Leslie R. Pogue and Jeanette I. Pogue v. Elizabeth A. Williamson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 12, 2020
Docket01-17-00844-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Leslie R. Pogue and Jeanette I. Pogue v. Elizabeth A. Williamson (Leslie R. Pogue and Jeanette I. Pogue v. Elizabeth A. Williamson) 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
Leslie R. Pogue and Jeanette I. Pogue v. Elizabeth A. Williamson, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 12, 2020

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-17-00844-CV ——————————— LESLIE R. POGUE AND JEANETTE I. POGUE, Appellants V. ELIZABETH A. WILLIAMSON, Appellee

On Appeal from the 164th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2012-56353

OPINION

This real-estate contract case asks whether an unambiguous “as-is” and

disclaimer-of-reliance provision precludes a buyer’s fraudulent-inducement,

common-law fraud, statutory-fraud, negligent-misrepresentation, and Deceptive

Trade Practice Act (DTPA) claims. The parties to this arm’s-length transaction negotiated its terms, agreed to include clear and broad “as-is” and disclaimer-of-

reliance language, and worked with an attorney and a real-estate agent who acted as

intermediaries between the two. Because the disclaimer-of-reliance clause is

enforceable, it negates the essential element of reliance in the buyer’s fraudulent-

inducement claim, which in turn renders the “as-is” clause enforceable. The “as-is”

clause severs the causal link between the seller’s misrepresentation and the buyer’s

damages. Accordingly, the buyer’s claims are contractually barred. We therefore

reverse the trial court’s judgment and render judgment that the buyer take nothing.

Background

Appellants Leslie and Jeannette Pogue owned a 33-year-old home in Crosby.

The Pogues purchased the four-and-a-half-acre property in 2000. When Hurricane

Ike hit Texas in 2008, the property was damaged. The Pogues used insurance

proceeds to replace the roof, repaint the house, replace some sheetrock, and repair

exterior trim. The following year, the Pogues moved to Bellville and put their Crosby

home on the market. After failing to sell their property after seven months, the

Pogues retained real estate agent Gina Jones.

The Crosby home was vacant for nearly a year and a half when Lewis Walker,

appellee Elizabeth Williamson’s then fiancé and eventual husband, expressed

interest in the property. Because of his poor credit, Walker could not qualify for a

loan. As an alternative, the Pogues agreed to rent the property to him. Before Walker

2 agreed to rent the property, he and Williamson, who lived only two streets away,

looked at the property. Williamson was well aware of the property; she described

the property as “iconic.” Williamson explained, “It wasn’t so much just the house.

It was just—the land and everything, the way it was set up. It was just a really nice

property.” Because the Pogues would not sell the property to Walker, Williamson

decided to make an offer.

When she made the offer to the Pogues, Williamson visited the property a

second time. Like Williamson’s first visit to the property with Walker, the Pogues

were not there. During this second visit, Williamson noticed that the vacant

property’s overgrowth was so severe that she could not see the landscaping. She also

noticed that the garden was unattended, the garage was full of debris, the pool was

black and filled with patio furniture, the inside of the home smelled musty, and the

carpet was “nasty” and needed replacing. Williamson described the barn on the

property as looking “Silence of the Lambs” scary as it had “needles and syringes on

the ground, and on tables.” But Williamson, a first-time home buyer, was excited.

Williamson and the Pogues initially entered into an earnest money contract

for the sale of the property. The Pogues asked $235,000 for the property, but

Williamson, also working with Gina Jones, put together a non-standard offer to

purchase the property for $210,000 with a wrap note and a two-year balloon

3 payment.1 The Pogues were willing to work with that price and provide owner

financing to Williamson. In the earnest money contract, Williamson agreed that she

would “accept[] the Property in its current condition.” The agreement also provided

that Williamson could have the property inspected by professionals, but Williamson

decided against an inspection.

Before she could purchase the property, Williamson had to obtain property

insurance. During that process, she learned from her insurance company that a wind

claim had previously been made on the home. Williamson asked Jones about any

insurance claims that may have been made on the property. Jones then contacted

Mrs. Pogue, who responded, “We replaced the roof on November 20, 2008, after

Hurricane Ike with Holding Roofing Inc., . . . for $18,737.92 . . . . Hope this helps

her.”

Before the parties closed, Williamson reviewed the seller’s disclosure the

Pogues prepared. It would later come to light that the disclosure had a number of

errors in it. But, at the time, everything looked good to Williamson, and, after signing

a number of documents, the parties closed on September 10, 2010. Those documents

1 A wraparound mortgage, or wrap note, is “[a] second mortgage issued when a lender assumes the payments on the borrower’s low-interest first mortgage (usu[ally] issued through a different lender) and lends additional funds. Such a mortgage covers both the outstanding balance of the first mortgage and the additional funds loaned.” Wraparound mortgage, BLACKS LAW DICTIONARY (9th ed. 2009). 4 included a two-year note, a deed of trust, a warranty deed with a vendor’s lien, and

a number of other related documents.

The two-year note Williamson signed for the Pogues was for $210,000 and

provided for a final balloon payment for the full amount 24 months later. Williamson

also signed a deed of trust that secured the Pogues’ note and showed a final maturity

date of September 25, 2012. The Pogues signed a warranty deed with vendor’s lien

and conveyed the property to Williamson. Williamson signed the deed as grantee,

agreeing to accept the deed and consenting to its form and substance, acknowledging

that the terms of the deed “conform[ed] with [her] intent.” She further agreed to the

obligations imposed on her by the terms of the deed, the accompanying warranty

deed with vendor’s lien, and the deed of trust.

The deed of trust also included a paragraph that appeared in different typeface

and larger font size, making it obvious on the page. It read:

As a material part of the consideration for the Property, [the Pogues have] executed this deed and granted, sold and conveyed the above described property, premises and improvements, and [Williamson] has accepted this deed and purchased the above-described property, premises improvements, “AS IS.” [The Pogues] and [Williamson] agree that there is no warranty by [the Pogues] that the Property is fit for a particular purpose. [Williamson] acknowledges that [she] is not relying upon any representations, statements, assertions or non-assertions by the [Pogues] with respect to the Property condition, but is relying solely on [her own] examination of the Property.

(Emphasis in original).

5 Williamson also signed a document acknowledging that Donna Heinlein, the

attorney who prepared the closing documents, was instructed by Williamson to

refrain from doing 19 specific actions on her behalf, including ordering a title policy,

ordering a survey, ordering a title search, “having a termite inspection, and/or having

experts inspect the premises and/or appliances,” ascertaining whether or not the

property was in a 100-year-flood zone, or ascertaining whether there were any

drainage problems or drainage easements.

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Bluebook (online)
Leslie R. Pogue and Jeanette I. Pogue v. Elizabeth A. Williamson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leslie-r-pogue-and-jeanette-i-pogue-v-elizabeth-a-williamson-texapp-2020.