Earnest Taylor v. Vernice Hill and Consolidated Rural Properties, Ltd.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 2008
Docket03-07-00285-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Earnest Taylor v. Vernice Hill and Consolidated Rural Properties, Ltd. (Earnest Taylor v. Vernice Hill and Consolidated Rural Properties, Ltd.) 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
Earnest Taylor v. Vernice Hill and Consolidated Rural Properties, Ltd., (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-07-00285-CV

Earnest Taylor, Appellant

v.

Vernice Hill and Consolidated Rural Properties, Ltd., Appellees

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF LEE COUNTY, 21ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 12,334, HONORABLE TERRY L. FLENNIKEN, JUDGE PRESIDING

OPINION

This appeal arises from a post-judgment proceeding in which Earnest Taylor sought

to attack the district court’s subject-matter jurisdiction to render a prior judgment. Previously,

Taylor had unsuccessfully appealed the prior judgment to this Court.1 Taylor urges that we “reverse

the order denying [his] challenge to the trial court’s subject-matter jurisdiction, reverse the final

judgment of the trial court and dismiss the Appellees’ causes of action without prejudice and vacate

this Court’s opinion [in his earlier appeal] for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.” We affirm the

district court’s order.

The Court’s memorandum opinion in the prior appeal presents most of the relevant

underlying facts. To summarize, Taylor and Vernice Hill were among 31 heirs of Louis Taylor.

1 Taylor v. Hill, No. 03-03-00540-CV, 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 5747 (Tex. App.—Austin July 1, 2004, no pet.) (mem. op.). In 2003, Hill and 27 other heirs filed a petition in district court alleging that they, Earnest Taylor, and

two other heirs owned undivided interests in a 100-acre tract in Lee County that had previously been

owned by Louis Taylor; seeking a determination of each heir’s respective interest; and asking the

district court to decide whether the property could be partitioned. Hill and aligned heirs claimed that

Louis Taylor had conveyed the tract to the 31 heirs through a warranty deed. The deed bore the

signature of a Clifford Marine. In the Court’s prior opinion, it observed that Earnest Taylor had not

filed a verified plea challenging Marine’s authority to execute the deed on Louis Taylor’s behalf 2;

and that “Taylor did not object to the deed, raise any issues related to Marine’s authority to sign the

deed on Louis’s behalf, or voice any other concerns regarding the deed’s validity in the trial court.”3

On June 6, 2003, the district court rendered judgment that the 31 heirs were the sole owners of the

property deed, stating the share that each owned (ranging from 1/13th to 1/728th, consistent with the

deed), and that the property could not be partitioned but should be sold by a receiver and the

proceeds divided among the heirs according to their respective shares. Taylor appealed this

judgment, attacking, for the first time on appeal, the validity of the deed as it bore upon the

evidentiary support for the district court’s finding that the 31 heirs were the sole owners of the

property. Taylor argued that the warranty deed was void because Louis Taylor had not signed it.

Holding that Earnest Taylor had waived this argument and that the parties would have acquired title

through adverse possession anyway, the Court affirmed the judgment.4

2 See id. at *5 (quoting Tex. Prop. Code Ann. § 5.021 (West 2004), Tex. R. Civ. P. 93(7) and Mondragon v. Mondragon, 257 S.W. 215, 216 (Tex. 1923)). 3 See id. 4 See id.

2 The district court had appointed a receiver, Margaret Ann Bexley, to sell the tract.

In February 2005, the court issued an order accepting a proposed earnest money contract that

Ms. Bexley had negotiated with Creekside Rural Investments, Inc., and ordering her to sell the

property in accordance with the contract. Creekside subsequently assigned its interest in the earnest

money contract to Consolidated Rural Properties, Ltd. The district court denied a motion by Taylor

to set aside the sale and, on July 21, 2005, over Taylor’s objections, signed a decree approving and

confirming the sale. The decree further directed the receiver to distribute the net proceeds of the sale

to the heirs in shares consistent with the percentage interests specified in the earlier judgment.

Taylor filed a motion for new trial, which the district court denied, and then appealed from the

district court’s decree. After granting Taylor repeated extensions of time to file his brief, this Court

ultimately dismissed this appeal for want of prosecution in October 2006.5

On September 6, 2006, while his appeal from the decree confirming the receiver sale

was still pending, Taylor filed, in the same underlying cause, a “Motion to Declare Judgment Void

Due to Lack of Subject-Matter Jurisdiction.” Taylor requested the district court to “vacate its Final

Judgment entered on June 6, 2003, and dismiss the Plaintiffs’ cause of action for lack of subject-

matter jurisdiction.”6 In support, Taylor again attacked the validity of the warranty deed on the basis

that Louis Taylor had not signed it—the same issue addressed in this Court’s prior opinion—but now

recasting his argument as going to the district court’s subject-matter jurisdiction to render its original

5 Taylor v. Hill, No. 03-05-00683-CV (Tex. App.—Austin Oct. 6, 2006) (mem. op.), available at http://www.3rdcoa.courts.state.tx.us/opinions/HTMLopinion.asp?OpinionID=15294. 6 Taylor purported to invoke the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, and sought reasonable attorney’s fees. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 37.001-.011 (West 1997 & Supp. 2007).

3 judgment. Specifically, Taylor contended that (1) because Louis Taylor had not signed the warranty

deed; (2) the deed was void and had not passed title to the heirs, so that; (3) the Hill-aligned heirs

had lacked standing to file their partition action in district court; (4) the district court had thus lacked

subject-matter jurisdiction to determine the heirs’ respective interests; and (5) an inquiry that was

instead within the exclusive jurisdiction of the County Court of Lee County to determine through

an heirship proceeding. Hence, Taylor reasons, the 2003 judgment is void.

Following a hearing at which only argument was presented, the district court denied

Taylor’s motion without stating its grounds. It further ordered the clerk of the Court “to immediately

disburse the funds held in the registry of the Court in accordance with the Decree Confirming Sale

By Receiver of Property dated July 22, 2005.”7 Taylor appeals from this order, bringing forward the

same arguments he made below. Hill urges that Taylor’s attack on the 2003 judgment is barred by

res judicata and collateral estoppel. Also, observing that the tract has already been sold and urging

that the net proceeds have now been distributed to the heirs, (including Taylor), Hill urges that the

underlying controversy is moot.

The receiver, Ms. Bexley, and current owner of the property, Consolidated, each filed

amicus curiae briefs in support of the district court’s ruling. See Tex. R. App. P. 11. In response,

Taylor filed motions to strike both amicus briefs. Subsequently, out of apparent concern that we

might grant Taylor relief and that it would have no means of protecting its ownership interest in the

7 At the hearing, counsel for the receiver stated that the sale proceeds had not yet been distributed.

4 property, Consolidated filed a motion to intervene in this appeal and a motion for emergency stay

pending our ruling on its motion to intervene.

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Related

In Re Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Co.
184 S.W.3d 718 (Texas Supreme Court, 2006)
Long v. Spencer
137 S.W.3d 923 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2004)
City of San Benito v. Rio Grande Valley Gas Co.
109 S.W.3d 750 (Texas Supreme Court, 2003)
Mondragon v. Mondragon
257 S.W. 215 (Texas Supreme Court, 1923)

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