Robbyn Elizabeth Coy Arriola, Joey Arriola, Jack Henry Lawson, and Raven Jonae Pritchett v. Tommy Kutscherousky, Sr., D/B/A Kutscherousky Farms

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 4, 2015
Docket07-15-00004-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Robbyn Elizabeth Coy Arriola, Joey Arriola, Jack Henry Lawson, and Raven Jonae Pritchett v. Tommy Kutscherousky, Sr., D/B/A Kutscherousky Farms (Robbyn Elizabeth Coy Arriola, Joey Arriola, Jack Henry Lawson, and Raven Jonae Pritchett v. Tommy Kutscherousky, Sr., D/B/A Kutscherousky Farms) 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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Robbyn Elizabeth Coy Arriola, Joey Arriola, Jack Henry Lawson, and Raven Jonae Pritchett v. Tommy Kutscherousky, Sr., D/B/A Kutscherousky Farms, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo

No. 07-15-00004-CV

ROBBYN ELIZABETH COY ARRIOLA, JOEY ARRIOLA, JACK HENRY LAWSON, AND RAVEN JONAE PRITCHETT, APPELLANTS

V.

TOMMY KUTSCHEROUSKY, SR., ET AL., D/B/A KUTSCHEROUSKY FARMS, APPELLEES

On Appeal from the 87th District Court Limestone County, Texas Trial Court No. 30,122-B, Honorable Patrick H. Simmons, Presiding

September 4, 2015

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before QUINN, C.J., and CAMPBELL and HANCOCK, JJ.

The judgment in the following case is modified and affirmed as modified. The

case involves the liability of three cotenants for a breach of a lease executed by one of

the three. Robbyn Elizabeth Coy Arriola, Jack Henry Lawson, and Raven Jonae

Pritchett inherited an undivided one-third interest in a farm from their father. Robbyn

decided to live on the property; and her siblings approved of her decision. Thereafter,

she married Joey Arriola, and the two continued to reside on the farm. However, Joey, who did not have an ownership interest in the land, met with Eric Kutscherousky in late

May of 2011 to negotiate the lease on a portion of the land to Eric, his brother Tommy,

and his father Tommy, Sr. Joey initially memorialized the lease via a one sentence

writing upon which he affixed his signature and that of his wife. The lease term was

designated as January 1, 2011 to December 16, 2016. That one sentence lease was

amended the same day to indicate that the conveyance was a “cash lease.” The sole

signature on the amended document was that of Joey. However, that was not the end

of Joey’s efforts at drafting a lease. About two months later, he presented another

writing to Eric (i.e., the July 2011 lease). This document contained, for the first time, a

description of the yearly rentals payable over the length of the lease, as well as other

terms. It also alluded to the lease ending on December 31, 2015, as opposed to 2016.

And, appearing at its end were the signatures of Joey, Robbyn and Eric.

In January of 2013, the Kutscherouskys tendered to Joey the 2013 rental

payment. He refused to accept it. Thereafter, he and Robbyn accused their tenants of

having breached the lease and, thereby, caused its termination. By that time, Joey and

the cotenants decided to sell the farm. The Kutscherouskys sued the three cotenants

and Joey for breach of the lease and damages. Trial was to a jury. The latter found

that the cotenants and Joey had breached the agreement and awarded damages to the

Kutscherouskys. Judgment was entered upon the verdict, and the judgment debtors

appealed.

We have before us six issues. Each will be address but not necessarily in the

order presented by Joey and the cotenants.

2 No Jury Finding on the Essential Terms of the Contract

The first issue we address is whether the Kutscherouskys could recover because

the jury was not asked to determine the essential terms of the lease agreement. Joey

and the cotenants acknowledge that the jury found the existence of a lease agreement,

that the July 2011 instrument did not memorialize the entire agreement, and that the

lease terms ended on December 31, 2016. But, because the jury was not asked to

determine (nor did it determine) all the essential terms of the agreement, the trial court’s

judgment was insupportable, allegedly. We overrule the issue.

The trial court asked the jury, among other things, 1) “Do you find there was an

agreement between Plaintiffs and Joey and Robbyn Elizabeth Arriola to lease the

‘Farm’”; 2) “Do you find that the Defendants failed to comply with a material obligation of

the lease agreement”; 3) “Do you find the Defendants terminated the lease agreement

with Plaintiffs for reasons other than Plaintiffs' failure to comply with the lease

agreement”; and 4) “Do you find that the lease agreement provided for the lease to

conclude on December 31, 2015 or December 31, 2016?” The jury answered, “yes,”

“yes,” “yes,” and “December 31, 2016,” respectively. So too were issues submitted

asking the jury to determine the “probable profit loss” suffered by the Kutscherouskys

during the four years remaining on the lease after the “Defendants failed to comply with

a material obligation” and “terminated the lease.” Those questions covered the

elements of a cause of action for breached contract, that is, a contract, its breach, and

the resulting damages. Consequently, we disagree with the contention that the jury

issues and answers were insufficient to support the trial court’s judgment.

3 Simply put, the trial court was free to submit the cause in broad-form. TEX. R.

CIV. P. 277 (stating that in “all jury cases the court shall, whenever feasible, submit the

cause upon broad-form questions”). The questions given the jury liken to a broad-form

submission. Had Joey, Robbyn, Jack and Raven wanted more particularized issues

involving the terms of the contract and its breach, they should have requested them

below or otherwise objected to the manner in which the cause was submitted to the jury.

They did not complain then and cannot complain now. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 274 (stating

that a party “objecting to a charge must point out distinctly the objectionable matter and

the grounds of the objection. Any complaint as to a question, definition or instruction on

account of any defect, omission, or fault in pleading, is waived unless specifically

included in the objections.”).

July 6, 2011 Lease Was Only Contract

The next issue considered is that wherein Joey and the cotenants argue that the

July 6, 2011 lease constituted the entire lease between the parties as a matter of law.

We overrule it.

A lease is no more or less than a contract, see Frost Nat. Bank v. L & F

Distributors, Ltd., 165 S.W.3d 310 (Tex. 2005), and a contract can consist of multiple

documents. In re Laibe Corp., 307 S.W.3d 314, 317 (Tex. 2010). Furthermore,

“[d]ocuments ‘pertaining to the same transaction may be read together,’ even if they are

executed at different times and do not reference each other, and ‘courts may construe

all the documents as if they were part of a single, unified instrument.’” Id., quoting Fort

Worth Indep. Sch. Dist. v. City of Fort Worth, 22 S.W.3d 831, 840 (Tex. 2000). Finally,

whether multiple writings constitute a written contract is a matter that a court may

4 determine as a matter of law.1 Fort Worth Indep. Sch. Dist. v. City of Fort Worth, 22

S.W.3d at 840.

As previously mentioned, Joey drafted three documents, two in May of 2011 and

one in July of 2011. Each involved the lease of the same farm. Each added a little

more explanation to the leasehold created.2 None contained a merger clause. More

importantly, the last document, that is, the July 2011 lease, was presented to Eric

weeks after the Kutscherouskys assumed their roles as lessee and made their first

lease payment of $1820.

In short, what we have before us is a situation akin to that described in Laibe,

that is, documents pertaining to the same transaction, executed at different times and

failing to reference each other. Given the lack of a merger clause in the final July

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Robbyn Elizabeth Coy Arriola, Joey Arriola, Jack Henry Lawson, and Raven Jonae Pritchett v. Tommy Kutscherousky, Sr., D/B/A Kutscherousky Farms, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robbyn-elizabeth-coy-arriola-joey-arriola-jack-henry-lawson-and-raven-texapp-2015.