Rebecca Schultz v. Scott Taylor and Kimberly Taylor

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 14, 2010
Docket10-08-00077-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Rebecca Schultz v. Scott Taylor and Kimberly Taylor (Rebecca Schultz v. Scott Taylor and Kimberly Taylor) 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
Rebecca Schultz v. Scott Taylor and Kimberly Taylor, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

No. 10-08-00077-CV

REBECCA SCHULTZ, Appellant v.

SCOTT TAYLOR AND KIMBERLY TAYLOR, Appellees

From the County Court at Law No. 1 McLennan County, Texas Trial Court No. 20070441 CV1

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Raising five issues, Rebecca Schultz appeals the trial court’s judgment in favor of

Scott and Kimberly Taylor (the Taylors) in their lawsuit to recover a “security deposit.”

We will affirm.

On February 22, 2005, Schultz and the Taylors signed an agreement entitled

“RESIDENTIAL LEASE,” a fourteen-page preprinted form with handwritten additions

and deletions. The agreement states that Schultz, “the owner of the Property,

Landlord,” leases to the Taylors, “Tenant(s),” the real property located at 10004 Polo Park Cir in McLennan County, Texas; that the primary term of the lease begins on

February 22, 2005 and ends on February 22, 2007; and that the monthly rent is $1,900.

The agreement includes a section entitled “SECURITY DEPOSIT.” It provides, “A.

Security Deposit: On or before execution of this lease, Tenant will pay a security

deposit to Landlord in the amount of $10,000. ‘Security deposit’ has the meaning

assigned to that term in § 92.102, Property Code.”1 However, “non-refundable” has

been written just below these two sentences. Nevertheless, the preprinted language

goes on to state, “C. Refund: Tenant must give Landlord at least thirty (30) days

written notice of surrender before Landlord is obligated to refund or account for the

security deposit.”

The agreement also includes a section entitled “SPECIAL PROVISIONS,” in

which the following is handwritten:

(1) This is an owner-finance property. Sold as-is for $199000.00. $10,000 down payment. $2000.00 at signing (2/22/2005) $8000.00 due in 90 days (5/22/2005), otherwise re-negotiated by seller & buyer by (8/22/2005) (2) Buyer will obtain own financing by March 07 for a sales price of 186425.00. If for some reason buyer cannot obtain own financing, we will renegociate [sic] owner financing at that time. Reguardless [sic] of how financing is settled, buyers are purchasing home.

In several sections of the agreement, the handwritten term “buyers” has also been

added to the agreement. For example, after the subsection addressing pool/spa

maintenance, the handwritten phrase “maintained by buyers” has been inserted.

1 The handwritten addition to the preprinted language of the agreement is italicized.

Schultz v. Taylor Page 2 Schultz testified as follows during the bench trial of the case: The agreement was

prepared by a friend of hers who is a realtor. She told her friend that she and the

Taylors were “doing a lease-to-own.” The Taylors were not able to obtain financing;

therefore, she told them that she would give them two years to resolve their credit

issues. She stated, “That way they will be able to get the financing at that time and be

able to make the purchase of the home.”

On the other hand, Schultz believed that at the time the Taylors signed the

agreement, they had purchased the property from her. She stated, “[T]hey could not

initially get the mortgage themselves, so they needed me to owner finance it for them

until they could clear up their credit” and obtain their own financing. She testified that

although the agreement provides that the Taylors were to pay $1,900 per month in rent

to her, the Taylors were actually making a mortgage payment to her, which was the

same amount as her own monthly mortgage payment on the property. Her realtor

friend added the word “non-refundable” in the “SECURITY DEPOSIT” section of the

agreement because Schultz was selling the property to the Taylors, and the $10,000 was

a non-refundable down payment.

Schultz received the $10,000 down payment from the Taylors over the course of

about six months. She received $2,000 when the agreement was signed, and although

she did not receive all of the remaining $8,000 by May 22, 2005, as stated in the

agreement, Schultz and the Taylors signed an addendum to the agreement, allowing for

the remaining balance to be fully paid by October 15, 2005. The addendum states:

Schultz v. Taylor Page 3 The balance of $3200.00 for the initial $10000.00 down payment was not paid as was stated in the contract.

Rebecca Schultz, has agreed to accept $1500.00 on August 31, 2005, with the condition that the remaining balance of $1700.00 is paid by October 15th. (Giving the Taylors an extra month and a half).

If the $1700.00 is not paid by this date, the Taylors, are aware that no further extensions will be given , [sic] they will become month to month tenants, and have agreed to move out by the end of October.

The final payment was received by Schultz on October 16, 2005, and she accepted it.

Schultz subsequently received the $1,900 monthly payments from the Taylors

through August 2006; however, at the beginning of that month, the Taylors advised her

that they were not making any more payments because they could no longer afford it

and were moving out. Schultz stated that the Taylors asked for their down payment

back but that she told them she “wasn’t going to be able to do that.” She never sent any

letter to the Taylors referencing a security deposit.

Schultz testified that, on September 15, 2006, her lawyer then sent the Taylors a

“Notice to Cure Default” because Schultz had not received the $1,900 payment for

September. The notice states that it is regarding the “RESIDENTIAL LEASE WITH

PURCHASE OPTION.” A second notice entitled “Notice of Cancellation of Contract for

Deed” was then sent to the Taylors on October 15, 2006. Again, the notice states that it

is regarding the “Residential Lease with Purchase Option”; however, the substantive

language of the notice states:

You failed to cure the defaults set out in Seller’s notice of default mailed September 15, 2006, within the permitted cure period.

Schultz v. Taylor Page 4 The Contract for Deed is now canceled, and your interest under the contract and in the Property is now forfeited. Seller will retain all money previously paid under the contract as liquidated damages, as provided in the contract. Seller gives notice that you must vacate within three (3) days, if you are still in possession of the Property.

Schultz received something from the Taylors two or three months after they had

left, but she does not “remember what the particulars were.” At the end of September

2006, new tenants moved into the house located on the property, and their lease began

on October 1. The new tenants were month-to-month tenants and lived there

approximately three months. Schultz had no more tenants after they left, and the

property eventually went into foreclosure.

Kimberly Taylor testified that the agreement that she signed was a lease with an

option to buy. She paid the $10,000 security deposit through several payments, ending

on October 16, 2005. Although she and her husband referred to the payments on their

checks as applying toward the down payment on the house, the $10,000 was just a

deposit. If they decided to purchase the house, then the money would serve as a down

payment; however, before the purchase, the money was just a deposit.

Taylor and her husband started trying to obtain financing in July 2006. They

qualified for a loan, and the mortgage payment would have been less than what they

had been paying in rent; therefore, they began talking to Schultz because they were

ready to buy the house.

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