Michael Combs and Michael Combs Properties, LLC v. Diane Crepeau and Lari Reninger

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 7, 2024
Docket05-23-00088-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Michael Combs and Michael Combs Properties, LLC v. Diane Crepeau and Lari Reninger (Michael Combs and Michael Combs Properties, LLC v. Diane Crepeau and Lari Reninger) 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
Michael Combs and Michael Combs Properties, LLC v. Diane Crepeau and Lari Reninger, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Affirmed in Part, Reversed and Rendered in Part, Remanded in Part, and Opinion Filed October 7, 2024

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-23-00088-CV

MICHAEL COMBS AND MICHAEL COMBS PROPERTIES, LLC, Appellants V. DIANE CREPEAU AND LARI RENINGER, Appellees

On Appeal from the 68th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-19-03038

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Partida-Kipness, Pedersen, III, and Carlyle Opinion by Justice Partida-Kipness Appellants Michael Combs (Michael) and Michael Combs Properties, LLC

(the LLC) appeal the trial court’s June 21, 2021 order granting partial summary

judgment and the trial court’s October 28, 2022 Modified Final Judgment, both of

which were in favor of appellees Diane Crepeau (Diane) and Lari Reninger (Lari).

Because we conclude there was legally insufficient evidence to support the damages

awarded to Diane and Lari, we reverse and render judgment that Diane and Lari take

nothing on their claims against Michael and the LLC for breach of fiduciary duty and fraud and render judgment for Michael on his counterclaim for breach of

fiduciary duty in accordance with the jury’s verdict. We remand the case to the trial

court for the limited purposes of calculating pre- and post-judgment interest as

allowed by law on the award of actual damages to Michael and for entry of judgment

consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

Betty and Ken Combs had four children; Lisa Bowen, appellant Michael

Combs, and appellees Diane Crepeau and Lari Reninger. Following Betty’s death,

Diane and Lari sued Michael for breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, and fraud by non-

disclosure in relation to his management of Betty’s finances before her death.

Michael filed a counterclaim for breach of fiduciary duty against Diane.

I. The Plan

In the mid-1990s, as Betty and Ken1 began dealing with medical issues and

approached retirement age, the family started discussing how to meet the medical

and living expenses of Betty and Ken in their later years. Through meetings with

their parents, attorneys, and financial planners, Michael and Diane developed “the

Plan” to prepare for and address the future financial needs of Betty and Ken. The

Plan had two overarching goals: maximize Betty’s retirement funds before

retirement and divest Betty and Ken of the bulk of their assets so they would qualify

for Medicaid to cover future medical expenses. Diane and Michael agree they

1 Ken did not work steadily after 1992 and retired in 1995 or 1996. Ken died in October 2016. –2– implemented the Plan with Betty’s help and oversight before and after her retirement

in 2006.

A. Maximize Betty’s retirement funds

The first goal was to maximize Betty’s retirement funds. Betty worked for the

City of Irving as an administrative assistant for more than twenty years. She retired

on May 31, 2006, at the age of 72. Betty’s employer-backed retirement plan was the

Texas Municipal Retirement System (TMRS). For every $1.00 Betty put into her

TMRS account, her employer would give her $2.00. Because of the generous 2-to-1

match, Michael and Diane encouraged Betty to put as much money as possible into

TMRS before retirement. Betty’s TMRS plan provided for monthly payments to

Betty beginning thirty days after her retirement date until her death and for a 75%

survivor benefit following her death. The survivor benefit provided for monthly

payments to the retirement beneficiary for the beneficiary’s lifetime.

According to Diane, she, Michael, and their parents discussed using the

TMRS survivor benefits to repay anyone who was left with out-of-pocket expenses

for their parents’ medical care after their parents’ deaths. However, Diane does not

dispute she, Michael, Betty, and Ken agreed to remove Ken as the beneficiary on the

TMRS account and designate Michael as the beneficiary. Diane testified they chose

Michael to be the beneficiary because, as the youngest sibling, he would “have the

most opportunity to get the most payments back, so that was planned, too, and – part

of the plan.” Diane took her parents to complete the paperwork in which Ken

–3– disclaimed his interest in Betty’s TMRS retirement funds, and Betty designated

Michael as the beneficiary of the lifetime retirement benefits upon her death. Betty

later designated Michael as the sole beneficiary for the $7,500 supplemental death

benefit (SDB). Michael testified he had nothing to do with Betty’s designation of

him as her sole beneficiary for SDB and that “was all Mom’s choice at her

retirement, all prior, I guess.”

Betty retired on May 31, 2006 and began receiving monthly TMRS payments

on June 30, 2006. Michael received no payments under TMRS before Betty’s death.

Following her death on April 10, 2018, TMRS began paying Michael $1,001.63 per

month in survivor benefits. Michael also received the $7,500 SDB.

B. Divest Betty and Ken’s assets to remain Medicaid-eligible

The Plan’s second goal was for Betty and Ken to divest the bulk of their assets

so they could remain qualified for Medicaid should they require it. According to

Michael, when the asset planning started in 2006, they wanted “to get the money out

of Mom’s name as quickly as possible.” Based on advisor recommendations,

Michael formed the LLC to be the recipient of funds from Betty.

One of the first actions Betty took after her retirement was to transfer their

house and accompanying land (the Property) to the LLC by Special Warranty Deed

on July 1, 2006. After transferring the house to the LLC, Betty and Ken continued

to live there and paid rent to Michael through the LLC. Michael testified the lawyers

and financial planners told the family they should get the house out of his parents’

–4– names because the house was their biggest asset. However, they advised against

putting the house into a trust, and transferring title directly to Michael while Betty

and Ken were alive was not a good option because doing so would have had severe

tax consequences. Given those options, the family was advised to have Michael “pay

for the house, and then have Mom’s rental income offset the taxes and expenses of

the house.”

Michael told the jury the home purchase was done as “an owner finance” for

$100,000 at five percent interest for five years. Every month thereafter, Betty paid

the LLC rent, and the LLC paid Betty on the $100,000 owner-financed loan. Betty’s

rent began at $500 per month but increased twice between 2006 and her death in

2018. At the time of her death, rent was $1,200 per month. Michael testified Betty

agreed to the rent increases and doing so was part of the Plan: “the whole purpose

of her paying rent is so that we can keep their income low for Medicaid.” For

example, Betty and Ken had already paid off their mortgage when they transferred

the Property to the LLC. The rent paid by Betty and Ken to the LLC after the transfer

was then used by Michael through the LLC to offset the annual real estate taxes on

the Property. Between 2006 and her death, Betty paid $88,600 in rent to the LLC.

The evidence also shows the LLC paid Betty $1,887.12 each month for fifty-nine

months and $1,887.13 per month for two months on the owner–financed loan, for a

total of $115,114.34.

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Michael Combs and Michael Combs Properties, LLC v. Diane Crepeau and Lari Reninger, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-combs-and-michael-combs-properties-llc-v-diane-crepeau-and-lari-texapp-2024.