions

ultimately led to the closing of CES and its bankruptcy in 2010. Appellants filed a

lawsuit against CES in 2009 to recover damages caused by this delay in the

2 development of the project. Vernon Young testified that he would have been able to

begin marketing and constructing town homes on the Property in mid to late 2011,

except for the fact that Wells Fargo decided to proceed with the foreclosure in

September 2011.

On September 22, 2011, Wells Fargo sued Calhoun for breach of the Note and

Artisan/American and the Youngs for breach of their guaranty agreements. Wells

Fargo foreclosed on November 1, 2011, and purchased the Property with a credit bid

of $532,570 at the foreclosure sale, leaving a deficiency of $1,415,652. Wells Fargo

later amended its petition and sought to recover on this deficiency amount. Wells

Fargo eventually sold the Property to a neighboring charter school for $675,000 in

May 2018, approximately eighteen months after the foreclosure sale.

Appellants answered and filed three counterclaims seeking a declaratory

judgment with respect to Wells Fargo’s interest in the proceeds of appellants’ lawsuit

against CES and a valuation of the Property pursuant to the Texas Property Code,

and asserting a claim for wrongful foreclosure with respect to any recovery in the

CES lawsuit. The appellants’ declaratory judgment and wrongful foreclosure claims

were resolved in September 20121 and the only issue remaining to be tried was the

fair market value of the Property on the date of the foreclosure sale.

1 The CES lawsuit was settled, and the net proceeds of the suit, $629,786.44, were deposited in the registry of the court subject to Wells Fargo’s security interest.

3 Before trial, the parties stipulated that:

(1) the Note matured on January 23, 2009 and that appellants failed to pay the outstanding amounts due and owing under the Note; (2) Wells Fargo foreclosed on the Property and sold it at auction on November 1, 2011; (3) Wells Fargo purchased the Property at the foreclosure sale for a credit bid of $542,570; and (4) Appellants owed Wells Fargo $1,948,187.72 on November 1, 2011, including all applicable interest and fees.

Three witnesses testified about the Property’s fair market value on November

1, 2011: Wells Fargo’s appraiser, Phillip Barletta; appellants’ appraiser, William

Forrest; and Vernon Young.

Vernon Young testified that the Property had a fair market value of

$2,400,000 on November 1, 2011. Young based his valuation on his experience as a

homebuilder, and specifically, what he thought the townhomes could sell for in the

future, if they were built at all, and “what it would have cost” to develop the lots in

November 2011. Appellants’ appraiser, Forrest, prepared a 2012 report in which he

assessed the Property’s fair market value to be $1.71 million as of the foreclosure

date, based on his analyses of comparable sales of homes and residential lots. Wells

Fargo’s appraiser, Barletta, prepared three reports in which he assessed the

Property’s fair market value to be $550,000 as of August 20, 2010, $590,000 as of

August 26, 2011, and $650,000 as of May 2013. Barletta also prepared an October

2013 report critiquing Forrest’s 2012 appraisal. Based on his 2011 and 2013

4 appraisals, Barletta opined at trial that the fair market value of the Property on

November 1, 2011 was between $590,000 and $650,000.

Forrest’s and Barletta’s appraisals of the Property share several similarities.

Although Forrest and Barletta differed in their choice of comparable sales and their

adjustments to those sales, their valuations of the individual lots was relatively

close—Barletta valued the lots at $14,500 each and Forrest valued them at $20,800

each. Both experts also recognized that because lots in a subdivision sell over an

extended period of time, they had to project the time it would take to sell all of the

lots, i.e., the absorption rate, and then discount those future sales to a present value,

as of November 1, 2011. The primary difference between the two appraisals is that

Barletta projected that it would take several years longer to sell all of the lots than

Forrest. In addition to using a longer absorption rate, Barletta also used a higher

discount rate because he perceived the Property’s future development to be riskier

than Forrest.

In his October 2013 report, Barletta criticized Forrest’s appraisal on a number

of grounds. Specifically, Barletta took issue with Forrest’s comparison of the

Property’s small townhome lots with the sale of single–family homes in residential

subdivisions. According to Barletta, not only did the single–family homes used by

Forrest have lot sizes that were two to three and one half times larger than the

Property’s lots, but the pool of buyers for single–family residences is traditionally

5 much greater than the pool of buyers for townhomes. Barletta also noted that

although Forrest “concede[d] that the [Property] is ‘stigmatized’” in his report and

acknowledged that it usually takes ten years before stigmatized properties reclaim

their previous values, Forrest “never consider[d] such ‘stigma’ in [his] actual

analyses” or made any adjustments to his aggressive absorption projections based

on stigma.

On cross-examination, Forrest testified that he based his appraisal of $1.7

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Calhoun/Holiday Place, Inc., Artisan/ American Corp., Vernon Young and Elizabeth Young v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Successor-By-Merger to Wachovia Bank, National Association, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calhounholiday-place-inc-artisan-american-corp-vernon-young-and-texapp-2016.