Pine Forest Investments Group, LLC v. the County of Bastrop, Texas The Bastrop Independent School District And the City of Bastrop, Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 22, 2018
Docket03-16-00789-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Pine Forest Investments Group, LLC v. the County of Bastrop, Texas The Bastrop Independent School District And the City of Bastrop, Texas (Pine Forest Investments Group, LLC v. the County of Bastrop, Texas The Bastrop Independent School District And the City of Bastrop, Texas) 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.

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Pine Forest Investments Group, LLC v. the County of Bastrop, Texas The Bastrop Independent School District And the City of Bastrop, Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-16-00789-CV

Pine Forest Investments Group, LLC, Appellant

v.

The County of Bastrop, Texas; The Bastrop Independent School District; and the City of Bastrop, Texas, Appellees

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BASTROP COUNTY, 21ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 052-21, HONORABLE CARSON TALMADGE CAMPBELL, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Pine Forest Investments Group, LLC (“the Developer”) complains of the

trial court’s final judgment in favor of appellees Bastrop County, Bastrop Independent School

District, and the City of Bastrop (collectively, “the Bastrop Entities”). The dispute arises out of a

2012 real estate contract under which the Developer sought to purchase 262 lots in the Pine Forest

Subdivision. As explained below, we affirm the trial court’s judgment in part and reverse and

remand in part for proceedings related to the Developer’s claims pursuant to the Texas Open

Meetings Act (“TOMA”). See Tex. Gov’t Code §§ 551.001-.146.

Factual and Procedural Summary

This case is grounded in a long, contentious, and complicated background. The

factual summary below is taken from the pleadings and attached evidence and the testimony and

exhibits produced at the various hearings before the trial court. The Pine Forest Property Owners Association (“the Association”) is a non-profit corporation formed in 1978 to govern the subdivision,

which consists of multiple “units” of lots—Unit 6, which is where the 262 lots in question are

located, and Units 7 through 12. The articles of incorporation state that a voting member in the

Association is a person or entity “who is the owner of a fee interest or of the equitable title in any

lot” in the subdivision and that ownership is deemed to have vested “upon delivery of a duly

executed deed or contract” to the buyer. The original Unit 6 Declaration of Covenants, Conditions,

and Restrictions (CCRs), executed in 1979, define owner as “(i) the record owner . . . of the fee

simple title and (ii) any lot purchaser who is purchasing his or her or its lots under an agreement for

deed,” and provide that “[e]ach Owner shall automatically be a member of the Association with a

right to one vote for each whole Lot or Reserve owned.” The CCRs could only be amended by a

vote of at least one-third of the owners. Units 7 through 12 are governed by their own CCRs, but

those documents do not appear to have been introduced into evidence. The Association is operated

by a board of directors, and the two sets of CCRs govern how board members are elected.

This dispute arises out of a 2012 real estate contract (“the Contract”) under which the

Developer agreed to buy a total of 262 lots in Unit 6 from the Bastrop Entities and the Association.1

The Bastrop Entities had acquired ownership of the lots largely through foreclosure. The Developer,

acting through its managing partner, Robert Leffingwell, agreed to pay $2,000 per lot and to provide

infrastructure for Unit 6. The Contract imposed two “conditions precedent”—the first required that

a “final construction Development Agreement” be approved by the City before the closing date and

1 The Bastrop County Water Control and Improvement District and the Bastrop County Emergency Services District No. 2 were also sellers under the contract but are not part of this appeal.

2 the second required that the Association execute the contract within 180 days of the date the first

party signed it. The Contract also provided that the sellers would provide the Developer with a

commitment for title insurance within forty-five days of the date the title company was given a copy

of the Contract; that the Developer could object in writing to any defects, exceptions, or

encumbrances to title disclosed in the commitment within thirty days or before closing, whichever

was earlier; and that the selling entities “shall cure the timely objections of [the Developer] or any

third party lender within 181 days after [the selling entities] receive[] the objections and the Closing

Date will be extended as necessary. If objections are not cured within such 181 day period, this

contract will terminate and the earnest money will be refunded to [the Developer] unless [the

Developer] waives the objections.” The Contract stated that closing “shall be held” on or before

180 days after the Developer receives the title commitment, subject to possible extension related to

objections to the title commitment. The first of the Bastrop Entities executed the contract on

February 21, 2012, and Leffingwell signed it on behalf of the Developer on October 15, 2012.

A title company soon sent the Developer a title commitment containing numerous

“exceptions to title,” largely due to the fact that the properties were acquired by the Bastrop Entities

through foreclosure. Leffingwell testified that the Developer objected to those exceptions and never

waived those objections. Although Leffingwell seems to have sought a title commitment elsewhere,

the Bastrop Entities never cured the Developer’s objections.

Following execution of the Contract, on September 14, 2012, the City and the

Developer signed a Development Agreement (“the Agreement”) setting out the Developer’s duties

with regard to the infrastructure it was to provide to the subdivision. The Agreement provided that

3 the Developer would submit to the City a Master Drainage Plan within ninety days and specified that

Developer’s failure to do so “shall result in an automatic and full termination of the Agreement”

unless the City specifically agreed in writing to an extension of time. The Agreement would “only

become fully and finally effective” when the City’s engineer reviewed and accepted the Master

Drainage Plan, and the City had the right to terminate the Agreement in the event of the Developer’s

“uncured material default,” breach, or failure “to meet any stipulated time frames for deliverables

or other performance requirement . . . after written notice and reasonable time to cure.” The

Developer provided a “Master Drainage Study” on December 12, 2012, and on January 3, 2013, the

City asked the Developer to provide additional information and verify certain items. The City

reminded the Developer that its “review cannot be completed until the comments of this letter have

been addressed” and that the drainage study was required under the Agreement and was “the first

step prior to submitting construction/development plans.” The Developer did not provide the

requested information or an updated drainage plan, and the parties never closed on any of the lots.

On June 4, 2013, the City wrote a letter informing Bastrop ISD that the city council

had determined that the Developer “has failed to timely submit . . . a complete, sealed Master

Drainage Plan” or request an extension of time for that plan and that “this failure has resulted in an

automatic and full termination of the Agreement.” On June 5, 2013, the City sent the Developer a

letter stating that the Agreement was “now automatically and fully terminated” because the

Developer had not responded to the City’s notice of deficiencies in the drainage plan or asked for

an extension of time. The City reminded the Developer of its contractual duty to submit a “complete

Master Drainage Plan” and stated that the deficiencies noted by the City Engineer had to be

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