Cindy Harrell, Successor Trustee of the Sam Minchen Revocable Living Trust v. Everett Stovall, as Independent of the Sam Minchen Estate Jason Ewing Allen And Howard Street Condos, L.P.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 21, 2020
Docket14-18-00991-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Cindy Harrell, Successor Trustee of the Sam Minchen Revocable Living Trust v. Everett Stovall, as Independent of the Sam Minchen Estate Jason Ewing Allen And Howard Street Condos, L.P. (Cindy Harrell, Successor Trustee of the Sam Minchen Revocable Living Trust v. Everett Stovall, as Independent of the Sam Minchen Estate Jason Ewing Allen And Howard Street Condos, 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.

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Cindy Harrell, Successor Trustee of the Sam Minchen Revocable Living Trust v. Everett Stovall, as Independent of the Sam Minchen Estate Jason Ewing Allen And Howard Street Condos, L.P., (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed April 21, 2020.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-18-00991-CV

CINDY HARRELL, SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE OF THE SAM MINCHEN REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST, Appellant V. EVERETT STOVALL, AS INDEPENDENT EXECUTOR OF THE SAM MINCHEN ESTATE; JASON EWING ALLEN; AND HOWARD STREET CONDOS, L.P., Appellees

On Appeal from the 149th District Court Brazoria County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 78434-CV

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Cindy Harrell as successor trustee of the Sam Minchen Revocable Living Trust appeals the trial court’s judgment after a jury trial in favor of Everett Stovall as independent executor of the Sam Minchen Estate, Jason Ewing Allen, and Howard Street Condos. In twelve issues Cindy argues (1) the trial court erred in submitting certain instructions to the jury; (2) there is no evidence to support the jury’s finding that Sam Minchen revoked the Trust; (3) the jury’s findings that Everett Stovall did not commit fraud and that Jason Allen was not in possession of money that belonged to the Trust are against the overwhelming weight of the credible evidence; and (4) there is no evidence to support the jury’s findings on appellees’ affirmative defenses. Concluding that the evidence supports the jury’s finding of res judicata, which barred this action, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

I. Formation of the Trust and Sale of the Bluewater Property to Renew Blue

On May 20, 2005, Sam Minchen created a Revocable Living Trust (“the Trust”). Sam had four children, Sammy, Helen, Mitchell, and Cindy.1 The Trust estate was made up of certain property including real property at 500 Bluewater Highway (“the Bluewater Property”). The Trust named Sam’s daughter Helen Allen Arguello as trustee and Helen’s son Jason Ewing Allen as successor trustee. On the day the Trust was created Sam executed a general warranty deed that transferred title to the Bluewater Property from Sam to the Trust reserving a life estate in the Bluewater Property for Sam’s life. Sam later amended the Trust naming himself as trustee and Mark Elder, his daughter Cindy’s ex-husband, as substitute trustee. The amended Trust named Cindy’s son Zachary Elder as beneficiary.

Sam subsequently sold the Bluewater Property to a company called Renew Blue for $2,500,000. Renew Blue paid $10,000 in cash and signed a promissory note for the remaining balance. Renew Blue made nine payments by check to Sam of $25,000 each from January 2009 through March 2010. Each of the checks was deposited into Sam’s personal bank account. Renew Blue bought the Bluewater Property to institute an operation that would withdraw saltwater from the ocean and

1 For ease of reference we will refer to the family members by their first names.

2 make plastic products.

Approximately one year after selling the Bluewater Property to Renew Blue, Sam executed a will, which devised all of his property to Jason, Sam’s grandson. Everett Stovall, Sam’s attorney, prepared the will and was named as the independent executor. Stovall testified over objection that at the time Stovall prepared the 2009 will, Sam told Stovall that he wanted the will to dispose of his property rather than the Trust. Stovall did not prepare documents to terminate the Trust because Sam led him to believe that documents were unnecessary. Sam told Stovall that the Trust was terminated when the Bluewater Property was sold to Renew Blue.

II. The Will Contest

Just over one year after executing the 2009 will, Sam passed away and Stovall was appointed temporary independent executor of Sam’s estate. Approximately two months after Sam’s death, Cindy filed an application to probate a different will in the Brazoria County Court at Law (“the Probate Court”). Cindy filed with her application a will dated February 22, 1995, which left all of Sam’s property to Cindy, leaving Sam’s other three children $10 each. Cindy argued that the 1995 will was never revoked and that Sam did not have testamentary capacity at the time the 2009 will was drafted. Stovall filed the will drafted by him on Sam’s behalf dated February 24, 2009 and submitted the 2009 will to the Probate Court for probate. Jason, Sam’s grandson and beneficiary under the 2009 will, filed a petition in intervention seeking to intervene as beneficiary of the 2009 will. Attached to Jason’s intervention was a copy of the Trust document.

In the meantime, Renew Blue’s complex operation did not progress. The process of removing the saltwater was expected to involve large trucks in and out of the area, and round-the-clock processing, which was expected to be noisy. The Bluewater Property, however, was not zoned for such a commercial use. After 3 Hurricane Ike hit the Texas Gulf Coast in September 2008, the plant and equipment Renew Blue was using “was in total disrepair and disarray” and was condemned by Surfside city council.

While the will contest was pending in Probate Court, Renew Blue’s parent company sent a letter to Stovall stating that its use for the Bluewater Property had changed and while it still wanted to own the Bluewater Property it sought a reduction in its monthly payment. The letter expressed that Renew Blue was willing to pay the full $25,000 per month while Sam was alive to assist him with his end-of-life medical bills, but after Sam’s death, Renew Blue was not willing to make the same monthly payment. As temporary administrator Stovall sought approval from the Probate Court to negotiate a monthly payment reduction on the Renew Blue note. Stovall filed a motion with the Probate Court stating that all parties to the will contest approved the proposal to reduce Renew Blue’s payments from $25,000 per month to $15,000 per month. At the time of Stovall’s motion Renew Blue was in default on the note.

In connection with Stovall’s motion in the Probate Court he exchanged email communications with Don Ford, Cindy’s attorney. Three email exchanges were admitted into evidence over Cindy’s relevance objection. One of the email exchanges, which occurred on September 29-30, 2010, begins with the following note from Stovall to Ford:

Jason Allen’s attorneys have indicated that their client is generally in favor of the proposal to rework the real estate note. Please let me know your client’s position on this.

Ford, representing Cindy, responded:

Generally, I am in agreement with the proposal. I have a couple of questions, though. As it stands today, the Estate has the right to foreclose on this property and take it back because of the default. 4 When the president of Renew Blue says that we would redo the Note, is it your intention that the default would be cured at that point such that we would lose our option to foreclose on the note, unless they subsequently defaulted again? Also, have you received any more payments from them, or is the November 1 payment going to be the first? (emphasis added)

Stovall agreed with Ford that Sam’s estate had the right to foreclose on the Bluewater Property. At this time the will contest was pending, and Cindy was pursuing admission of the 1995 will, which devised all of Sam’s estate including the note receivable on the Bluewater Property to her. Renew Blue defaulted on the note and made no further payments even after receiving a negotiated monthly payment amount.

After a jury trial, the Probate Court signed a final judgment admitting the 2009 will to probate and issuing letters testamentary to Stovall as independent executor of Sam’s estate. The Probate Court further found that Cindy defended or prosecuted the will contest in good faith and awarded attorney’s fees to Cindy of $53,000. On March 15, 2011, Stovall, as independent executor, submitted an “Inventory and Appraisement” of Sam’s estate.

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Cindy Harrell, Successor Trustee of the Sam Minchen Revocable Living Trust v. Everett Stovall, as Independent of the Sam Minchen Estate Jason Ewing Allen And Howard Street Condos, L.P., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cindy-harrell-successor-trustee-of-the-sam-minchen-revocable-living-trust-texapp-2020.