Diana G. Offord, as Guardian of the Estate of Winter Gordon, Jr., A/K/A Winter Gordon Sr. v. West Houston Trees, L.L.P.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 11, 2010
Docket01-08-01027-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Diana G. Offord, as Guardian of the Estate of Winter Gordon, Jr., A/K/A Winter Gordon Sr. v. West Houston Trees, L.L.P. (Diana G. Offord, as Guardian of the Estate of Winter Gordon, Jr., A/K/A Winter Gordon Sr. v. West Houston Trees, L.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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Diana G. Offord, as Guardian of the Estate of Winter Gordon, Jr., A/K/A Winter Gordon Sr. v. West Houston Trees, L.L.P., (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion on rehearing issued February 11, 2010

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-08-01027-CV


DIANA G. OFFORD, AS GUARDIAN OF THE ESTATE OF WINTER GORDON, JR. A/K/A WINTER GORDON, SR., Appellant

V.

WEST HOUSTON TREES, L.L.P., Appellee


On Appeal from the 268th District Court

Fort Bend County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 07-DCV-159720


MEMORANDUM OPINION ON REHEARING

Appellant Diana G. Offord has moved for correction of the record and amendment of our November 12, 2009 opinion, pointing out an inconsistency in the clerk’s record, and for rehearing.  We grant the motion for correction and amend our opinion accordingly.  We also grant rehearing, withdraw our opinion and judgment of November 12, 2009, and issue the following in their stead.  We dismiss as moot Offord’s motion for en banc consideration.  Our disposition of the case remains unchanged. 

          Offord, as guardian of the estate of her father Winter Gordon, Jr., appeals the trial court’s denial of her bill of review attempting to set aside a default judgment rendered against Gordon.  Offord contends that the trial court erred in granting West Houston Trees’ no-evidence summary judgment and that Gordon was not afforded due process in the trial court because he was not served with process in the underlying lawsuit and was incompetent at the time his property was sold to satisfy the judgment.  We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Background

In 2003, Gordon sued his neighbors for trespass to try title, objecting to their use of a road through his property to access a larger, undisputedly public, road.  West Houston Trees owns the land adjacent to both Gordon’s and his neighbors’ land, and also used the road through Gordon’s property in connection with its business of growing and selling trees.  At the outset of his suit, Gordon sought, and the trial court granted, a temporary injunction preventing his neighbors and West Houston Trees from using the road.

After Gordon secured the temporary injunction, West Houston Trees intervened in Gordon’s lawsuit, brought a declaratory judgment action, and sued Gordon for trespass to try title.  A constable served Gordon with the petition in intervention.  West Houston Trees’ counsel sent notice of the July 11, 2006 trial setting to John Wesley Wauson, Gordon’s former attorney in the case, who had informed the trial court of his withdrawal from representation on July 29, 2005.  The trial court’s judgment recites that Gordon “failed to appear at trial despite notice of the proceeding . . . .”  On July 18, 2006, the trial court rendered a default judgment to West Houston Trees, finding that it was entitled to an easement “by necessity, implication, and/or estoppel,” and that Gordon’s obstruction of the use of that easement caused damages of approximately $77,000.00, to be recovered from Gordon. 

The record does not address when Gordon received notice of the judgment, but Offord’s live pleading states that she first learned of the judgment on August 23, 2006.  Gordon did not seek post-judgment relief in the trial court and did not appeal the judgment.

When Gordon failed to pay the judgment, West Houston Trees obtained a writ of execution.  After Gordon was served with the writ and failed to take any action, the constable seized Gordon’s property and sold it to West Houston Trees at a properly conducted judicial sale on December 5, 2006. 

In October 2007, about seven months before her formal appointment as Gordon’s guardian, Offord petitioned for a bill of review on his behalf.  Offord alleged that Gordon had no knowledge of the judgment in the previous case and that he was not negligent in his lack of knowledge due to his mental condition.  In addition, she contended that Gordon had a good defense which he was unable to present in the court below because he lacked mental capacity at the time of the judgment. 

Approximately eight months after Offord filed the petition, West Houston Trees moved for summary judgment.  In its motion, West Houston Trees alleged that Offord failed to present any evidence to raise a fact issue showing fraud, accident, or official mistake as required for a bill of review and that she had no evidence to show either that Gordon lacked mental capacity at the time of the judgment as alleged, or that he did not know or understand the nature of his acts, the lawsuit, or the consequences of his failure to appear at trial. 

Meanwhile, in a separate probate proceeding, Offord was appointed as Gordon’s guardian.  After that appointment, on July 17, 2008, Offord filed her response to West Houston Trees’ motion for summary judgment in the trial court.  Offord contended that the affidavits attached to the motion raised a genuine issue of material fact about Gordon’s competence.  Offord attached the affidavits of (1) the constable who served Gordon with the writ of execution, who said that he was concerned based on their interaction that Gordon did not know what was going on; (2) a report from a psychiatrist who examined Gordon in October 2007, who stated that Gordon had Alzheimer’s and was irrational and incapable of making decisions and had suffered a general decline in cognition over the previous two years; and (3) another doctor’s opinion that Gordon was incapacitated and suffered from memory loss when the doctor examined him in November 2007.  The court granted a continuance of the case for sixty days to allow Offord’s attorney to conduct additional discovery and set the motion for oral hearing on September 19, 2008. 

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Diana G. Offord, as Guardian of the Estate of Winter Gordon, Jr., A/K/A Winter Gordon Sr. v. West Houston Trees, L.L.P., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diana-g-offord-as-guardian-of-the-estate-of-winter-gordon-jr-aka-texapp-2010.