Noble Mortgage & Investments, LLC v. D & M Vision Investments, LLC

340 S.W.3d 65, 2011 WL 940756
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 17, 2011
Docket01-09-00987-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 340 S.W.3d 65 (Noble Mortgage & Investments, LLC v. D & M Vision Investments, LLC) 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
Noble Mortgage & Investments, LLC v. D & M Vision Investments, LLC, 340 S.W.3d 65, 2011 WL 940756 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

*68 OPINION

SHERRY RADACK, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal following a bench trial from a judgment adjudicating title and encumbrances to real property. We reverse the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

This dispute involves property located at 1923 Blodgett in Houston. (“Blodgett Property”). Danny Whitfield (“Whitfield”) purchased the Blodgett Property at an execution sale held to satisfy a county court judgment against the then owner, Kenneth Banks (“Banks”). Plaintiff D & M Vision Investment (“D & M”), a company owned by Whitfield and an assignee of title to the Blodgett Property, filed a trespass to try title action against Noble Mortgage (“Noble”), another party claiming later-acquired title to the same property. Noble counterclaimed against D & M and filed cross-claims against Whitfield and his wife, seeking title to the property or, alternatively, a subrogation lien. Because the timing of various transactions and filings are germane to this appeal, we first set forth several relevant transactions and their dates.

In March 2005, Houston Kaco, Inc. — a company owed by Banks — purchased the Blodgett Property. The purchase was financed by a mortgage from Statewide Capital Investments (“Statewide”) and secured by a deed of trust properly recorded in the real property records in favor of Statewide. This mortgage and deed of trust were later transferred from Statewide to International Bank of Commerce (“IBC”), which recorded the assignment in the real property records.

On March 23, 2006, Houston Kaco transferred title to the Blodgett Property to Banks personally. In October 2007, Banks sought refinancing of a portion of the Statewide/IBC mortgage debt and applied for a mortgage loan with Noble. As part of this refinancing transaction, Banks conveyed the Blodgett Property back to Houston Kaco on October 9, 2007. On the same date, Noble loaned $172,250.00 to Houston Kaco, secured by a deed of trust on the property. The Noble mortgage deed of trust was recorded in the real property records of Harris County on November 2, 2007.

Out of the new loan proceeds supplied by Noble, three pre-existing liens were paid off and released: (1) $130,000.00 towards balance due to IBC (as assignee of Statewide’s lien recorded in the real property records on May 3, 2005), (2) $2,545.40 for balance due on a judgment in favor of Unovate Inc. evidenced by an abstract of judgment recorded in the real property records on October 5, 2004, and (3) $9,982.39 to satisfy unpaid property taxes, secured by superior tax liens.

Unbeknownst to Noble, on October 30, 2006, Financial Holdings, Inc. had obtained a default judgment against Banks in the County Civil Court at Law No. 2 of Harris County, Texas. Financial Holdings did not file an abstract of that judgment in the real property records. It did, however, obtain an execution and order of sale on July 5, 2007, which resulted in a constable’s sale of the property on September 4, 2007. The high bidder of $18,000.00 was Whitfield. The sale was documented in the litigation records of Case No. 866,463 in the County Civil Court at Law No. 2 by the constable’s filing of a “return of execution” on September 11, 2007. On November 14, 2007, the constable prepared a deed transferring the Blodgett Property to Whitfield, which Whitfield recorded in the real property records on December 31, 2007. That December 31, 2007 filing was the first time any reference to the Financial Holdings Judgment, lien, or sale to *69 Whitfield appeared in the real property records, and it was after Noble’s interest was recorded in the real property records. On January 14, 2008, the Whitfields transferred title of the Blodgett Property to their company D & M.

After filing D & M’s deed in the real property records, Whitfield posted “No Trespassing” signs at the Blodgett Property. Around the same time, Noble foreclosed on Houston Kaco’s note secured by the Blodgett Property. Upon finding Whitfield’s signs on the property, Noble’s owner, Darrell Daik, called Whitfield and, for the first time, the parties discovered that they had competing claims to title of the Blodgett Property.

THE TRIAL COURT PROCEEDINGS

D & M filed a trespass to try title suit against Noble, requesting that D & M be declared the fee simple owner of the property. Noble asserted, as an affirmative defense, that it was a bona fide mortgagee and/or bona fide purchaser of the Blodgett Property and, as such, its interest was taken free and clear of D & M’s unrecorded claims.

Noble also asserted a counterclaim against D & M and asserted third-party cross-claims against Whitfield and his wife, requesting the court quiet title to the property by extinguishing the deeds transferring the Blodgett Property to Whitfield and D & M. Alternatively, if title remained vested in D & M, Noble requested that the court grant it a $142,527.79 subro-gation lien, to reimburse Noble the liens it satisfied when it refinanced the Blodgett Property, i.e., $130,000 to IBC, $9,982.39 to taxing authorities, and $2,545.40 to extinguish the Unovate Judgment lien. In answering these claims, D & M argued that Noble knew, or should have known, of its and Whitfield’s ownership of the Blodgett Property because the underlying judgment, though unrecorded in the real property records, nonetheless was of public record in the Harris County Civil Court civil court records. D & M further denied that Noble is subrogated to any prior liens.

The case was tried to the bench with Whitfield, Daik, and Banks testifying.

A. Whitfield’s testimony

Whitfield testified that he first located the Blodgett Property on a constable office’s list of properties to be auctioned. Before bidding on the property, Whitfield did not commission a professional title search, but he did research himself to determine what hens might burden the property by looking at (1) the real property records, (2) tax records, and (3) the County Court at Law No. 2 docket of the Financial Holdings lawsuit giving rise to the constable’s foreclosure sale. The only hen he located in the real property records was the abstract of the Unovate Judgment, although he stipulated at trial that Statewide’s mortgage hen was properly filed and of record at the time he bought the property putting him on notice of that hen. The tax records, according to his research, revealed taxes to be “fairly current.” Finally, he testified that, while there was no abstract or other reference to the Financial Holdings Judgment in the real property records, he believed that “by giving Financial Holdings the right to foreclose on Kenneth Banks’ property at 1923 Blod-gett,” the county court at law “had already decided that Banks was the owner of the property.” Whitfield knew at the time of the foreclosure sale that he would be responsible for satisfying any outstanding hens if he bought the Blodgett Property, and he testified that he was unsure whether he would have bid on the property had he known about the approximately $196,000 deed of trust to Statewide Mortgage.

*70

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
340 S.W.3d 65, 2011 WL 940756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noble-mortgage-investments-llc-v-d-m-vision-investments-llc-texapp-2011.