Sandra Amezquita, David Flores, and Christopher Flores v. Chuck Fisher, Tom Fisher, Jayne Ulreich, Rick Fisher, Jake Fisher, Jordan Fisher, Margot Guerrero, James Evans, Maureen Leos, Michael Leos, Marty Leos, Matt Leos, Marshall Leos, Melanie Leos, Patricia Flores, Lorie Flores Sanchez, Roland Flores, and Larry Flores III

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 3rd District (Austin)
DecidedJune 4, 2026
Docket03-24-00393-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sandra Amezquita, David Flores, and Christopher Flores v. Chuck Fisher, Tom Fisher, Jayne Ulreich, Rick Fisher, Jake Fisher, Jordan Fisher, Margot Guerrero, James Evans, Maureen Leos, Michael Leos, Marty Leos, Matt Leos, Marshall Leos, Melanie Leos, Patricia Flores, Lorie Flores Sanchez, Roland Flores, and Larry Flores III (Sandra Amezquita, David Flores, and Christopher Flores v. Chuck Fisher, Tom Fisher, Jayne Ulreich, Rick Fisher, Jake Fisher, Jordan Fisher, Margot Guerrero, James Evans, Maureen Leos, Michael Leos, Marty Leos, Matt Leos, Marshall Leos, Melanie Leos, Patricia Flores, Lorie Flores Sanchez, Roland Flores, and Larry Flores III) 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
Sandra Amezquita, David Flores, and Christopher Flores v. Chuck Fisher, Tom Fisher, Jayne Ulreich, Rick Fisher, Jake Fisher, Jordan Fisher, Margot Guerrero, James Evans, Maureen Leos, Michael Leos, Marty Leos, Matt Leos, Marshall Leos, Melanie Leos, Patricia Flores, Lorie Flores Sanchez, Roland Flores, and Larry Flores III, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-24-00393-CV

Sandra Amezquita, David Flores, and Christopher Flores, Appellants

v.

Chuck Fisher, Tom Fisher, Jayne Ulreich, Rick Fisher, Jake Fisher, Jordan Fisher, Margot Guerrero, James Evans, Maureen Leos, Michael Leos, Marty Leos, Matt Leos, Marshall Leos, Melanie Leos, Patricia Flores, Lorie Flores Sanchez, Roland Flores, and Larry Flores III, Appellees

FROM THE 98TH DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-GN-22-001572, THE HONORABLE DANIELLA DESETA LYTTLE, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Special rules of proof apply when a cotenant of a tract asserts adverse possession

against a fellow cotenant. The rules require proof of both “ouster—unequivocal, unmistakable,

and hostile acts the possessor took to disseize other cotenants,” BP Am. Prod. Co. v. Marshall,

342 S.W.3d 59, 70 (Tex. 2011)—and that the defendant was put on notice of the ouster, with

the notice itself required to be clear, unequivocal, and unmistakable, see Todd v. Bruner,

365 S.W.2d 155, 159–60 (Tex. 1963). Because the appellants here adduced no evidence sufficient

to show ouster of and notice to the cotenant appellees, the trial court was correct to take the case

from the jury and grant a directed verdict. We affirm. I

The underlying suit concerns ownership of the Austin land and improvements,

primarily a home, known as 1008 East 8th Street. In the 1950s and early ’60s, the property

belonged to Virginia Flores. Virginia 1 lived in the home along with her parents and her four

children, two of whom were Jesse Flores and Larry Flores Jr. When Jesse married in 1959, his

wife moved into the home. The couple’s three children grew up living in the home as well.

In 1966, ownership of the property was transferred to Lois Thrasher via foreclosure

on a lien. In 1970, Thrasher deeded the property to Joe Leos Sr. and Janie Cruz. Cruz was one of

Virginia’s sisters, and Joe Leos Sr. was married to Virginia’s other sister. Joe Leos Sr. died

intestate in 1975, survived by his three children. In 1982, Cruz executed a deed to Virginia. The

deed makes no mention of Joe Leos Sr. or his interest in the property, and the appellants here

contend that the deed purported to convey the entirety of the property to Virginia. From the

1982 deed onward, only Virginia and Jesse lived in the home on the property.

In 1994, Virginia died intestate, survived both by Jesse and by the heirs of Larry Jr.,

who predeceased her. From Virginia’s death onward, only Jesse lived in the home on the property.

That remained true until 2016, when Jesse moved to a nursing home, where he continued to live

until he died in 2020, leaving a will. 2 As part of the probate of the will and settling of his estate,

a conveyance of the property—exactly what was conveyed, the parties dispute—was made to

1 We refer to some of the relevant individuals by their given names to reduce confusion because some of them share surnames. 2 It is undisputed that the home has been unoccupied and boarded up since 2016.

2 Jesse’s surviving three children. Those three are the plaintiffs in this suit, Sandra Amezquita,

David Flores, and Chris Flores (collectively, Amezquita). 3

When Amezquita sought to sell the property, the title-examination process gave rise

to two questions that led Amezquita to file this suit. On one hand, the title company asked about

Joe Leos Sr.’s interest in the property after his 1975 death. His three immediate heirs, according

to the relevant set of appellees here, have since died, one in 2013, one in 2018, and the last in 2021.

Each of the three immediate heirs was survived by descendants, all of whom claim an interest in

the property ultimately through Joe Leos Sr. Those subsequent heirs, defendants below and

appellees before us, are the “Leos Defendants.”

There is a second group of defendant–appellees. When Virginia died intestate, she

was survived by Jesse and by the heirs of her son Larry Jr. His four heirs all claim an interest in

the property, through him and thus through Virginia. Larry Jr.’s heirs are the “Flores Defendants.”

Amezquita sued the Leos Defendants and Flores Defendants. She alleged that their

claims of interest were invalid clouds on title because of the operation of the adverse-possession

limitations periods of Civil Practice and Remedies Code sections 16.026, 16.027, 16.028, and

16.029. As relief for the suit, she sought a judgment declaring that each defendant group’s claims

are invalid and unenforceable, ordering the claims removed from the property’s title, and “quieting

title in the plaintiff and her brothers.” 4 She also sought attorneys’ fees.

3The brothers granted their sister the power of attorney to act on their behalf in the suit and were made plaintiffs at the pre-trial hearing, without objection. 4 We do not decide whether the claims in this suit are claims in trespass to try title or quiet-title claims. See Brumley v. McDuff, 616 S.W.3d 826, 831–36 & n.46 (Tex. 2021) (citing and applying “nuanced” rules that distinguish the two kinds of claims); accord Faith P. & Charles L. Bybee Found. v. Knutzen, 681 S.W.3d 818, 826–29 (Tex. App.—Austin 2023, no pet.) (deciding whether claims were of one kind or the other). No one asks us to decide this issue, see Tex. R. App. P. 47.1, and in general, there can be “harsh” consequences when a plaintiff must

3 At trial, Amezquita sought to prove a period of adverse possession against the

interests of the Leos Defendants from Virginia’s 1982 acquisition of an interest in the property to

Jesse’s leaving the property for the nursing home in 2016. By contrast, because the

Flores Defendants claim title through Virginia just like Amezquita does, Amezquita sought to

prove a period of adverse possession against the interests of the Flores Defendants from Virginia’s

death in 1994, when Jesse alone became the sole inhabitant of the property, to 2016.

After Amezquita rested her case, the Leos Defendants and Flores Defendants

moved for a directed verdict. After arguments by the parties, the court granted the motions and

released the jury. The court issued a directed-verdict order, which recites:

After considering the evidence and arguments of counsel, the Court FINDS that Section 16.0265 . . . applies to this adverse possession case involving cotenant heirs, and that the evidence, at the conclusion of Plaintiffs’ case, shows that Plaintiffs have not satisfied the statutory requirements as set forth in subsection (c) of Section 16.0265.

The Court FURTHER FINDS that the evidence, as it stands at the conclusion of Plaintiffs’ case, is such that no other verdict can be reached and the moving parties are entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

The court also rendered its written final judgment. The judgment recites:

At the conclusion of Plaintiff[s’] case in chief, the Defendants moved for a directed verdict. The Court, having considered the motion, GRANTED it and rendered judgment as a matter of law . . . . The Court rendered judgment for the reason that the Plaintiffs, in order to establish adverse possession of the Property, had to prove that they adhered to the requirements contained in Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code §16.0265, and that the Plaintiffs presented no evidence that they

take nothing on a claim in trespass to try title, see, e.g., Hejl v.

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Sandra Amezquita, David Flores, and Christopher Flores v. Chuck Fisher, Tom Fisher, Jayne Ulreich, Rick Fisher, Jake Fisher, Jordan Fisher, Margot Guerrero, James Evans, Maureen Leos, Michael Leos, Marty Leos, Matt Leos, Marshall Leos, Melanie Leos, Patricia Flores, Lorie Flores Sanchez, Roland Flores, and Larry Flores III, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandra-amezquita-david-flores-and-christopher-flores-v-chuck-fisher-tom-txctapp3-2026.