K. R. Playa VI, S. De R.L. De C v. v. Stewart Title Guaranty Company and Stewart Title Guaranty De Mexico, S.A. De C v.

417 S.W.3d 592, 2013 WL 5489662
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 2, 2013
Docket14-11-00900-CV, 14-11-00901-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 417 S.W.3d 592 (K. R. Playa VI, S. De R.L. De C v. v. Stewart Title Guaranty Company and Stewart Title Guaranty De Mexico, S.A. De C v.) 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
K. R. Playa VI, S. De R.L. De C v. v. Stewart Title Guaranty Company and Stewart Title Guaranty De Mexico, S.A. De C v., 417 S.W.3d 592, 2013 WL 5489662 (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

SHARON McCALLY, Justice.

In this consolidated appeal regarding a dispute over payment on title insurance claims to numerous properties in Mexico, appellants Citigroup Global Markets Realty Group and K.R. Playa VI, S. de R.L. de C.V. (K.R. Playa) challenge the trial court’s take-nothing judgment in favor of appellees Stewart Title Guaranty Company (Stewart U.S.) and Stewart Title Guaranty de Mexico, S.A. de C.V. (Stewart Mexico). 1 In four issues, Citigroup asserts (a) that the trial court erred in admitting the expert testimony of Bruce Greenberg regarding property valuation, (b) that there is legally insufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding that an exclusion to the title insurance policies issued to K.R. Playa and Citigroup by Stewart Mexico and Stewart U.S. precludes coverage for ten of the sixteen subject properties, (c) that the jury’s damages award of zero for the six properties to which the exclusion is not applicable is not supported by the evidence, and (d) that the trial court erred by “barr[ing] Citigroup from bringing claims under Texas law for the insurer’s violation of the Texas Insurance Code and its duty of good faith and fair dealing.” K.R. Playa contends that (1) Stewart Mexico did not prove that it was actually prejudiced by K.R. Playa’s failure to comply with certain conditions in its title insurance policy, which does not absolve Stewart Mexico of liability under the policy; (2) Stewart Mexico had both constructive and actual knowledge of the title defect at issue in this case; thus KR. Playa had no duty to provide Stewart Mexico with notice of this defect; and (8) both Stewart Mexico’s and Stewart U.S.’s repeated violations of a pre-trial motion in limine order “deceived” the jury into believing that K.R. Playa “owned” the properties at issue in this case, “a misconception that poisoned the entire verdict.” After considering those issues necessary to final disposition of this appeal, we affirm.

Introduction

K.R. Playa purchased sixteen properties in Mexico and obtained title insurance from Stewart Mexico. K.R. Playa later obtained financing from Citigroup for its purchases of these properties. Citigroup *595 purchased lender’s title insurance policies for each property from Stewart Mexico, but also insisted that Stewart U.S. contractually agree to “assume the entire liability of [Stewart Mexico] under” each policy and agree to “pay any valid claim” under the policies to the same extent as if the entire liability had been insured by Stewart U.S. policies. These agreements provided Citigroup the right to enforce the policies against Stewart U.S. in Texas courts.

The record reflects that, at the time of trial, the following claims remained unresolved: (1) Citigroup’s claims against Stewart U.S. for breach the lender’s title policies, breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing, and violations of the Texas Insurance Code; 2 and (2) K.R. Playa’s claims against Stewart Mexico for breach of the owner’s title policies.

BACKGROUND 3

The Decree

On April 23,1981, the president of Mexico issued an Expropriation Decree (the Decree), pursuant to which the Mexican federal government took over six million square meters of land to create the Tulum National Park (the Park). According to the Mexican National Commission of Protected Natural Areas (CONANP), the Park is federal property owned by the Mexican federal government. But the Decree does not provide any guidance, on its face, showing its application to any particular properties located in the Park. And notwithstanding the Decree, at the time of this dispute, some private individuals operated hotels and restaurants on land subject to the decree. Further, the Mexican federal government had taken no steps to enforce the decree or evict the commercial ventures.

The K.R. Playa Purchases

In late 2005, Kor Realty Group, a Los Angeles-based real estate developer specializing in building luxury hotels, sought to develop a stretch of beachfront property in Tulum. This property was attractive to Kor because there were no high-end luxury hotels in the area with direct beach access. Additionally, the Mexican state of Quintana Roo, in which Tulum was located, was in the process of improving its airport and infrastructure. Finally, Kor anticipated that Tulum would be granted independence as a city in 2007, which would permit the local government to increase density in the area as an “urban zone” and manage the zoning and development of this stretch of property.

From early to mid 2006, Kor, through its Mexican subsidiary, appellant K.R. Pla-ya, 4 purchased sixteen properties in the Tulum area (the “Tulum Properties”) for a total of nearly $55 million. The first eleven purchases of the Tulum Properties were handled by K.R. Playa managers Jim Reilly and David Lopez. 5 Before the clos *596 ing of the purchase of each property, KR. Playa obtained title insurance commitments from Stewart Mexico. 6 Stewart Mexico hired an agent to search public title records in connection with its issuance of policies for K.R. Playa’s purchase of the first two Tulum Properties. This agent discovered a reference to the Decree in its title search, but stated in its report, “By a Map indicating the area condemned by the Decree of April 23, 1981, to declare it the Tulum National Park, [the owner] shows that the tracts owned by him were not affected by such condemnation” (emphasis added). Stewart Mexico did not specifically list the Decree as an exception from coverage in any of its title policies.

In June 2006, K.R. Playa obtained state government issued land-use certificates showing the type of permitted use and the density (number of hotel rooms permitted in a given area) for each of the Tulum Properties pursuant to federal zoning law, the Programa de Ordenamiento Ecológico Tentorial (POET). According to these POET certificates, the zoning designation of the properties was as follows: (1) Ecological Policy: Conservation; (2) Prevailing Use: Wildlife; (3) Conditional Use: Infrastructure and Tourism. The density permitted for each property was up to thirty hotel rooms per hectare.

Two months later, Kor hired a local environmental engineering firm, Kaiser-GAIA, to assist with development plans.' Kaiser-GAIA informed Kor that, contrary to the POET land-use certificates, only parts of the Tulum Properties were zoned for development — those properties in the southern part of the area. According to Kaiser-GAIA, the northern portions of the Tulum Properties were all zoned “AN5,” meaning “zero density” was permitted in this area. However, Kaiser-GAIA informed Kor that Tulum officials had proposed an Urban Development Plan (PDU) with zoning laws for Tulum that differed from the federal zoning laws under POET.

Kor was interested in a greater density than permitted under either POET or Tu-lum’s proposed PDU.

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417 S.W.3d 592, 2013 WL 5489662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/k-r-playa-vi-s-de-rl-de-c-v-v-stewart-title-guaranty-company-and-texapp-2013.