Nine Syllables, LLC v. Gary C. Evans

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 30, 2015
Docket05-13-01677-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Nine Syllables, LLC v. Gary C. Evans (Nine Syllables, LLC v. Gary C. Evans) 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
Nine Syllables, LLC v. Gary C. Evans, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion Filed June 26, 2015.

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-13-01677-CV

NINE SYLLABLES, LLC, Appellant V. GARY C. EVANS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 14th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC12-10225-A

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Francis, Lang, and Stoddart Opinion by Justice Stoddart

This is an appeal from a take nothing and declaratory judgment rendered by the trial court

following a bench trial. The trial court ordered that Nine Syllables, LLC (Nine) take nothing on

its counterclaim against Gary C. Evans and declared the promissory note and deed of trust

securing it, the subject of Nine’s counterclaim, were uncollectable and unenforceable by Nine.

The dispute arises out of a revolving line of credit note (Note) signed by Gary and his

former wife, Jacque E. Evans.1 The Note was secured by property (Property) owned by Gary

and Jacque and later used for their home. Claiming the Property was her homestead, Jacque later

enjoined the lender’s attempts to foreclose on the Property when the Note went into default

1 Jacque E. Evans married Guy Gilliland after her divorce from Gary. We use their first names to avoid confusion. during the divorce proceedings.

After Jacque and Gary divorced, Nine, a company formed by Jacque and her new

husband, acquired the Note and deed of trust and demanded payment from Gary. Gary then filed

this suit seeking a declaratory judgment that the Note and deed of trust were unenforceable

against him because Nine was bound by judicial estoppel from asserting the Note and lien were

valid. The judicial estoppel was based on Jacque’s repeated sworn testimony that the property

securing the Note was her homestead and her attorneys’ argument that the Note and lien were

unenforceable under the forfeiture provisions of the home equity loan amendment to the Texas

Constitution.

Nine raises four issues on appeal, arguing: (1) the Property was not homestead when

Jacque and Gary purchased it in 2001 or when they refinanced it in 2002; (2) the Note is not

subject to forfeiture under the home equity loan provision of the constitution; (3) Jacque did not

contend in prior litigation that the Note was subject to forfeiture and did not make a sworn

statement that would give rise to judicial estoppel; and (4) Nine is not bound by Jacque’s

statements in the prior suit.

We conclude the trial court correctly found that Nine is in privity with Jacque and

judicially estopped from asserting the Note is enforceable in light of Jacque’s sworn testimony

that the property was her homestead and her successful position in prior litigation that the Note

and lien were unenforceable. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

In 2002, during their marriage, Jacque and Gary signed the Note, which was payable to

Compass Bank. The Note was secured by a deed of trust on property in Denton County they

bought two years earlier. The deed of trust contained a disclaimer that the Property was the

homestead of the borrowers. Although they lived in another house at the time, Gary and Jacque

–2– bought the Property intending to build their home there. According to Gary’s testimony, the

entire balance of the Note, $2,090,000, was drawn and used to pay the previous loan secured by

the Property. At the time the Note was signed, they had begun constructing improvements on the

Property, including a large stone fence, but did not move in until 2007 when the main house2 was

substantially complete.

Later in 2007, Jacque filed for divorce in Denton County and Gary moved out of the

house on the Property. In 2009, while the divorce case was pending, Compass claimed the Note

was in default and posted the Property for a foreclosure sale in September 2009. Jacque joined

Compass as a party to the divorce case and sought an injunction to stop the foreclosure.3 In an

unsworn petition,4 Jacque alleged the Property was her homestead and she would suffer

irreparable harm if Compass were allowed to foreclose. Jacque obtained an agreed temporary

restraining order to stop the September posting. She later obtained another agreed temporary

restraining order to stop an October 2009 posting.

Before the temporary injunction hearing, Jacque filed a supplemental petition alleging the

Property was her homestead and the Note and lien were unenforceable under the home equity

amendment to the constitution.5 At that time, the home equity amendment did not permit a home

equity lien against the homestead in the form of a revolving line of credit. Jacque alleged the

Note and lien were an impermissible lien against her homestead and “the penalty for an illegal

2 Jacque testified at the temporary injunction hearing that the main residence was about 20,000 square feet and they spent approximately $18 million on improvements to the Property. 3 The lawsuit against Compass was later severed into a separate action, which we refer to as the Compass Lawsuit. 4 Although the injunction was sought against Compass, a third party, the parties apparently proceeded as if the temporary restraining orders and temporary injunction were injunctions entered under Subchapter F of Chapter 6 of the family code and sworn pleadings were not required. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 6.503; contra TEX. R. CIV. P. 682 (no writ of injunction shall be granted without petition verified by affidavit). See TEX. R. CIV. P. 680, 682 (no writ of injunction shall be granted unless the applicant presents his petition to the judge verified by his affidavit). 5 TEX. CONST. art. XVI, § 50(a)(6) (2003). Unless otherwise noted, all references herein are to the version of the home equity amendment as it existed at the time the Note and deed of trust were signed.

–3– and invalid home equity lien at the time of the inception of the [Note] and Compass Bank lien is

for forfeiture of all principal and interest due under the loan agreement.” Jacque requested a

declaratory judgment that the Note and lien were void because the Property was her homestead

before the inception of the loan.

At the temporary injunction hearing, Jacque testified that the Property was her family’s

homestead before they moved to the Property in 2007 and she never abandoned the homestead.

Based on the testimony and arguments of counsel, the Denton County trial court granted a

temporary injunction in December 2009 enjoining Compass from foreclosing on the Property.6

Compass then filed a suit in Dallas County against Jacque and Gary to collect the Note.

This suit was transferred to Denton County and consolidated with the Compass Lawsuit.

Afterwards, Compass filed a motion for summary judgment seeking to dissolve the temporary

injunction and allow foreclosure on the Property. Compass asserted the Property was not

Jacque’s homestead when the Note and lien were executed. In response, Jacque filed her

affidavit stating that from the time Gary began designing the home on the Property, “we both

fully intended it to be our permanent homestead. This was true when we broke ground on our

homestead, when construction began, and when we entered into the loans with Compass Bank

which are the subject of this suit and motion.” Jacque also stated she never intended to waive

her homestead rights in the Property and did not know about the disclaimer of homestead in the

deed of trust securing the Note. She said she would not have signed the deed of trust had she

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