Dixie Berryhill, Administratrix of the Estate of Helen Ferguson v. Rusty Carroll and Rebecca Carroll

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 16, 1995
Docket03-94-00523-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dixie Berryhill, Administratrix of the Estate of Helen Ferguson v. Rusty Carroll and Rebecca Carroll (Dixie Berryhill, Administratrix of the Estate of Helen Ferguson v. Rusty Carroll and Rebecca Carroll) 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
Dixie Berryhill, Administratrix of the Estate of Helen Ferguson v. Rusty Carroll and Rebecca Carroll, (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

Berryhill

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-94-00523-CV



Dixie Berryhill, Administratrix of the Estate of Helen Ferguson, Deceased, Appellant



v.



Rusty Carroll and Rebecca Carroll, Appellees



FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 1 OF BELL COUNTY

NO. 18,104, HONORABLE EDWARD S. JOHNSON, JUDGE PRESIDING



Appellant Dixie Berryhill, administratrix of the estate of Helen Ferguson, refused to acknowledge the validity of an option agreement executed by Charles Cleveland, Ferguson's former guardian, and appellees Rusty and Rebecca Carroll. The Carrolls brought this action requesting specific performance of the agreement, which the probate court (1) subsequently ordered. Berryhill appeals from the judgment of the probate court. She argues that the court should not have enforced the agreement because it did not meet the requirements of section 27 of the Texas Probate Code and the Statute of Frauds. We will affirm the probate court's judgment.

BACKGROUND

In 1988, Charles Cleveland was appointed guardian of the estate of Helen Ferguson. At that time, Ferguson lived in a nursing home and needed someone to manage her personal affairs. When Cleveland took over as guardian, he discovered that Ferguson did not have enough money to cover her expenses; however, she did own property in Bell County. Cleveland decided to sell Ferguson's house and the land surrounding it to support her. (2)

Before Cleveland placed the house on the market in 1989, he walked through it and found it uninhabitable. (3) Cleveland also had the house and the land surrounding it appraised and the appraiser estimated the market value of the house to be between $23,400 and $25,000. After the appraisal, Cleveland obtained the probate court's approval to sell the house as the Probate Code required. See Tex. Prob. Code Ann. §§ 341, 346 (West 1980). (4)

In the spring of 1990, appellees Rusty and Rebecca Carroll expressed an interest in purchasing Ferguson's house. However, the Carrolls told Cleveland that they were interested in the house only if it included both the North and South Gardens. Additionally, the Carrolls told Cleveland that they could not afford to buy the house outright until they sold their own house. Because Ferguson's house was not ready for occupancy, the Carrolls did not sell their house immediately. Therefore, they wanted to finance the purchase of the Ferguson house. They discovered, however, that the Probate Code required them to make a twenty percent downpayment on the house in order to finance it. Tex. Prob. Code Ann. § 348(a) (West 1980). The Carrolls could not afford this downpayment and could not obtain third-party financing for the purchase because of the poor condition of the house. As a result, Cleveland and his attorney, Mike Gibbs, devised a lease-option plan that allowed the Carrolls to sign a two-year lease and included an option to buy the house at any time during the term of the lease. The option permitted the Carrolls to either pay in cash or finance the purchase of the house. (5) Their lease payments would be applied to the purchase price of the house.

Gibbs attempted to draft lease and option agreements to fit the Carrolls' specifications. The option agreement specified that the option period would run from July 20, 1990 to July 19, 1992. The agreement included a description of the property; however, this description was not based upon any survey taken of the land. The agreement also allowed for third-party financing, but it did not allow for owner financing. Cleveland applied to the probate court for permission to execute the lease and option agreements. On June 26, 1990, the probate court approved those agreements. (6) Cleveland signed the option agreement on July 6, 1990. He then brought it before the probate court for approval. On July 10, 1990, the probate court rendered an order confirming the lease of the Ferguson house and approving the option agreement between Cleveland and the Carrolls.

When Cleveland forwarded the option agreement to the Carrolls for their signature, they discovered two problems: (1) an inadequate legal description of the property that did not include the South Garden, and (2) no provision for owner financing. As a result, the Carrolls did not sign the agreement. They did, however, execute the lease and start making improvements to the house.

Cleveland acknowledged that the South Garden should have been included in the property's description. He informed the probate court that the option agreement inaccurately described the property that was supposed to be conveyed and asked the court's permission to hire a surveyor to make a description that would include the South Garden. In early December 1990, the probate court granted Cleveland's request; later that month, the property was surveyed. Gibbs then attached the new description to the option agreement and placed it in his file. (7) The Carrolls did not sign the 1990 agreement.

In August 1991, Helen Ferguson died. Cleveland applied to the probate court to be appointed the administrator of her estate; however, Dixie Berryhill, Ferguson's cousin, also came forward and applied to be administratrix. Because she was a relative, the court named Berryhill administratrix of Ferguson's estate.

In 1992, Cleveland and the Carrolls discovered that the option agreement had never been changed to allow owner financing. They asked Gibbs to prepare a new option agreement (the "1992 option agreement") that allowed such financing. This agreement contained an accurate description of the property to be conveyed. In May 1992, the probate court once again confirmed the new option agreement by rendering an order confirming the sale of real estate. Both Cleveland and Rusty Carroll signed this new option agreement on June 9, 1992. On June 10, 1992, the Carrolls exercised their option to buy the Ferguson house. The Carrolls continued to make monthly payments on the house after giving notice of their exercise of the option.

This cause arose when Berryhill refused to honor the option agreement. The Carrolls filed suit in the probate court seeking specific performance of the option agreement and paid the remainder of what they owed on the house into the registry of the court. Berryhill contended that neither option agreement could be specifically enforced. She argued that the 1992 option agreement was void due to the death of Helen Ferguson in 1991. She claimed that the 1990 agreement was also void because the Carrolls never signed it and because it did not accurately describe the land to be sold to the Carrolls.

The same probate court that ordered the sale of the Ferguson home found that, in July of 1990, Cleveland and the Carrolls executed an option agreement that did not accurately describe the property that was the subject of their agreement. The court further found that a court-approved survey was prepared and that the property description in the option agreement was clarified on December 30, 1990.

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Dixie Berryhill, Administratrix of the Estate of Helen Ferguson v. Rusty Carroll and Rebecca Carroll, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixie-berryhill-administratrix-of-the-estate-of-he-texapp-1995.