Colleen Marie Fisher v. Paul M. Cooke, Sr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 22, 2022
Docket05-21-00243-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Colleen Marie Fisher v. Paul M. Cooke, Sr. (Colleen Marie Fisher v. Paul M. Cooke, Sr.) 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
Colleen Marie Fisher v. Paul M. Cooke, Sr., (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion Filed August 22, 2022

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-21-00243-CV

COLLEEN MARIE FISHER, Appellant V. PAUL M. COOKE, SR., Appellee

On Appeal from the 191st Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-18-05882

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Partida-Kipness, Pedersen, III, and Nowell Opinion by Justice Nowell Colleen Marie Fisher appeals a final judgment in favor of Paul M. Cooke, Sr.

in this declaratory judgment suit regarding ownership of real property. The trial court

granted a motion for partial summary judgment against Fisher declaring Cooke to

be the owner of the property and subsequently entered orders sanctioning Fisher and

striking her counterclaim. The court ultimately rendered a final judgment

incorporating the partial summary judgment, a summary judgment against another

party, the orders sanctioning Fisher, and awarding Cooke attorney’s fees under the

declaratory judgment act. Only Fisher appeals. We affirm. Background This dispute involves ownership of a residence in Dallas County (the

Property). In July 2008, Fisher and her husband conveyed the Property to Cooke (her

father) and her mother by general warranty deed. The deed was recorded on July 30,

2008. Sometime in 2010, the house was damaged in a fire and has remained vacant

since that time.

In April 2018, Cooke entered into a contract to sell the Property to a third

party. The sale was scheduled to close in June 2018. On May 4, 2018, however,

Fisher’s son, Jonathan, as trustee of the JCLLA trust (the Trust), filed this suit against

Cooke seeking a declaratory judgment that the Trust, as assignee of Fisher, held an

option to repurchase the Property and seeking an order enforcing that option.

Alternatively, the Trust asserted a claim for damages for breach of the option

contract. Jonathan also filed a lis pendens notice regarding the Property.

The Trust’s claim is based on an agreement regarding real property (Option

Agreement) prepared in July 2008. The Trust’s petition alleged the Option

Agreement gave Fisher and her husband an option to repurchase the Property. The

petition alleged that Fisher received all rights under the Option Agreement from her

husband in a 2012 divorce decree and that Fisher assigned all of her rights under the

Option Agreement to the Trust on April 1, 2018.

–2– Cooke contends the Option Agreement was never executed by all parties and

that Fisher and her husband never paid the consideration recited in the agreement.

Thus, he contends the agreement is unenforceable.

On June 28, 2018, Cooke answered the lawsuit and filed a counterclaim

against the Trust and third-party claims against Fisher and her now ex-husband,

Kelly. Cooke alleged claims for a declaratory judgment that the Option Agreement

was void and unenforceable; the lis pendens notice was improper and void; the Trust,

Fisher, and Kelly had waived or otherwise forfeited any rights under the alleged

Option Agreement; and that Cooke was the sole, lawful owner of the Property.

Cooke also alleged a claim for breach of the Option Agreement against Fisher and

Kelly, and a suit to quiet title to the Property. He sought a temporary restraining

order and temporary and permanent injunctions, supported by his affidavit, to

require the removal of the lis pendens and to restrain any actions to interfere with

Cooke’s title to the Property or his ability to sell.

The trial court granted the temporary restraining order ex parte. Fisher states

in her brief that she learned of the temporary restraining order and filed a motion for

reconsideration. Neither the temporary restraining order nor the motion for

reconsideration are included in the appellate record. Fisher also states in her brief

that the trial court conducted a hearing on her motion for reconsideration on July 2,

2018. There is no record of this hearing before us.

–3– On July 12, 2018, the trial court conducted a hearing on the application for a

temporary injunction. An attorney appeared at the hearing and announced he was

representing Fisher for purposes of the hearing. Cooke’s counsel then announced

that the parties had reached an agreement on the temporary injunction and on a Rule

11 agreement regarding access to the Property for a period of sixty days. The Rule

11 agreement was dictated into the record and counsel for Fisher and Cooke

indicated their agreement to its terms. Jonathan was also present and confirmed his

agreement as trustee. The trial judge announced she was signing the written

temporary injunction, indicating that it was agreed and that it was subject to the Rule

11 agreement announced on the record. No one objected to or indicated any

disagreement with the court or with the temporary injunction signed at the

conclusion of the hearing.

The temporary injunction nullified the lis pendens notice and restrained the

Trust, Fisher, and Kelly from “filing any future lis pendens or other cloud against

the title to the Property, pending further order of this Court” and “from taking any

other action, legal or otherwise, to impede or prevent [Cooke]’s sale of the Property

or his peaceable use, enjoyment, and/or disposition of the Property as he pleases.” It

set a bond and recognized Cooke’s prior bond payment for the temporary restraining

order as full payment of the bond for the temporary injunction. The temporary

injunction set the case for trial on January 7, 2019.

–4– On November 16, 2018, Cooke filed a no-evidence motion for summary

judgment on the Trust’s claims for declaratory judgment and breach of contract. He

asserted the Trust had no evidence to support any of the elements of a breach of

contract claim based on the Option Agreement and no evidence of an ownership

interest in the Property to support a declaratory judgment. Jonathan filed an affidavit

in response; however, the trial court struck the affidavit and its exhibits on Cooke’s

objections. The trial court then granted the no-evidence motion for summary

judgment and rendered judgment that the Trust take nothing on its claims.

On September 24, 2019, Cooke filed a motion for partial summary judgment

on his claims for a declaratory judgment, permanent injunction, and attorney’s fees

against Fisher. Fisher did not file a response to the motion for partial summary

judgment.

On October 17, 2019, Cooke filed a motion for sanctions against Fisher

arguing she violated the temporary injunction by filing a notice of claim in the Bexar

County Probate Court administering her mother’s estate. The claim asserted that

Fisher’s mother executed a quitclaim deed of her interest in the Property to Fisher in

2008 and that Fisher held a fifty-percent interest in the Property and any proceeds

from its sale.

On November 12, 2019, Fisher filed an original answer and counterclaim

against Cooke, just three days before the hearing on the motion for partial summary

judgment and without leave of court. She alleged affirmative defenses of judicial –5– estoppel and unclean hands and claims for a declaratory judgment that she is entitled

to enforce the Option Agreement, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, and

attorney’s fees. On the same day, Cooke filed a second motion for sanctions,

supplementing the prior motion, and asserting that Fisher’s counterclaim was filed

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