Deborah Hayward v. Socorro Gomez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 7, 2023
Docket06-22-00053-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Deborah Hayward v. Socorro Gomez (Deborah Hayward v. Socorro Gomez) 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
Deborah Hayward v. Socorro Gomez, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

No. 06-22-00053-CV

DEBORAH HAYWARD, Appellant

V.

SOCORRO GOMEZ, Appellee

On Appeal from the 354th District Court Hunt County, Texas Trial Court No. 88034

Before Stevens, C.J., van Cleef and Rambin, JJ. Opinion by Chief Justice Stevens OPINION

Socorro Gomez sued Deborah Hayward for breach of a rent-to-own agreement. Gomez

filed a traditional motion for summary judgment based, in part, on deemed admissions. The trial

court granted Gomez’s motion and entered judgment against Hayward, who did not file a

response to the summary judgment motion but instead asked that she be allowed to withdraw her

deemed admissions. On appeal, Hayward argues that the trial court erred by granting summary

judgment based on the deemed admissions. Because the summary judgment is supported by

evidence independent of the deemed admissions and the circumstances of this case support the

trial court’s exercise of discretion to implicitly deny the motion to withdraw the deemed

admissions, we overrule Hayward’s sole point of error and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Gomez sued Hayward on October 8, 2019, for breach of contract involving a four-

bedroom home located at 2216 Wilson Hill, Neylandville, Texas (the Property). The contract,

signed by both Hayward and Gomez and titled “Rent to Own Agreement” (the Agreement),

required a $15,000.00 deposit, set a monthly payment of $650.00, and gave Gomez the exclusive

“option to purchase the [P]roperty . . . for a purchase price of $100,000.00.” The “OPTION TO

PURCHASE” section stated, “The Landlord shall credit towards the purchase price at closing the

sum of $650.00 from each monthly lease payment that the Tenant timely made.” Pursuant to the

Agreement, Hayward had “the responsibility to maintain the Premises in good repair at all times

and perform all repairs necessary to satisfy any implied warranty of habitability.” The

Agreement began on June 6, 2016, and was set to terminate on May 31, 2020, unless Gomez

2 exercised the option to purchase. Hayward was also permitted to terminate the Agreement by

providing written notice. Gomez made payments pursuant to the Agreement.

Even so, Gomez alleged that Hayward filed an eviction suit against her on June 26, 2018,

“without cause and without following the procedures set forth in the contract.” After Hayward’s

lawsuit was dismissed, Gomez alleged that Hayward did not own the Property and had no

authority to sell or lease it. Hayward answered and filed her own breach of contract claim,

arguing that alterations were made to the Property without her consent.

Discovery disputes followed. On November 19, 2019, Gomez filed requests for

disclosures. Requests for production and interrogatories were served on Hayward on January 31,

2020. On March 11, Gomez’s counsel emailed Hayward’s counsel about the discovery

responses and, on April 15, informed her that they were “still waiting” for discovery responses

“that were due almost two months” prior to that time. The email warned of an impending motion

to compel the discovery. Hayward’s counsel replied that she was waiting on Hayward’s

responses and would reach out to her. On April 16, Gomez served Hayward with requests for

admissions.

On May 1, 2020, Gomez filed a motion to compel responses to the requests for

disclosures, requests for production, and interrogatories. Because they were not yet due, the

requests for admissions were not mentioned in Gomez’s motion. After a May 15, 2020, hearing,

the trial court granted Gomez’s motion to compel and ordered Hayward to respond to the

requests for disclosures, requests for production, and interrogatories within one week. Hayward

was also ordered to pay $1,150.00 in attorney fees.

3 The May 18 deadline to respond to the requests for admissions passed without any

response from Hayward. Also, the record showed that Hayward did not comply with the trial

court’s May order compelling disclosures, production of documents, and responses to

interrogatories. Even so, Gomez’s counsel agreed to an extension to respond to the discovery

requests until June 1. When that deadline passed without any response, Gomez’s counsel

attempted to confer with Hayward’s counsel and again agreed to an extension until June 5.

On June 9, Gomez alleged that Hayward served “inadequate, incomplete and evasive

responses” to the interrogatories and requests for production. Gomez added that she had not

received any responses to the requests for disclosures or the payment of attorney fees awarded by

the May order. On June 18, 2020, Gomez filed another motion to compel responses to the

requests for disclosures, requests for production, and interrogatories and moved for sanctions.

The requests for admissions, which had already been deemed admitted, were not mentioned in

Gomez’s motion. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 198.2(c). After a June 22 hearing on the second motion to

compel, the trial court took the matter under advisement and said it would revisit the issue on

June 26. On June 26, the parties reported that the matter had been resolved.

Almost two years later, on May 18, 2022, Gomez filed a motion for summary judgment

based, in part, on Hayward’s deemed admissions. The motion for summary judgment attached

the Agreement, a deed showing that the Property was purchased by Willie L. Bush and Neita J.

Bush in 1975, and Gomez’s affidavit stating that (1) Hayward was not the true title holder of the

Property, (2) Hayward did not have authority to sell or lease the Property, and (3) Gomez had

“paid a total of $65,000 pursuant to the Contract with an expectation that [she] owned the house

4 under the rent-to-own agreement.” The motion also attached Gomez’s counsel’s affidavit and

emails showing that Hayward’s counsel received and acknowledged the requests for admissions

due on May 18, 2020, and that Hayward had never paid the attorney fees ordered by the trial

court’s May 2020 order.

Hayward did not file a response to the summary judgment motion. Instead, on May 31,

2022, Hayward filed a motion to withdraw the deemed admissions. The motion acknowledged

that Gomez had served the requests for admissions on April 16, 2020. Even so, the motion

(1) stated that Hayward’s counsel did not realize that there were deemed admissions,

(2) generally referred to the COVID-19 pandemic’s “contribut[ion] to counsel’s inaction,”

(3) stated that counsel simply “forgot or overlooked that the responses had not been provided,”

(4) attached the long-overdue responses, and (5) asked the trial court for an additional five days

to respond to the motion for summary judgment. Tellingly, Hayward’s late response admitted

both that she did not have title to the Property at the time she entered into the Agreement and that

she did not own the Property in fee simple at that time.

In response to Hayward’s motion to withdraw the deemed admissions, Gomez argued

that Hayward should not receive any extension because the motion was filed on the day before

her response to the summary judgment motion was due. Gomez also argued that there was no

evidence of good cause attached to Hayward’s motion that would permit withdrawal of the

deemed admissions. Gomez represented that Hayward had a history of non-compliance with

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