Hector Dominguez v. Marvin Dominguez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 16, 2019
Docket08-17-00118-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Hector Dominguez v. Marvin Dominguez (Hector Dominguez v. Marvin Dominguez) 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
Hector Dominguez v. Marvin Dominguez, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

HECTOR DOMINGUEZ, § No. 08-17-00118-CV Appellant, § Appeal from the v. § 210th District Court MARVIN DOMINGUEZ, § of El Paso County, Texas Appellee. § (TC# 2014-DCV0981) §

OPINION

This case involves a dispute between Hector Dominguez (Appellant) and Marvin

Dominguez (Appellee), father and son, respectively, regarding ownership of property located at

6948 Oveja, El Paso, Texas (the property). After Appellant filed a trespass to try title suit,

Appellee countered with affirmative defenses and a tortious interference with contract claim.

Following a bench trial, the trial court confirmed that Appellee owned the property in its entirety,

declared the property free of any claim of Appellant, and entered judgment in favor of Appellee

on his claim of tortious interference. In four issues, Appellant challenges the trial court’s

judgment. We affirm in part and reverse and render in part. Factual Background and Procedural History

At trial, Appellant and Appellee admitted documents by agreement, and other than their

own testimony, no other witnesses testified in the proceeding. Appellant began by describing that

he and Appellee purchased the property on October 31, 2008. Appellant identified a Special

Warranty Deed with Vendor’s Lien, executed on October 31, 2008, as proof that Francisco Z.

Acosta and Alberto Acosta, acting in their capacities as successor co-trustees of the Zenaido

Acosta and Cristina S. Acosta 2004 Living Trust (the sellers), granted, sold, and conveyed the

property known as 6948 Oveja to Appellant and Appellee. Along with the deed, Appellant also

identified his signature on the related Deed of Trust which provided a security lien to sellers for a

principal loan of $107,000, owed by Appellant and Appellee, as borrowers of the debt.

Appellant further testified that he agreed to loan Appellee $13,000 for their down payment

to buy the property. To fund the payment, Appellant testified that he borrowed funds from his

bank credit card. Appellant claimed that Appellee promised he would make monthly payments on

the property until fully paid, and additionally, he would pay a minimum payment of $109 per

month to Appellant’s credit card until the original loan of $13,000 was fully reimbursed.

Appellant further claimed that, about February 2014, he became suspicious when Appellee

stopped answering his phone or his door when he went to his house to collect the credit card

payment. His suspicions led him to the county courthouse where he discovered a Special Warranty

Deed executed on March 11, 2013, which purportedly transferred title of the property from joint

ownership of Appellant and Appellee, to sole ownership by Appellee. Although the newly

discovered deed purportedly contained his signature, Appellant testified it was forged, and, in any

case, he was in Mexico on the date the deed was executed. Once again, Appellant testified that

2 Appellee would not answer his phone or open his door to speak with him when he tried to have a

discussion. As for the credit card debt, Appellant described that Appellee made payments up to

about $5,000, but he owed a balance of $8,000.

On cross-examination, Appellant acknowledged that the loan funded from his credit card

was never documented in writing. When Appellant was next shown a Durable Power of Attorney

dated March 11, 2013, which empowered Appellee to act as Appellant’s agent for any transaction,

Appellant denied he had signed the instrument even though, on its face, his signature showed it

was acknowledged by a notary and two other witnesses. Lastly, when Appellant was shown a

Warranty Deed dated June 2013, which purportedly displayed his own signature and that of

Modesta Dominguez, his former wife, Appellant testified that both signatures were valid even

though other evidence admitted at trial established that his wife had been deceased for over three

years from the date of execution. Appellant completed his testimony stating that he had not been

aware that Appellee was selling the property to another party until after he filed his lawsuit and

later learned about the contracts for sale during a deposition.

When Appellee took the stand, he contradicted Appellant’s testimony principally from the

point that Appellant accused him of fraudulently transferring title from their joint ownership to his

individual ownership. In his defense, Appellee testified that Appellant himself personally prepared

the deed dated March 11, 2013, which conveyed title over the property from Appellant and

Appellee, jointly, to Appellee in its entirety. Appellee testified he recognized his own signature,

and that of Appellant’s, as shown on the face of the deed that was entered of record. Appellee

testified that he and Appellant had signed the deed at the same time on the trunk of his car. As for

the later deed that followed, Appellee identified the deed at trial and testified that he received it

3 from his father. Appellee explained that he had wanted to add his wife to the title of the property,

but he did not want to spend money to hire an attorney. Instead, he asked his father for help, which

he provided, but it took a while to get it. He and his wife signed the deed that Appellant provided

on August 27 and they filed it the next day.

Appellee further testified that he never borrowed money from his father to purchase the

property, and instead, he bought the property wholly on his own. He testified that he later lost two

opportunities to sell the property. To establish proof, two contracts for sale were admitted into

evidence. Appellee testified the first contract was signed by the purported buyer on October 2,

2014, for a purchase price of $139,000. The second had a prospective execution date of June 10,

2015, and a purchase price of $135,000. Appellee further testified he was unable to complete

either transaction explaining that “[b]ecause of [Appellant’s] lawsuit against me.” Appellee added,

“I tried selling the property, title company came back, can’t do it because of the lawsuit.”

Pleadings of the Parties

On March 27, 2014, Appellant filed his original petition for trespass to try title against

Appellee. Appellant’s petition described that he and Appellee were initially granted title to the

property by means of a Special Warranty Deed with Vendor’s Lien dated October 31, 2008, which

he attached to his petition. Appellant’s suit alleged that, after they had acquired the property,

Appellee fraudulently transferred title into his own name by a Special Warranty Deed dated March

11, 2013. Appellant further claimed that Appellee later transferred the property a second time by

means of a Special Warranty Deed dated August 27, 2013, by which he conveyed his sole

ownership to joint ownership by himself and his wife, Perla Marisol Dominguez. By his suit,

Appellant sought judgment to establish title and right to possession of the property and to remove

4 Appellee as registered owner in the public records of El Paso County, Texas. In responding,

Appellee denied Appellant’s claim and filed his own counter suit against Appellant. Among other

allegations, Appellee accused Appellant of disturbing his quiet possession of title, using fraudulent

and forged documents, and tortiously interfering with an existing contract of sale of property.

At the conclusion of the proceeding, the trial court ruled in open court that Appellant did

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