Charles Murray v. C.I.A. Hidden Forest, Inc. and Nancy Cramer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 2020
Docket09-19-00013-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Charles Murray v. C.I.A. Hidden Forest, Inc. and Nancy Cramer (Charles Murray v. C.I.A. Hidden Forest, Inc. and Nancy Cramer) 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
Charles Murray v. C.I.A. Hidden Forest, Inc. and Nancy Cramer, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-19-00013-CV __________________

CHARLES MURRAY, Appellant

V.

C.I.A. HIDDEN FOREST, INC. AND NANCY CRAMER, Appellees

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 284th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 17-09-11342-CV __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Charles Murray (“Murray”) appeals the trial court’s judgment in

favor of Appellees C.I.A. Hidden Forest, Inc. (“the Property Owners Association”)

and Nancy L. Cramer (“Cramer”) (collectively “Appellees”), granting a permanent

injunction and ordering Murray to remove a mobile home from certain property. We

affirm.

1 Procedural Background

In September 2017, the Property Owners Association and Cramer filed an

original petition seeking a permanent injunction against Murray. The petition

explained that Cramer was a property owner in Section 5 of the Hidden Forest

Estates Subdivision (“the subdivision”). According to the petition, in February 2014,

Murray made an “Affidavit to the Public” regarding Lots 136 through 139 in Section

5 of the subdivision for an onsite wastewater treatment system to be installed.

Murray also made an “Affidavit Acknowledging Need to Join Properties” seeking

to join the four lots because the onsite sewage system was located on all four lots.

Murray subsequently moved a double-wide mobile home onto the four lots, which

were then owned by Lester Ruthstrom.

According to the plaintiffs, Lots 136 through 139 were subject to

(1) restrictions recorded in Volume 776, Page 484 through Page 487 of the Deed

Records of Montgomery County, Texas; and (2) restrictions recorded in Volume

963, Page 95 of the Deed Records of Montgomery County, Texas. 1 Plaintiffs alleged

that the relevant restrictions stated:

1 The parties stipulated that a document titled “Restrictions” was recorded in Volume 776, Pages 484 through 487 of the Deed Records of Montgomery County on June 15, 1972, which states in part “No trailer houses, mobile homes, or kindred structures will be permitted.” 2 1. b. Only a residence, garage, or tool house may be built on residential lots, and they must conform in appearance and construction generally to other dwellings in the Hidden Forest Estates subdivision. No trailer houses, mobile homes, or kindred structures will be permitted.

Plaintiffs alleged that a deed restriction letter was sent to Ruthstrom and to Heather

Lininger2 in March 2014. In April 2014, the Property Owners Association president

spoke with Ruthstrom, and the next month, the president told the attorney for the

Property Owners Association that Lininger was willing to have the mobile home

moved out, however the mobile home was not removed. In September 2014, a

second attorney (and the plaintiffs’ attorney in this proceeding) sent another deed

restriction letter to Ruthstrom, but neither Ruthstrom nor Murray removed the

mobile home.

In October 2014, Ruthstrom deeded all four lots to Murray and the Property

Owners Association sent a “Notice of the Opportunity to Meet with the Board” letter

to Ruthstrom, Murray, and Lininger. According to the petition, in the meeting,

Murray told the Property Owners Association that “there was no way a court would

enforce these restrictions because there were other mobile homes in the subdivision.”

The petition asserted that although there were some mobile homes in the subdivision,

they were in sections where there are no specific restrictions against trailers and

2 Murray testified at trial that he and Lininger have a child and live together and that Lininger had Murray’s “proxy[.]” 3 mobile homes. According to the plaintiffs, Murray had told the Property Owners

Association Board and Board members that he had no intention of complying with

the restrictions against mobile homes. Plaintiffs sought a court order requiring

Murray to remove the mobile home from Lots 136 through 139 and sought a

permanent injunction prohibiting Murray from moving a “trailer house, mobile

home, or kindred structure” on any lot in Sections 4 or 5.3

In October 2017, Murray filed an answer asserting a general denial. In July

2018, Murray filed an amended answer, asserting the affirmative defenses of waiver

and estoppel and asserting that “Plaintiffs’[] attempt to enforce against him the

covenants and regulations at issue violates Texas law as arbitrary, capricious, and

discriminatory.”

Evidence at Trial

Testimony of Doug Walker

Doug Walker testified that he was on the Board of the Property Owners

Association and described how the Board dealt with requests for variances:

Q. What process did the [Property Owners Association] file for approval of a variance to the deed restrictions?

A. We would ask people to follow the process of bringing in their plans, making sure they had all the permits in place, and then sit down and 3 Plaintiffs also sought to recover certain costs and fees, which are not at issue in this appeal. 4 discuss a timeline, and we asked for updates as far as what they were doing.

Q. Okay. So would the [Property Owners Association] consider allowing somebody to bring in a trailer or a mobile home if they had plans, a timeline, and, of course, a septic system, and their water and electrical?

A. Correct, we would.

Walker testified that he had a conversation with Heather Lininger at a Board meeting

about what Lininger and Murray needed to show in order to temporarily have a

trailer on the property: a sewer permit; water installed; and a plan for what they

wanted to build, how long it would take to build, and how long they would want a

trailer on the property.

According to Walker, the Property Owners Association was not well-funded

and sometimes could barely cover basic expenses, and the Board did not have funds

to hire attorneys for lawsuits on trailer violations. Walker recalled that, when he left

the Board, there were three trailers in Section 5. Walker testified that one trailer had

been modified so that it did not look like a trailer. One of the trailers was on the

Warren property, and Walker explained that the statute of limitations barred any

action against that violation. Walker testified that the Property Owners Association

had successfully sued another property owner who moved five travel trailers onto

his lot.

5 Testimony of Laura Warren

Laura Warren testified that her family obtained permission from the land

developer to put a mobile home on their lots in 1984. She also testified that in 1996

they obtained permission from the developer to replace the original mobile home

with a newer one.

Testimony of Nancy Cramer

Plaintiff Nancy Cramer testified that she had lived in the subdivision for about

fourteen years, and she joined this lawsuit because she did not want “to live in a

trailer park.” Cramer testified that the Property Owners Association had not filed a

lot of lawsuits on deed restriction violations because it does not have very much

money.

Testimony of Tammy Parker

Tammy Parker, the president of the Property Owners Association, testified

that she had lived in the subdivision for eleven years. Exhibit 21 was admitted into

evidence, which Parker explained was a map of Section 5 and which identified

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