Rosa Arreola and Carlos Padilla, Husband and Wife v. Sammy Brown, Ryder Mitchell Jensen and Alison Margaret Jensen, Husband and Wife, and All Those Having an Interest in the Property Located at 7404 Glen Haven Drive, 76133-7704

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 2nd District (Fort Worth)
DecidedJune 11, 2026
Docket02-24-00500-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Rosa Arreola and Carlos Padilla, Husband and Wife v. Sammy Brown, Ryder Mitchell Jensen and Alison Margaret Jensen, Husband and Wife, and All Those Having an Interest in the Property Located at 7404 Glen Haven Drive, 76133-7704 (Rosa Arreola and Carlos Padilla, Husband and Wife v. Sammy Brown, Ryder Mitchell Jensen and Alison Margaret Jensen, Husband and Wife, and All Those Having an Interest in the Property Located at 7404 Glen Haven Drive, 76133-7704) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 2nd District (Fort Worth) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosa Arreola and Carlos Padilla, Husband and Wife v. Sammy Brown, Ryder Mitchell Jensen and Alison Margaret Jensen, Husband and Wife, and All Those Having an Interest in the Property Located at 7404 Glen Haven Drive, 76133-7704, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-24-00500-CV ___________________________

ROSA ARREOLA AND CARLOS PADILLA, HUSBAND AND WIFE, APPELLANTS

V.

SAMMY BROWN AND ALL THOSE HAVING AN INTEREST IN THE PROPERTY LOCATED AT 7404 GLEN HAVEN DRIVE, 76133-7704, APPELLEES

AND

ROSA ARREOLA AND CARLOS PADILLA, HUSBAND AND WIFE, APPELLANTS AND APPELLEES

RYDER MITCHELL JENSEN AND ALISON MARGARET JENSEN, HUSBAND AND WIFE, APPELLEES AND APPELLANTS On Appeal from the 153rd District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 153-331059-21

Before Birdwell, Bassel, and Womack, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Birdwell

2 MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellants Rosa Arreola and Carlos Padilla, husband and wife, appeal the trial

court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of Appellees Ryder Mitchell Jensen

and Alison Margaret Jensen (the Jensens) and Sammy Brown. In a cross-appeal, the

Jensens appeal the trial court’s summary dismissal of their “conditional” counterclaim

with prejudice. We conclude that Appellants’ claims are time-barred as a matter of law

and that the trial court erred by dismissing the Jensens’ counterclaim with prejudice.

Accordingly, we modify the trial court’s order to reflect that the Jensens’ counterclaim

is dismissed without prejudice, and we affirm the summary judgment as modified.

I. Background

A. Factual Background

In March 2015, Appellants negotiated the purchase of a home from Brown (the

property) and agreed on a sales price of $91,000. For this real estate transaction, the

parties executed a standard Texas Real Estate Commission (TREC) form titled, “One

to Four Family Residential Contract (Resale),” which incorporated a signed “Seller

Financing Addendum” (collectively, the Purchase Agreement). Per the Purchase

Agreement, Brown agreed to finance the sales price; to obtain seller financing,

Appellants were required to provide Brown with credit information and execute a

promissory note in the amount financed secured by a deed of trust giving Brown a

security interest in the property. The Purchase Agreement set a closing date of April

1, 2015. At closing, Brown was required to “execute and deliver a general warranty

3 deed conveying title” to Appellants, and Appellants were required to “pay the [s]ales

[p]rice.”

Appellants asked Brown if they could move into the property before the

closing date, assuring him that they would provide the requisite credit information and

loan documents. On their assurance, Brown allowed Appellants to take possession of

the property. After they took possession of the property, Appellants told Brown that

they would obtain third-party financing.

Appellants failed to provide Brown with the necessary credit information or to

execute a promissory note or deed of trust giving Brown a security interest in the

property by the closing date. Thus, Brown did not give Appellants credit approval for

a seller-financed loan. Appellants had also failed to obtain third-party financing.

Brown therefore did not execute and deliver a warranty deed conveying title of the

property to Appellants, and the real estate transaction did not close on April 1, 2015.

Brown subsequently allowed Appellants to keep possession of the property,

and from March 2015 until December 2021, Appellants made monthly payments to

Brown. Brown claimed that the real estate transaction had been terminated and that

pursuant to a verbal, month-to-month lease, Appellants’ monthly payments were rent

payments. Appellants, on the other hand, believed that their monthly payments were

for a “loan” pursuant to the Purchase Agreement.

At some point, Appellants moved out of the property. In February 2020,

Appellants leased the property to third-party tenants, who took possession of the

4 property in March 2020. In November 2021, after Brown discovered that Appellants

had “abandoned the [p]roperty” and “clandestinely started renting it out,” he entered

into an agreement to sell the property to the Jensens. On December 30, 2021, the

Jensens purchased the property from Brown; Brown and the Jensens executed a

contract for the sale of real estate, and Brown executed and delivered a general

warranty deed conveying title to the Jensens.

B. Procedural Background

On December 22, 2021, Appellants sued Brown to quiet title to the property

and for violations of Chapter 5, Subchapter D of the Property Code; breach of

contract; and fraud. Brown answered and filed counterclaims against Appellants. After

the Jensens purchased the property from Brown, Appellants amended their petition

and added the Jensens as defendants. The Jensens answered and filed a counterclaim

against Appellants and a cross-claim against Brown.

Brown moved for partial summary judgment arguing that there was no

executory contract, that the quiet-title claim was against the Jensens and not him, and

that Appellants’ causes of action were barred by the statute of limitations. The trial

court granted Brown partial summary judgment and rendered judgment in favor of

Brown on all of Appellants’ claims and causes of action against him. The Jensens also

filed a motion for partial summary judgment, but the trial court did not rule on it.

The trial court subsequently granted Appellants leave to amend their petition,

and Appellants filed their second amended petition on April 1, 2024. Appellants’

5 second amended petition raised the same causes of action against Brown—including

the ones addressed in the trial court’s partial summary judgment—and the Jensens

and added several new equitable theories to defeat the statute of limitations.

After Appellants filed their second amended petition, Brown and the Jensens

filed a joint motion for partial summary judgment. In their motion, they argued

against Appellants’ newly asserted equitable theories, Brown re-urged his previous

summary judgment evidence and arguments to ensure clarity, and the Jensens sought

a ruling on their pending motion for partial summary judgment. The trial court

granted the motion on May 30, 2024, and ordered that all the claims and causes of

action asserted by Appellants against Brown and the Jensens were denied in their

entirety.

The same day that the trial court granted the joint motion for summary

judgment, it also granted Appellants’ motion for leave to file their third amended

petition; Appellants filed their third amended petition the following day. In their third

amended petition, Appellants again raised the same claims against Brown and the

Jensens but also raised new claims.

Brown and the Jensens subsequently filed a joint motion for pre-trial

conference seeking clarification on “what issues of fact [Appellants] believe remain

unsettled and that might still need to be decided at trial.” Appellants then filed a

“Motion to Amend Order on Summary Judgment to Allow Interlocutory Appeal,”

6 which Brown and the Jensens opposed. The trial court heard the motions in

September 2024; it granted the motions in part and denied the motions in part.

On October 11, 2024, the trial court rendered its final judgment. In its

judgment, the trial court severed Appellants’ newly raised claims, Brown’s

counterclaims against Appellants, and the Jensens’ cross-claim against Brown. It then

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Rosa Arreola and Carlos Padilla, Husband and Wife v. Sammy Brown, Ryder Mitchell Jensen and Alison Margaret Jensen, Husband and Wife, and All Those Having an Interest in the Property Located at 7404 Glen Haven Drive, 76133-7704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosa-arreola-and-carlos-padilla-husband-and-wife-v-sammy-brown-ryder-txctapp2-2026.