Dolenz v. A___ B

742 S.W.2d 82, 1987 Tex. App. LEXIS 9167, 1987 WL 32134
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 2, 1987
Docket05-86-01187-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 742 S.W.2d 82 (Dolenz v. A___ B) 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
Dolenz v. A___ B, 742 S.W.2d 82, 1987 Tex. App. LEXIS 9167, 1987 WL 32134 (Tex. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

HECHT, Justice.

When his borrower failed to repay a loan, Bernard J. Dolenz sued the borrower’s attorney, A_ B_, 1 for fraud, negligence and breach of contract. Dolenz and the attorney both moved for summary judgment. The district court granted the attorney’s motion and denied Dolenz’ motion. We affirm the judgment of the district court, and because we determine that this appeal has been taken for delay and without sufficient cause, we award the attorney against Dolenz damages equal to ten times the total taxable costs of this appeal.

I

The material facts, all undisputed, are as follows.

Bernard Dolenz, a licensed attorney, agreed to loan Windy Gale & Company, Inc. and its president, Joy Huddleston, $20,-000. The loan was to be secured by a second lien on certain property known as the Three Sisters building, and by a three-foot carved ivory elephant tusk. Dolenz gave Huddleston his check for the funds, and Huddleston signed a promissory note. Huddleston told 2 Dolenz she would have *84 all the other paperwork for the transaction prepared by her attorney.

The next day, after the money had already changed hands, Huddleston went to her attorney and asked that a corporate resolution be prepared for Windy Gale authorizing the transaction with Dolenz. This the attorney did. Huddleston told her attorney that as security for the loan Windy Gale was to give Dolenz a second lien on certain property, but that Dolenz, being an attorney himself, had already prepared the lien documentation. Huddle-ston’s attorney reminded her that Windy Gale & Company, Inc. did not hold title to the property and could not convey a lien. Huddleston’s attorney advised her to do one of two things: either have the owners of the property convey the lien to Dolenz, or have title to the property conveyed to the corporation so that it could convey the lien. Huddleston elected the latter course, and her attorney prepared a deed conveying the property to Windy Gale & Company. Huddleston took the deed and told her attorney that she would have it executed and recorded.

After completing all the work Huddle-ston requested, her attorney wrote Dolenz the following letter:

I have prepared a resolution in compliance with the agreement between yourself and Joy Huddleston for Windy Gale and Company, Inc. Please be advised that as of this date, the transfer into the corporation [sic] the Three Sisters building has not been completed. I am preparing a Deed from each of the individual owners to the corporation of the building at this time. After the deed has been circulated for signature and recorded, I shall be glad to furnish you with a copy of it. The deed will be dated prior to December 12, 1984.
If you need anything further from me please notify me.

Huddleston’s attorney never received the deed back from Huddleston. Some seven months later Dolenz telephoned Huddle-ston’s attorney to say that he had never received a copy of the deed.

Neither Dolenz nor Huddleston ever asked Huddleston’s attorney to prepare papers giving Dolenz a second lien on a building. Huddleston’s attorney was never asked and never undertook to represent Dolenz. As a result, Dolenz never received a second lien on the property.

When Huddleston failed to repay Dolenz, he sued her and recovered a default judgment.

II

Dolenz complains in his first point of error that the district court erred in granting the attorney’s motion for summary judgment. 3 Specifically, Dolenz argues that there are genuine issues of material fact as to each of his claims against the attorney. We examine in turn each of the claims Dolenz pled against the attorney.

First, Dolenz claims that Huddle-ston’s attorney defrauded him. Specifical *85 ly, Dolenz claims that the attorney made two misrepresentations to him: first, that he would receive a copy of the deed prepared for the conveyance of the Three Sisters building to Windy Gale & Co., and second, that he would receive second lien documentation securing his loan to Huddle-ston and the corporation. Dolenz also claims that these misrepresentations violated section 27.01 of the Texas Business and Commerce Code Annotated (Vernon 1968, Supp.1987). Both claims are based upon the attorney’s letter to Dolenz, quoted above. 4 As to the first alleged misrepresentation, that letter promises only that a copy of the deed would be mailed to Do-lenz, and then only after it was recorded. The deed was never executed or recorded. As to the second alleged misrepresentation, the letter does not even mention a second lien. Thus, the letter makes neither of the misrepresentations Dolenz alleges. Moreover, because Dolenz delivered the loan proceeds to Huddleston prior to any representations by her attorney to him, he could not have detrimentally relied on those representations. As a matter of law, Dolenz is not entitled to recover on his fraud claims.

Second, Dolenz argues that Huddle-ston’s attorney was negligent in failing to obtain a deed of the property to Windy Gale & Co. and a second lien to him securing the loan. Dolenz argues that Huddle-ston’s attorney was acting as his attorney to the extent of obtaining the second lien for him. Dolenz also argues that the attorney negligently supplied false information to him in the letter. The undisputed facts are that Dolenz never asked Huddleston’s attorney to represent him, and the attorney never undertook to do so. Huddleston’s attorney owed Dolenz no duty to obtain for him the security for his loan that Huddle-ston had agreed to give. Nothing in the letter from Huddleston’s attorney to Do-lenz is false. As a matter of law, Dolenz is not entitled to recover on his negligence claims.

Third, Dolenz claims that he is a third party beneficiary of an agreement between Huddleston and her attorney that the attorney would cause a second lien securing Dolenz’ loan to be created. Putting aside the legal question whether Dolenz can be a third party beneficiary of an agreement between the opposing party to a loan transaction and that party’s attorney, a question as to which we harbor considerable doubt, the undisputed evidence in the summary judgment record is that Huddleston’s attorney never agreed with Huddleston to create such a lien. As a matter of law, Dolenz is not entitled to prevail on this claim.

Inasmuch as there is no genuine issue of material fact as to any claim made by Do-lenz against Huddleston’s attorney, and Dolenz is not entitled as a matter of law to prevail on any of his claims, the district court did not err in granting the attorney’s motion for summary judgment. Dolenz’ first point of error is overruled.

Ill

Dolenz complains that his constitutional rights have been violated. In his third point of error Dolenz claims that “for obvious reasons” the district court denied him redress of wrongs in violation of article 1, section 13 of the Texas Constitution. Not only are Dolenz’ reasons not obvious; they are indiscernible. Dolenz has suffered no such violation of his constitutional rights.

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Bluebook (online)
742 S.W.2d 82, 1987 Tex. App. LEXIS 9167, 1987 WL 32134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dolenz-v-a___-b-texapp-1987.