Richard Glassman and Lucy Glassman v. Sylvia Pena, DeWetter Hovious, Inc., Charles DeWetter, Individually and as a Licensed Real Estate Broker and Sponsor of Sylvia Pena

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 18, 2003
Docket08-02-00541-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Richard Glassman and Lucy Glassman v. Sylvia Pena, DeWetter Hovious, Inc., Charles DeWetter, Individually and as a Licensed Real Estate Broker and Sponsor of Sylvia Pena (Richard Glassman and Lucy Glassman v. Sylvia Pena, DeWetter Hovious, Inc., Charles DeWetter, Individually and as a Licensed Real Estate Broker and Sponsor of Sylvia Pena) 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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Richard Glassman and Lucy Glassman v. Sylvia Pena, DeWetter Hovious, Inc., Charles DeWetter, Individually and as a Licensed Real Estate Broker and Sponsor of Sylvia Pena, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS

RICHARD GLASSMAN AND LUCY GLASSMAN,

                            Appellants,

v.

SYLVIA PENA, DEWETTER HOVIOUS, INC., AND CHARLES DEWETTER, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS A LICENSED REAL ESTATE BROKER AND SPONSOR OF SYLVIA PENA,

                            Appellees.

'

No. 08-02-00541-CV

Appeal from the

County Court at Law No. 7

of El Paso County, Texas

(TC#2001-3260)

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Richard and Lucy Glassman sued Sylvia Pena, DeWetter Hovious, Inc., and Charles DeWetter (the appellees) for damages arising from the purchase of a home.  The Glassmans purchased the home from Cendant Mobility Financial Corporation.  Pena, a realtor with DeWetter Hovious, listed the home for sale.  Charles DeWetter is a broker with DeWetter Hovious and Pena=s supervisor.  The trial court granted the appellees= motion for summary judgment, and the Glassmans appeal.  We affirm.


The Glassmans= Petition

The Glassmans alleged that the appellees misrepresented the size of the home.   They asserted claims for violation of the Deceptive Trade Practices Act (DTPA); common-law fraud; statutory real estate fraud; negligent misrepresentation; negligent hiring, supervision, and/or management; and breach of contract.

The Summary Judgment Evidence

According to an affidavit by Richard Glassman, Pena told him and his wife that the home was Aabout 5,500 square feet and that it was over 5,000 square feet on a number of occasions.@  Glassman also averred, AWe would not have negotiated or purchased the house if we thought it was less than 5,000 square feet and we believed that it was over 5,500 square feet because Sylvia Pena told us that it was.@

In her deposition, Pena admitted that she told Richard Glassman that the home was over 5,000 square feet A[m]aybe a couple of times.@  Pena also stated that she knew that the size of the home was very important to Richard Glassman.  According to Pena, Ahe was always saying that@ the size of the home mattered to him.


In 1995, when the home was being built, Pena listed it for sale in the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) as having 3,950 square feet.  She testified that the builder probably anticipated that the home would be that size, and she probably got the square footage information from him.  Pena listed the home for sale again in 1997.  At that time, she listed the home as having zero square feet in the MLS.  She explained that the owners had made changes to the home as it was being built, and they were unsure what the true square footage was.  The home did not sell in 1997, so the owners attempted to rent it out later that year.  When Pena listed the home for rent in the MLS, she listed it as having 5,000 square feet, based on what the owners told her.  In 2000, when Pena listed the home for sale for the last time, she listed it as having 5,767 square feet.  She obtained this figure from the tax assessor=s office.

Pena testified that she was not under the impression that the house=s size had changed since it was built.  But she also testified that when she placed the final listing, she believed the home was 5,767 square feet.  Pena never reviewed the square footage information in her prior listings, although the listings were still available on the Internet and in the DeWetter Hovious office files.  At one point, Pena testified that when she listed the house for rent at 5,000 square feet it occurred to her that this square footage was different from what she had previously listed it as.  But she later testified that she did not remember that the square footage was less in the prior listings.

On March 11, 2001, the Glassmans signed three documents related to the home purchase--a ANotice to Purchaser,@ a AStandard Addendum,@ and a ASeller=s Real Estate Disclosure.@  The Notice to Purchaser is a two-page document that contains the following provisions relative to this dispute:


Buyers expressly acknowledge . . . that they are purchasing the property . . . upon their own examination and judgement and that BROKERS AND AGENTS INVOLVED HAVE MADE NO REPRESENTATIONS, STATEMENTS, OR CLAIMS TO THE PROPERTY CONDITIONS OR BOUNDARY LINES UPON WHICH BUYERS ARE RELYING.  Buyers acknowledge that the real estate brokers and agents involved in this sale are acting only as CONDUITS OF INFORMATION PROVIDED TO THEM BY OTHERS and are not responsible for the validity or verification of such information to include that which is provided by the seller, or for the actions or failure to act of any other persons involved in this transaction.

.  

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Richard Glassman and Lucy Glassman v. Sylvia Pena, DeWetter Hovious, Inc., Charles DeWetter, Individually and as a Licensed Real Estate Broker and Sponsor of Sylvia Pena, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-glassman-and-lucy-glassman-v-sylvia-pena-dewetter-hovious-inc-texapp-2003.