Lee Shafer and Pamela Shafer v. Joel Gulliver and Maryanne Gulliver

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 12, 2010
Docket14-09-00646-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Lee Shafer and Pamela Shafer v. Joel Gulliver and Maryanne Gulliver (Lee Shafer and Pamela Shafer v. Joel Gulliver and Maryanne Gulliver) 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
Lee Shafer and Pamela Shafer v. Joel Gulliver and Maryanne Gulliver, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Affirmed, in Part, and Reversed and Rendered, in Part, and Memorandum Opinion filed November 12, 2010.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-09-00646-CV

Lee Shafer and Pamela Shafer, Appellants

v.

Joel Gulliver and Maryanne Gulliver, Appellees

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 1

Fort Bend County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 06-CCV-029325

MEMORANDUM OPINION

            Appellants, Lee and Pamela Shafer, appeal from the trial court’s judgment entered after a bench trial in favor of appellees, Joel and Maryann Gulliver, on their claim for breach of contract.  The trial court awarded the Gullivers specific performance, interest damages, and attorney’s fees.  The Shafers challenge the trial court’s judgment in three issues.  We affirm, in part, and reverse and render, in part.

Background

            The Shafers and the Gullivers are neighbors in Fort Bend County.  The Shafers, who were in need of cash, offered to sell a piece of undeveloped land that was contiguous to both the Shafers’ and Gullivers’ residences and was part of the Shafers’ homestead.  The Shafers and Gullivers executed an earnest money contract on January 21, 2005, for the sale of the property for $53,000.  The Gullivers wrote a check payable to Lee Shafer in the amount of $5,000 for earnest money on January 21, 2005, and the Shafers agreed to deliver a general warranty deed at closing in exchange for the purchase price.  The closing date in the contract was September 30, 2005.  The Shafers represented in the contract that as of the closing date there would be no liens on the property that could not be satisfied out of the proceeds of the sale.  Lee Shafer explained that the closing date was for nine months after the contract date because he thought he could have the liens against the property released by that time. 

            By the September 30, 2005 closing date, there were still two liens on the property totaling approximately $115,000 that could not be satisfied by the sales price.  Because the Shafers had not obtained releases of the liens by September 30, 2005, closing was not scheduled and did not take place. 

            Lee Shafer asked Joel Gulliver if they wanted to still purchase the property; Gulliver said they did.  Lee Shafer testified that this conversation took place in October 2005.  Joel Gulliver testified that this conversation took place before September 30, 2005.  On December 28, 2005, Lee Shafer delivered copies of the releases of the liens to the Gullivers.  One release of lien was file stamped, while the other was not.  A week later, Maryann Gulliver told the Shafers that they would have the money and close in two weeks.  The Gullivers did not tender the money in those two weeks.  Although the Gullivers did not initially intend to close through a title company, they changed their minds after only one of the releases was file stamped.  In March 2006, Maryann Gulliver called the Shafers and told them that they were going to close at Stewart Title, which was the title company chosen by the Shafers in the contract. 

            Title was opened at Stewart Title on March 14, 2006.  The Shafers gave the Gullivers a file-stamped copy of the second release of lien on either March 24 or 25, 2006.  Closing was scheduled for March 31, 2006, but the parties did not close on that date.  Another closing was scheduled for April 6 or 7, 2006, but that closing was cancelled.  After Stewart Title informed Lee Shafer that the closing was scheduled for April 10, 2006, he said he was not going to go forward with selling the property.  The Gullivers attended the April 10, 2006 closing; the Shafers did not.  The Gullivers signed the closing documents, left a cashier’s check in the amount of $48,000 payable to the Shafers with Stewart Title, and gave Stewart Title a check in the amount of $1,100.95 for closing fees.  By letter dated April 7, 2006, the Shafers wrote the Gullivers, returning the earnest money and advising that they were terminating the contract.[1]  The letter, which was sent by certified mail, was not mailed until April 11, 2006—after the April 10, 2006 closing.  The Gullivers were not at home when two attempts were made to deliver the letter, and they did not pick up the letter from the post office.  The Gullivers ultimately found out about the Shafers’ letter and check from Stewart Title. 

            The Gullivers sued the Shafers on April 26, 2006, for breach of contract, seeking specific performance, actual and consequential damages, attorney’s fees, and pre- and post-judgment interest.[2]  The Shafers raised the affirmative defenses of statute of frauds, estoppel, rescission, waiver, failure to meet conditions precedent, and failure of consideration, and also sought attorney’s fees.[3]

            After a bench trial, the trial court found that the Shafers had breached the contract both on September 30, 2005, and April 10, 2006, and ordered specific performance.  The trial court also awarded interest damages in the amount of $13,020.69, i.e., interest in the amount of: (1) $264.97 on the $1,100.95 closing fees; (2) $1,203.37 on the $5,000 earnest money; and (3) $11,552.35 on the $48,000 paid at closing, and attorney’s fees in the amount of $30,838.91. 

            In this appeal, the Shafers

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Lee Shafer and Pamela Shafer v. Joel Gulliver and Maryanne Gulliver, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-shafer-and-pamela-shafer-v-joel-gulliver-and-m-texapp-2010.