Jacob Oliver v. Elinor Rowan, Roy Rowan, and Julie Rowan

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 29, 2021
Docket05-19-01433-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jacob Oliver v. Elinor Rowan, Roy Rowan, and Julie Rowan (Jacob Oliver v. Elinor Rowan, Roy Rowan, and Julie Rowan) 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
Jacob Oliver v. Elinor Rowan, Roy Rowan, and Julie Rowan, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Affirm and Opinion Filed June 29, 2021

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-19-01433-CV

JACOB OLIVER, Appellant V. ELINOR ROWAN, ROY ROWAN, AND JULIE ROWAN, Appellees

On Appeal from the 162nd Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-17-06001

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Myers, Partida-Kipness, and Garcia Opinion by Justice Myers Jacob Oliver appeals the trial court’s judgment following a jury trial that he

recover $500 damages and $3,000 attorney’s fees through trial from Elinor Rowan

and that he take nothing from Elinor’s parents, Roy Rowan and Julie Rowan. Jacob

brings five issues on appeal contending the trial court erred by (1) granting a directed

verdict for appellees on Jacob’s cause of action for fraud; (2) granting a directed

verdict in favor of Roy and Julie for conspiracy to wiretap; (3) excluding Elinor’s

arrest records; (4) refusing to allow Jacob to testify about his loss of earning

capacity; and (5) failing to award appropriate attorney’s fees and costs. We modify the judgment to award Jacob costs of court relating to his cause of action under the

Texas Theft Liability Act, and we otherwise affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND In early 2015, Elinor was working as a bartender at a restaurant, and Jacob

was a medical student at University of Texas Southwestern Medical School (UTSW)

studying to become a physician. They began dating, and Elinor moved into Jacob’s

apartment at UTSW in September 2015. Their relationship was troubled. Several

incidents are relevant to this case.

Elinor testified that on April 23, 2016,1 at the apartment, Jacob grabbed her,

pushed her onto the bed, and started to choke her. She bit him on the arm, and he

let her go. That night, after work, Elinor did not go back to the apartment but went

to her parents’ house, where she lived until May 11. The next day, April 24, she

went to the apartment with her father when Jacob was there to get some of her

possessions. On April 28, Jacob went to the restaurant where Elinor worked. As

Elinor was leaving, Jacob tried to push her into her car and to steer her towards his

car. She got away from him, but she testified she cut her arm during the altercation.

Between then and May 8, she went to the apartment one or two times when Jacob

was not there to get some of her belongings.

1 Unless otherwise indicated, all dates are in 2016.

–2– Jacob testified he believed someone was coming into the apartment when he

was not there and taking things. On April 27, he picked up a prescription for

Adderall. When it went missing, either from his car or from the apartment, he

reported the theft of the Adderall to his physician. Jacob asked the apartment

management to rekey his apartment.

On May 8, at 1:45 a.m., as Elinor was headed home from work, a Rockwall

police officer pulled her over for a traffic violation, crossing into the opposing traffic

lane. The officer concluded Elinor’s driver’s license was invalid. After seeing an

open alcohol container, a beer can, in Elinor’s car, the officer searched the car and

found bottles of Adderall and some hydrocodone pills, both of which are controlled

substances. The Adderall bottles indicated they were prescribed to Jacob. The

officer asked, “Who is Jacob,” and Elinor said he was her fiancé. The officer asked

Elinor why she had the pills, and she said he “drove my car earlier.” The officer

then arrested her. Her father bailed her out of jail the next day. Elinor was charged

with possession of controlled substances and driving with an invalid license.

Elinor’s defense attorney told her she needed to get an affidavit from Jacob

saying the pills found in her car were his and that he had left them in her car. A

friend of Elinor’s who was a paralegal told her that if Jacob refused to sign the

affidavit, then she should try to record Jacob saying that the pills were his.

Elinor’s father ordered a “spy gear” audio recorder that looked like and

worked as a cellphone charger as well as an audio recorder. On May 11, Elinor

–3– contacted Jacob and told him that after her arrest, her parents had kicked her out of

their house. That was not true—her parents had not kicked her out of their house—

but was a ruse to get Jacob to let her move back into his apartment, which he did.

Elinor’s father received the recorder on May 14, and Elinor began audio recording

her time with Jacob on May 15.2

Elinor testified that on May 17, she was in Jacob’s car in the apartment

parking lot, when he started driving quickly around the parking lot. She jumped out

of his car and hid under a stairwell. When she looked out from the stairwell, she

saw Jacob letting the air out of her car’s tires. She ran to the apartment with Jacob

chasing her. When she got inside the apartment, she was holding a Taser, but she

did not use it. Jacob knocked it out of her hand and stomped on it, breaking it. Jacob

testified Elinor was drunk and that he let the air out of her tires because she told him

she was going to drive. Elinor testified that she was not drunk at the time and that

he deflated her tires to prevent her from leaving.

The next day, May 18, they had a physical altercation over a computer. The

evidence shows Jacob told Elinor to get out of the apartment. Elinor went to a

desktop computer, unplugged the cables from it, and tried to leave with it, telling

Jacob it was her computer, that she had paid for it, and that she was taking it with

2 The record includes some excerpts of the audio recordings as well as a 613-page transcription of the recordings. –4– her.3 Jacob tried to force the computer away from her. As they tussled over the

computer, Elinor fell to the floor, injuring her tailbone. Jacob told her she could take

the computer if she let him remove his information and move it to another hard drive.

Elinor refused, saying she knew he would not give it back to her or that he would

change the password on the computer. He also told her she could not take the

computer because it contained patient files, and it would be a HIPAA violation for

her to take the computer with the files. Elinor left for work, driving there on her

flattened tires, and Jacob went to his mother’s house.

The next day, May 19, Elinor and her father returned to the apartment to get

some of her belongings, and Elinor called the police. She told the UTSW police that

Jacob had assaulted her the day before. She told the police she had recordings of

her conversations with Jacob, and the officers asked for the recordings. Elinor’s

father sent the police a fourteen-minute excerpt of the recording that included the

physical altercation over the computer.

The UTSW police informed the UTSW dean of medical students, Dr. Angela

Mahalic, about the complaint against Jacob. Dr. Mahalic sent Jacob a letter

informing him she had “received allegations that you have engaged in conduct that

3 The actual ownership of the computer was disputed. Jacob maintained the computer was his because he had purchased it with his credit card. Elinor testified the computer was purchased using Jacob’s credit card so he could get the “points” for the purchase, but she testified she was the real purchaser of the computer and that it belonged to her because she had paid Jacob’s credit card bill that included the computer.

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Jacob Oliver v. Elinor Rowan, Roy Rowan, and Julie Rowan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacob-oliver-v-elinor-rowan-roy-rowan-and-julie-rowan-texapp-2021.