Capcor at KirbyMain, L.L.C. v. Moody National Kirby Houston S, L.L.C D/B/A Moody National Kirby Houston, L.L.P and Moody National Title Company, L.P.

509 S.W.3d 379, 2014 WL 982858, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 2808
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 13, 2014
Docket01-13-00068-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 509 S.W.3d 379 (Capcor at KirbyMain, L.L.C. v. Moody National Kirby Houston S, L.L.C D/B/A Moody National Kirby Houston, L.L.P and Moody National Title Company, L.P.) 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
Capcor at KirbyMain, L.L.C. v. Moody National Kirby Houston S, L.L.C D/B/A Moody National Kirby Houston, L.L.P and Moody National Title Company, L.P., 509 S.W.3d 379, 2014 WL 982858, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 2808 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

MICHAEL MASSENGALE, Justice.

This appeal concerns the fiduciary responsibilities of a title insurer as escrow agent for a commercial real estate transaction. Appellant Capcor at KirbyMain, L.L.C., argues that the escrow agent— appellee Moody National Title Company, L.P.—breached its fiduciary duties by refusing to accept a cashier’s check to close Capcor’s purchase of a tract of unimproved land. Capcor also contends that the trial court erred in refusing a requested jury instruction on material breach of contract by the seller, appellee Moody National Kirby Houston, L.L.P.

Finding no reversible error, we affirm.

Background

Moody National Kirby Houston, L.L.P. (Moody Kirby) owned a vacant lot near the Texas Medical Center. Moody Kirby had fallen behind on its loan payments, and its bank agreed to forgive a substantial portion of the principal in exchange for the proceeds of a sale. Capcor agreed to purchase the land from Moody Kirby using a standard “Unimproved Property Contract” promulgated by the Texas Real Estate Commission. The contract specified a definite date for closing and provided that “At closing ... Buyer shall pay the Sales Price in good funds acceptable to the escrow agent.” If a party failed to close the sale by the closing date, the other party was entitled to exercise its contractual remedies, which included terminating the contract and receiving the earnest money as liquidated damages.

*383 The parties agreed to use Moody National Title Company, L.P. (Moody Title), a company wholly owned by Moody Kirby’s sole owner, Brett Moody, as title company. Pursuant to the contract, Capcor deposited $25,000 in earnest money with Moody Title.

As the last day for closing under the contract was the Sunday of Memorial Day weekend, the parties agreed to shift the date for closing to the following Tuesday. The day prior to closing, Moody Title escrow agent Kay Street informed Capcor’s lawyer that Moody Title needed to receive the purchase funds in the form of a wire transfer. She informed Capcor’s principal, Josh Aruh, of the same requirement when he arrived at Moody Title’s office the next morning to sign closing documents.

That afternoon, Street became concerned. Although the portion of the purchase price Capcor was borrowing from its bank had arrived by wire transfer, she had not received a wire for the additional amount that Capcor was paying itself. She sent an email to Aruh stating: “Please advise once the wire has been sent. We need to fund today and our outgoing wire cutoff is 3:30.” She also spoke on the phone with Capcor’s attorney, who called and asked if she had received the wire. When she replied that she had not received it, he said, “Let me see what’s going on.” She still had not received a wire at 3:05 when she sent another email to Aruh: “The purchaser funds are still outstanding. Please be advised that this transaction is not closed until all funds are received.”

At 4:26, Street received an email from Capcor’s bank informing her that a Capcor principal was on his way to the bank to obtain a cashier’s check. This is the first communication to Street clearly established in the record that Capcor intended to use a cashier’s check, and no evidence was presented to affirmatively establish that Capcor had provided such notice to Street at any time prior to that. Street reacted by contacting her underwriter, Fidelity National Title, to ask whether she could accept the cashier’s check. Fidelity had sent a bulletin to its agents cautioning them about counterfeit cashier’s checks. Street eventually spoke to two Fidelity representatives who both informed her that she could not accept a cashier’s check.

Street next sent an email to Capcor’s bank, which stated: “They need to be stopped. We cannot accept a cashier’s check for that amount it has to be a wire.” She sent a further email to the bank, copying it to Capcor’s attorney: “Underwriting will not allow a cashiers check for that amount. It needs to be a wire.” About this time, she also called the Texas Department of Insurance, which informed her that as long as she did not accept types of funds prohibited by its regulations, Moody Title was free to set its own policies as to what funds it would accept.

Sometime after 5:00, Capcor principal Avi Ron arrived at Moody Title with a cashier’s check. When Street told Ron that she was leaving for the day and could not accept the check, he threw it on her desk. At this point it was no longer possible for Capcor’s bank to conduct a wire transfer.

Street later testified as to her reasons for refusing to accept the cashier’s check. Not only had Fidelity’s representatives told her not to accept the check, but she avowed that she had had “an absolute responsibility to follow the directive of the underwriting counsel” at Fidelity. Violating this responsibility, she believed, would have resulted in loss of her escrow officer’s license.

Aside from the limitations imposed by her underwriter, Street had been directed by Capcor’s bank not to disburse its funds *384 unless she was in a position to issue a title policy. And Street could not issue a title policy until consideration had passed. As she expressed the limitation, “[A]ny transaction that’s on the last day of the contract has got to close and fund that day. And it’s not closed till it’s funded. And I’m in a position to issue a title policy.” When asked what type of funds were needed, Street responded, “Collected funds, a wire.”

Street clarified that cashier’s checks are not considered “collected funds” because they are subject to a three-day recall. She also explained that because she would not have been able to deposit the check until the next day, the funds were not available for transfer on the day of closing. Simply “floating” the money, i.e., using Moody Title’s own funds to complete the transaction on behalf of the buyer while awaiting fulfillment of the cashier’s check, was not possible due to Moody Title’s limited resources and the need to strictly separate sums in trust accounts from an escrow agent’s own assets.

The morning after the failed closing, Gapcor’s attorney offered to immediately substitute a wire transfer for the cashier’s check. Moody National, however, sent notice that it was terminating the contract.

Capcor refused to sign a release of the earnest money, and it sued Moody Kirby on the sales contract, later adding claims against Moody Title for tortious interference with the contract and breach of fiduciary duty. Moody Kirby counterclaimed, seeking the earnest money and contractual liquidated damages. When the case was tried, the jury found that Capcor had breached the contract, while Moody Kirby had not. The jury further found that Moody Title had not breached its fiduciary duties to Capcor.

The trial court entered judgment awarding Moody Kirby’s attorney’s fees, the es-crowed funds, and contractual liquidated damages in an amount three times greater than the earnest money. After its motions for JNOV and new trial were overruled by operation of law, Capcor timely appealed.

Analysis

Capcor argues that the evidence was factually insufficient to support the jury’s verdict that Moody Title did not breach its fiduciary duties.

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Bluebook (online)
509 S.W.3d 379, 2014 WL 982858, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 2808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capcor-at-kirbymain-llc-v-moody-national-kirby-houston-s-llc-dba-texapp-2014.