Covenant Clearinghouse, LLC v. Kush and Krishna, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 18, 2020
Docket14-19-00302-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Covenant Clearinghouse, LLC v. Kush and Krishna, LLC (Covenant Clearinghouse, LLC v. Kush and Krishna, LLC) 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
Covenant Clearinghouse, LLC v. Kush and Krishna, LLC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed August 18, 2020.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-19-00302-CV

COVENANT CLEARINGHOUSE, LLC, Appellant

V. KUSH AND KRISHNA, LLC, Appellee

On Appeal from the 281st District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2017-83237

OPINION

This appeal involves private transfer fees associated with conveyances of real property. One example of a private transfer fee obligation is a subdivision deed restriction that a developer places on all property in the subdivision, obligating a transfer fee payable to the developer on each future conveyance of the property.1 In 2011, the legislature enacted laws prohibiting the use of private transfer fees after

1 See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. KP-0195 (2018). June 17, 2011. See Tex. Prop. Code § 5.202(a). Private transfer fee obligations created before that date, however, are subject to strict notice requirements to remain enforceable.

Appellant Covenant Clearinghouse LLC (“CCH”)—which claims the right to receive a private transfer fee arising from a pre-2011 obligation—did not comply with statutory notice requirements, and the dispositive question of first impression in this appeal is whether it was required to do so. For the reasons explained below, we conclude that CCH was required to comply. Because it did not comply, the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment in appellee’s favor, and we affirm the judgment.

Background

A. Private Transfer Fees Generally

In 2011, the legislature addressed the practice of using private transfer fees in real estate transactions by amending the Property Code to add chapter 5, subchapter G, entitled “Certain Private Transfer Fees Prohibited; Preservation of Private Real Property Rights.”2 A “private transfer fee” is defined as “an amount of money, regardless of the method of determining the amount, that is payable on the transfer of an interest in real property or payable for a right to make or accept a transfer.” Tex. Prop. Code § 5.201(4). A “private transfer fee obligation” can be created by any number of instruments, including as here a declaration requiring payment of a private transfer fee that is recorded in the real property records in the county in which the property is located. See id. § 5.201(5)(A).

2 See Act of May 21, 2011, 82d Leg., R.S., ch. 211, § 1, 2011 Tex. Gen. Laws 780, 780-84 (currently codified at Tex. Prop. Code §§ 5.201-.207).

2 Subject to exceptions not relevant here, a private transfer fee obligation created on or after June 17, 2011 is void and unenforceable against a subsequent owner or subsequent purchaser of real property. Id. § 5.202(a). Any private transfer fee obligation created before that date, however, is subject to rather austere notice requirements. First, a person who “receives” a private transfer fee under a private transfer fee obligation created before June 17, 2011 must, on or before January 31, 2012, file a “Notice of Private Transfer Fee Obligation” in the real property records of each county in which the property is located. See id. § 5.203(a). The notice must include the content and be in the form prescribed by the statute. Id. § 5.203(c). Second, any person who is required to file the initial notice by January 31, 2012 must also refile the notice every three years thereafter. See id. § 5.203(d) (stating a person required to file a notice under this section shall refile the notice described by this section within a thirty-day window preceding the third anniversary of the original filing date, and “within a similar 30-day period every third year thereafter”).

The consequences of failing to comply with the notice requirements are clear and inflexible. “If a person required to file a notice under this section fails to comply with this section: (1) payment of the private transfer fee may not be a requirement for the conveyance of an interest in the property to a purchaser; (2) the property is not subject to further obligation under the private transfer fee obligation; and (3) the private transfer fee obligation is void.” See id. § 5.203(f).

B. The Private Transfer Fee Obligation at Issue

In September 2009, I-45 Thirty, a Texas general partnership, recorded in the Harris County real property records a “Declaration of Covenant” pertaining to real property then owned by I-45 Thirty and described in the Declaration. The Declaration became binding on the property at filing and does not expire until December 31, 2110. The Declaration contains a private transfer fee provision, which

3 imposes an obligation to pay a private transfer fee equal to one percent of the total purchase price of the property upon the closing of a sale. Section 5 states specifically:

AMOUNT DUE, Except as otherwise provided herein, contemporaneous with, and as an encumbrance in connection with a Conveyance, the Grantor shall pay to Trustee, as trustee for Beneficiaries, a fee (the “Reconveyance Fee”) equal to one percent (1%) of the Consideration (as defined in section 1(c)) paid by or on behalf of the Grantee in connection with the Conveyance.

Additionally, in accordance with section 5, the Declaration instructs any closing agent to, for non-exempt sales made before December 31, 2110, collect from the grantor one percent of the consideration paid by the grantee, retain the closing agent fee, and remit the balance to a designated trustee.

C. The Present Dispute

In December 2009, Kush and Krishna LLC (“Kush”) purchased the property from I-45 Thirty. Kush was aware of the private transfer fee obligation when it purchased the property; however, because Kush’s acquisition was the property’s initial sale, the transfer was exempted from the private transfer fee obligation pursuant to the Declaration’s terms.

The Declaration appointed “Rjon Robins, Esq.” as “trustee” for the “beneficiaries” of the private transfer fee. For additional information, including “any successor trustee,” the Declaration directs readers to CCH’s website. The Declaration lists seven beneficiaries, in each of whom is vested varying percentages of “all rights, interest, ownership and privileges in” the private transfer fee. Notably, I-45 Thirty holds a 54% interest in the private transfer fee created by this Declaration. On January 6, 2012, CCH filed in the Harris County real property records a “Notice of Private Transfer Fee Obligation,” which designated itself as the

4 “payee of record” entitled to accept payment on behalf of all payees under numerous instruments, including the Declaration at issue. However, it is undisputed that neither CCH nor anyone else refiled a “Notice of Private Transfer Fee Obligation” pertaining to the Declaration any time after January 2012.

In February 2017, Kush sold the property. Apparently aware that no party had refiled a notice of private transfer fee obligation relating to the property by January 2015, Kush did not pay the private transfer fee at the time of sale but placed into an escrow account an amount that would be due as the fee ($36,000) were it payable. Kush then filed the present declaratory-judgment action, seeking declarations that the private transfer fee obligation in the Declaration is void for failure to comply with section 5.203’s notice provisions and that Kush did not owe a private transfer fee. It also sought an order instructing the escrow agent to disperse the escrowed funds to Kush.3

Kush filed a traditional motion for partial summary judgment on its declaratory-judgment claim.

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Bluebook (online)
Covenant Clearinghouse, LLC v. Kush and Krishna, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/covenant-clearinghouse-llc-v-kush-and-krishna-llc-texapp-2020.