Jack Besteman and Pam Besteman v. Jerry Pitcock and Joanne Pitcock

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 5, 2008
Docket06-07-00134-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jack Besteman and Pam Besteman v. Jerry Pitcock and Joanne Pitcock (Jack Besteman and Pam Besteman v. Jerry Pitcock and Joanne Pitcock) 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
Jack Besteman and Pam Besteman v. Jerry Pitcock and Joanne Pitcock, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

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

______________________________

No. 06-07-00134-CV ______________________________

JACK BESTEMAN AND PAM BESTEMAN, Appellants

V.

JERRY PITCOCK AND JOANNE PITCOCK, Appellees

On Appeal from the 62nd Judicial District Court Lamar County, Texas Trial Court No. 75422

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

About two months after Jack Besteman and his wife, Pam, acquired a called 235–acre tract

of land in Lamar County as part of a like-kind exchange for property they had owned in another state,

the Bestemans were approached by Jerry Pitcock and his wife, Joanne, who wanted to buy it. Jack

Besteman refused to sell it to the Pitcocks in an outright sale, indicating that he would only agree to

part with it if it could be achieved through a similar like-kind exchange of the manner he had just

experienced, thus saving substantially on taxes which would otherwise be incurred. As a vehicle to

facilitate this, Besteman insisted that the Pitcocks enter into a lease of the property for two years with

an option to purchase at the termination of the lease agreement. Besteman explained this delay by

indicating that he wanted an opportunity to locate available apt real estate which could be used to

effect such an exchange.

Besteman drafted a lease/option agreement by which the Pitcocks would pay the Bestemans

$11,675.00 per year for two years and, at the expiration of the lease term, could exercise the option

to purchase the property at $950.00 per acre (i.e., $223,250.00). The general form of the lease/option

agreement was drawn heavily from one which the Bestemans had used in the past in another

transaction. It contained clauses that required maintenance of the pastures and improvements in

accord with good husbandry of the land and dictated that any addition or removal of improvements

on the land could only be done with the approval of the Bestemans. A condition precedent in the

contract to the Pitcocks' right to purchase was stated as follows: "90 days before the 24 month lease

2 period expires, Lessee will notify Lessor of Lessee's intent to purchase said property." The twenty-

four-month lease period was set to expire on September 20, 2006. The lease agreement also

specified that:

Any notice required, or permitted to be delivered hereunder must be in writing, and all notices and payments of rent will be deemed received on the date they are deposited in the United States mail, certified mail or registered mail, postage prepaid, return receipt requested, addressed to Lessor or Lessee, as the case may be, at the address shown above, or at such other place as the Lessor or Lessee may from time to time designate by written notice as provided in this paragraph. Notices delivered otherwise will be effective upon receipt.

It is uncontroverted that no written notice of an intention to exercise the option to purchase

was given by the Pitcocks to the Bestemans at least ninety days before the expiration of the lease

agreement term.

The Pitcocks went into possession of the tract of land under the lease agreement and made

timely payments of the lease installments. However, they failed to provide any written notice of their

intention to exercise the option to purchase until some forty-nine days after the time specified in the

contract. When the Pitcocks did send written notice by certified mail, it was not retrieved by the

Bestemans and the notice was returned, undelivered.

Almost immediately after the notice was returned to them, the Pitcocks filed suit for specific

performance, declaratory judgment, and breach of contract. In their petition, the Pitcocks alleged

that they had provided unequivocal notice of their intention to exercise the option to purchase well

before the required time and that they had, in reliance upon the option to purchase, invested

3 substantial sums in improving the property. The Bestemans responded with a request for an award

of reasonable rentals from the time of the termination of the two-year lease until the time of recovery

of the property from the Pitcocks. Both parties requested attorneys' fees pursuant to Sections 37.009

and 38.001 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code.

The Pitcocks maintain that although the contract states that all notices required under the

agreement be in writing and delivered by certified mail, the paragraph concerning notices ends with

the statement that "Notices delivered otherwise will be effective upon receipt." The Pitcocks insist

that since the contract permits notices to be delivered "otherwise," that means that the notice could

be delivered orally rather than in writing; in other words, the Pitcocks say that they effected notice

by oral communication and that this was sufficient notice to invoke the option to purchase.

The Pitcocks also rely upon the equitable doctrine of disproportionate forfeiture (defined

later) as a defense against the claims that they failed to conform to the ninety-day notice requirement.

In a trial to the court at which only Jack Besteman and Jerry Pitcock testified, the testimony

was somewhat controverted as to the efforts made by Pitcock to orally communicate the intention

to exercise the option to purchase.

Pitcock testified that he had attempted unsuccessfully on a number of occasions to reach

Besteman by telephone and had tried on one occasion to find him at home, all with the intention of

communicating his intention to exercise the option to purchase; Pitcock further said that on the

occasion of paying the annual rent, he had requested that he be allowed to simply complete the

4 purchase at that time rather than waiting the additional year; and that on another occasion, he had

attempted to persuade Besteman to terminate the lease by completing a sale of the property. Pitcock

testified further that the course of his actions on the property by improving the ponds, clearing of

underbrush, the construction of a concrete pad as a horse-washing area, and fertilizing the property

was evidence of the intention of the Pitcocks to exercise their option to purchase, this evidence being

tantamount of notice of their intention to purchase. However, on cross-examination, it was shown

that the $15,000.00 statement which was presented as evidence of the Pitcocks' investment in

clearing the property was from Joanne Pitcock's father, and the Pitcocks were unable to particularize

the services which had been performed and indicated that these services were not paid for in cash.

Pitcock also admitted that fertilization of the property was a part of good husbandry of the property

(although he indicated that he would not have fertilized as much had he not believed he would be

able to purchase), that some of the billing statements he presented were for work done on other

property, and that the oats which had been sown were to feed deer and the oats provided benefits

only during the term of the lease.

Besteman responded by indicating that he was not difficult to reach by telephone and he

indicated doubt that someone would be unable to find him (or someone in his family) at his house

as Pitcock had testified, that he had no recollection of Pitcock's expression of interest in purchasing

the property at the time Pitcock paid the second year's lease amount or any other time during the two-

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