Linda Jurek v. Gary E. Kivell

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 21, 2011
Docket01-10-00040-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Linda Jurek v. Gary E. Kivell (Linda Jurek v. Gary E. Kivell) 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
Linda Jurek v. Gary E. Kivell, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 21, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-10-00040-CV

———————————

LINDA JUREK, Appellant

V.

GARY KIVELL, Appellee

On Appeal from the Probate Court

Galveston County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 65790B

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This appeal arises out of a long-running family dispute in which Linda Jurek fought over ownership of a home with her father, Joseph Forrest, in three separate lawsuits.  In the first suit, Jurek entered into a mediation agreement with Forrest in which she agreed to a settle her claims.  Jurek later brought this suit alleging that Forrest and his lawyer, Gary Kivell, fraudulently induced her to sign the mediation agreement by failing to disclose Forrest’s existing will.  The trial court granted Kivell’s summary-judgment motion and severed the claims against him.  In three issues, Jurek contends that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment because she presented a scintilla of evidence to support her fraud claim, Kivell did not meet his burden of proof on his affirmative defenses, and res judicata does not bar the action.

We affirm.

Background

Joseph Forrest conveyed a home to his daughter, Linda Jurek, several decades ago, but the parties later disputed the conveyance.  Forrest sued Jurek over ownership of the home and the court ordered them to mediation.  Forrest attended the mediation in 1999 along with his attorney, Gary Kivell.  At the mediation, Jurek agreed to surrender fee simple in the home and pay for the maintanence and property taxes in return for a life estate on the property.  The mediation agreement also included a promise by Forrest to give Jurek a one-fourth future interest in the home upon his death.  The mediation agreement did not require Forrest to provide any proof that a will existed or would be prepared conveying a one-fourth future interest in the home to Jurek upon his death.  The trial court entered a “Final Decree” incorporating the terms of the mediation into a judgment and declaring that the mediation agreement was “binding upon the parties.” 

Forrest subsequently sued Jurek a second time seeking reimbursement of insurance he paid on the home and contending that she had not properly maintained the property as a life tenant and had forfeited her right to her life estate in the property.  Based on the final judgment, it appears that Jurek filed a counterclaim in which she alleged that she was fraudulently induced to enter into the 1999 mediation settlement agreement.  The case was tried to the court.  The court found for Jurek on all of Forrest’s claims, including that she had not forfeited her life estate, and awarded her attorneys’ fees.  The court also found that Jurek was not fraudulently induced to enter into the mediated settlement agreement.

  In 2005, Jurek filed this third lawsuit against her two sisters, both in their individual capacity and as guardians of their father who had been declared incapacitated.  She alleged that Forrest and her sisters had conveyed the home to one of the sisters in violation of the mediation agreement and that such actions constituted fraud and breach of contract.  When Forrest died in 2008, Jurek learned that Kivell had prepared a will approximately one year before the mediation that left the entire remainder of the estate to her sisters without providing for her one-fourth future interest in the home as mandated by the mediation agreement.  She amended her lawsuit to assert that the mediated settlement agreement superseded and invalidated the will, or alternatively that Forrest intentionally made a false promise to induce her to sign the agreement without any intent to keep his promise to convey her a one-fourth future interest.  She also sued Kivell claiming that he had not disclosed the existence or contents of the will during the mediation.

Kivell moved for summary judgment on both traditional and no-evidence grounds including standing, res judicata, statute of limitations, no duty to disclose, and no evidence of fraudulent inducement, causation, or damages.   As summary-judgment evidence, Kivell attached his own affidavit and the final decree and judgment from the prior two lawsuits between Jurek and Forrest.  In his affidavit, Kivell stated that he was not authorized at the mediation to disclose anything about his client’s will.  At the time he also had no memory of the will’s contents or any knowledge of whether Forrest had revoked his will or intended to revoke his will in the future. 

In response, Jurek argued that Kivell failed to disclose that Forrest’s will did not leave her the promised one-fourth future interest in the estate, making Forrest’s promise at the mediation to convey her an interest false at the time it was made.  She also claimed that because Kivell prepared the will, he knew that his client’s promise to make the conveyance to her was fraudulent.  Jurek filed an affidavit in which she stated that she did not know of her father’s will before the mediation, that Kivell concealed the will during the mediation, and that her father went to the mediation “with intent not to negotiate honestly.”  She also filed an affidavit from her lawyer who attended the mediation stating that the terms of Forrest’s will were a “stumbling block to settlement unless the settlement specifically provided for [Forrest] to make a will guaranteeing Mrs. Jurek’s springing one-fourth interest.” Jurek’s attorney also stated that Kivell never disclosed the existence of the will during the mediation.

The court granted summary judgment without specifying whether it was granting the no-evidence motion or the traditional summary-judgment motion.  Jurek filed a motion for new trial, which was overruled by operation of law. 

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