Matthew Lykken and Suzanne Lykken v. Jon K. Kindsvater and Jan G. Kindsvater

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 6, 2014
Docket02-13-00214-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Matthew Lykken and Suzanne Lykken v. Jon K. Kindsvater and Jan G. Kindsvater (Matthew Lykken and Suzanne Lykken v. Jon K. Kindsvater and Jan G. Kindsvater) 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
Matthew Lykken and Suzanne Lykken v. Jon K. Kindsvater and Jan G. Kindsvater, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-13-00214-CV

MATTHEW LYKKEN AND APPELLANTS SUZANNE LYKKEN

V.

JON K. KINDSVATER AND JAN G. APPELLEES KINDSVATER

----------

FROM THE 96TH DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY TRIAL COURT NO. 096-262837-12 ----------

MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

Appellants Matthew Lykken and Suzanne Lykken appeal the trial court’s

orders granting summary judgment in favor of appellees Jon K. Kindsvater and

Jan G. Kindsvater and awarding attorneys’ fees to the Kindsvaters. We reverse

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. the summary judgment on the Lykkens’ warranty of seizen claim and the award

of attorney’s fees.

Background Facts

The Kindsvaters owned property in Colleyville in Tarrant County. In

September 2008, the Kindsvaters entered into an oil and gas lease with Titan

Operating, LLC. Under the lease, the Kindsvaters were entitled to a bonus

payment. Titan recorded a memorandum of the lease in the real property

records of Tarrant County in 2009.

On February 12, 2012, the Kindsvaters entered into a sales agreement

with the Lykkens for the Kindsvaters’ property. The sales contract required the

Kindsvaters to convey a general warranty deed. Paragraph 6(D) states that the

Lykkens could object to any defects, exceptions, or encumbrances to title. If they

objected, the contract states that the Kindsvaters

shall cure the timely objections . . . within 15 days after Seller receives the objections and the Closing Date will be extended as necessary. If objections are not cured within such 15 day period, this contract will terminate and the earnest money will be refunded to Buyer unless Buyer waives the objections.

On February 21, 2012, the Lykkens received a title commitment from the

title insurance company that contained an exception from the title because of the

notice of the oil and gas lease in the property records. They told the Kindsvaters’

agent that they had been unaware of the lease, requested a copy of the lease,

and demanded that the Kindsvaters “turn over any proceeds received [under the

lease] and . . . convey the rights to any future proceeds.” On February 22, 2012,

2 the Kindsvaters’ agent confirmed that the Kindsvaters would transfer the mineral

rights to the Lykkens.

The Lykkens received a copy of the lease on February 28, 2012. The next

day, they sent a demand letter to the Kindsvaters, arguing that the Kindsvaters

had received a $9,325 signing bonus and although the Kindsvaters could convey

their future rights under the lease, the Lykkens were “still damaged to the extent

of the signing bonus” that the Kindsvaters had already received. The Lykkens

demanded “cash compensation or a price discount in compensation for that

determent.”

On March 5, 2012, the Lykkens submitted a formal objection to the title

defect represented by the gas lease. 2 The day before closing, on March 7, 2012,

Matthew Lykken sent an email to the Kindsvaters stating,

[T]omorrow afternoon at close, unless we have beforehand reached an agreed settlement with the sellers, we will tender the purchase price, renew our objection to the defective title, claim an abatement of purchase price in the amount of $9,325, and object to the escrow agent's release of $9,325 of the purchase price to sellers on the grounds that sellers will not be tendering that which they are required to tender to the escrow agent in order to trigger the release of funds, i.e. good title and a warranty deed to the property inclusive of the mineral rights or, at least, warranty deed for the rights possessed by the sellers, including an assignment of their interest in the gas lease and financial compensation in the full amount of the bonus previously received. . . . If the escrow agent does not initiate legal action to determine the appropriate disposition of the funds in interpleader, we will promptly initiate action against the sellers to

2 No copy of the objection is in the record. However, the Kindsvaters do not dispute the Lykkens’ claim that they filed a formal objection.

3 obtain a judgment confirming our $9,325 abatement and to have those funds released back to us.

At closing on March 8, 2012, the Lykkens tendered the full purchase price,

but told the escrow agent to withhold $9,325 for the “presumed bonus payment”

under the gas lease. The escrow agent told the Lykkens that he could not do

that under Texas law. The Lykkens agreed to disburse the full purchase price

from the escrow account. They signed a printed copy of the above email from

March 7, 2012, and wrote,

For the reasons stated above, the undersigned purchasers formally object to the release of the purchase money funds to the extent of $9,325 plus estimated costs of determination due to the failure of sellers to tender full performance as required by the contract and demand that said funds be retained in escrow pending performance of satisfactory resolution of the dispute.

The Kindsvaters executed and delivered a general warranty deed and transferred

the gas lease.

In November 2012, the Lykkens sued the Kindsvaters for fraudulent

inducement, breach of warranties of seizen and right to convey, and in the

alternative, breach of warranty against encumbrances, “enforcement of

conveyance,” and breach of contract. The Lykkens filed their petition pro se but

requested that they be awarded attorneys’ fees.

In December 2012, the Kindsvaters filed an answer and special

exceptions. They then filed a motion for summary judgment on all of the

Lykkens’ claims against them, arguing that they conveyed all of their title to the

Lykkens via the deed and assignment. In January 2013, the Kindsvaters filed a

4 motion for a protective order against the Lykkens’ requests for admissions and

disclosures. They argued that the requests were numerous, overly burdensome,

and premature, and they requested that the trial court abate the response

deadline until after the hearing on their motion for summary judgment. The trial

court granted the motion and ordered that the deadline to respond to the

requests be extended until thirty days after the trial court’s order on the special

exceptions and motion for summary judgment.

The Lykkens filed a response to the special exceptions and to the motion

for summary judgment. They also filed a supplemental petition and an amended

response to the Kindsvaters’ special exceptions and motion for summary

judgment. They made no new claims and sought no new relief in their

supplemental petition, but they clarified that their “enforcement of conveyance”

claim “should be understood to encompass” a request for specific performance or

a claim for money had and received. They also noted that “Matthew Lykken has

been required to make substantial out-of-pocket expenditures for admission fees,

dues, and taxes in order to become a licensed Texas attorney for this

proceeding.” 3 In their amended response to the motion for summary judgment,

the Lykkens requested partial summary judgment be granted “determining that

[the Kindsvaters] are liable for breach of the warranties of seisen and right to

convey.”

3 Matthew Lykken entered an appearance for the Lykkens in January, 2013.

5 At the hearing on the Kindsvaters’ motions, the Kindsvaters elected to

“hold the special exceptions until after disposition of the motion for summary

judgment.” After the hearing, the trial court granted the Kindsvaters’ motion for

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Matthew Lykken and Suzanne Lykken v. Jon K. Kindsvater and Jan G. Kindsvater, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthew-lykken-and-suzanne-lykken-v-jon-k-kindsvat-texapp-2014.