Homer Fears, Louise Fears, Terry Fears and Teresa Fears v. Texas Bank

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 6, 2008
Docket06-07-00080-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Homer Fears, Louise Fears, Terry Fears and Teresa Fears v. Texas Bank (Homer Fears, Louise Fears, Terry Fears and Teresa Fears v. Texas 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
Homer Fears, Louise Fears, Terry Fears and Teresa Fears v. Texas Bank, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

______________________________

No. 06-07-00080-CV ______________________________

HOMER FEARS, LOUISE FEARS, TERRY FEARS AND TERESA FEARS, Appellants

V.

TEXAS BANK, Appellee

On Appeal from the 4th Judicial District Court Rusk County, Texas Trial Court No. 2001-295

Before Morriss, C.J., Carter and Moseley, JJ. Opinion by Justice Carter OPINION

Tommy and Wanda Fears borrowed money from the Texas Bank and failed to make the

payments in a timely manner. Tommy's parents, Homer and Louise Fears, conveyed fifty acres of

their property to the Bank to avoid foreclosure or other legal consequences to Tommy. The Bank

gave Homer and Louise written assurance that it would return their property on payment of the note.

The note was never satisfied and the Bank was preparing to sell the fifty acres when Homer and

Louise, joined by their other son, Terry, and his wife, Teresa, sued the Bank alleging they had been

coerced and were under duress when they executed the deed; they requested the trial court to find

the conveyance void.

Tommy also conveyed a twenty-acre tract to the Bank which Homer and Louise had

previously conveyed to him. Homer and Louise claim their deed to Tommy violated the statute of

frauds and was void.1 Ultimately, the Bank filed summary judgment motions which the trial court

granted finding the Bank was the owner of both tracts. The Fearses2 appeal from a summary

judgment taken in favor of the Bank, and Tommy and Wanda Fears.3

1 They sought 1) to have the first deed set aside, 2) declaration that the second deed was invalid, 3) judgment declaring the boundaries of their realty, 4) permanent injunction to prevent the Bank or codefendants, Tommy and Wanda, from conveying the property owned by them, and 5) attorney's fees. 2 Homer, Louise, Terry, and Teresa Fears will collectively be referred to as the Fearses. 3 In the original petition, it is alleged that Terry Fears and wife, Teresa Fears, owned the twenty-acre tract. There is no support for that contention in the record. In the brief filed in this Court, the Fearses argue that "legal and equitable title to the property is still in Homer and Louise

2 In a pleading which the Bank entitles as a cross-action, but which appears to be a classic

counterclaim,4 the Bank claimed that the Fearses' lawsuit had clouded its title to the property and

requested a declaratory judgment establishing its title to the fifty- and twenty-acre tracts.

The Bank filed its initial motion for summary judgment in June 2005. The motion is a

traditional one alleging there was no genuine issue of material fact. It contains a lengthy exposition

of the course of events leading up to the foreclosure and is supported by an affidavit by the president

of the Bank. The Fearses filed a response August 17, 2005.

In February 2006, the Bank then filed a supplemental motion for summary judgment (a no-

evidence motion against the claims of duress) and the Fearses filed a supplemental response

February 6, 2006. A hearing on the motion was conducted February 23; the trial court advised the

attorneys by letter dated February 27 that the Bank's motions for summary judgment were granted.

On February 28, the Fearses filed a supplemental complaint which, on March 2, the Bank

filed a motion to strike.5 The trial court granted summary judgment by order signed April 6, 2006.

Fears." It is unclear why Terry and Teresa are included as appellants. 4 A counterclaim is asserted against the opposing party. A cross-claim is a pleading asserted against a coparty. TEX . R. CIV . P. 97(a), (b), (e). 5 Summary judgment may be granted on later-pleaded causes of action if the grounds actually asserted show that the plaintiff could not recover on the later-pleaded cause of action. Ortiz v. Collins, 203 S.W.3d 414, 423 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2006, no pet.); Espeche v. Ritzell, 123 S.W.3d 657, 664 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2003, pet. denied) ("If a motion for summary judgment is sufficiently broad to encompass later-filed claims, the movant need not amend his motion."). In this case, the late-filed pleadings are essentially expansions of the original claims. New causes of action were alleged that might not fall within the scope of the previously-filed

3 That summary judgment was not then final, as it did not dispose of the cross-action. The cross-

action was disposed of by a later judgment signed February 8, 2007, and this appeal followed in due

course.

I. Contentions of the Fearses

On appeal, the Fearses complain that the summary judgment regarding the property was

erroneous. First, the Fearses argue there was some evidence this was a sham transaction which

should be set aside; that the fifty-acre tract was a homestead and it could not be foreclosed on for a

non-purchase-money lien. The Fearses argue their deed to the Bank was nothing more than an artful

way to avoid the homestead provisions of the Texas Constitution—and they only agreed to this

procedure because the Bank threatened to have their son jailed should they refuse.

Second, the Fearses assert that there was some evidence the deed was obtained by fraud and

extortion by the Bank and that there was some evidence no consideration was received for the

transfer.

In their third point, the Fearses argue the trial court erred by refusing to grant their motion

for summary judgment asking the court to set aside the 1995 deed to Tommy because it did not meet

the requirements of the statute of frauds—because it did not adequately identify the property being

transferred.

motions for summary judgment.

4 In a fourth point, the Fearses argue that the court erred by granting summary judgment on

attorney's fees because they contested the amount in their response to the summary judgment motion

and because the summary judgment against them was improperly rendered.

II. The Bank's Response

The Bank addresses the Fearses' first argument as complaining the court erred because there

was an issue about whether the property was a homestead, and submits that the issue was not

preserved because that matter was not alleged until the Fearses' first supplemental complaint, filed

after the summary judgment hearing.

The Bank contends that "fraud and extortion," as now argued by the Fearses, was not before

the trial court—the only tort claims were duress and coercion, which were before the court and

properly subject to the Bank's no-evidence summary judgment motion. It also argues there was no

evidence to controvert its allegations that credit was given to the notes of Tommy and Wanda as

consideration for the transfer of the property.

The Bank argues the deed of the twenty-acre tract sufficiently describes the property to meet

the requirements of the statute of frauds.

Finally, the Bank argues there is no summary judgment evidence to controvert its claims for

attorney's fees—only legal conclusions that those fees were excessive.

5 III. Discussion

A. Standard of Review

When reviewing a summary judgment, we take as true all evidence favorable to the

nonmovant and indulge every reasonable inference and resolve any doubts in the nonmovant's favor.

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