Mary Latona Ward, Independent of the Estate of Eric L. Ward v. Jacob Sponseller

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 2021
Docket09-19-00441-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Mary Latona Ward, Independent of the Estate of Eric L. Ward v. Jacob Sponseller (Mary Latona Ward, Independent of the Estate of Eric L. Ward v. Jacob Sponseller) 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
Mary Latona Ward, Independent of the Estate of Eric L. Ward v. Jacob Sponseller, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

_________________

NO. 09-19-00441-CV _________________

MARY LATONA WARD, INDEPENDENT EXECUTRIX OF THE ESTATE OF ERIC L. WARD, Appellant

V.

JACOB SPONSELLER, Appellee __________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 284th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 17-08-10366-CV __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this breach of contract case, Mary Latona Ward, as Independent Executrix

of the Estate of Eric L. Ward, 1 appeals the trial court’s judgment in favor of Jacob

Sponseller.2 Following a bench trial, the trial court concluded that Eric breached a

verbal agreement as Sponseller’s employer to allow Sponseller to earn a percentage

1 For purposes of clarity, we refer to the Wards by their first names throughout this opinion. 2 Sponseller initially sued Eric, but in 2018, Eric passed away. Mary subsequently appeared and answered as the independent executrix of Eric’s estate. 1 of equity in a home Eric purchased for Sponseller, for each year of Sponseller’s

continued employment with Eric’s company. The trial court determined that the

statute of frauds applied to the agreement, but Sponseller proved partial performance

as an exception to the statute of frauds. For the following reasons, we affirm.

I. Background

In 2010, Sponseller began working for Lincoln Manufacturing. Eric was the

sole owner of Lincoln. Sponseller steadily and significantly increased sales revenues

while there. In 2011, Lincoln promoted Sponseller to sales manager over all product

lines.

In 2014, one of Lincoln’s customers, NCS Energy Services, offered

Sponseller a job. NCS’s vice president provided Sponseller with a written offer that

included a base salary, signing bonus, employer matching 401(k) contributions, and

a vehicle allowance, among other things. While the base salary offer was the same

as Sponseller’s salary at Lincoln, the overall compensation package NCS offered

Sponseller was calculated to be $60,000 per year more than Sponseller was making

at Lincoln.

Sponseller testified that he accepted NCS’s offer, but when he gave Lincoln

his notice, he shared NCS’s offer with Eric. Shortly before Sponseller’s scheduled

departure from Lincoln for his new job at NCS, Eric approached Sponseller with

another offer. Eric told him that while Lincoln could not offer the same benefits to

2 all its other employees that NCS offered Sponseller, Eric would personally purchase

a home for Sponseller valued at approximately $300,000 if Sponseller would

continue working for Lincoln. Sponseller could earn a twenty percent interest in the

home’s equity each year over five years, and after five years, Sponseller would own

the home. Sponseller explained the amounts coincided with the additional

compensation NCS offered of $60,000 per year. Sponseller did not dispute that the

agreement involved the sale and purchase of real estate and would have taken more

than a year to complete.

After receiving Eric’s counteroffer, Sponseller spoke to his wife, and they

agreed he would forego the offer from NCS and remain employed at Lincoln.

Sponseller testified that but for Eric’s counteroffer, he would have gone to work for

NCS. At trial, Sponseller’s wife corroborated his testimony.

Eric’s wife, Mary, worked as a real estate agent. Shortly after receiving Eric’s

proposal, Mary began showing the Sponsellers homes. They chose a home with a

purchase price of approximately $288,000, and Eric purchased it. The Sponsellers

sold their other home and moved into the home Eric purchased.3

Upon moving into the home, the Sponsellers made several improvements

totaling between $5,500 and $6,000. These included installing gutters, masonry, and

3 Mary acted as the Sponseller’s agent and earned a commission when selling their other home. 3 a water softener. Because the home remained in Eric’s name, a question arose in

2014 regarding the payment of property taxes; however, the Sponsellers ultimately

paid the 2014 property taxes. In 2015 and 2016, the Sponsellers did not pay the

property taxes.

After the issues surrounding the title and taxes arose in 2014, Sponseller

approached Eric to execute a written document memorializing their verbal

agreement. Despite Eric telling Sponseller the agreement “looks right” and he would

“get it back to [him,]” Sponseller never received the signed document from Eric.

Sponseller did not know whether Eric ever signed it. This unsigned document was

admitted as an exhibit during trial.

In December 2016, Lincoln laid off Sponseller. Eric did not pay Sponseller

any equity he had earned in the home for the time he continued to work for Lincoln.

Sponseller initially sued Eric for breach of contract, fraud, quantum meruit and

promissory estoppel. To Sponseller’s claims, the defense pleaded the affirmative

defense of statute of frauds. Prior to trial, Sponseller non-suited the fraud and

quantum meruit claims, leaving only the claims for promissory estoppel and breach

of contract.

Following a bench trial, the trial court entered judgment for Sponseller,

awarding him actual damages of $158,400, court costs, and pre- and post-judgment

4 interest at five percent per annum. At defendant’s request, the trial court entered

findings of fact and conclusions of law. Of relevance, the findings of fact included:

18. Plaintiff’s testimony was credible. a. Plaintiff fully performed tendering consideration in services up until he was prevented from further performance by the defendant. b. Plaintiff forewent another, more lucrative job opportunity to his detriment because of his reliance on the oral agreement. c. Plaintiff possessed the property in question. d. Plaintiff paid taxes on the property in question. e. Plaintiff made permanent and valuable improvements to the property in question.

The conclusions of law included the following:

2. The agreement between Plaintiff and Eric Ward was a real estate transaction. a. The statute of frauds requires transactions for real estate and transactions that will span over one year to be in writing. b. Despite the statute of frauds, a partially performed oral contract for the sale of real estate is enforceable. 3. Defendant was on notice of partial performance of this contract pursuant to facts plead in paragraph 15 of the petition. 4. To relieve a parol sale of land from the operation of the Statute of Frauds, the Plaintiff must show: a. Payment of the consideration, whether it be in money or services; b. Possession; c. The making of valuable and permanent improvements upon the land with the consent; or, without such improvements, the presence of such facts as would make the transaction a fraud upon the purchaser if it were not enforced. 5. This transaction would amount to a fraud upon Plaintiff if it is not enforced. 6. There was an oral agreement between Plaintiff and Eric Ward which is excluded from operation of the statute of frauds due to partial performance.

5 The trial court also concluded that the statute of frauds barred Sponseller’s

promissory estoppel claim. Since the only writing memorializing the agreement was

presented to the defendant for signature several months after the oral agreement, the

plaintiff could not aver that he relied on a promise to sign a written agreement when

he decided to remain employed with Lincoln.

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