Judy Cook v. Joe Alfred Izen Jr. and Karen Lee Cooley

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 31, 2019
Docket09-17-00025-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Judy Cook v. Joe Alfred Izen Jr. and Karen Lee Cooley (Judy Cook v. Joe Alfred Izen Jr. and Karen Lee Cooley) 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
Judy Cook v. Joe Alfred Izen Jr. and Karen Lee Cooley, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________ NO. 09-17-00025-CV ____________________

JUDY COOK, Appellant

V.

JOE ALFRED IZEN JR. AND KAREN LEE COOLEY, Appellees

_______________________________________________________ ______________

On Appeal from the 253rd District Court Liberty County, Texas Trial Cause No. CV1104671 ________________________________________________________ _____________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

All the parties appeal from the trial court’s rulings on their respective

combined traditional and no-evidence motions for summary judgment. In her appeal,

Judy Cook argues the trial court erred in granting Joe Alfred Izen Jr.’s and Karen

Lee Cooley’s motion for summary judgment because fact issues exist that prevented

the court from disposing of her claims by summary judgment. In a cross-appeal, Izen

1 and Cooley argue that the trial court erred by denying their requests for attorney’s

fees and sanctions. We conclude the issues the parties have raised in their respective

appeals are either without merit or were not preserved for our review. For these

reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Background

Izen is an attorney who holds a license to practice law in Texas. Cook is a

Montana resident, who, at one time, held a license to sell real estate there. Cook has

never been licensed to sell real estate in Texas.

Before the trial of the case that resulted in this appeal, Izen represented Cook

in a lawsuit in Harris County, Texas. When that lawsuit ended, Cook failed to pay

Izen’s bill. In 2004, Izen sued Cook for the fees he claimed that Cook failed to pay.

The parties settled that suit in October 2009. To carry out the settlement, Izen

dismissed his suit against Cook in return for Cook’s signing a $40,000 promissory

note. The note required Cook to make monthly installment payments on the principal

and interest due each month on her note.

The same day Cook signed the note, Cook, Cooley, and Izen signed a written

agreement titled “AGREEMENT TO FORM AND MANAGE L.L.C.” The 2009

Agreement contemplated that Cook would market and sell real estate that, on the

date the agreement was signed, was owned by Izen, Cooley, and a company they

2 controlled. All the property that is described in the 2009 Agreement is in Liberty

County. The 2009 Agreement anticipated that

• Cook, Cooley, and Izen would become members in a limited liability company named Cedar Woods Estates, L.L.C.;

• Izen and Cooley would perform the necessary legal and clerical work to develop any real estate held by Cedar Woods;

• Cook would market and sell any property acquired by Cedar Woods;

• Izen and Cooley would convey a 120-acre tract of property they own in Liberty County to Cedar Woods;

• Cook, Izen, and Cooley would contribute equally to the costs required to develop the property held by the L.L.C.;

• an entity, named Measures Realty Corporation, which Izen and Cooley controlled, would become a part of Cedar Woods, and any money that Cedar Woods realized from then sales of lots owned by Measures Realty would be used by Cedar Woods to “pay the development costs” incurred by Cedar Woods;

• Izen, Cooley, and Cook would receive equal membership interests in Cedar Woods;

• a debt owed to The Sykes Company for survey work on the land Cedar Woods was to acquire would “be paid out of the first profits[,]” of Cedar Woods, but Izen and Cooley were not assuming “any personal Liability (sic) for making such payments[;]”

• Cedar Woods recognized debts of $30,000 that it owed Cook for the payments she made toward developing the property identified in the agreement, and a debt of $10,000 that it owed to Izen for the payments he made toward developing the property identified in the agreement;

3 • funds advanced to Cedar Woods would “be treated as loans repayable by [Cedar Woods] to the member(s) advancing same[;]”

• the parties would use any money realized from the sales of property owned by Cedar Woods to pay the costs attributable to those properties; and

• the members of Cedar Woods would split the profits, if any, realized by Cedar Woods “[q]uarterly or as all members agree.”

Several months after Cook signed the promissory noted, she defaulted on her

obligation to make monthly payments. Also, Izen never formed Cedar Woods, and

he and Cooley never transferred any real property to Cedar Woods.

In July 2011, Izen and Cooley sued Cook in Liberty County alleging they were

entitled to rescission on the 2009 Agreement. When Cook answered, she filed a

general denial and a counterclaim, alleging that Izen and Cooley breached the

obligations they owed her under the 2009 Agreement.

In 2012, Cook amended her counterclaim, suing Izen and Cooley on theories

ranging from promissory estoppel to fraud. In September 2015, Izen and Cooley

amended their petition and added a claim alleging that Cook had defaulted on the

promissory note she gave Izen in return for his agreement to dismiss his suit for

attorney’s fees.

In September 2016, Cook filed a hybrid traditional and no-evidence motion

for summary judgment on Izen’s and Cooley’s claims. In October 2016, Izen and

4 Cooley filed a hybrid traditional and no-evidence motion for summary judgment. In

their hybrid motion, Izen and Cooley addressed all of Cook’s claims as well as their

claims for rescission, Izen’s claim to foreclose on Cook’s note, and their claims

seeking attorney’s fees. Following a hearing, the trial court signed interlocutory

orders on the cross-motions. In the orders, the trial court denied Cook’s hybrid

motion and granted Izen’s and Cooley’s hybrid motion, except as to their claims for

Less than one month later, Cook filed a motion asking the court to reconsider

its rulings on the parties’ hybrid motions. In January 2017, the trial court conducted

a hearing on Cook’s request. By motion, Cook also asked the trial court to allow her

to file additional summary judgment evidence. In the hearing, the trial court denied

both of Cook’s motion.

In the same hearing, the trial court considered Izen’s and Cooley’s requests

for attorney’s fees.1 The trial court also considered Izen’s and Cooley’s motion for

1 The traditional section of Izen’s and Cooley’s combined motion for summary judgment asked the trial court to award them attorney’s fees of $106,325. Izen’s and Cooley’s combined motion includes an itemized bill for legal services performed between July 2011 and October 2016 on the suit that is the subject of this appeal. The bill appears to reflect fees for all the work Izen performed, ranging from the work required to defend Izen and Cooley from Cook’s counterclaims to his work to foreclose on the note Cook signed in consideration for a release of Izen’s claim for attorney’s fees in the other suit. 5 sanctions. After hearing argument, the trial court denied Izen’s and Cooley’s request

for sanctions and Izen’s and Cooley’s motion for summary judgment on their claims

for attorney’s fees. After announcing its rulings, the trial court stated: “I would like

to have an order stating all of those things.” At that point, Izen volunteered to draft

the order. He suggested that the trial court include language of finality in the order

so that it functioned as “a final judgment disposing of all parties and all claims[.]”

The trial court agreed with Izen’s suggestion, stating “[t]hat’s certainly how I intend

it to be.”

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Judy Cook v. Joe Alfred Izen Jr. and Karen Lee Cooley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/judy-cook-v-joe-alfred-izen-jr-and-karen-lee-cooley-texapp-2019.