In the Estate Of: David Luke Brown v. the State of Texas

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 1st District (Houston)
DecidedMarch 6, 2026
Docket01-24-00263-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In the Estate Of: David Luke Brown v. the State of Texas (In the Estate Of: David Luke Brown v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 1st District (Houston) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Estate Of: David Luke Brown v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 6, 2026

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-24-00263-CV ——————————— IN THE ESTATE OF DAVID LUKE BROWN, DECEASED

On Appeal from Probate Court No. 4 Harris County, Texas Cause No. 494036-401

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This appeal arises from a property dispute between the Decedent, David Luke

Brown, and his ex-wife, Valeriya Ruzynska. Ruzynska petitioned for a post-divorce

division of property and asserted breach of contract and tortious interference with

prospective business relations claims against the dependent administrator of

Brown’s estate, Louis Ditta. Ditta counterclaimed, seeking a declaratory judgment

regarding certain property and requesting that the $105,000 remaining in the court’s registry be distributed to the estate. Ditta moved for summary judgment on

Ruzynska’s claims, which the probate court granted. After a bench trial, the probate

court awarded the requested funds to Brown’s estate.

Ruzynska contends the probate court erred in granting summary judgment in

favor of Brown’s estate and in awarding the estate the $105,000 in registry funds.

We affirm.

Background

On November 13, 2009, the divorce court rendered an Agreed Final Decree

of Divorce (the “Decree”) that dissolved Brown and Ruzynska’s marriage.

Thereafter, Brown and Ruzynska had ongoing disputes regarding two assets, the

subject of this appeal: (1) a 22.307-acre tract of land located at 11900 East Tidwell

Road, Houston, Harris County (the Tidwell property); and (2) certain Hartford

Investor Annuity Contract accounts.

The divorce court found that Brown and Ruzynska owned the Tidwell

property as joint tenants. The Decree equally divided the debt and the tax liability

on the Tidwell property. And the Decree ordered that the Tidwell property be sold

under the following conditions:

1. The portion of the [Tidwell property] containing the cell phone tower and subject to the cell phone tower lease . . . shall be partitioned and separated from the remaining 22.307 acre tract of land and the remaining 22.307 acre tract of land shall be listed with a broker as hereinafter provided.

2 2. The parties shall list the property with a duly licensed real estate broker having sales experience in the area where the property is located, provided further that the real estate broker shall be an active member in the Multiple Listing Service with the Houston Board of Realtors.

3. The property shall be sold for a price that is mutually agreeable to [the parties]. If [the parties] are unable to agree on a sales price. Heather Hughes acting as an arbitrator shall decide the sales price.

4. In the event the property does not sell before MUD or property taxes are due and a party pays those taxes, then the paying party shall be reimbursed at closing for such payments over and above his or her required 50% payment.

5. Net sales proceeds is defined as the gross sales price less cost of sale and full payment of the following:

a. Outstanding mortgage balance; b. Outstanding property and MUD Taxes c. The sum of $62,000.00 paid to [Brown] as reimbursement to his separate estate for the down payment on the property d. the sum of $43,000,00 paid to [Brown] as reimbursement to his separate estate for improvements to the property. e. The parties’ 2008, 2009 and 2010 Federal income tax liability; If [Brown] has to pay any of the parties’ 2008, 2009, and 2010 Federal Income tax liability before the property is sold, then [Brown] shall be reimbursed out of the gross sales proceeds for any funds paid by him to the Internal Revenue Service for the parties’ 2008 ($144,538.00), 2009 ($19,102 estimated) and 2010 taxes ($37,096 estimated to be paid for withdrawal from his retirement funds for 2009 taxes). g. Reimbursement of Greenwood Utilities District taxes or ad valorem property taxes if any are paid by a party as provided in section 4 above. h. The cost of partitioning the real estate subject to the cell tower lease.

3 The Decree ordered the parties to distribute the “net sales proceeds” equally—

50% to Brown and 50% to Ruzynska. The Decree awarded Brown the Hartford

Investor Annuity Contract ending in 8060 but does not mention the Hartford Investor

Annuity Contracts ending in 4171 and 4173 (the “Hartford Annuities”). Nonetheless,

the Decree awarded Brown all sums of cash within his control, including accounts

under his sole control, and all sums and rights related to any plan or other benefits

existing by reason of Brown’s past, present, or future employment. The Decree also

awarded any undisclosed assets to the other party.

The divorce court found that the agreements set out in the Decree created a

binding contract between Brown and Ruzynska and ordered them to comply with its

terms.

In 2011, Ruzynska filed claims related to the Tidwell property and the Harford

Annuities, but they were ultimately dismissed.

After Brown and Ruzynska failed to pay the taxes on the Tidwell property,

the taxing authorities foreclosed on it in July 2019. The appraised value of the

Tidwell property at the time was $1,223,943.00. The property sold for $905,000.00

to the highest bidder, and after the tax claims were satisfied, $708,704.94 remained

in the court registry.

Brown died in 2021, and the probate court appointed Ditta as the dependent

administrator of Brown’s estate. In a separate action, Ditta petitioned the district

4 court on behalf of Brown’s estate for a distribution of excess proceeds from the tax

sale of the Tidwell property, seeking one-half of the excess proceeds plus $105,000

due to Brown under the Decree as reimbursement for the downpayment on and

improvements to the Tidwell Property. Ruzynska also petitioned the district court to

distribute the excess proceeds from the tax sale but asked the court to deny Ditta’s

request for reimbursement. The district court entered an agreed partial judgment to

distribute $301,408.62 to each Ruzynska and Brown’s estate but did not rule on the

reimbursement claim before it was transferred to the probate court.

In 2022, Ruzynska petitioned the probate court for a post-divorce division of

property and brought breach of contract and tortious interference with prospective

business relations claims against Ditta. She alleged that the Hartford Annuities were

undisclosed assets and requested that the probate court award her those accounts.

She also alleged that she procured two firm offers from IDEA Public Schools

(“IDEA”) to purchase the Tidwell property, but the Tidwell property was lost to tax

foreclosure because Brown did not cooperate with its sale and would only agree to

sell the Tidwell property if she complied with conditions that would have been

detrimental to her and would have required her to forfeit her rights under the Decree.

Ditta’s answer included various affirmative defenses, including, but not

limited to, statute of limitations, waiver, collateral estoppel, and unclean hands. Ditta

5 also brought a declaratory judgment counterclaim regarding the Hartford Annuities

and the distribution of the remaining proceeds from the tax foreclosure sale.

Ditta then moved for summary judgment on all of Ruzynska’s claims. Ditta

argued he was entitled to summary judgment on Ruzynska’s petition for post-

divorce division of property under three alternative theories: (1) the Hartford

Annuities were fully surrendered and did not exist on the date of the Decree; (2) the

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In the Estate Of: David Luke Brown v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-estate-of-david-luke-brown-v-the-state-of-texas-txctapp1-2026.