Lonnie E. Daniels, Jr. v. Botts Title Company D/B/A Botts Title Company American Title Insurance Company of Texas Busch & Von Minden Monroe Von Minden Scott Lawrence Penn Elizabeth Ana Penn Roy Streger Land Brokers, Inc. Robert Ruckert Harry C. Arthur And Danny Gumm

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 21, 2000
Docket03-00-00102-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Lonnie E. Daniels, Jr. v. Botts Title Company D/B/A Botts Title Company American Title Insurance Company of Texas Busch & Von Minden Monroe Von Minden Scott Lawrence Penn Elizabeth Ana Penn Roy Streger Land Brokers, Inc. Robert Ruckert Harry C. Arthur And Danny Gumm (Lonnie E. Daniels, Jr. v. Botts Title Company D/B/A Botts Title Company American Title Insurance Company of Texas Busch & Von Minden Monroe Von Minden Scott Lawrence Penn Elizabeth Ana Penn Roy Streger Land Brokers, Inc. Robert Ruckert Harry C. Arthur And Danny Gumm) 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.

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Lonnie E. Daniels, Jr. v. Botts Title Company D/B/A Botts Title Company American Title Insurance Company of Texas Busch & Von Minden Monroe Von Minden Scott Lawrence Penn Elizabeth Ana Penn Roy Streger Land Brokers, Inc. Robert Ruckert Harry C. Arthur And Danny Gumm, (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-00-00102-CV

Lonnie E. Daniels, Jr., Appellant

v.

Botts Abstracting Company d/b/a Botts Title Company; American Title Insurance Company of Texas; Busch & Von Minden; Monroe Von Minden; Scott Lawrence Penn; Elizabeth Ana Penn; Roy Streger; Land Brokers, Inc.; Robert Ruckert; Harry C. Arthur; and Danny Gumm, Appellees

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF FAYETTE COUNTY, 155TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 99V-059, HONORABLE FRED A. MOORE, JUDGE PRESIDING

Lonnie Daniels appeals following a summary judgment in favor of the appellees.1

Daniels contends that summary judgment was improper because a fact issue existed regarding his

claim of duress and that the judgment improperly required him to pay attorney’s fees related to a

previous lawsuit with exempt homestead proceeds. We will affirm the summary judgment.

1 The appellees include all of the parties that were involved in any manner in the sale of Daniels’s property. The appellees are Botts Abstract Company d/b/a Botts Title Company, American Title Insurance Company of Texas, Busch & Von Minden, Monroe Von Minden, Scott and Elizabeth Penn, Roy Streger, Land Brokers, Inc., Robert Ruckert, Harry C. Arthur., and Danny Gumm. Background

2 On October 20, 1994, Daniels signed an earnest-money contract for sale of his house

along with nine acres out of a fifty-nine-acre tract of land he owns in Fayette County to Scott and

Elizabeth Penn. The contract provided that in the event a legal proceeding involving the property

commenced before closing, the prevailing party was entitled to recover from the non-prevailing party

all costs related to the proceeding and its attorney’s fees. Apparently experiencing seller’s remorse,

Daniels attempted to rescind the contract. The Penns sued Daniels seeking damages and specific

performance of the contract for sale of the property. Additionally, Land Brokers, Inc., the real-estate

company that marketed the property, claimed damages for expenses as third-party plaintiffs and

counter-defendants.

On May 2, 1996, following a bench trial, the district court rendered judgment in favor

of the Penns and the other third-party plaintiffs and issued findings of fact and conclusions of law.

Before the district court signed the final judgment, Daniels filed a Chapter 7 voluntary bankruptcy

petition. See 11 U.S.C.A. §§ 301, 701-66 (West 1993 & Supp. 2000). The state district-court

proceedings were automatically stayed. See 11 U.S.C.A. § 362(a)(1) (West 1993). The Penns

petitioned the bankruptcy court and requested that it modify the stay in state district court and allow

the specific-performance suit to proceed. The bankruptcy court granted the Penns’ request and

modified the stay. See 11 U.S.C.A § 362(d) (West 1993). On October 16, the state district court

signed a final judgment in the Penns’ specific-performance suit.

In its order, the district court declared that Daniels breached the contract for sale of

the property and the Penns were entitled to specific performance of the contract. The district court

also ordered the following: (1) Daniels pay the Penns’ attorney’s fees charged for preparing the

3 specific-performance suit and to pay the Penns’ attorney’s fees if Daniels appealed the case; (2)

Daniels pay Land Brokers, Inc.’s attorney’s fees, expenses, prejudgment and postjudgment interest;

(3) the amounts Daniels owed to the Penns were to be credited as a down payment or prepayment

on the contract; (4) the attorney’s fees Daniels owed to Land Brokers were to be deducted from the

balance of the purchase price and paid to Land Brokers; (5) Daniels and the Penns were to execute

all necessary closing documents, and the closing was to occur within forty-five days of the signing

of the judgment; (6) Daniels was to pay Botts Title for the owner’s title insurance policy; (7) Daniels

was to pay Land Brokers the commission as provided for in the earnest-money contract, prejudgment

interest, and attorney’s fees; (8) Daniels was to bear the cost of preparing the note, deed of trust, and

general warranty deed; and (9) the purchaser’s and buyer’s statements were to reflect a credit or

offset for amounts described above in addition to the usual and customary charges for fees and

expenses of closing.

After the district court signed the judgment, Daniels, in his bankruptcy proceeding,

moved to designate the property as his homestead; the Penns responded by filing a motion opposing

the designation. On March 14, 1997, the bankruptcy court denied Daniels’s request for a homestead

exemption but ruled that he was entitled to “file a claim of exemption which . . . [was] consistent with

the Texas Property Code as to any net proceeds from the sale which are allowed to [Daniels]

pursuant to the state court’s ruling.”

On April 30, 1997, Daniels appealed to the federal district court complaining about

the following bankruptcy-court decisions: (1) the September 13, 1996 decision to modify the stay

and allow the state court to proceed with the specific-performance suit; (2) the March 14, 1997

4 decision to disallow a homestead exemption and allow an exemption only for the net proceeds from

the sale; and (3) the March 14 decision to allow the Penns to set off costs and attorney’s fees against

the net proceeds from the sale of the property.

On September 30, 1998, the federal district court (1) affirmed the bankruptcy court’s

decision to modify the stay to allow the state district court to proceed; (2) affirmed the denial of the

homestead exemption and ruled that when Daniels filed for bankruptcy protection, only the net

proceeds from the sale of the homestead became part of the bankruptcy estate that he can claim as

his exempt property; and (3) reversed the bankruptcy court’s decision to allow the Penns a setoff and

attorney’s fees against the proceeds from the sale of Daniels’s homestead.

Meanwhile, Daniels timely filed a notice of appeal in this Court appealing the state

district court’s order in the specific-performance suit. This Court dismissed his appeal for want of

prosecution because Daniels failed to file an appellant’s brief. Daniels v. Penn, No. 03-97-00086-CV

(Tex. App.—Austin Aug. 28, 1997, writ denied) (not designated for publication). Daniels complained

about this Court’s dismissal to the Texas Supreme Court; his petition for review was denied, and on

May 21, 1998, his motion for rehearing was overruled. This Court issued its mandate on June 17,

1998.

On October 1, Daniels agreed to execute the necessary documents to close the sale

of the property. In order to quell fears that Daniels would continue to litigate the sale of his property,

Botts and First American Title Insurance requested that Daniels sign a release, indemnity, and hold-

harmless agreement in their favor before they would participate in the closing. At the time, Daniels

was represented by counsel who prepared the agreement and, after Daniels signed the agreement,

5 notarized Daniels’s signature to the agreement. The parties appeared and signed all the necessary

closing documents. Then, on December 16, 1998, Daniels’s bankruptcy trustee moved to dismiss his

voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition; the bankruptcy court granted the motion. 2

On March 29, 1999, Daniels, pro se, filed the underlying lawsuit naming as defendants

all entities involved in closing the sale of the property. He contended that as a result of the sale, the

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Lonnie E. Daniels, Jr. v. Botts Title Company D/B/A Botts Title Company American Title Insurance Company of Texas Busch & Von Minden Monroe Von Minden Scott Lawrence Penn Elizabeth Ana Penn Roy Streger Land Brokers, Inc. Robert Ruckert Harry C. Arthur And Danny Gumm, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lonnie-e-daniels-jr-v-botts-title-company-dba-botts-title-company-texapp-2000.