Kelvin Willis F/D/B/A Willis Legal Support Services and F/D/B/A Willis Legal Services, Judgment by Assignment Through the Original Judgment Michael Chivington and Sonia Chivington v. Atistar Mortgage Solutions, LLC and Nyanza Cook

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 26, 2025
Docket03-23-00377-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Kelvin Willis F/D/B/A Willis Legal Support Services and F/D/B/A Willis Legal Services, Judgment by Assignment Through the Original Judgment Michael Chivington and Sonia Chivington v. Atistar Mortgage Solutions, LLC and Nyanza Cook (Kelvin Willis F/D/B/A Willis Legal Support Services and F/D/B/A Willis Legal Services, Judgment by Assignment Through the Original Judgment Michael Chivington and Sonia Chivington v. Atistar Mortgage Solutions, LLC and Nyanza Cook) 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.

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Kelvin Willis F/D/B/A Willis Legal Support Services and F/D/B/A Willis Legal Services, Judgment by Assignment Through the Original Judgment Michael Chivington and Sonia Chivington v. Atistar Mortgage Solutions, LLC and Nyanza Cook, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-23-00377-CV

Kelvin Willis f/d/b/a Willis Legal Support Services and f/d/b/a Willis Legal Services, Judgment Plaintiff by Assignment through the original Judgment Plaintiffs, Michael Chivington and Sonia Chivington, Appellant

v.

Atistar Mortgage Solutions, LLC and Nyanza Cook, Appellees

FROM THE 146TH DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY NO. 285172, THE HONORABLE JACK WELDON JONES, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Kelvin Willis appeals from the district court’s order finding that Willis

failed to properly domesticate a California judgment in Texas, vacating a turnover order

authorizing Willis to recover on that judgment, and dismissing all claims that were based on that

judgment. In three issues on appeal, Willis argues that the district court lacked plenary power to

dismiss the domestication proceedings and vacate the turnover order. He also argues that the

district court violated his due process rights by dismissing the proceedings without notice or a

hearing. We will affirm the district court’s order in part, vacate in part, and remand the cause for

further proceedings. BACKGROUND

In 2010, plaintiffs Michael Chivington and Sonia Chivington obtained a judgment

in California state court against defendant Nyanza Cook in the amount of $355,000 in

compensatory damages for fraud (Count One) and $100,000 in compensatory damages plus

$5,000 in punitive damages for alter ego liability (Count Two). 1 In 2011, Cook moved to Texas.

In 2015, Michael Chivington, acting individually and as the executor of the estate

of Sonia Chivington, assigned the judgment to “Kelvin Willis of Willis Legal Support Services.”

On May 20, 2016, Willis, who was not a lawyer and was acting pro se at the time, filed a

certified copy of the judgment and a petition to domesticate the judgment in the 146th Judicial

District Court of Bell County, where Cook resided. The judgment, which is certified by the clerk

of the Superior Court of Ventura County, California, and signed and stamped with the seal of

that county, was signed and stamped by the district clerk of Bell County on May 20, 2016.

In June 2016, Willis filed an amended petition to domesticate the judgment. Both

petitions listed Cook and Atistar as defendants. The judgment and the petition were assigned

cause number 285,172-B. 2 With his amended petition, Willis also filed with the clerk of the

1 There is limited information in the record regarding the underlying facts that gave rise to the judgment, but we take judicial notice from a Texas administrative proceeding involving Cook and referencing the California judgment that the Chivingtons were California homeowners who hired Cook “to help save their home from foreclosure, but in the end the homeowners lost their home.” See In re Nyanza Yvette Cook Application for Real Est. Sales Agent License, SOAH Docket No. XXX-XX-XXXX.REC, 2018 WL 11686677, at *1 (Texas Real Estate Comm’n) (Nov. 19, 2018) (proposal for decision); see also Tex. R. Evid. 201 (providing for judicial notice of adjudicative facts). Atistar Mortgage Solutions, LLC (Atistar) appears to have been Cook’s business. The record reflects that the Chivingtons obtained separate judgments against Cook and Atistar. However, as we discuss below, Willis domesticated only the judgment against Cook. 2 We take judicial notice that each district court in Bell County is assigned a letter for identification purposes, and the 146th District Court is assigned the letter “B.” See Tex. R. Evid. 201. 2 court an affidavit showing the name and last known address of the judgment creditor (Willis) and

one of the judgment debtors (Cook), but the affidavit did not mention Atistar.

The record does not contain proof that Willis mailed notice of the filing to Cook.

However, the record reflects that the district clerk’s office mailed Cook notice and that she

received that notice. The notice, which was dated July 14, 2016, provided that

In accordance with the provisions of House Bill Number 1175 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure,[3] in cause number 285172-0, in the 146th District Court of Bell County, Texas,

Plaintiff(s) MICHAEL E CHIVINGTON, SONIA CHIVINGTON

filed a suit for enforcement of a Foreign Judgment against

Defendant(s) ATISTAR MORTGAGE SOLUTIONS LLC.

Said foreign judgment was signed on the 12th day of July, 2010.

This was issued at the request of attorney: Pro Se: KELVIN WILLIS WILLIS LEGAL SUPPORT SERVICES P.O. BOX 764144 DALLAS, TEXAS 75376.

The notice listed Willis as the judgment creditor and Cook as the judgment debtor.

In August 2016, counsel for Cook and Atistar (both defendants were represented

by the same counsel) filed a notice of appearance in the district court and a motion for

continuance, seeking time to conduct discovery. On August 26, 2016, the district court held a

3 Although the notice referred to the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, this appears to be instead a reference to the enacting bill of the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act in Texas, the statute under which Willis sought to enforce the judgment. See Act of May 14, 1981, 67th Leg., R.S., ch. 195, § 3, 1981 Tex. Gen. Laws 464, 464–65 (current version at Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §§ 35.001-.008). Until the Act was amended in 2011, the district clerk was required to mail notice of the filing to the judgment debtor. See id. 3 hearing on Willis’s petition and on the defendants’ motion for continuance. At the beginning of

the hearing, the district court asked counsel if Cook had “been served and is she actively a party

in the suit.” Counsel responded, “Yes, your Honor, she’s been served and she’s a party to the

suit.” Counsel also acknowledged that Cook had not yet responded to the suit or answered in

any way. Counsel did not complain, either at the hearing or in any filing before or after the

hearing, that the defendants lacked notice of the judgment or that Willis failed to give them

notice pursuant to Section 35.004 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code.

During the hearing, Willis argued that domestication was “a real simple process”

and asked that the motion for continuance be denied. Counsel for the defendants responded that

a continuance was necessary to allow “sufficient time to perform some very minimal discovery,

primarily Mr. Willis’s deposition, in order to flesh out issues of fact and law that we think may

be present with this court giving full faith and credit to a purported judgment from a

California court.”

The district court stated that domesticating a judgment in Texas was to be “done

ministerially,” not “through a court proceeding,” and that, accordingly, the court had

“historically, routinely, denied or just declined to enter any order because I don’t think there is a

basis for an order for domesticating a foreign judgment.” The district court added, “[T]he rules,

as I read them, provide that once you have gone through that process, then the judgment is the

same as a Texas judgment and it’s subject to collateral attack and direct attack in Texas, just as if

it were a judgment entered by a Texas court.” Counsel for the defendants replied that “before the

judgment is even registered, whether it should even be given full faith and credit, is questionable

in this case.” The court responded, “Well, to me, that’s the question that I’d have to ask is

whether Mr. Willis has exercised the proper procedure to legally register the judgment in Texas,

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Kelvin Willis F/D/B/A Willis Legal Support Services and F/D/B/A Willis Legal Services, Judgment by Assignment Through the Original Judgment Michael Chivington and Sonia Chivington v. Atistar Mortgage Solutions, LLC and Nyanza Cook, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelvin-willis-fdba-willis-legal-support-services-and-fdba-willis-texapp-2025.