Jones, Terry v. Rabson & Broocks,L.L.C.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 2003
Docket01-01-01210-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jones, Terry v. Rabson & Broocks,L.L.C. (Jones, Terry v. Rabson & Broocks,L.L.C.) 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
Jones, Terry v. Rabson & Broocks,L.L.C., (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Opinion issued February 13, 2003



In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-01-01210-CV





TERRY JONES, Appellant


V.


RABSON & BROOCKS, L.L.C.; PELICAN CONNECTION MANAGEMENT, L.L.C.; AND BROOCKS, BAKER & LANGE, L.L.P., Appellees





On Appeal from the 129th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 00-28899





MEMORANDUM OPINION


This is an appeal of summary judgment rendered for appellees/defendants Rabson & Broocks, L.L.C.; Pelican Connection Management, L.L.C.; and Broocks, Baker & Lange, L.L.P (the Rabson defendants) against appellant, Terry Jones. In eight issues presented for review, Jones challenges the rendition of summary judgment, contending that (1) the Rabson defendants were not entitled to summary judgment on his causes of action for theft, civil conspiracy, slander of title, and tortious interference with contract; (2) he suffered recoverable damages; (3) he has a viable claim for attorney’s fees; (4) the trial court abused its discretion by not granting him leave to file his third and fourth amended petitions; and (5) summary judgment was improperly rendered because there was an unresolved counterclaim. We affirm.

Factual & Procedural Background

The parties do not dispute the essential facts of the underlying dispute; however, the parties’ interpretation of those facts is greatly disparate. The events leading to this lawsuit unfolded in the following sequence. The Rabson defendants obtained a $360,000 judgment against Gladys Goffney in an unrelated lawsuit. In the spring of 1999, as part of their efforts to collect the judgment, the Rabson defendants searched the Harris County real property records and identified roughly 17 pieces of property that Goffney owned, including an unimproved lot at 5206 Wayne Street in Houston. After a writ of execution was issued on the judgment in May 1999, the Rabson defendants requested a constable’s sale of the properties. On July 6, 1999, the constable’s sale was completed. The Rabson defendants received the deeds from the sale on August 11, 1999 and recorded them in October 1999. The Wayne Street property, however, had been sold six years earlier to Noah Murchison. It is not clear from the record whether the deed records were incomplete or the person who searched the records overlooked the deed conveying the property from Goffney to Murchison.

After the writ of execution was issued in the unrelated lawsuit against Goffney, but before the constable’s sale took place, Murchison sold the property to Jones for $12,500. Jones recorded his deed on July 27, 1999. Only after Jones began negotiating with the Fifth Ward Community Redevelopment Corporation to sell it the property for $25,000 did he learn there was a cloud on his title; he was unable to complete the sale of the property in November 1999 as planned. Just after the first of the year 2000, Jones contacted the Rabson defendants to attempt to resolve the question of ownership. He originally sent an unsigned, unrecorded deed to the Rabson defendants’ counsel that was not accepted as proof of ownership; on March 30, 2000, Jones supplied a signed, recorded deed conveying the property from Goffney to Murchison.

Upon receiving this deed, the Rabson defendants conceded that Jones was the rightful owner of the property. Jones asked the Rabson defendants to supply him with a general warranty deed but, because their title was void from inception, the Rabson defendants refused to execute such a deed. Instead, they provided Jones with a deed without warranty.

The Rabson defendants characterize their inclusion of the Wayne Street property in the constable’s sale as an innocent mistake—one they rectified as soon as they obtained legal proof that Jones owned the property. Jones, in contrast, characterizes the entire series of transactions as a malicious, fraudulent scheme to deprive him of his property. When he did not obtain the general warranty deed he asked for, Jones filed suit to quiet title. He sought to recover compensatory damages, exemplary damages, and attorney’s fees. The Rabson defendants answered with a general denial.

On October 13, 2000, despite Jones’s earlier refusal to accept an identical deed, the Rabson defendants delivered to Jones an executed deed without warranty in which it conveyed any and all of their interests in the Wayne street property to Jones. Evidently, Jones has never recorded this deed. In November 2000, the Fifth Ward Community Redevelopment Corporation renewed its offer to purchase the property for $25,000. Jones refused the sale, in part because he believed that the cloud on the property was not removed, in part because of the pending litigation, and in part because he was no longer interested in selling for that price.

Jones filed a second amended petition in December 2000, setting out causes of action for conversion, theft, civil conspiracy to commit theft, and slander of title. Broocks, Baker & Lange filed a second, separate answer to this amended petition, repeating the general denials and pleading the affirmative defenses of failure to mitigate damages and tender of performance. The firm also added a counterclaim for Rule 13 violations, seeking attorney’s fees. In January, the Rabson defendants filed a no-evidence motion for summary judgment in which they identified elements of each cause of action for which there was no evidence and challenged all causes of action based on an absence of proof of damages. In his response to the motion, Jones filed an affidavit setting out the facts in detail. The motion was heard on March 26, 2001. Before the trial court ruled on the motion, Jones filed a third amended petition, three days after the summary judgment hearing, adding a cause of action for tortious interference with contract and seeking additional damages for mental anguish. The Rabson defendants supplemented their motion for summary judgment to raise a no-evidence challenge to this additional cause of action. Jones filed a fourth amended petition on August 14, 2001 adding a cause of action for wrongful execution.

The trial court rendered summary judgment on September 10, 2001, basing it on the March hearing. The judgment did not address the counterclaim for sanctions but included a “Mother Hubbard” clause. Jones’s motion for new trial was overruled by operation of law and this appeal ensued. On appeal, Jones does not address the cause of action for conversion; thus he has waived any complaint regarding this issue.

Finality of Judgment

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Jones, Terry v. Rabson & Broocks,L.L.C., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-terry-v-rabson-broocksllc-texapp-2003.