Inwood Forest Community Improvement Ass'n v. Arce

485 S.W.3d 65, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 11891, 2015 WL 7306466
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 2015
DocketNO. 14-14-00825-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 485 S.W.3d 65 (Inwood Forest Community Improvement Ass'n v. Arce) 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
Inwood Forest Community Improvement Ass'n v. Arce, 485 S.W.3d 65, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 11891, 2015 WL 7306466 (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

Ken Wise, Justice

In this accelerated, interlocutory appeal, the appellant contends that the trial court’s purported oral grant of motions to dismiss under the Texas Citizens Participation Act (TCPA) was ineffective and therefore the motions were denied by operation of law. Under the TCPA, the trial court must rule on a motion to dismiss no later than the 30th day following the date of the hearing on the motion, and if the trial court does not rule within the prescribed time, the motion is denied -by operation of law. Tex. Civ. Prac. &. Rem. Code §§ 27.005(a), 27.008(a). At the. hearing, the judge stated that she was going to grant the appellees’ motions to dismiss, but ,she declined, to sign a written order and instead instructed the parties to try to work out their differences over the next thirty days. After the statutory 30-day deadline had passed, the trial court signed written orders granting most of the homeowners’ .motions to dismiss. For the reasons explained below, we hold that the trial court’s comments at the hearing did not constitute a. ruling and therefore the motions to clismiss were denied by operation of law. The appellant has moved to dismiss its appeal in. the event we conclude the motions to dismiss were denied by operation of law. We therefore grant appellant’s motion and dismiss the appeal.

Factual and Procedural Background

Appellant Inwood Forest Community Improvement Association- (the “Associa: tion”) is the homeowners association of Inwood Forest, a residential subdivision in Houston. The subdivision is divided into sevei’al sections, and each section has its own set.of deed restrictions. This- lawsuit involves the deed restrictions applicable to Section. 12, which contains 138 lots owned by one or more homeowners. The appel-lees are some of Section 12’s homeowners who were named as defendants in the lawsuit (the “Homeowners”).

In November 2013, Elio Arce, one of the Homeowners, filed in the Harris County real property records a “Petition to Modify Deed Restrictions” to change the existing deed restrictions to permit the placement of fences along the rear lot lines of all the lots in Section 12. These lots border a golf course that was closed and sold in 2007.' According to the Homeowners, the now-empty and unsupervised fairways and golf cart-paths are easily accessible by criminals who enter the area and break into the surrounding homes. The petition to modify recited that -it “must receive the [68]*68approval of 51% of the owners of property” in Section 12 to modify- the deed restrictions. '

In response, the Association filed a declaratory judgment action "in district court against Arce arid over 100 owners’ of lots in Section 12, seeking to have the petition to modify declared invalid. The Association claims that it filed the action because the petition to modify created a cloud on the title to all of the affected land. In the declaratory judgment action, the Association argued that the petition to modify was invalid because, under the deed restrictions, the petition needed to be “signed by the then record owners of a riiajority of the residential lots,” and that a majority of the lots was more than “51% of the owners of property” recited in the petition to modify. The Association contended that all of the owners of each multiowner lot had to sign the petition in order for that lot to count, and it also lodged various challenges to the sufficiency and validity of the list of homeowners and signatures. compiled by the Homeowners in support of the petition to modify. • ■

In June 2014, Arce filed a motion to dismiss the Association’s declaratory judgment action under the TCPA. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §§ 27.001-.011. Other Homeowners also filed motions to dismiss under the TCPA or joined in previously filed motions. The. Homeowners generally alleged that the Association’s declaratory judgment action* should be dismissed because it was based on, related to, or in response to the- Homeowners’ exercise of their constitutional rights of free speech, petition, and association. According to the Homeowners, the Association’s intent was to prevent the Homeowners from changing the Section 12 deed restrictions without the Association’s permission or approval.

■ On September 15, 2014, the trial 'court held a hearing on the Homeowners’ motions to dismiss. ’ At the conclusion of the hearing, the judge stated:

I am going to grant the motions to dismiss. There’s 30 days before they are final. In those 30 days, I want you to go out and find out what the community wants, to do. So you guys have the opportunity to go out and say, hey, Judge disinissed the cases. I want you to come back to me before those 30 days are up and tell me what the community wants to do. That’s why they call me Solomon.

A .discussion ensued concerning whether the judge was making an oral- ruling only or whether she would be hiaking a written ruling. Counsel for one group of Homeowners wanted a written ruling, but counsel for the Association indicated that if there were a written ruling, the Association intended to take an accelerated appeal. The trial court then stated:

So here’s what we are going to do. We are going to go back into the community. We are going to say the Judge has orally granted the motion to dismiss. She will be signing final orders in 30 days.... All right, and we have 30 days to get back to her and tell her what we want to do as a community. At the end of that 30 days, we will talk again; but I’m not going to sign anything in writing at this point.

The parties and the judge then discussed at length the steps the Homeowners should take over the next thirty days to obtain sufficient, authorizations - from the Section 12 homeowners to satisfy the Association’s criteria for a valid petition to modify. The hearing was then adjourned.

Thirty days after the hearing on the motions to dismiss, on October 16, 2014, the Homeowners filed a “Notice of Filing of Community Support of Petition to Modify Deed- Restrictions” purporting to attach the notarized signatures of all owners of [69]*69more than 70 of. the 138 lots in Section 12. That same day, the. Association (filed .this interlocutory appeal.1

More than thirty days after the hearing, the trial court signed the first written order granting the motion to dismiss of Homeowner Robert. Burchfield. Similar orders were signed in January granting the motions to dismiss of Arce and most of the other.Hoineowners. The trial court’s orders included awards of attorney’s fees to the. Homeowners based on the amounts stated in affidavits filed by the counsel representing the specific Homeowner or group of Homeowners represented. For reasons not apparent from the record, the trial court signed a written order denying the motion to dismiss of one of the Homeowners, Dorothy Burchfield.

Analysis op the Association’s .Issues

In its fourth issue, the Association contends that the trial court’s purported oral ruling was ineffective and the Homeowners’ motions to dismiss were denied by operation of law when the trial court failed to sign any written orders within the 30-day deadline in the TCPA.2 The Association also questions whether this court has jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Madeleine Connor v. Lauren Heather McMahan
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2024
Mark T. Womack v. Arcadio D. Rodriguez
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2022
in Re Franci Neely
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2020
William M. Windsor v. Sean D. Fleming
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2019
San Jacinto River Authority v. Evan Lewis
572 S.W.3d 838 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2019)
in Re Charles Wayne Russell
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2018
in the Interest of E.R.G, a Child
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2018
in Re Steven Baileys
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2017
Reaves v. City of Corpus Christi
518 S.W.3d 594 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
485 S.W.3d 65, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 11891, 2015 WL 7306466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inwood-forest-community-improvement-assn-v-arce-texapp-2015.