Flowers, Perry J. v. Sun NLF Limited Partnership

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 22, 2002
Docket08-00-00418-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Flowers, Perry J. v. Sun NLF Limited Partnership (Flowers, Perry J. v. Sun NLF Limited Partnership) 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
Flowers, Perry J. v. Sun NLF Limited Partnership, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

                                                            COURT OF APPEALS

                                                    EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                               EL PASO, TEXAS

PERRY J. FLOWERS,                                          )

                                                                              )            No.  08-00-00418-CV

Appellant,                          )

                                                                              )                 Appeal from the

v.                                                                           )

                                                                              )                44th District Court

SUN NLF LIMITED PARTNERSHIP,                 )

                                                                              )            of Dallas County, Texas

Appellee.                           )

                                                                              )               (TC# 00-05728-B)

                                                                              )

O P I N I O N

Appellant Perry J. Flowers (AFlowers@) appeals from the trial court=s granting of summary judgment for Appellee Sun NLF Limited Partnership (ASun NLF@) and contends that the existence of material fact issues preclude the summary judgment.  We affirm.

PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND


Alleging Sun NLF breached an oral agreement, Flowers filed a petition in the County Court at Law of Dallas County (Cause No. 00-98-12077-B) on December 9, 1998.  He asserted in the petition that Sun NLF had given him the right of first-refusal to purchase the property at the intersection of Wheatland and Lancaster roads in the City of Dallas (Aproperty@), and sought to recover in quantum meruit the value of services performed to maintain the property or 15 percent of the sale price.  Almost three months later on February 23, 1999, he filed suit in the trial court below and claimed ownership of the property (description attached same as one for Cause No. 00-98-12077-B) through adverse possession.

Sun NLF filed its motion for a regular summary judgment on February 10, 2000, and Flowers filed his response on March 8, 2000.  The trial court signed the order granting the summary judgment only on Flowers=s adverse possession claim on March 10, 2000.  Thereafter, the trial court severed the portion of the case that the summary judgment had been granted on from the other causes of action.[1]

SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE[2]

On June 27, 1977, Flowers agreed to lease from James F. Mason a tract of land in Dallas County described on the signed written lease agreement as approximately 151 acres on the north side of LBJ Freeway (I-635/20) at Lancaster Road (S.H. 342)(northwest corner).  In his petition in the county court at law (98-12077-B), Flowers alleged that Mason and he also entered into an oral contract in 1978, where Flowers would manage the property and also be given right of first refusal to purchase the property.


At the time of the lease, Flowers said in his deposition that he and his father had been using the land to hunt, and he wanted to put horses and cattle on it, as did Mason for purposes of tax exemption.  The property had a rundown shack with trash around it and a few isolated pieces of fencing.  Mason and he discussed putting the property in a working condition, and Flowers said he removed the trash from the property and put up fences for the cattle, even if it was not required from him.  Later on, Mason asked Flowers to also clean the house to avoid condemnation from the city.  Although Mason was supposed to pay Flowers for the fence and clean-up of the trash and the house, Mason never compensated him.  Flowers did not pay the property taxes or insurance premiums and was ignorant of the party responsible for those payments.

Flowers began to feel he owned the land in 1979, because the city was sending him notices on the property and he had not yet been paid for all the improvements.  Flowers said he never bluntly or specifically told Mason he was asserting ownership to the property or sent a letter and instead told Mason verbally that he would not leave the property until he had been paid.  At least around 1980, he would not have taken possession of the property, if he had been paid.  Mason stated in his affidavit that Flowers never tried to keep him or his agents away from the property nor did Flowers notify him of his adverse ownership interest.  Mason also denied that he had given to Flowers a right of first refusal to purchase the property or a 15 percent commission on the property=s sales price.  Flowers admitted in his deposition that he and Mason had not agreed upon a specific percentage for the commission but that he had thought 15 percent was a fair price when he pleaded to that figure in the petition:

A:         I=m not sure what the percentage was, but I thought about 15 or 20 percent, so I put the lowest of my figures on there, which was 15.


Mason sold various parcels of the property from 1980 to 1986.  Flowers was aware of transactions over the property, since a Mercantile Bank agent came to inspect the property on a note held against it.  Flowers did nothing to prevent Mercantile Bank from inspecting the property, because other parcels of land were mingled with his and he was only concerned with the land surrounding his immediate homeplace.  He also did not stop Pilot company from building a truck stop on the corner of Lancaster and LBJ around 1994.  Proximate to that time, he stopped maintaining one of the tracts at Wheatland and Lancaster and left it to the person claiming that tract, because it was too much trouble to keep mowing it. 

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Bluebook (online)
Flowers, Perry J. v. Sun NLF Limited Partnership, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flowers-perry-j-v-sun-nlf-limited-partnership-texapp-2002.