George Alejos and Yolanda Alejos v. John Vance and Depolos, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 4, 2024
Docket08-23-00321-CV
StatusPublished

This text of George Alejos and Yolanda Alejos v. John Vance and Depolos, Inc. (George Alejos and Yolanda Alejos v. John Vance and Depolos, Inc.) 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
George Alejos and Yolanda Alejos v. John Vance and Depolos, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

GEORGE ALEJOS and YOLANDA § No. 08-23-00321-CV ALEJOS, § Appeal from Appellants, § 57th Judicial District Court v. § of Bexar County, Texas JOHN VANCE and DEPOLOS, INC., § (TC# 2016-CI-07128) Appellees.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This appeal stems from a 1998 judgment against George Alejos. After being assigned the

1998 judgment and attempting to collect on it, Appellees John Vance and Depolos, Inc.

(collectively, Vance) sued Appellants, George and Yolanda Alejos, for purportedly fraudulent

transfers and civil conspiracy. After striking the Alejoses’ pleadings and finding their responses to

requests for admission deemed admitted, the trial court entered final judgment in Vance’s favor

and awarded him over $1,000,000. For the reasons below, we reverse. 1

1 This case was transferred pursuant to the Texas Supreme Court’s docket equalization efforts. Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 73.001. We follow the precedent of the Fourth Court of Appeals to the extent it might conflict with our own. See Tex. R. App. P. 41.3. I. BACKGROUND

On July 1, 1998, a Bexar County district judge entered final judgment in a separate suit

against Mr. Alejos brought by Tony Gomez. The judgment ordered Mr. Alejos to pay Mr. Gomez

$12,888 in actual damages, $100,000 in exemplary damages, and $36,620 in attorney’s fees. As

the Alejoses note on appeal, the record in this case reflects “some inconsistency” about whether

and to what extent that judgment was paid.

In 2016, Vance sued the Alejoses, alleging fraudulent transfer under the Texas Uniform

Fraudulent Transfer Act and civil conspiracy claims, and seeking punitive damages and attorney’s

fees. 2 Vance claimed that since the 1998 judgment, “several abstracts have been filed” and

“several writs of execution have issued and been returned,” but the Alejoses “conspired and

schemed to defraud the Judgment Creditors” by transferring property in Mr. Alejos’s name to Ms.

Alejos and filing for a “sham” divorce.

The Alejoses responded with a general denial. Discovery ensued. As relevant to this appeal,

Vance served the Alejoses with written discovery, including requests for admissions, on April 18,

2017. The response deadline of June 7 was extended to June 19. After the Alejoses served their

responses, Vance filed a motion to compel discovery and for discovery sanctions. The motion

represented that the Alejoses served their responses on June 20—not the due date of June 19—

because the “responses were served by facsimile after 5:00 p.m. on June 19, 2017,” and “[t]hus,

by rule, Defendants’ responses are deemed served on the next business day, June 20, 2017.”

Vance’s motion attached the Alejoses’ faxed responses, which are timestamped on June 19, 2017,

at 17:29, or 5:29 p.m., and include a certificate of service dated June 19, 2017.

2 While the petition does not explain Vance’s claim to the 1998 judgment, the record includes an assignment of judgment tracing the ownership interest in the judgment to Vance.

2 After a hearing (a transcript of which does not appear in the record), the court granted

Vance’s motion and found, among other things, that the Alejoses’ responses to the requests for

admission “were late served and therefore waived and each and every one of the requests for

admission is deemed admitted by operation of law.” The order further stated that “any objection

raised or asserted by Defendants that may have been valid is obscured by the large number of

invalid, frivolous objections attempted by Defendants.” The court also struck the Alejoses’ answer,

and it required the Alejoses to pay Vance $3,850 in attorney’s fees.

As litigation continued, the Alejoses were variously represented by counsel and pro se,

which had a deleterious effect on their defense. For example, just days before the hearing on

Vance’s motion to compel, the trial court granted the Alejoses’ then-attorney’s motion to

withdraw. During a period in which the Alejoses were represented, they filed a first amended

answer and a motion to strike the deemed admissions. The answer reasserted the Alejoses’ general

denial and raised the affirmative defenses of payment and limitations. The motion to strike the

deemed admissions argued that the “[d]eemed admissions will prevent Defendants from litigating

this lawsuit,” which would “violate Defendants’ due process rights, unless Plaintiffs can establish

flagrant bad faith or callous disregard for the rules by Defendants.” The motion further stated that

the deemed admissions would be “case determinative, and constitute a ‘merits-preclusive

sanction.’” And it urged that Vance would not be unduly prejudice if the admissions were

withdrawn because “the case will be resolved on the merits instead of by procedural default.” The

Alejoses reasserted these arguments in response to one of Vance’s summary-judgment motions.

Vance moved to strike the Alejoses’ amended pleading. Vance argued that the affirmative

defenses “are contrary to the deemed admissions” which had “been the law of the case for almost

five (5) years” and that Vance would “be unduly prejudiced” if the Alejoses asserted these

3 affirmative defenses. Vance also urged that he was entitled to summary judgment on these

affirmative defenses.

After a hearing (at which the Alejoses proceeded pro se), the trial court granted Vance’s

motion to strike the amended answer. The order also stated that the Alejoses “are not allowed to

replead” the affirmative defense of payment and release or limitations. And the court awarded

Vance $8,000 in attorney’s fees as sanctions.

The case was set for trial the week of October 5, 2023. On September 29, 2023, Vance

filed a “Motion for Instructed/Directed Verdict and for Judgment Against Defendants George &

Yolanda Alejos.” The motion argued that Vance was entitled to judgment on the deemed

admissions and lack of answer on file, “leav[ing] no facts to be determined by the trier of fact.”

The motion clarified that “[u]pon the admission of, or reliance upon, the Alejos’ said judicial

admissions, Plaintiffs will be entitled to a directed verdict against defendants George & Yolanda

Alejos, jointly and severally, as a matter of law.” Vance attached several documents to the motion,

including the requests for admission and court order deeming them admitted, excerpts from

hearings in probate court regarding the estate of Mr. Alejos’s late sister, and the underlying

judgment and various orders in that case.

On the parties’ trial date, the Alejoses appeared for trial pro se. Mr. Alejos moved to

continue the trial, as he had just hired an attorney, but the trial court denied his motion. Vance’s

counsel argued his motion, urging that the Alejoses’ answers were struck such that they were “in

default status and ha[d] not done anything to cure that” and the deemed admissions “leave no issue

of disputed fact for the Court or a jury to decide on any of the elements” of his claims. Accordingly,

he argued, Vance was “entitled to judgment based on those judicial admissions, and it would

behoove the Court to allow [Vance] to proceed in that vein . . . that is, through a directed verdict

4 instead of having to take the time with a jury, because the jury wouldn’t decide anything.” The

trial court granted the motion, except for Vance’s exemplary damages request.

The final judgment found that the Alejoses “jointly and severally, violated the Texas

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