Drake Interiors, L.L.C. v. Andrea Marie Thomas & Robert Warren Thomas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 2014
Docket14-13-00349-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Drake Interiors, L.L.C. v. Andrea Marie Thomas & Robert Warren Thomas (Drake Interiors, L.L.C. v. Andrea Marie Thomas & Robert Warren Thomas) 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
Drake Interiors, L.L.C. v. Andrea Marie Thomas & Robert Warren Thomas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Reversed and Remanded and Opinion filed April 3, 2014.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-13-00349-CV

DRAKE INTERIORS, L.L.C., Appellant V. ANDREA MARIE THOMAS AND ROBERT WARREN THOMAS, Appellees

On Appeal from the 334th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2009-22182

OPINION

This case involves two questions. Can an abstract of judgment create a valid lien on a home jointly managed as community property if the judgment is based on the premarital debt of only one spouse? If so, what is the effect of a homestead designation after a divorce when the property ceases to be held in community? The trial court ruled in favor of the current homeowner, declaring that the judgment creditor could have no lien on the property. We conclude that the judgment creditor may have a valid lien if the lien attached during marriage, but there is insufficient proof of whether the lien did attach or whether the property was protected as a homestead when the abstract was first recorded. Accordingly, we reverse the declaratory judgment in favor of the homeowner and remand for additional proceedings.

BACKGROUND

The judgment creditor in this case is Drake Interiors, L.L.C. In February 2000, Drake sold building materials to a Texas limited partnership known as Eastern Bloc Entertainment. The materials were to be used in the construction of a nightclub that Rob Thomas was planning to open. Rob is the sole manager of a Texas limited liability company named Altar Boys Management, and Altar Boys is the general partner of Eastern Bloc.

In 2001, Drake filed a suit on a sworn account against Eastern Bloc, alleging that it had not been paid in full for the goods sold in the nightclub project. No other defendants were joined in the lawsuit. Eastern Bloc never answered or appeared, and a default judgment was taken against it.

Drake filed a second action against Eastern Bloc in June 2002 complaining about the same nonpayment of goods. Joined in the lawsuit were Rob, Altar Boys, and another limited partnership managed by Altar Boys. Drake alleged in this action that Rob and Eastern Bloc had executed a promissory note in October 2000, which was meant to cover the goods furnished in the nightclub project. According to Drake, Rob breached the note by delivering only the first payment.

Drake acknowledged in its petition that it had obtained an earlier judgment against just Eastern Bloc. Drake alleged that the judgment remained unsatisfied, and it sought to hold Rob and Altar Boys liable because they had acted before as

2 general partners of Eastern Bloc. Drake also alleged that Altar Boys was Rob’s alter ego, and that Rob was liable because he had accepted a fraudulent transfer of assets from Eastern Bloc, which was then insolvent.

In October 2002, during the pendency of the lawsuit, Rob married his wife Andrea. In 2003, Rob and Andrea acquired a townhome known as the Asbury Property, which they held as their joint management community property.

The record does not reveal what defenses, if any, that Rob and his companies had raised in Drake’s second lawsuit against Eastern Bloc. All that is known is that Drake obtained a final judgment in 2004 in the amount of $44,856.95. The judgment was made subject to a Rule 11 settlement agreement, which provided that all liabilities would be discharged if Rob and his companies timely paid the lower sum of $24,856.95, plus interest. The settlement agreement specified that payments were to be made in monthly installments. In the event of a default, the settlement agreement entitled Drake to collect on the full amount of the final judgment.

Rob defaulted under the settlement agreement on an undisclosed date. The parties appear to be in agreement that the default occurred during Rob’s marriage to Andrea.

In 2006, while still married to Rob, Andrea purchased a lot known as the Queenswood Property, on which she and Rob planned to build a luxury custom home. The Queenswood Property was acquired in Andrea’s name only and she held it as her sole management community property.

In January 2008, Drake abstracted the judgment from its second suit and recorded the abstract in Harris County, where both the Asbury Property and the Queenswood Property are located. The abstract named Rob but not Andrea

3 because Andrea did not participate in the underlying proceeding. Drake also filed notices of lis pendens on the two properties.

Rob and Andrea separated shortly after Drake abstracted its judgment. Rob vacated the Asbury Property in February 2008 and began living with a friend. In August 2008, Andrea vacated the Asbury Property and moved into the Queenswood Property, where construction had recently been completed. The Asbury Property was immediately leased to a third party.

Rob and Andrea divorced on December 31, 2008. Under the final decree of divorce, Andrea was awarded the Queenswood Property, which she designated as her homestead effective January 1, 2009. The divorce decree also awarded Andrea full ownership of the Asbury Property. The trial court ordered Rob to convey his interest in the Asbury Property within fifteen days of the decree. Rob signed his general warranty deed on January 8, 2009.

Drake filed this action for declaratory relief in April 2009. Drake originally sought declarations stating that its abstract of judgment created a valid lien against both the Asbury Property and the Queenswood Property. Drake subsequently nonsuited its claims regarding the Queenswood Property, and limited its requests for relief to just the Asbury Property. Drake specifically sought a declaration stating that it was entitled to execute against the Asbury Property.

Rob and Andrea made separate appearances in the suit. Rob filed a general denial pro se, and that was his only responsive pleading throughout the entire course of the proceedings. Andrea asserted several affirmative defenses, a counterclaim for declaratory relief, and a separate counterclaim for tortious interference with property. By May 2011, the time of her live pleading, Andrea had returned to the Asbury Property and had claimed it as her homestead. Andrea asserted that the Asbury Property was exempt from forced sale, and she sought a 4 declaration stating that Drake’s judgment lien was invalid. For her tortious interference claim, Andrea sought cancellation of the notice of lis pendens.

Andrea filed a motion for partial summary judgment on traditional and no- evidence grounds. She argued that the Asbury Property was not liable for Rob’s premarital debt. She moved to invalidate the lien because the debt was not hers, there was no evidence of a community debt, and she was never called to appear in the suit from which the lien arose. On alternative grounds, Andrea also argued that the lien was invalid because of the statute of frauds and res judicata. Drake filed a response and cross-motion for partial summary judgment. Drake asserted that it had observed all proper formalities with recording its lien. Drake further contended that the Asbury Property was subject to the liabilities incurred by Rob before marriage and that the lien attached to the Asbury Property no later than August 2008, when Rob and Andrea ceased living there.

The trial court granted Andrea’s motion for partial summary judgment and denied Drake’s motion for partial summary judgment. The court declared in its order that “Drake Interiors, LLC has no lien on or claim to an interest in [the Asbury Property], and that Drake Interior[s], LLC’s judgment lien . . . is . . . null and void and of no force and effect as to [the Asbury Property].” Andrea’s remaining counterclaim for tortious interference was tried to a jury, which returned a take-nothing verdict. The trial court awarded attorney’s fees solely to Andrea.

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Drake Interiors, L.L.C. v. Andrea Marie Thomas & Robert Warren Thomas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drake-interiors-llc-v-andrea-marie-thomas-robert-warren-thomas-texapp-2014.