in the Matter of D. K. R., a Juvenile
This text of in the Matter of D. K. R., a Juvenile (in the Matter of D. K. R., a Juvenile) 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.
Opinion
Don Cooksey, the attorney for the appellant in this case, has filed a motion stating that the "[a]ppellant no longer desires to appeal this case." Pursuant to Tex. R. App. P. 42.1, we grant the motion.
We dismiss the appeal.
Donald R. Ross
Justice
Date Submitted: November 7, 2006
Date Decided: November 8, 2006
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JACKSON WIGHTMAN, Appellee
On Appeal from the County Court at Law
Lamar County, Texas
Trial Court No. 15,247
Before Morriss, C.J., Ross and Carter, JJ.
Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Morriss
MEMORANDUM OPINION
In 1991, Carl and Rosalind Blankenship agreed to purchase, under a single executory contract for deed, two separate residences in Hunt County. The Blankenships began living in one of those residences (the Blankenship residence). In 2002, by a second contract for deed, the Blankenships agreed to sell to Jackson Wightman the other house (the Wightman residence). In that contract, Wightman agreed to pay for the fire insurance on the Wightman residence. After both contracts were partially performed, but remained outstanding, the Wightman residence was destroyed in a fire; and, not long thereafter, both Rosalind Blankenship and the Blankenships' original vendor, Christine Caldwell, died. The issues before this Court spring from how the fire insurance proceeds were applied.
Because of the way the fire insurance policy on the Wightman residence was issued, the $34,000.00 in loss payment proceeds were payable to Rosalind Blankenship and Christine Caldwell. Before Caldwell died, she received the proceeds and applied them to the balance owed on the Blankenship residence. That application of the insurance proceeds, plus a subsequent payment by Blankenship to Caldwell, completely paid the balance owing on the Blankenship residence. At the time of the fire, $18,500.00 remained owing on the Wightman residence.
Wightman sued Carl Blankenship, both individually and as Independent Administrator of the Estate of Rosalind Blankenship, seeking application of the insurance proceeds to the balance owed on the Wightman residence, judgment for the remaining balance of the proceeds and attorney's fees, and an equitable lien on the Blankenship residence. The trial court granted Wightman summary judgment that his contract was paid in full, that Blankenship owed him the remaining balance of the insurance proceeds in the amount of $15,500.00, plus attorney's fees in the amount of $9,485.96, and that Wightman had an equitable lien in the sum of $24,985.96 in Blankenship's interest in the Blankenship residence.
In three points of error, Blankenship claims that the equitable lien violated homestead rights, that the required parties had not been joined, and that the attorney's fees judgment was not supported by legally or factually sufficient evidence. We modify the judgment of the trial court, and affirm it as modified, because (1) granting an equitable lien in Blankenship's rights in his residence did not violate homestead rights to the extent the insurance proceeds were paid toward the purchase money for the Blankenship residence, (2) there was no defect in parties, and (3) sufficient evidence supported the judgment for attorney's fees.
(1) Granting an Equitable Lien in Blankenship's Rights in His Residence Did Not Violate Homestead Rights to the Extent the Insurance Proceeds Were Paid Toward the Purchase Money for the Blankenship Residence
It is without dispute that the Blankenship residence—that is, the property Blankenship purchased from Caldwell and retained—is Blankenship's homestead, and there is no claim that it has been abandoned. Blankenship asserts that the trial court erred in granting Wightman an equitable lien in the Blankenship homestead. He appropriately argues that a lien can be created on a homestead only for purchase money, improvements, or taxes. See Tex. Const. art. XVI, § 50. But he also cites Hruska v. First State Bank of Deanville, 747 S.W.2d 783 (Tex. 1988), for the proposition that, before any equitable lien can be created in a homestead, there must be an express or implied agreement between the parties that would support creation of that lien. Blankenship reasons that, because there was no express or implied contract between Blankenship and Wightman that would support a lien on Blankenship's homestead, the equitable lien ordered by the trial court was invalid. We disagree with the reasoning and conclusion.
Hruska is not as broad as Blankenship would have it. The Hruskas were homeowners who sought and obtained bank financing for improvements to their homestead. All appeared to be in order until the bank reviewed their loan papers after the improvements had been completed and discovered that no improvements contract had ever been signed. Though the trial court and the court of appeals both agreed the bank should have an equitable lien on the Hruskas' homestead for the loan proceeds used to improve the homestead, the Texas Supreme Court invalidated the lien, because there was no written preimprovement contract to support the lien. See id. Hruska is distinguishable from the facts before us. In Hruska, no preimprovement written contract existed as is required before an improvement lien is created on homestead property. Here, a contract existed between Caldwell and Blankenship providing for purchase of the Blankenship residential property and for the payment of purchase money. Wightman's insurance proceeds were used to pay on Blankenship's purchase money obligation on that very contract.
Constructive trusts, being remedial in nature, have the very broad function of redressing wrongs or unjust enrichment in accordance with basic principles of equity and justice. There is no unyielding formula to which a court of equity is bound; the equity of the transaction will shape the relief granted. [T]he homestead protection afforded by the Texas Constitution was never intended to protect stolen funds. Stolen funds used for the purchase of a homestead or improvement of an existing homestead can never acquire homestead rights as they are held in trust for the rightful owners of the funds.
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