Kimberly Gaspard v. Debra B. Wester

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 2, 2013
Docket13-12-00287-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Kimberly Gaspard v. Debra B. Wester (Kimberly Gaspard v. Debra B. Wester) 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
Kimberly Gaspard v. Debra B. Wester, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-12-00287-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

KIMBERLY GASPARD, Appellant,

v.

DEBRA B. WESTER, Appellee.

On appeal from the 58th District Court of Jefferson County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Rodriguez, Garza and Perkes Memorandum Opinion by Justice Garza

Appellant, Kimberly Gaspard, challenges the trial court’s summary judgment

dismissing her legal malpractice and breach of contract claims against appellee Debra

B. Wester. Gaspard argues by two issues that the trial court erred. We reverse and remand.

I. BACKGROUND

Gaspard hired attorney Wester to represent her in divorce proceedings. A final

decree of divorce was rendered in 2009. In 2010, Gaspard sued Wester for malpractice

and breach of contract. Gaspard’s petition did not state what actions or omissions by

Wester, in particular, she alleged constituted malpractice; nor did it state what

contractual provision was allegedly breached.1

Wester filed a motion for summary judgment which set forth a factual background

of the case. According to Wester, Gaspard claimed in the divorce proceedings that the

Groves, Texas house in which she and her ex-husband resided was community

property. However, the evidence at trial established that, in fact, her ex-husband

purchased the house prior to the marriage. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 3.001(1) (West

2006) (providing that a spouse’s separate property consists of, inter alia, “the property

owned or claimed by the spouse before marriage”). The final divorce decree declared

the house to be the ex-husband’s separate property.

1 Gaspard’s original petition, filed on July 21, 2010, and an amended petition filed on February 21, 2012, each contained an identical section entitled “Facts and Causes of Action.” The section reads, in its entirety, as follows:

5. The Plaintiff hired the Defendant to serve as her attorney in her divorce. During the course of the divorce, the Defendant committed attorney malpractice, thereby proximately causing actual and consequential damages to the Plaintiff, for which the Plaintiff now sues. That is, the Plaintiff sues the Defendant for negligence during the course and scope of her legal representation of Plaintiff, and seeks to recover actual and consequential damages proximately caused by the negligence of the Defendant.

6. Plaintiff also sues Defendant for breach of contract, and seeks to recover all actual and consequential damages proximately caused by the breach of contract, as well as to recover all attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses incurred in prosecuting the breach of contract cause of action.

No other details as to Gaspard’s allegations appear in her pleadings.

2 Also at issue in the divorce, according to Wester’s motion, was Gaspard’s

alleged liability for a home equity loan executed by both spouses after the parties

married, which was secured by the house. The funds obtained were allegedly used, in

part, to improve the Groves house. The final divorce decree provided that the ex-

husband was exclusively responsible for repaying the loan. However, the decree did

not contain any provision compensating Gaspard for any community funds expended on

making home improvements.

Wester’s summary judgment motion included a transcript of Gaspard’s

deposition, taken in connection with her suit against Wester, in which Gaspard claimed

to be entitled to one-half of the value of the house “[b]ecause I’m on the deed to the

home after we refinanced it, and I’m also on the mortgage of it.” Gaspard suggested in

her deposition testimony that her ex-husband had executed a deed granting her a one-

half interest in the house. She claimed that she obtained a copy of the document from

the county courthouse and gave the document to her attorney in the malpractice suit;

however, Wester’s counsel stated that no such document had been produced in

discovery. Gaspard testified that she did not give the document to Wester at the time

Wester represented her because Wester “said she was getting all the information

because she could go to the county clerk’s office” and Gaspard “was believing and

going on everything she told me.”

Gaspard also provided details of her claim in a response to the following

interrogatory propounded by Wester:

7. Please describe in detail the manner in which you contend you have been damaged, detailing the damages and/or expenses incurred by you as a result of the incident complained of in Plaintiff’s Original Petition and all subsequent petitions.

3 ANSWER:

Failure to address loan in ex-husband’s name only in Divorce Decree has caused the following damages:

Loss of equity in home Harm to credit due to foreclosure Unable to get loan due to foreclosure Unable to get job due to foreclosure Mental anguish from foreclosure

Also, [Gaspard] had a right to obtain credit for the equity that was built into the home during the period of their marriage, since the payments made on the mortgage were community property. [Wester] also did not address this, resulting in loss of the equity set forth above. Also, [Wester] should have requested a forced sale of the residence, because [Wester] had actual knowledge that [the ex-husband] was behind on the Note and was not in a position to continue making payments on the home.

Additionally, [Wester] put no safe guards in the clearly evident circumstance that [the ex-husband] was not going to be able to obtain financing to refinance the home in his own name.

In her summary judgment motion, Wester claimed she was entitled to judgment

as a matter of law on the malpractice and breach of contract claims because: (1)

Gaspard “has no and never had any ownership interest” in the Groves home; (2) “[n]o

deed exists conveying a one-half interest in the property” to Gaspard; and (3) the

divorce court was “without authority to order [the ex-husband] to either refinance the

home or order the separate property home sold” and “no personal liability was attached

to the home equity loan.”

Attached to Wester’s motion was an affidavit by attorney Ken N. Whitlow,

testifying as an expert witness. Whitlow averred that title to the home was never vested

in Gaspard because it was purchased by her ex-husband prior to the marriage and

“[t]here is no deed of record in the Official Public Records of Jefferson County in favor of

4 [Gaspard]” as to the home. Whitlow stated that Gaspard’s signature on the Deed of

Trust executed in connection with the home equity loan did not confer or infer ownership

of the home to Gaspard because her signature was required by the Texas Constitution

and the Texas Family Code. See TEX. CONST. art. XVI, § 50(a)(6)(A) (“The homestead

of a family, or of a single adult person, shall be, and is hereby protected from forced

sale, for the payment of all debts except for . . . an extension of credit that . . . is

secured by a voluntary lien on the homestead created under a written agreement with

the consent of each owner and each owner’s spouse.”); TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 5.001

(West 2006) (“Whether the homestead is the separate property of either spouse or

community property, neither spouse may sell, convey, or encumber the homestead

without the joinder of the other spouse except as provided in this chapter or by other

rules of law.”). Whitlow averred that the divorce court could not have ordered the ex-

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Kimberly Gaspard v. Debra B. Wester, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimberly-gaspard-v-debra-b-wester-texapp-2013.