John G. Kelley v. A. E. Kelley

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 21, 2004
Docket11-03-00278-CV
StatusPublished

This text of John G. Kelley v. A. E. Kelley (John G. Kelley v. A. E. Kelley) 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
John G. Kelley v. A. E. Kelley, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

                                                             11th Court of Appeals

                                                                  Eastland, Texas

                                                             Memorandum Opinion

John G. Kelley

Appellant

Vs.                   No.  11-03-00278-CV -- Appeal from Howard County

A. E. Kelley

Appellee

This appeal arises from an action to rescind a series of conveyances made by an elderly man to his son.  The items conveyed consisted of a commercial building, the inventory located within the building, two automobiles, and various liens and notes.  Appellee, A. E. Kelley, alleged several theories for invalidating the conveyances, including lack of assent, breach of trust, breach of fiduciary duty, and fraud.  At the conclusion of a bench trial, the trial court nullified the conveyances based upon its determination that appellant, John G. Kelley, procured the conveyances by fraud.  The trial court also entered judgment awarding appellee attorney=s fees of $4,500.00 and exemplary damages of $50,000.00.  Appellant attacks the trial court=s judgment in three issues.[1]  We affirm.

The challenged conveyances occurred in May and June of 2002.  Appellee was in his nineties at the time of the conveyances and in poor physical health.  He suffered serious vision problems which made him unable to read documents.  In spite of his advanced age and health problems, appellee actively acquired and conveyed residential rental properties as a means of support during this period.  As a result of his vision problems, appellee depended on others to read documents to him which were prepared for his execution.   


The conveyances which are at issue in this appeal arise from business dealings between appellee and Tim Ortega.  The first transaction between appellee and Ortega involved the sale of a farm to Ortega in the late 1990s.  Later transactions involved Ortega doing repair work on appellee=s rental properties and appellee loaning various sums to Ortega.  Appellee subsequently loaned Ortega funds to acquire a business known as AThe Carpet Center.@  Appellee purchased a building for the business which he rented to Ortega.  Appellee also purchased inventory and equipment for Ortega which Ortega agreed to pay for with revenues generated by the business. 

A disagreement developed between appellee and Ortega regarding Ortega=s repayment of the money advanced by appellee for the purchase of the business.  The parties disputed the extent of this disagreement at trial.  Appellee testified that the disagreement he had with Ortega was minor.  The trial court determined that appellee=s disagreement with Ortega was significant based on a tape recording offered into evidence by appellant.

Appellant eventually intervened in the disagreement between his father and Ortega.  Prior to March of 2002, appellant resided in Oregon and California.  Appellee and appellant=s mother were divorced in 1957.  Appellee testified that he had seen appellant approximately five times over a 45-year span.  Appellee and appellant began having more contact in the 1990s.  Appellee gave appellant $50,000.00 in 2002.  Appellee also gave his other son $50,000.00 at the same time.  Appellant testified that he came to Big Spring in March of 2002 in order to invest the $50,000.00 in the town where appellee lived.   

Appellant presented appellee with several documents in May and June of 2002 for execution which conveyed appellee=s interests in various items of property to appellant.   Appellee testified that appellant told him that the purpose of the documents was to permit appellant to look through appellee=s records and Astraighten out@ appellee=s dealings with Ortega.  The documents consisted of a warranty deed for the building which housed the Carpet Center, a bill of sale for the inventory and equipment of the Carpet Center as well as all of Ortega=s indebtedness to appellee, a bill of sale transferring a lien on an automobile, and two documents transferring title to two vehicles.  Appellant prepared the deed and bills of sale on his computer.  He also transported appellee to notaries who acknowledged appellee=s execution of the documents.  Appellee testified that the value of the property conveyed to appellant amounted to $90,000.00.  The documents recited that the consideration consisted of ATen and No/100 Dollars ($10.00) and other good and valuable consideration.@  In addition to attempting to tender $10.00 to appellee for each of the documents, appellant testified that the remaining consideration consisted of the benefit his father would derive from being separated from Ortega. 


Appellant took the position at trial that he owned the property conveyed in the challenged documents free and clear of any claim asserted by appellee.  Appellant specifically denied that he held the property in trust for his father.   Despite his assertion of complete ownership at trial, appellant executed a document shortly after the conveyances occurred wherein he agreed to reconvey the property back to his father as follows:

The undersigned [appellant] agrees to sell the property known commonly as AThe Carpet Center,@ back to [

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Bluebook (online)
John G. Kelley v. A. E. Kelley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-g-kelley-v-a-e-kelley-texapp-2004.