Joel Gulliver ET UX, Mary Ann Gulliver v. Lee Shafer ET UX, Pamela Shafer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 15, 2008
Docket14-07-00217-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Joel Gulliver ET UX, Mary Ann Gulliver v. Lee Shafer ET UX, Pamela Shafer (Joel Gulliver ET UX, Mary Ann Gulliver v. Lee Shafer ET UX, Pamela Shafer) 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
Joel Gulliver ET UX, Mary Ann Gulliver v. Lee Shafer ET UX, Pamela Shafer, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Reversed and Remanded and Memorandum Opinion filed January 15, 2008

Reversed and Remanded and Memorandum Opinion filed January 15, 2008.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-07-00217-CV

JOEL GULLIVER ET UX., MARYANN GULLIVER, Appellants

V.

LEE SHAFER ET UX., PAMELA SHAFER, Appellees

On Appeal from the County Civil Court No. 1

Fort Bend County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 29325

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

Appellants, Joel and Maryann Gulliver, filed suit against appellees, Lee and Pamela Shafer, seeking specific performance of a contract to sell unimproved real estate.  Appellees  filed a traditional motion for summary judgment, which the trial court granted.  Appellants, arguing there were genuine issues of material fact, now appeal the trial court=s summary judgment.  Because we find the trial court erred when it granted appellee=s motion for summary judgment, we reverse and remand to the trial court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.


Factual and Procedural Background

The parties to this appeal are neighbors in Fort Bend County.  In January 2005, appellees, because they needed the cash flow, offered to sell approximately 80 percent of a plot of undeveloped land that was between and contiguous to the residences of the parties.  The undeveloped land was part of appellees= homestead.  Appellants accepted appellees= offer and the parties executed an earnest money contract (the AContract@) prepared by appellee Lee Shafer, on January 21, 2005.  At the time the Contract was executed appellants paid appellees $5,000 as earnest money for the Contract.

In the Contract, appellees agreed they would deliver a general warranty deed at the closing in exchange for a total price of $53,000.  Appellees also represented that, as of the closing date, there would be no liens on the property that could not be satisfied out of the proceeds of the sale.  The Contract provided that, if they were notified in writing, appellees would furnish a title insurance policy to the appellants.  In addition, the Contract provided that once appellants received the commitment for title insurance, they had ten days to lodge objections with appellees.  The Contract set the closing of the sale for September 30, 2005 or within seven days after objections to matters disclosed in the title insurance commitment had been cured, whichever date was later.  Finally, there is no time is of the essence language in the Contract.


As September 30, 2005 approached, there were still two liens on the property totaling approximately $115,000.  Mr. Shafer admitted that, because appellees were unable to obtain releases of the liens by September 30, no closing was scheduled and none took place.  However, even though September 30, 2005 came and went, appellees continued their efforts to obtain releases of the liens.  During his deposition, Mr. Shafer testified that appellees  finally succeeded in obtaining releases of both liens in December, 2005.  Mr. Shafer further testified that he provided filed copies of the lien releases to appellants in January 2006.  In her affidavit filed in response to appellees= motion for summary judgment, appellant Maryann Gulliver testified that, because they had still not been provided with copies of the lien releases that had been filed in the Fort Bend County property records, on March 3, 2006 appellants sent appellees written notice requiring a title insurance policy issued by Stewart Title.   Ms. Gulliver further testified they did not receive a draft copy of the title commitment until April 1 or 2, 2006 and did not receive the final title commitment until April 10, 2006.

Once September 30, 2005 passed with no closing, several closings were set in March 2006, but, for reasons not disclosed in the appellate record, none took place.  Another closing was set for April 6, 2006 but it was postponed until April 10, 2006 because appellees informed Stewart Title they would not pay their pro rata share of the 2006 taxes on the property as required by the Contract.  When asked about closing on April 10, 2006, appellees told Stewart Title they would not appear because they were not Asatisfied with the conversations [Mr. Shafer] had had with the Gullivers.@  Despite this, Stewart Title set the closing for April 10, 2006.  On that date, appellants appeared at Stewart Title for closing and tendered the $48,000 balance owed on the property and executed all documents they were required to sign for the sale to be completed.  The Shafers did not appear for the closing.  On April 11, 2006 appellees mailed a letter purportedly rescinding the Contract.[1]  During his deposition, Mr. Shafer testified appellees did not go through with the sale of the property because they had simply changed their minds and no longer wished to sell.


Once appellees failed to appear at the closing, appellants filed suit seeking specific performance of the Contract.  Eventually, appellees filed a motion for summary judgment.  In their motion, appellees argued they were entitled to a final summary judgment because they (1) disproved, as a matter of law, a required element of appellants= breach of contract cause of action; and (2) conclusively proved their affirmative defenses of statute of frauds, estoppel, failure of consideration, failure to plead that all conditions precedent had been met, and rescission.  The trial court granted appellees a final summary judgment based on all grounds asserted by appellees in their motion.  This appeal followed.

Discussion

In six issues on appeal, appellants challenge the trial court=s final summary judgment.  In these issues, appellants separately address each ground asserted by appellees as a basis for their motion for summary judgment.  Appellants contend there were genuine issues of material fact regarding each ground asserted in appellees= motion for summary judgment thus precluding the granting of appellees= motion.

A.      The Standard of Review

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