Henry G. Jordan and Charlene Hanson Jordan v. Coupland State Bank Ted W. Hejl, Substitute Trustee and Agent And C. W. Pfluger, Jr., as Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Coupland State Bank

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 28, 1994
Docket03-93-00199-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Henry G. Jordan and Charlene Hanson Jordan v. Coupland State Bank Ted W. Hejl, Substitute Trustee and Agent And C. W. Pfluger, Jr., as Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Coupland State Bank (Henry G. Jordan and Charlene Hanson Jordan v. Coupland State Bank Ted W. Hejl, Substitute Trustee and Agent And C. W. Pfluger, Jr., as Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Coupland State Bank) 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
Henry G. Jordan and Charlene Hanson Jordan v. Coupland State Bank Ted W. Hejl, Substitute Trustee and Agent And C. W. Pfluger, Jr., as Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Coupland State Bank, (Tex. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

jordan
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS,


AT AUSTIN




NO. 3-93-199-CV


HENRY G. JORDAN AND CHARLENE HANSON JORDAN,


APPELLANTS



vs.


COUPLAND STATE BANK, TED W. HEJL, SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE AND AGENT;
AND C. W. PFLUGER, JR., AS CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
OF THE COUPLAND STATE BANK,


APPELLEES





FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY, 26TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT


NO. 89-338-C, HONORABLE WILLIAM S. LOTT, JUDGE PRESIDING




Appellants Henry and Charlene Jordan appeal the denial of their request for a judgment declaring that a deed of gift and deed of trust, and the subsequent foreclosure under that deed of trust, were void as an unconstitutional conveyance of the homestead property of Charlene Jordan's mother. The Jordans also sought damages for usury, breach of contract, violation of a permanent injunction issued by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Texas, and violation of the Texas Business and Commerce Code (1) for failure to dispose of collateral in a reasonable and timely manner. Coupland State Bank ("the Bank") counterclaimed seeking declaratory judgment that the lien and foreclosure were valid and seeking attorney's fees. The trial court rendered judgment for the Bank on all issues, and the Jordans appealed. We will affirm the trial court's judgment.



HOMESTEAD ISSUES

This suit involves property located in Williamson County, Texas. The specific property at issue is approximately 44 acres of land ("the Subject Property") out of a larger 122-acre tract, known as the "Dock Place," near Coupland, Texas. In 1956, Ruth Hanson, Charlene Jordan's mother, owned the 122 acres; she had inherited 61.45 acres and she and her husband, John, had purchased the other 60.864 acres. Ruth and John lived in a house that was on the Dock Place. When John died intestate in 1978, Ruth continued residing in this home. The house was not located on the Subject Property.

The Jordans moved to Austin in 1975 to start a business named Longhorn Travelers. Due to poor health, Ruth Hanson moved to Austin in 1980 and lived with the Jordans until 1987. The Jordans added a bedroom to their house for Ruth. However, Ruth left behind many of her home furnishings and belongings in the house she had lived in on the Dock Place. In 1987, Ruth and the Jordans moved back to the Dock Place house and lived there until Ruth's death in 1988. After Ruth died, the Jordans continued to live on the Dock Place.

On August 13, 1982, the Jordans executed a promissory note payable to the Bank for $50,000 ("the 1982 Note"). The security for the 1982 Note was Longhorn Travelers' accounts receivable and some oil stocks the Jordans owned. In accordance with this agreement, the Jordans pledged and delivered the oil stock certificates to the Bank. The 1982 Note was renewed and extended several times.

On December 29, 1983, the Jordans executed a note for $57,972.84 payable to the Bank as a renewal and extension of the previous notes. The note indicated it was secured by a deed of trust on the Subject Property, a second lien on a tract of land at Apache Shores, various shares of stock, and a 1974 Mercedes automobile. (2) Charlene testified that C. W. Pfluger, the Bank's president and chairman of the board, drafted the note to recite a deed of trust lien on the Subject Property only to satisfy the bank examiners, who were pressuring him to obtain more collateral on the Jordans' notes.

On February 27, 1984, Ruth, the Jordans, and Waltraud Hanson, Charlene's sister-in-law, (3) partitioned 58.864 acres (4) out of the Dock Place of which each owned an undivided interest. Waltraud received 14.716 acres as her sole property, but sold 11.716 acres to the Jordans on the same day. She also sold her undivided interest in the house to the Jordans. (5) Ruth and Charlene maintained undivided interests in the Subject Property.

On March 3, 1984, four years after she moved to Austin, Ruth conveyed her interest in the Subject Property to her daughter Charlene by deed of gift. On April 22, 1984, the Jordans executed a real estate lien note ("the 1984 Note") for $57,972.84 payable to the Bank. The 1984 Note was secured by a deed of trust dated April 21, 1984, in favor of the Bank and covering the Subject Property and the Apache Shores Property. The Jordans defaulted on the 1984 Note, and the Bank eventually foreclosed on the Subject Property on October 2, 1990, two years after Ruth's death.

Charlene testified that she executed the deed of trust because Pfluger had begun pressuring her for it as additional collateral on the outstanding notes. She testified that she told Pfluger she did not own the Subject Property, to which he stated she "needed to get it into [her] name." Charlene testified that Pfluger told her the deed of trust would be only for appearance and that she understood it would never be enforced. Shortly thereafter, Charlene asked Ruth to give her the Subject Property and Ruth reluctantly agreed because "she knew Mr. Pfluger, and she knew it was for appearances."

Pfluger testified that while he asked the Jordans for more collateral to secure their debt, he never specified the Subject Property; rather, the Jordans offered it. He further testified that he never told the Jordans that the Bank would not enforce a deed of trust on the Subject Property, nor foreclose on the Subject Property if they failed to make payments on the notes. Pfluger testified that when the Jordans executed the deed of trust, they never mentioned a homestead claim; the first time he heard of such a claim was after the Jordans filed suit. Finally, Pfluger testified that in renewing and extending the Jordans' debt to the Bank, he relied on representations the Jordans made in the deed of trust that they owned the property and had the right to convey it.

In addition to the Subject Property, Ruth conveyed her interest in the remaining portions of the 122-acre Dock Place to Charlene through several gift conveyances between 1978 and 1984. In 1980, Ruth also conveyed to Charlene an adjacent 115-acre tract. Charlene mortgaged her interest in the 115-acre tract in 1984. The Jordans also mortgaged 61.455 acres, 11 acres, and .729 acres of the Dock Place acreage to various lenders in 1984. When asked about her mother's numerous conveyances to her, Charlene testified that the only one she considered void was the conveyance of the Subject Property. All of the other gift conveyances were "real" transactions. Although Ruth conveyed a 61-acre tract by deed of gift on the same day she conveyed the Subject Property, Charlene maintained that the 61-acre tract conveyance was a "real" transaction but that the Subject Property conveyance was not.

Charlene's nephew, David Hanson, testified that Charlene leased the Subject Property to him between 1983 and 1989 and collected rent. David (6) testified that around 1984 or 1985, Charlene represented to him that rent money generated from leases of the 122 acres belonged to her because she owned the property.

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Henry G. Jordan and Charlene Hanson Jordan v. Coupland State Bank Ted W. Hejl, Substitute Trustee and Agent And C. W. Pfluger, Jr., as Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Coupland State Bank, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-g-jordan-and-charlene-hanson-jordan-v-coupland-state-bank-ted-w-texapp-1994.