Robert York Pettit, Jeffrey York Pettit, Individually and as Trustee of the Big Horn Phalanx Trust, Joseph Austin Pettit and Emily Anne Pettit Covey v. Marilyn Eileen Pettit Tabor

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 15, 2020
Docket06-19-00002-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Robert York Pettit, Jeffrey York Pettit, Individually and as Trustee of the Big Horn Phalanx Trust, Joseph Austin Pettit and Emily Anne Pettit Covey v. Marilyn Eileen Pettit Tabor (Robert York Pettit, Jeffrey York Pettit, Individually and as Trustee of the Big Horn Phalanx Trust, Joseph Austin Pettit and Emily Anne Pettit Covey v. Marilyn Eileen Pettit Tabor) 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
Robert York Pettit, Jeffrey York Pettit, Individually and as Trustee of the Big Horn Phalanx Trust, Joseph Austin Pettit and Emily Anne Pettit Covey v. Marilyn Eileen Pettit Tabor, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

No. 06-19-00002-CV

ROBERT YORK PETTIT, JEFFREY YORK PETTIT, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS TRUSTEE OF THE BIG HORN PHALANX TRUST, JOSEPH AUSTIN PETTIT AND EMILY ANNE PETTIT COVEY, Appellants

V.

MARILYN EILEEN PETTIT TABOR, Appellee

On Appeal from the 8th District Court Delta County, Texas Trial Court No. 10985

Before Morriss, C.J., Burgess and Stevens, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Morriss MEMORANDUM OPINION Marilyn Eileen Pettit Tabor (Lyn) conveyed her undivided one-half interest in a family

farm and a joint bank account to her brother, Robert York Pettit (Bob), based on his promise to

protect the property and to reconvey it to her. When Bob refused to reconvey the property and

instead conveyed it to his children, who later conveyed it to The Big Horn Phalanx Trust (the

Trust), Lyn sued Bob, his children, and the trustee of the Trust (collectively Appellants) for a return

of the property. The trial court found that Bob had breached an informal fiduciary relationship

and had committed common law and statutory fraud, voided all of the conveyances of Lyn’s one-

half interest, imposed a constructive trust on the property, ordered Appellants to reconvey the

property to Lyn, and awarded Lyn damages, exemplary damages, and attorney fees.

In this appeal, Appellants assert that the trial court erred in imposing a constructive trust

because any recovery by Lyn was barred by the affirmative defense of illegality and because the

evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support the trial court’s finding of an informal

fiduciary relationship, that the award of exemplary damages was not supported by clear and

convincing evidence, that Lyn was not entitled to attorney fees, and that the evidence was legally

and factually insufficient to support the trial court’s findings that the conveyances to Bob were not

gifts. Because (1) no illegality bars a constructive trust, (2) Bob’s actual fraud supports a

constructive trust, (3) exemplary damages are supported by the evidence, (4) attorney fees are

supported by the evidence, and (5) Appellants’ challenge to the no-gift conclusion was forfeited,

we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

2 (1) Background

A. The Family Farm and the Pettit Siblings

The family of Margaret Eileen Pettit (Margaret), Lyn and Bob’s mother, had owned a 280-

acre tract and a 34.5-acre tract of land in Hunt County (the Hunt Tracts) since 1903. Margaret had

owned them since 1947. At some point, Margaret also acquired a 70-acre tract in Delta County

(the Delta Tract). 1 In 1951, Margaret and her husband built a house on the Hunt Tracts, where the

family lived for some time. Around 1960, the family moved to Waco, where Lyn and Bob

graduated high school. A few years later, Lyn got married to her first husband and moved to New

Mexico, where she eventually began a mortgage brokerage business, Pettit Mortgage. Bob became

an ordained minister, but has worked as a petroleum landman for the last forty years

In 2001, Lyn moved back to Waco. There, her relationship with both Margaret and Bob

became closer, their families began spending holidays together, and Bob performed the wedding

of Lyn and her current husband, Johnny. She also started going to the Family Farm with Margaret

and began spending weekends there. Eventually, Bob and his family also began using the Family

Farm. In 2003, the house on the Family Farm was in disrepair, and Lyn’s husband, Johnny, did

some repairs to get it in shape for family functions. Sometime later, they began having family

functions with Bob’s family on holidays and extended weekends. Bob and his sons helped Johnny

with the maintenance and improvements on the Family Farm. Both families engaged in hunts for

deer and hogs and other outdoor activities at the Farm.

1 Hereinafter, the Hunt Tracts and the Delta Tract, collectively, will be referred to as “the Family Farm” or “the Farm.” 3 As Margaret aged, Lyn and Bob worked closely together to deal with her and the issues

that arose. In 2006, Margaret conveyed the Family Farm to Lyn and Bob by warranty deeds and

reserved a life estate to herself. Because of his forty years of experience and knowledge regarding

the transfer of property interests, Bob drafted those warranty deeds, as well as other deeds for the

family. When they became owners of the property, if something needed to be done, either Lyn or

Bob would take care of it.

Lyn testified that she loved Bob, that she had trusted him implicitly, and that there was

nothing she could not trust him with. When Margaret died in 2009 and her life estate terminated,

she left Lyn $60,000.00 to $80,000.00 in a pay-on-death account. Lyn used some of that money

to rehabilitate Margaret’s residence, and Bob, the executor of Margaret’s estate, told her she would

be reimbursed from the estate. Bob wanted to put a stock pond on the Farm, so another $25,000.00

of that money was spent to do so. Lyn also agreed to put the rest of the money in a joint bank

account to be used for the management of the Farm, taxes, utilities, and repairs. Bob and Lyn were

both authorized signatories on the account.

Bob acknowledged that Lyn trusted him enough to make him a signatory on the account

and that they worked together to do the things that needed to be done at the Family Farm. He also

agreed that the Family Farm was important to him, Lyn, and their families and that he and Lyn

had talked about wanting to pass it down to their respective heirs. Bob acknowledged that he knew

that this was important to Lyn.

Bob’s wife, Sharon, testified that, based on Bob and Lyn’s relationship, Lyn trusted Bob

implicitly. She believed that, based on their relationship and Bob’s dealings with Lyn, Lyn

4 believed as truth anything Bob told her and trusted him to do what he promised. She also agreed

that Bob took the lead in the management and running of the Farm, but also testified that it was

“kind of” mutual.

B. Lyn’s Transfer to Bob

In late March 2013, Lyn called Bob to ask for his help in conveying her interest in the

Family Farm to her children, Darrin and Casey. The substance of that conversation was disputed

at trial. According to Lyn, she had had two heart surgeries, including one in January 2013 to

replace her pacemaker. This made her consider her mortality and accelerated her timeline for

transferring the Farm to her children. In early 2013, she received notice that a hearing was

scheduled in a New Mexico lawsuit against Pettit Mortgage, although she thought it had been

settled several years before. This prompted her to hire an attorney to help resolve the lawsuit and

to feel more urgency in conveying the Farm to her children. Lyn testified that she was a little

concerned about the lawsuit because she was not familiar with legal matters but that she did not

think she had any liability. 2 She also testified that, at the time, she did not have any creditors or

any outstanding judgments and that she had about $150,000.00 in liquid assets.

When she called Bob to let him know she wanted to transfer her interest to her children,

she also mentioned the lawsuit and the upcoming hearing. Bob proceeded to tell her about a

lawsuit he was in at the time, about how horrible the depositions and discovery were and about the

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Robert York Pettit, Jeffrey York Pettit, Individually and as Trustee of the Big Horn Phalanx Trust, Joseph Austin Pettit and Emily Anne Pettit Covey v. Marilyn Eileen Pettit Tabor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-york-pettit-jeffrey-york-pettit-individually-and-as-trustee-of-the-texapp-2020.