In Re Cohen

340 S.W.3d 889, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 2776, 2011 WL 1506087
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 14, 2011
Docket01-10-00804-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 340 S.W.3d 889 (In Re Cohen) 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
In Re Cohen, 340 S.W.3d 889, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 2776, 2011 WL 1506087 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

*890 OPINION

SHERRY RADACK, Chief Justice.

In this original proceeding, Relator Jay H. Cohen seeks relief from two trial court orders 1 expunging lis pendens on three properties. We conditionally grant his petition for writ of mandamus.

BACKGROUND

The underlying suit involves claims related to several parcels of real property in Houston. Because a complete recitation of the facts surrounding the underlying dispute is not necessary for our disposition, we limit our discussion to only the facts relevant to this original proceeding. The notices of lis pendens at issue here relate to the following three properties:

(1) 7.7 acre tract at Alabama and Dunla-vy that is the subject of a June 24, 2010 “Supplemental Notice of Lis Pendens” (“Alabama/Dunlavy Property 1 ’);
(2) 1.56 acre tract on East Bissonnet that is the subject of a July 27, 2010 “Second Supplemental Notice of Lis Pendens” (“Bissonnet Property”); and
(3) 2.44 acre tract on West Newcastle that is also the subject of the July 27, 2010 “Second Supplemental Notice of Lis Pendens” (“Newcastle Property”).

In the past, Cohen has owned each of these properties. Through a series of transactions over several years, he transferred them into different partnerships. In the underlying suit, he claims that these properties have since been wrongfully and fraudulently encumbered by debt and transferred to others.

On April 10, 2010, acting in his capacity as trustee of trusts that are limited partners in partnerships that now hold or have held the properties, Cohen sued several defendants derivatively on behalf of those partnerships. Between May 5, 2010 and August 27, 2010, he amended his petition four times to add additional defendants and claims. During the course of this litigation, he also filed numerous notices of lis pendens — including the one filed June 24, 2010 related to the Dunlavy/Alabama Property and the one filed July 27, 2010 related to the Bissonnet Property and the Newcastle Property.

1. Alabama/Dunlavy Property

On July 23, 2010, Defendants Commerce Equities II, LLC, Flat Stone Development, Inc., Flat Stone II of Texas, Inc., and Alabama & Dunlavy, Ltd. (“Alabama/Dunlavy Defendants”) filed a “Motion to Cancel and Expunge Notices of Lis Pendens, and Request for Costs and Fees.” This filing challenged the lis pen-dens filed on several properties, with only the Alabama/Dunlavy Property being relevant here.

The Alabama/Dunlavy Property was the subject of a April 6, 2010 “Notice of Lis Pendens,” a May 17, 2010 “Amended Notice of Lis Pendens,” a June 17, 2010 “Release of Notice of Lis Pendens” (releasing the April 6, 2010 Lis Pendens), a June 11, 2010 Release of Amended Notice of Lis Pendens (releasing May 17, 2010 “Amended Notice of Lis Pendens”), and a June 24, 2010 “Supplemental Notice of Lis Pen-dens.” The Alabama/Dunlavy Defendants’ motion to expunge challenged the notices of lis pendens as void because, these defendants alleged, Cohen’s claims related to the Alabama/Dunlavy Property are collateral, rather than direct, and thus are not “seeking title to, an interest in, or eneum- *891 branee against the real property” sufficient to support lis pendens. Rather, they asserted, Cohen improperly seeks to impose a lis pendens to support “what amounts to a judgment lien.” Accordingly, they argued, Cohen “cannot make a showing ... that his pleading contains real property claims.”

2. Bissonnet and Newcastle Properties

On August 24, 2010, Defendants East Bissonnet, Ltd. and West Newcastle, Ltd. (“Bissonnet/Newcastle Defendants”) filed a joinder of the Alabama/Dunlavy Defendants’ motion to expunge. This motion challenged the lis pendens on the Bisson-net Property and on the Newcastle Property.

The Bissonnet Property and Newcastle Property were the subject of a July 27, 2010 “Second Supplemental Notice of Lis Pendens.” The Bissonnet/Newcastle Defendants argued both that Cohen’s pleadings did not state a claim for an interest in real property and that Cohen cannot establish by a preponderance of the evidence the probable validity of any real property claim. This is because, they contend, “[bjased upon the incontrovertible facts pertaining to Movants’ respective ownership of the subject properties, Cohen had no legal right to place Notices of Lis Pen-dens on Movants’ respective real property.”

On September 3, 2010, Defendants Matthew G. Dilick and the Bissonnet/Newcas-tle Defendants filed “The Dilick Defendants’ Emergency Motion for Immediate, Expedited Expungement and Cancellation of Lis Pendens.” They asserted that the Bissonnet and Newcastle Properties were facing “impending foreclosures” and that the Second Supplemental Notice of Lis Pendens “prohibits execution of potential contracts that could keep the properties out of foreclosure and profit the Partnerships.” They argued that Cohen’s filing notices of lis pendens was wrongful, and that the lis pendens on the Bissonnet and Newcastle Properties jeopardized Defendant Dilick’s credit because he personally guaranteed notes that will be foreclosed.

3. The trial court orders

On September 1, 2010, the trial court signed an “ORDER ON MOTION TO CANCEL AND EXPUNGE NOTICES OF LIS PENDENS, AND REQUEST FOR COSTS AND FEES.” That order found that the lis pendens filed on three properties, including the Alabama/Dunlavy Property at issue in this proceeding, void. The order states:

Plaintiffs allegations in his First Amended Petition do not support any claim that Plaintiff possessed a direct interest in [the Alabama/Dunlavy Property] at the time the notices of lis pen-dens were filed — and such failure is enough to merit the expunging of lis pendens. 2

On September 7, 2010, the trial court signed an order granting Dilick’s and the Bissonnet/Newcastle Defendants’ motion for expedited expungement of the Second Supplemental Notice of Lis Pendens relating to the Bissonnet Property and the Newcastle Property. Unlike the September 1, 2010 order expunging the notice of lis pendens on the Alabama/Dunlavy Property, this September 7, 2010 order did not specify which of Cohen’s pleadings were relied upon by the court, and did not state whether the court found Cohen’s pleading or Cohen’s evidence deficient.

*892 In response to Cohen’s motion to reconsider, the court signed two further orders refusing reconsideration but clarifying that both its September 1, 2010 and September 7, 2010 orders were made with reference to the Fourth Amended Petition — the live pleading when the motions to expunge were heard — rather than the First Amended Petition that was referenced in the court’s September 1, 2010 order. Both orders also state that, in entering both the September 1, 2010 and September 7, 2010 orders, the court “did not consider evidence or make a determination of the sufficiency of the evidence.”

4. This proceeding

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
340 S.W.3d 889, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 2776, 2011 WL 1506087, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cohen-texapp-2011.