Carolyn W. Dessens v. Charles Wayne Dessens, Ronald Hudson, Lynn Anderson and Barbara K. Runge

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 16, 2004
Docket14-03-00139-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Carolyn W. Dessens v. Charles Wayne Dessens, Ronald Hudson, Lynn Anderson and Barbara K. Runge (Carolyn W. Dessens v. Charles Wayne Dessens, Ronald Hudson, Lynn Anderson and Barbara K. Runge) 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
Carolyn W. Dessens v. Charles Wayne Dessens, Ronald Hudson, Lynn Anderson and Barbara K. Runge, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed November 16, 2004

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed November 16, 2004.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-03-00139-CV

CAROLYN W. DESSENS, Appellant

V.

CHARLES WAYNE DESSENS, RONALD HUDSON, LYNN ANDERSON AND BARBARA K. RUNGE, Appellees

On Appeal from the 309th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 92-13606

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N


In 1996, appellant Carolyn Dessens and appellee Charles Wayne Dessens were divorced.  The divorce decree provided that Mr. Dessens had the exclusive right to sell the family residence within a specified time frame, and each party was to receive fifty percent of the net proceeds of the sale.  Three years later, Mr. Dessens listed the property for sale with appellee Lynn Anderson, a real estate agent, and eventually entered into a sales contract with appellee Ronald Hudson.  However, Mrs. Dessens refused to attend the closing or sign the deed.  Mr. Dessens moved to enforce the sales contract, but the trial court denied his motion because the proposed closing statement did not distribute the net proceeds to the parties equally.  The trial court then appointed appellee Barbara Runge as receiver.  Anderson and Hudson intervened to require Mrs. Dessens, or alternatively Runge, to sign the deed to the property and complete the sale.  The trial court granted the intervention.

In its Final Judgment on Intervention, the trial court ordered Runge to execute a deed conveying the property to Hudson, and specified how the sale proceeds were to be allocated on the settlement statement.  Mrs. Dessens appeals the Final Judgment on Intervention, contending that (1) the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter the judgment; (2) the trial court lacked authority to order payment of attorney’s fees out of the sale of the parties’ homestead; and (3) the judgment makes substantive changes to the divorce decree’s property division.  For the reasons stated below, we affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND


Mr. and Mrs. Dessens were divorced on October 29, 1996.  The final decree of divorce granted Mr. Dessens possession of their house and required that he sell the house within ninety days of the earliest date that (1) their minor child graduates from high school,[1] (2) the residence is no longer the child’s principal residence, or (3) the residence is the primary residence of any individual to whom the child is not related or to whom Mr. Dessens is not married or related.  The decree stated that Mr. Dessens had the exclusive right to list the property and the exclusive right to enter into an earnest money contract for the sale.  The net proceeds from the sale would be distributed equally to Mr. and Mrs. Dessens.[2]  In the case that the above conditions of the sale were not satisfied, Barbara Runge would be appointed receiver.  Among other provisions, the decree additionally required Mr. Dessens to pay all taxes and insurance on the property from November 1996 until the final sale, as well as provided that he be reimbursed for drapes removed from the house by Mrs. Dessens, and for a November 1996 mortgage payment.

In 1999, Mr. Dessens contacted real estate agent Lynn Anderson about listing the house.  Ronald Hudson contacted Mrs. Anderson to view the property and soon after entered into a contract to purchase the house for $170,000.  Mr. Hudson was Mr. Dessens’ supervisor for a number of years at the City of Houston Engineering Department; at the time of the contract, however, Mr. Hudson had retired.  At the March 19, 2001 closing, Mr. Hudson paid $86,471.31 in cash to the title company and tendered a note for the balance of the purchase price to Mr. Dessens.  Mr. Dessens accepted the tender of consideration and executed a deed to the property which was then held by the title company.  However, Mrs. Dessens refused to sign the deed.

Mr. Dessens then filed a petition for enforcement seeking enforcement of the sale.  An associate judge determined the original contract of July 7, 1999 was not timely, but found that a “back-up contract” of August 6, 2001 and the closing of March 19, 2001 were within the required 90 days.  However, he denied the petition after finding that the contract did not provide Mrs. Dessens fifty percent of the proceeds as the final divorce decree required.  Mr. Dessens appealed to the trial judge, but on April 22, 2002, the trial judge affirmed the associate judge’s findings and denied the appeal.  The trial judge also appointed Barbara Runge as receiver.


On July 29, 2002, Ronald Hudson and Lynn Anderson filed a petition of intervention to force Mrs. Dessens, or alternatively, Runge, to execute the deed.  They also requested the court order payment of Anderson’s real estate commission and distribute the remaining net proceeds of the sale as provided by the divorce decree.  Both Mr. Hudson and Mrs. Anderson sought attorney’s fees.  In October 2002, the trial court conducted a hearing on the intervention.  At the hearing, the trial court struck Mrs. Dessens’ response to the intervenors’ petition for intervention as not timely filed.  On October 29, 2002, the trial court signed the Final Judgment on Intervention to enforce the sale of the house.  In the judgment, the trial court directed that Mr. Hudson’s cash payment be split evenly between Mr. and Mrs. Dessens, that they share the closing costs, commission costs and receiver fees,[3] and that Mr.

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Carolyn W. Dessens v. Charles Wayne Dessens, Ronald Hudson, Lynn Anderson and Barbara K. Runge, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carolyn-w-dessens-v-charles-wayne-dessens-ronald-hudson-lynn-anderson-texapp-2004.