Rickye Henderson v. Ali Arabzadegan

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 3rd District (Austin)
DecidedMarch 31, 2026
Docket03-24-00236-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Rickye Henderson v. Ali Arabzadegan (Rickye Henderson v. Ali Arabzadegan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 3rd District (Austin) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rickye Henderson v. Ali Arabzadegan, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-24-00236-CV

Rickye Henderson, Appellant

v.

Ali Arabzadegan, Appellee

FROM THE 353RD DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-GN-23-001138, THE HONORABLE JAN SOIFER, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Rickye Henderson appeals from the trial court’s final judgment. Appellee Ali

Arabzadegan sued Henderson, Curtis Meeks, and Top & Ball Properties, LLC to quiet title to his

property and for fraud and various other claims, asserting that Henderson and Meeks tricked him

into signing a quitclaim deed when he thought he was signing a lease agreement. In addition,

Arabzadegan alleged that after he signed the quitclaim deed, Henderson and Meeks caused a fire

at the property and sought to obtain insurance proceeds by claiming ownership of the property.

Before trial, the trial court signed several interlocutory orders, including an order

for default judgment resolving all issues of liability because of Henderson’s and the other

defendants’ “flagrant and repeated” discovery abuses, “persistent obstruction of the discovery

process,” and “deliberate disregard for [the trial court’s] prior discovery orders and overall

authority.” Only the issue of damages remained for trial. Henderson and the other defendants failed to appear for trial. After a bench trial, the trial court signed a judgment in Arabzadegan’s

favor that quieted title to the disputed piece of property, declared the quitclaim deed void, and

awarded significant damages and attorneys’ fees. 1

In three issues, Henderson contends that the trial court (1) misapplied the unclean-

hands doctrine, denying him relief based on Arabzadegan’s alleged conduct; (2) erred by

excluding critical evidence essential to his defense in violation of his right to due process and

“by excluding newly discovered racially offensive email evidence”; and (3) erred by granting

Arabzadegan’s summary-judgment motion for breach of contract. 2

For the reasons explained below, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND 3

Factual background

Arabzadegan owns a four-acre tract of commercial property in Austin.

Arabzadegan’s business, an auto-repair shop, is on the property. When the events leading to the

lawsuit occurred, the property also contained another building that Arabzadegan had for many

years leased out for use as a nightclub.

1 The other defendants, Curtis Meeks and Top & Ball Properties, LLC, filed notices of appeal, but we dismissed their untimely appeals for want of jurisdiction. 2 Henderson numbered as a fourth issue his request that this Court remand the case for a new trial based on his first three asserted issues. 3 The facts in this section are derived from the parties’ pleadings and from the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. In his appellate brief, Henderson has not challenged the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the final judgment or the trial court’s findings of fact. When findings of fact are filed and are unchallenged, as here, they are binding on an appellate court unless the contrary is established as a matter of law, or if there is no evidence to support the finding. McGalliard v. Kuhlmann, 722 S.W.2d 694, 696 (Tex. 1986). 2 In September 2022, Arabzadegan leased the nightclub building to Henderson and

Meeks. When the parties signed the lease agreement, Henderson and Meeks insisted on bringing

a notary to the lease-signing meeting. They “secretly and deceptively” had Arabzadegan sign the

signature page to a quitclaim deed that purported to transfer the entire four-acre property to Top

& Ball Properties, LLC. 4

The five-year lease, signed by Henderson and Meeks as tenants, included a term

that gave them a right of first refusal if Arabzadegan decided to sell the property. The rent was

$7,000 per month. On the day that Arabzadegan, Henderson, and Meeks signed the lease,

Henderson and Meeks paid the partial rent for September and the full rent for October.

Henderson and Meeks did not pay the November rent when it became due on November 1, 2022,

and they never made another rent payment.

On November 9, 2022, a fire started in the middle of the night that destroyed a

significant portion of the nightclub building. The trial court ultimately found that the defendants

were responsible for causing the fire, although they blamed the fire on a contractor that they

hired to do repairs on the property.

On December 16, 2022, Meeks made a written offer through a realtor to buy the

property from Arabzadegan for $5.5 million. Arabzadegan testified that he rejected the offer,

which proposed a seller-financed sale under which no payments would be made for the first six

4 At the temporary-injunction hearing, the notary present for the lease signing testified that Arabzadegan was not actually presented with the full documents he was signing. Henderson and Meeks had a “stack of papers,” including “the lease and everything,” and then “they took out the signature pages to be signed.” The notary saw Arabzadegan’s driver’s license and noted the number in her book, but he did not sign her book, which listed both the lease and quitclaim deed. Henderson and Meeks did not provide Arabzadegan with signed copies of the documents at the meeting. Arabzadegan later texted Henderson and asked him to email copies of all signature pages and any notarized documents. Henderson emailed him only the lease, not the quitclaim deed. 3 months. In addition, Arabzadegan wanted $500,000 as a down payment, and Meeks told him he

did not have the funds to put that amount down.

On January 2, 2023, Arabzadegan sent the defendants a lease-termination notice.

He also paid the Travis County property taxes that were due in January.

On January 17, 2023, Henderson submitted a claim to their contractor’s insurance

carrier, seeking nearly $1,000,000 for damage to Arabzadegan’s nightclub building, which the

defendants intended to keep for themselves.

On February 6, 2023, Meeks recorded the quitclaim deed dated September 15,

2022, that purports to have conveyed the property from Arabzadegan to Top & Ball Properties,

LLC, an LLC for which Meeks is the sole member-manager. The deed falsely recites that Top &

Ball paid Arabzadegan $1,200,000 in consideration for the quitclaim deed.

Arabzadegan did not know that he had signed a signature page for a quitclaim

deed until he discovered the deception after the defendants recorded the purported quitclaim

deed. Arabzadegan never received any consideration for the purported sale of the property. 5

On March 1, 2023, Arabzadegan filed suit to quiet title to the property and

recover damages that he asserts were caused by the defendants’ fraudulent scheme and the fire.

Procedural history

Arabzadegan sued Henderson and the other defendants for declaratory relief,

injunctive relief, quiet title, trespass to try title, common-law fraud, statutory fraud, violation of

Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 12.002, breach of contract, negligence,

trespass, and civil conspiracy. In May 2023, the defendants hired a construction crew to enter

5 At the temporary-injunction hearing, Meeks testified that there was no evidence that the money had been paid because they paid Arabzadegan in cash. 4 onto the property and that crew replaced Arabzadegan’s lock on the property with their own

lock. Arabzadegan subsequently sought and obtained a temporary injunction prohibiting them

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Rickye Henderson v. Ali Arabzadegan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rickye-henderson-v-ali-arabzadegan-txctapp3-2026.