Manuel Artemio Garza, Jr., Individually and as Next Friend of Seth Manuel Garza, a Minor v. Thelma N. Garza, Individually and as Trustee

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 2013
Docket04-11-00310-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Manuel Artemio Garza, Jr., Individually and as Next Friend of Seth Manuel Garza, a Minor v. Thelma N. Garza, Individually and as Trustee (Manuel Artemio Garza, Jr., Individually and as Next Friend of Seth Manuel Garza, a Minor v. Thelma N. Garza, Individually and as Trustee) 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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Manuel Artemio Garza, Jr., Individually and as Next Friend of Seth Manuel Garza, a Minor v. Thelma N. Garza, Individually and as Trustee, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas MEMORANDUM OPINION No. 04-11-00310-CV

Manuel Artemio GARZA, Jr., Individually and As Next Friend of S.M.G., a Minor, Appellant

v.

Thelma N. GARZA, Individually and as Trustee, Appellee

From the 381st Judicial District Court, Starr County, Texas Trial Court No. DC-06-211 Honorable Jose Luis Garza, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Karen Angelini, Justice

Sitting: Catherine Stone, Chief Justice Karen Angelini, Justice Marialyn Barnard, Justice

Delivered and Filed: February 27, 2013

AFFIRMED

Appellant, Manuel Artemio Garza, Jr., individually and as next friend of S.M.G., a minor,

sued appellee, Thelma N. Garza, for claims arising from a real estate transaction. In the suit,

Manuel brought claims for breach of warranty of title, common law fraud, statutory fraud,

deceptive trade practices, and negligent misrepresentation. After a bench trial, the trial court

rendered a take-nothing judgment on all claims. On appeal, Manuel argues the trial court erred in

rendering a take-nothing judgment because he established four of his five claims as a matter of

law. We disagree, and affirm the trial court’s judgment. 04-11-00310-CV

BACKGROUND

Manuel agreed to purchase a parcel of real property from Thelma. Manuel tendered

Thelma payment of $9,200.00 in accordance with the parties’ agreement. On May 20, 2003,

Thelma, as trustee, executed a warranty deed conveying a parcel of real property located in Starr

County, Texas, to Manuel’s minor child, S.M.G. On February 17, 2004, Thelma executed a

corrected warranty deed. In the corrected warranty deed, the parcel was described as:

5.636 acres of land more or less out of and forming a part or portion of Share No. 2-E of Porcion No. 70, Jurisdiction of Camargo, Mexico, now Starr County, Texas.

The deed further described the parcel by metes and bounds. Subsequently, a dispute emerged

over ownership of the parcel. Heraldo Gonzalez and other individuals claimed they were the

owners of the parcel. Eventually, an expert hired by Manuel concluded the deeds executed by

Thelma did not convey title to S.M.G.

In 2006, Manuel filed the underlying suit against Thelma. 1 In his petition, Manuel alleged

Thelma (1) breached the general warranty clause in the deed by failing to defend S.M.G.’s title

to the parcel; (2) falsely represented that she had title to the parcel when she did not; (3)

misrepresented her capacity to convey the parcel and/or title to the parcel during the transaction;

and (4) committed fraud, breached an express warranty, and engaged in false, misleading, or

deceptive acts and an unconscionable course of action during the transaction.

The Evidence Presented by Manuel

At trial, Manuel presented testimony from three witnesses. Manuel did not testify on his

own behalf. Manuel’s first witness was Thelma. Thelma testified she divorced her husband

Higinio Garza in 1991. The divorce decree awarded the couple’s three children multiple tracts of

1 Heraldo Gonzalez and other individuals were initially named as defendants in the suit; however, by the time of trial Thelma was the only defendant.

-2- 04-11-00310-CV

land located in Starr County. The divorce decree named Thelma as “guardian and [t]rustee of the

children and their estate” and gave Thelma the authority to sell property that was owned by the

children. The decree also stated that any real property owned by the couple but not awarded in

the decree was awarded to Higinio. Thelma acknowledged that in 1997 her three children

conveyed 23.24 acres “out of and forming a part or portion of Share 2-E of Porcion No. 70,

Ancient Jurisdiction of Camargo, Mexico, now in Starr County, Texas,” to Heraldo Gonzalez,

Joel Gonzalez, and Rolando Gonzalez (“the Gonzalezes”). This conveyance was made by

warranty deed, which was filed in the Starr County deed records on July 29, 1997. At the time of

the conveyance, all of Thelma’s children were over the age of eighteen.

Additionally, Thelma testified about an affidavit that was filed in the county deed records

in 2003. The affidavit, which was admitted into evidence, was signed by Tomas Arredondo and

Bernabe Guerra on March 27, 2002. The affidavit was filed in the Starr County deed records on

March 28, 2003. In the affidavit, Arredondo and Guerra stated that they had been familiar with

the use and occupancy of “2.466 acres of land out of and forming a part or portion of Share No.

2-E of Porcion No. 70 Ancient Jurisdiction of Camargo, Mexico, now Starr County, Texas” for

the last forty years. Arredondo and Guerra further stated:

That during all of said period of time said land has been actually occupied as stated [a]bove and such occupancy and claim of title have been open, visible, notorious, continuous, [p]eaceable, exclusive and adverse to all the world, and those claiming said lands as aforesaid [h]ave recognized no title superior to theirs during all of said period of time, and that the aforesaid [o]ccupants of said land have used, cultivated and enjoyed the same and have exercised exclusive [a]cts of ownership of the same and have appropriated the rents, income and revenues derived there from during all of said period of time without any hostile claim or interference from any source whatsoever.

That the boundaries of said [land] and had been well marked and defined on the ground. That has no dispute or controversy with respect to the correct location thereof; but on the contrary, they have been well established, either by monuments on the ground or by acquiescence [] and general reputation during all of said period of time. -3- 04-11-00310-CV

That said land i[s] now in the peaceable, open[,] notorious, adverse possession of Thelma Canales, whose claim is under the above possessors in title. 2

Thelma acknowledged that Arredondo and Guerra made the affidavit at her request; however,

she denied that she drafted the affidavit for them.

The second witness Manuel presented was an expert, Sigifredo Perez, III. Perez, a

lawyer, testified that he had reviewed the county deed records relating to the parcel. Based on

these records, Perez concluded Thelma did not own the parcel she purportedly conveyed to

S.M.G.; rather, Thelma had only a claim to the parcel. Perez also testified that the parcel was part

of a larger 35.34-acre tract, and that the 35.34-acre tract had multiple undivided interest owners,

including the Gonzalezes. Perez further indicated that these undivided interest owners held

superior title to the parcel.

Finally, Manuel’s lawyer testified about attorney’s fees. Additionally, Manuel presented

other documentary evidence, including the divorce decree, the initial and the corrected deeds

executed by Thelma to S.M.G., the deed executed by the children to the Gonzalezes, and Perez’s

abstract of title with its attachments.

The Evidence Presented by Thelma

Thelma presented the testimony of two witnesses. Thelma’s first witness, Eulalio

Aguilar, Jr., testified that he was a self-employed licensed land surveyor. Aguilar testified that he

examined various documents concerning the parcel in dispute. These documents included the

deed from Thelma’s children conveying 23.24 acres to the Gonzalezes. Aguilar also reviewed

the initial deed and the corrected deed from Thelma to S.M.G. Aguilar testified that the initial

deed from Thelma to S.M.G. contained an error because it “encroached” on the 24.23 acres that

Thelma’s children had conveyed to the Gonzalezes.

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Manuel Artemio Garza, Jr., Individually and as Next Friend of Seth Manuel Garza, a Minor v. Thelma N. Garza, Individually and as Trustee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manuel-artemio-garza-jr-individually-and-as-next-friend-of-seth-manuel-texapp-2013.