Lakesha Samuels and Corey Samuels v. Sayed Nasir

445 S.W.3d 886, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 10977, 2014 WL 4955380
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 3, 2014
Docket08-13-00126-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 445 S.W.3d 886 (Lakesha Samuels and Corey Samuels v. Sayed Nasir) 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
Lakesha Samuels and Corey Samuels v. Sayed Nasir, 445 S.W.3d 886, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 10977, 2014 WL 4955380 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

YVONNE T. RODRIGUEZ, Justice.

LaKesha and Corey Samuels appeal a trial court judgment rendered in favor of their former landlord for breach of a lease agreement and conversion of personal property. In three issues, Appellants seek reversal and rendition of a take-nothing judgment or, in the alternative, remittitur, contending that the court’s damages award was excessive and that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support several expenses their landlord claims to have incurred. We affirm as to Appellant LaKesha Samuels. We affirm in part as to Appellant Corey Samuels and suggest a remittitur of damages assessed against him.

*889 DISCUSSION

Factual History

The Samuels-Nasir Lease

On January 15, 2011, Appellants agreed to rent a partially-furnished house in Fort Worth (“the Property”) from Appellee Sayed Nasir and signed a one-year lease agreement. The lease sets rent for the house at $1,280.00 per month and rent for furniture inside the house at $160.00 a month. The lease further states that if rent is not remitted by the first of the month, a $25.00-per-day late fee will accrue until payment is made. In the event that the tenants wished to terminate the lease early, the lease required thirty-day written notice to Nasir. Abandonment or vacation of the property without prior notice to the landlord was prohibited under the lease’s terms.

The Samuels Divorce and Subsequent Rent Payment Disputes

In June 2011, Appellants filed for divorce. As a result of financial hardship from the divorce, the Appellants fell behind on their financial obligations and missed the rent payment due on July 1. Nasir notified LaKesha Samuels that she and her husband were delinquent on rent via a July 6 e-mail. Corey Samuels submitted a check for $1,280.00 to Nasir (“the First Check”). LaKesha Samuels also submitted a check dated August 1, 2011, for $1,280.00 to Nasir with the memo line stating “July Rent” (“the Second Check”). The testimony is undisputed that the first two checks the Appellants tendered did not clear. Nasir received the First Check toward the end of July, and it was rejected by the bank due to insufficient funds. The Second Check was refused because the Alaska state courts had frozen LaKesha Samuels’ bank account pending the outcome of divorce proceedings.

Upon finding out that the First Check for July rent had bounced, LaKesha sent an e-mail to Nasir explaining that the Second Check she sent for August would also likely be returned as well if Nasir tried to deposit it due to the freeze on her account. She stated that she was speaking with her lawyer to try and get some funds unfrozen so she could pay the rent.

On July 81, Nasir sent LaKesha Samu-els an e-mail confirming that the First Check for July rent was returned. Nasir then proposed a settlement agreement. If the Appellants paid full rent for the months of July and August on August 1, 2011 and returned “[a]ll [his] furniture ... in same condition as original [sic][,]” Nasir would agree to reduce the July late payment to $350.00, not require them to buy the washer-dryer and lawnmower, and allow them to vacate the property at the end of August 2011.

The parties dispute whether a third check the Appellants purportedly tendered in August (“the Third Check”) cleared and was deposited in Nasir’s account. At trial, LaKesha Samuels presented a printout of a screenshot of a Microsoft Word document containing another pasted, grainy, barely legible screenshot of an MECU Bank Account Access web page. The web page shows a copy of an MECU check ending in 2134 with a bank annotation that the check cleared August 3. From what is legible, the check appears to be made out to the order of Nasir in the amount of $1,280.00 for “August Rent.” Like the Second Check, the Third Check appears to be dated August 1, 2011, although the copy is nearly illegible. Appellants maintain that the screenshot reflecting the cleared check is proof that Nasir deposited the money and that they are not delinquent on August rent.

Nasir denied having ever seen the Third Check and claimed the money from the *890 Third Check never entered his account. As proof, he submitted a copy of his Chase Bank statement current through August 11. The bank statement shows that a $1,380.00 deposit was made on July 29 (“the July 29 Deposit”). Another deposit of $2,560.00 was made on August 2 (“the August 2 Deposit”). The bank statement does not specify from what sources either deposit came. The bank statement further shows that a check with the last four digits. 9997 valued at $1,280.00, i.e. the First Check, was returned on August 2. On August 5, the bank returned another $1,280.00 check with the last four digits 2548, i.e., the Second Check, because the account for that check had been frozen. The origin and disposition of the remaining $1,380.00 deposited into Nasir’s account during that time period remains unknown. Nasir’s bank statement does not reflect that any other deposits took place for the period ending August 11.

Vacating the Property and Aftermath

Nasir sent LaKesha Samuels a Notice to Tenant to Pay or Vacate on August 2. The notice was delivered via certified mail on August 3. The notice states that she owed $2,560.00 for July and August rents plus $750.00 in late fees. The notice further states that Samuels must tender payment in full for these charges within three days or else vacate the premises no later than August 15.

On August 7, Nasir sent LaKesha Samu-els an e-mail acknowledging receipt of two payments for the months of July and August, telling her to disregard the certified letter he had previously sent. He also informed her that she needed to tender “the difference of payment due to Washer/dryer,” $12.00 in returned check fees, the late payment, and expenses related to air conditioning work. Nasir later testified at trial that at the time he sent this email rescinding the notice to vacate, he was unaware the checks had been returned.

On August 31, the Appellants vacated the Property. Nasir denied that the Appellants had given thirty-days-notice to vacate. LaKesha conceded at trial that she did not give notice because, based on Na-sir’s e-mail, she believed there was a mutual understanding that the Appellants would vacate the property on August 31.

Nasir testified that on September 2, he passed by the house and noticed that it did not look like anyone was living there. He then entered the backyard, looked in through the window, and saw that some furniture was missing. After calling the Fort Worth Police Department to ask if he could enter the property, Nasir did so. Nasir further testified that before he entered, a neighbor had told him that the house garage door had been open, so the neighbor had closed it.

Nasir claimed the house was “in really miserable shape,” that a coffee table and night table were gone, and another night stand “was all messed up[.]” Nasir also stated that furniture in the master bedroom was damaged, and that a twin bed in another room was missing, along with the washer and dryer.

On September 13, LeKesha forwarded Corey Samuels an e-mail she received from Nasir.

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445 S.W.3d 886, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 10977, 2014 WL 4955380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakesha-samuels-and-corey-samuels-v-sayed-nasir-texapp-2014.