Flora J. Mireles v. Danny Morman

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 6, 2010
Docket03-09-00451-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Flora J. Mireles v. Danny Morman (Flora J. Mireles v. Danny Morman) 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
Flora J. Mireles v. Danny Morman, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-09-00451-CV

Flora J. Mireles, Appellant



v.



Danny Morman, Appellee



FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 4 OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY

NO. 08-1486-CC4, HONORABLE JOHN MCMASTER, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



In a dispute regarding ownership of a puppy, Flora J. Mireles appeals from a final summary judgment awarding Danny Morman $6,800 in damages and $3,500 in attorney's fees. Following a storm in Williamson County, several of appellee Danny Morman's Bullmastiff puppies escaped. Appellant Flora J. Mireles found one of the puppies and gave it to her young son. When she was eventually confronted by Morman, Mireles refused to return the puppy, and Morman filed suit alleging conversion and ultimately requesting return of the puppy, damages, and attorney's fees. The trial court granted summary judgment, requiring Mireles to either pay $800 for the puppy or to return the puppy. Including that $800, the trial court awarded damages to Morman in a total amount of $6,800, plus $3,500 in attorney's fees. Mireles appeals, asserting on multiple grounds that summary judgment was improper. We conclude that the trial court acted within its discretion in refusing to allow Mireles to withdraw deemed admissions and that those admissions conclusively established Mireles's liability as to conversion. However, because we also conclude that the summary-judgment evidence does not support the damages award, that attorney's fees were unavailable, and that the judgment granted more relief than was sought in Morman's motion, we will reverse the district court's judgment and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.



BACKGROUND

Appellee Morman raises Bullmastiff puppies. On February 15, 2008, four of Morman's puppies escaped his property when a storm blew open a gate. While Morman soon recovered three of the puppies, the fourth remained missing. About two months after the storm, a neighbor told Morman that she had seen a woman who lived nearby--appellant Mireles--in possession of a Bullmastiff puppy matching the description of Morman's fourth lost puppy.

Upon learning this information, Morman and his wife went to Mireles's house. A confrontation ensued in which Mireles gave conflicting accounts of how she came to be in possession of the puppy. It is undisputed that Mireles and Morman eventually agreed that Mireles would pay $800 to keep the puppy, and Mireles signed a promissory note to that effect. However, after Mireles neither paid the $800 nor returned the puppy, Morman filed suit in the Williamson County Court-at-Law.

In his "Original Petition for Recovery of Dog," Morman alleged that Mireles had converted the puppy and sought judgment that the puppy be returned to him, plus attorney's fees. Mireles, appearing pro se, timely filed a general denial and a "countersuit" for emotional distress damages plus, contingent on the trial court's granting Morman title to the puppy, expenses that Mireles had incurred in caring for the puppy and additional emotional-distress damages. Morman propounded written discovery requests, including requests for admission and interrogatories. Although Mireles eventually responded, she served her responses eight days late.

Thereafter, Morman filed a motion for traditional summary judgment on his conversion claim as well as a claim for "Theft of Property/Trial to Title Right to Property." Regarding the latter claim, Morman's motion addressed each of the elements of theft as defined in the penal code, (1) which are in turn made a basis for civil liability under the Texas Theft Liability Act. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 134.003(a) (West 2005) ("A person who commits theft is liable for the damages resulting from the theft."), § 134.005 (West 2005) ("[A] person who has sustained damages resulting from theft may recover . . . the amount of actual damages found by the trier of fact and, in addition to actual damages, damages awarded by the trier of fact in a sum not to exceed $1,000," plus court costs and reasonable and necessary attorney's fees.). However, as Morman acknowledges, neither his petition nor his summary-judgment motion explicitly mentioned this statute. In his motion, moreover, Morman prayed not only that Mireles be ordered to return the puppy to him, as he had requested in his petition, but also for "at least $5,800 as actual, special, and consequential damages," "statutory damages of $1,000," attorney's fees, and costs.

In support of his summary-judgment motion, Morman attached Mireles's deemed admissions, his own affidavit (with attachments that included what purported to be the puppy's American Kennel Club papers (2)), and an affidavit from his attorney regarding fees. Mireles filed a response, attaching her own evidence, including two incident reports from the Williamson County Sheriff's Office, a witness statement provided by Morman's wife, and an original petition that Morman had previously filed against her in justice court. (3) Morman objected to all of Mireles's summary-judgment evidence on grounds of hearsay.

A hearing was held. The trial court sustained all of Morman's hearsay objections and excluded all of Mireles's summary-judgment evidence. After inquiring whether law enforcement should be involved in the matter and after Mireles began making representations to the court regarding the underlying facts, the court asked that both parties be sworn in. During the ensuing exchange, Mireles acknowledged that during her initial confrontation with the Mormans, she had offered to pay them $800 for the puppy, which they had accepted, and that she subsequently had reneged on the deal. (4) Eventually, the trial court granted summary judgment for Morman, ordering that Mireles surrender possession of the puppy by 5:00 p.m. that day and awarding Morman actual damages of $6,800, $3,500 in trial-level attorney's fees, another $6,000 in contingent appellate attorney's fees, costs, and interest. However, the trial court further ordered that Mireles could keep the puppy if she tendered a cashier's check for $800 to Morman within one week, in which case the amount of actual damages awarded in the judgment would be reduced by $800, to $6,000. Mireles tendered the cashier's check and kept the puppy.

Mireles thereafter obtained her current counsel and filed a motion to modify the judgment and for new trial. After these motions were denied by operation of law, Mireles appealed.



ANALYSIS

Mireles brings five issues on appeal. Her primary argument, the subject of her first two issues, is that the trial court should have awarded no more than $800 in damages, a sum that, Mireles contends, represents the market value of the lost dog, and that any additional damages or attorney's-fee award was error. Based on these arguments, and in a professed desire to bring this litigation to an efficient conclusion, Mireles asks us to modify the trial court's judgment to award Morman only $800 (an amount she has already paid to Morman in return for the puppy).

In the alternative, Mireles argues that the trial court's judgment should be reversed in its entirety and the case remanded for further proceedings.

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Flora J. Mireles v. Danny Morman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flora-j-mireles-v-danny-morman-texapp-2010.