Paula A. Mott v. Cathy Helm, by and Through Her Independent Co-Executors, Carrie Hard and Amy Hard Bergh

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 23, 2025
Docket01-24-00105-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Paula A. Mott v. Cathy Helm, by and Through Her Independent Co-Executors, Carrie Hard and Amy Hard Bergh (Paula A. Mott v. Cathy Helm, by and Through Her Independent Co-Executors, Carrie Hard and Amy Hard Bergh) 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
Paula A. Mott v. Cathy Helm, by and Through Her Independent Co-Executors, Carrie Hard and Amy Hard Bergh, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Opinion issued December 23, 2025

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-24-00105-CV ——————————— PAULA A. MOTT, Appellant V. CATHY HELM, BY AND THROUGH HER INDEPENDENT CO- EXECUTORS, CARRIE HARD AND AMY BERGH, Appellee

On Appeal from County Civil Court at Law No. 2 Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1184246

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This appeal arises out of a judgment on a jury verdict for the

plaintiffs-appellees in a suit for money had and received. Late in life, not too long

before her death, Cathy Helm wrote a dozen checks totaling nearly $100,000 to her

neighbor, Paula A. Mott. Helm’s daughters, Carrie Hard and Amy Bergh, sued Mott on their mother’s behalf (and later on behalf of her estate after she passed), alleging

that Mott obtained this money by taking advantage of an elderly woman with

reduced cognitive abilities. The jury that heard the case agreed with Helm’s

daughters, awarding compensatory and exemplary damages. The trial court rendered

judgment on the jury’s verdict.

Mott appeals, representing herself without the assistance of a lawyer.1 In

several issues, she asserts that we must reverse the trial court’s judgment. Among

other complaints, Mott argues that Hard and Bergh lack the standing or capacity to

assert a claim for money had and received under the circumstances of this case. She

also raises complaints about the jury charge, factual sufficiency of the evidence,

remarks made by opposing counsel in front of the jury, exclusion of her trial exhibits,

and the denial of or refusal to hear her motions, including one for a new trial.

On the record before us, we reject Mott’s standing and capacity arguments as

well as her other appellate complaints. Thus, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

1 Mott was represented below by counsel for a time. But with Mott’s consent, the trial court allowed her counsel to withdraw from the representation two months before trial due to her nonpayment of attorney’s fees. Mott represented herself at trial and continues to do so on appeal. Consistent with our supreme court’s precedent, we hold her to the same rules as all other litigants but construe her appellate brief with liberality and patience. See Goldstein v. Sabatino, 690 S.W.3d 287, 295 (Tex. 2024). 2 BACKGROUND

During the last year and a half or so of her life, Helm wrote twelve checks to

Mott for $94,500 in total. Helm’s daughters, Hard and Bergh, sued on their mother’s

behalf (initially as her agents acting under a power of attorney and later as the co-

executors of their mother’s estate after she passed away), contesting the validity of

these transfers. They alleged Mott took advantage of Helm, who was elderly and

whose mental health was deteriorating. In their live pleading at trial, they asserted

causes of action against Mott for money had and received, conversion, and theft.

Mott denied any wrongdoing. She claimed that Helm wrote eleven of the

twelve checks to her as gifts, owing to the close friendship they developed as

neighbors. Mott said the remaining check, which was for $10,000, was a loan.

The case was tried to a jury. Of the three causes of action pleaded, the court

submitted only money had and received for the jury’s consideration. The jury found

for Helm’s estate on this cause of action, awarding it $94,000 in compensatory

damages ($94,500 minus $500 that Mott paid back to Helm before Helm passed

away). In addition, the jury found by clear and convincing evidence that Mott acted

with malice, engaged in fraud, or was grossly negligent. Based on this additional

finding, the jury awarded another $75,000 to Helm’s estate in exemplary damages.

The trial court rendered judgment in accordance with the jury’s verdict.

3 DISCUSSION

I. Helm had, and her estate presently has, standing to sue for money had and received, and Mott waived any complaint about capacity.

Mott asserts that Helm’s daughters lack standing or capacity to bring this suit.

As an initial matter, she argues the money she received from Helm originated from

a trust, and that, under the trust, when Helm passed away the trust dissolved and all

trust property went to designated beneficiaries who are not Helm’s daughters. Mott

says these circumstances deprive Helm’s daughters of the authority to recover this

money.

Assuming for argument’s sake that Mott’s description of the trust’s terms is

accurate (the trust document is not in the record), her position nonetheless lacks

merit. The record shows the money at issue was transferred to Mott by checks written

on Helm’s bank accounts, not from the trust. Whether the money in Helm’s accounts

originally came from the trust is immaterial. Once this money was distributed from

the trust to Helm, it ceased to be trust property and became her personal property.

See TEX. PROP. CODE § 111.004(17) (trust property is property placed in trust or

otherwise transferred to, acquired by, or retained by trustee for trust); Casillas v.

Cano, 79 S.W.3d 587, 589 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburgh 2002, no pet.)

(citing statute for proposition that trust property is “property contained in the trust”).

Thus, this money was not trust property and was not subject to the trust’s terms.

4 Beyond this, the gravamen of this suit is that Mott obtained money from Helm

through chicanery of one sort or another and that fairness thus requires the money to

be returned to Helm (later her estate after she passed). A conventional claim for loss

of money like this involves the kind of concrete injury sufficient to confer standing

on a plaintiff, like Helm, who sues for money had and received. See Mosaic

Baybrook One, L.P. v. Simien, 674 S.W.3d 234, 251 (Tex. 2023).

Moreover, whether Helm’s daughters are entitled to any of the money at issue

does not impact standing. They first sued Mott on behalf of Helm as her agents under

a power of attorney and then as the personal representatives of Helm’s estate. Here,

Helm and her estate are the proper focus of any inquiry into standing. See In re

Bridgestone Americas Tire Operations, LLC, 459 S.W.3d 565, 573 (Tex. 2015) (in

suit by next friend, real party plaintiff is party on behalf of whom suit is brought, not

next friend); Austin Nursing Ctr., Inc. v. Lovato, 171 S.W.3d 845, 849–50 (Tex.

2005) (survival action belongs to decedent, and her estate has justiciable interest that

confers standing).

Any complaint about the daughters’ authority to sue on Helm’s behalf under

the power of attorney or as personal representatives of Helm’s estate concerns

capacity, not standing. See Austin Nursing Ctr., 171 S.W.3d at 849–50 (authority to

represent decedent’s estate is question of capacity); Rodarte v. Investeco Grp.,

L.L.C., 299 S.W.3d 400, 406 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2009, no pet.)

5 (authority under power of attorney is question of capacity); see also Intracare Hosp.

N. v. Campbell, 222 S.W.3d 790, 795 (Tex.

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