John L. Hawkins and Rischon Development Corp. v. Ron Walker and Marla Walker

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 5, 2007
Docket02-05-00387-CV
StatusPublished

This text of John L. Hawkins and Rischon Development Corp. v. Ron Walker and Marla Walker (John L. Hawkins and Rischon Development Corp. v. Ron Walker and Marla Walker) 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 L. Hawkins and Rischon Development Corp. v. Ron Walker and Marla Walker, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

                                      COURT OF APPEALS

                                       SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                   FORT WORTH

                                        NO. 2-05-387-CV

JOHN L. HAWKINS AND                                                                      

RISCHON DEVELOPMENT CORP.                                          APPELLANTS

                                                   V.

RON WALKER AND MARLA WALKER                                       APPELLEES

                                              ------------

            FROM THE 48TH DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

                                             OPINION

                                           I. Introduction


Rischon Development Corporation and John L. Hawkins (collectively, appellants) appeal the trial court=s August 15, 2005 judgment for Ron and Marla Walker.  In addition, appellants attempt to appeal a November 13, 2006 order denying their post-judgment motion to recuse the trial judge.  We affirm the trial court=s August 2005 judgment in part and reverse and render in part.  We dismiss appellants= appeal of the order denying their motion to recuse for want of jurisdiction.

                       II. Background Facts and Procedural History

On April 19, 2001, the Walkers bought lot 30 of the Sapphire Enclave subdivision in Colleyville, Texas from Rischon for $95,000.  The Sapphire Enclave consisted of thirty-two lots, which Rischon was developing.  Hawkins was Rischon=s president.  At the time of the purchase, Ron Walker owned Ron Walker Custom Homes, Inc.  He had been in the custom home building business for over twenty years and had built between 300 and 400 houses.  The Walkers planned to construct a Aspec house@ on the lot that they would live in while the home was on the market. 


Ron had first heard of the Sapphire Enclave sometime in 2000.  He was impressed by the brochure advertising the subdivision, which stated that it was to be a gated community.  Later, Ron received a copy of the Sapphire Enclave building restrictions and homeowner=s association covenants,[1] which Hawkins had drafted.  Before the Walkers purchased their lot, Ron and Hawkins talked often about the subdivision and Hawkins=s plans for it.  According to Ron, Hawkins made numerous representations to him, both before and after the Walkers purchased their lot and began building their house.  Ron testified that he relied on these representations in deciding to purchase the Walkers= lot and in building a 5000-plus square-foot house that was valued (preconstruction) at $896,000.

After closing on their lot in April 2001, the Walkers began construction on their house.  A month or six weeks later, no other homes were under construction, and no other lots had been sold.  In the summer of 2001, Hawkins told Ron that he was considering selling the remaining lots in the Sapphire Enclave to Pulte Homes and letting Pulte finish the subdivision.  By this time, the Walkers had already finished the outside of their home and had ordered custom items such as trim molding and cabinets.  Ron was concerned that the Walkers= home would be too expensive to be competitive with the lower-priced homes that Pulte would build.  He was also concerned because the promised gate and perimeter fence had not been constructed and the subdivision was overgrown with weeds three to four feet tall.  Consequently, the Walkers decided to delay finishing their house until they could see what type and price ranges of houses would be built around theirs.


Ron also asked Hawkins to approve variances from the Covenants for the Walkers= home that would reduce construction costs, such as substituting a heavy-duty composite roof for a slate one, a six-foot fence for an eight-foot one, and aluminum windows for wood windows on the back of the house.  Hawkins verbally approved these requests.  In addition, in violation of the Covenants and without Hawkins=s approval, the Walkers used cedar siding on part of the house and some nonconforming doors and shutters.  They also did not install roof down spout drains hidden within the house=s exterior walls, as required by the Covenants.  As a result of these cost-saving measures, the Walkers= total cost in their finished house was $732,199.

In early 2002, Rischon revoked the Covenants and sold the remaining thirty-one lots in the Sapphire Enclave to Pulte.  Pulte cleaned up the subdivision and began building other homes.  Pulte put up a sign advertising the homes as starting at $300,000 to $400,000.


In early January 2003, the Walkers consented to Rischon=s revocation of the Covenants.  On January 23, 2003, the Walkers sold their house for $490,000.  Shirley McLemore, a real estate agent with more than twenty years=

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John L. Hawkins and Rischon Development Corp. v. Ron Walker and Marla Walker, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-l-hawkins-and-rischon-development-corp-v-ron--texapp-2007.