Sierra Associate Group, Inc. D/B/A New Austin Homes v. Bryan Hardeman Hardeman Family Joint Venture, Ltd. Richard A. Smith Sandion G.P. and Tosca Gruber

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 20, 2009
Docket03-08-00324-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sierra Associate Group, Inc. D/B/A New Austin Homes v. Bryan Hardeman Hardeman Family Joint Venture, Ltd. Richard A. Smith Sandion G.P. and Tosca Gruber (Sierra Associate Group, Inc. D/B/A New Austin Homes v. Bryan Hardeman Hardeman Family Joint Venture, Ltd. Richard A. Smith Sandion G.P. and Tosca Gruber) 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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Sierra Associate Group, Inc. D/B/A New Austin Homes v. Bryan Hardeman Hardeman Family Joint Venture, Ltd. Richard A. Smith Sandion G.P. and Tosca Gruber, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-08-00324-CV

Sierra Associate Group, Inc. d/b/a New Austin Homes, Appellant



v.



Bryan Hardeman; Hardeman Family Joint Venture, Ltd.; Richard A. Smith;

Sandion G.P.; and Tosca Gruber, Appellees



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 126TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. D-1-GN-06-003059, HONORABLE DARLENE BYRNE, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N


This appeal arises from a dispute involving the sale of waterfront property on Lake Travis in Austin, Texas. Appellant Sierra Associate Group, Inc. d/b/a New Austin Homes ("Sierra") sued the seller, appellees Bryan Hardeman and Hardeman Family Joint Venture, Ltd., and the seller's real estate agent and broker, appellees Richard A. Smith, Sandion G.P., and Tosca Gruber, alleging common law and statutory fraud, violation of the deceptive trade practices act ("DTPA"), and negligent misrepresentation based on the description of the property as listed by the seller and the failure to disclose restrictive covenants prohibiting the construction of a boat dock on adjacent land owned by a third party. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the appellees on all claims and awarded attorney's fees to the appellees. Sierra challenges the trial court's judgment, the award of attorney's fees, and certain evidentiary rulings on appeal. Finding no reversible error, we affirm the trial court's judgment.



BACKGROUND


The transaction

Bryan Hardeman, acting as general partner for Hardeman Family Joint Venture, Ltd. (the "Partnership"), signed a listing agreement with real estate agent Tosca Gruber for the sale of real property located at 16308 E. Lakeshore Drive, Austin, Texas (the "Property"). The Property is located in the Hudson Bend Colony Subdivision and can only be used for residential purposes. The northeast boundary of the Property runs along the 670 contour line of Lake Travis. (1)

Lake Travis is a flood control lake with widely varying surface levels. The shoreline of Lake Travis moves as the surface level of the lake changes. When Lake Travis approaches full capacity at 681, its waters cover the Property's northeast boundary and a portion of the Property above the 670 contour line. However, from the time Hardeman listed the Property for sale on April 13, 2006, until the closing of the sale from Hardeman to Sierra on July 12, 2006, the water level in Lake Travis was below the 670 contour line. Thus, the shoreline of Lake Travis did not reach the Property's northeast boundary.

The adjoining land below the 670 contour line on the other side of the Property's northeast boundary is owned by the Sikes Trust, an entity unrelated to Hardeman or the Partnership. This adjoining land is generally known as McIntosh Cove. For an annual fee, the Sikes Trust allows the owners of the eighteen lots abutting McIntosh Cove to maintain swim platforms, but not boat docks, on the land owned by the Sikes Trust. The owners of the abutting lots all have the right to build boat docks on their own land.

Gruber and Tom Walton are licensed real estate agents whose licenses are sponsored by Sandion G.P. d/b/a/ Coldwell Banker United, Realtors. (2) Gruber and Walton listed the Property for sale as follows:



Wonderful Lake Travis Waterfront at [the] end of Hudson Bend. Pool, stunning views of sparkling blue lake, expansive rooms, walls of glass. Gated -- the perfect charming private retreat. Main body waterfront!



In June 2006 another real estate agent, Joseph Longton, contacted Walton with a prospective buyer for the Property. Longton's clients, Mr. and Mrs. Guthrie, entered into a contract prepared by Longton to purchase the Property. (3) But the Guthries thereafter decided against purchasing the Property and assigned their right to purchase the Property under the sales contract to Sierra. As consideration for their assignment, the Guthries received $500 from Sierra, which covered the loss of the nonrefundable option fee the Guthries had paid to the Partnership, and a return of their $25,000 earnest money deposit. Longton continued to act as real estate broker for Sierra.

The standard form contract promulgated by the Texas Real Estate Commission ("TREC") and used by Longton described the Property as "Lot 8 Block 3, Hudson Bend Colony Sec 3 Addition, City of Austin, County of Travis, Texas, known as 16308 E. Lake Shore Dr., Austin, Texas 78734." The purchase price was $1,225,000. The contract contained no covenant, condition, or requirement that the buyers were obtaining the right or permission to construct, anchor, or maintain a boat dock on land other than the Property itself--i.e., there was nothing in the contract regarding the right to construct a boat dock on adjoining land owned by the Sikes Trust below the 670 contour line.

A Travis Central Appraisal District ("TCAD") map attached to the contract showed the Property's boundaries and identified the Sikes Trust as the owner of the land adjoining the Property's northeast boundary. The contract gave the buyer the right to inspect and investigate the Property to determine whether it was suitable for the buyer's intentions. Paragraph 6.D. of the contract provided:



OBJECTIONS: Buyer may object in writing to defects, exceptions, or encumbrances to title: disclosed on the survey other than items 6A(1) through (7) above; disclosed in the (Title) Commitment other than items 6A(1) through (8) above . . . Buyer must object not later than (i) the Closing Date or (ii) __________ days after Buyer receives the Commitment, Exception Documents, and the survey, whichever is earlier. Buyer's failure to object within the time allowed will constitute a waiver of Buyer's right to object . . . .



Paragraph 7.D. of the contract also provided that Sierra agreed to accept the Property in its present condition:



ACCEPTANCE OF PROPERTY CONDITION: Buyer accepts the Property in its present condition; provided Seller, at Seller's expense, shall complete the following specific repairs and treatments: [none specified].



Sierra did not specify any repairs or treatments to be made by Hardeman or the Partnership.

In addition to the contract, Hardeman completed the required seller's disclosure notice, which encouraged the buyer to "HAVE AN INSPECTOR OF YOUR CHOICE INSPECT THE PROPERTY PRIOR TO CLOSING." Like the contract, the seller's disclosure notice made no mention of the right to build a boat dock on adjoining land.

Prior to closing on the Property purchase, Terry Polston, the sole officer, director, and shareholder of Sierra, reviewed a survey of the Property prepared July 6, 2006, and saw that the northeast boundary of the Property was at the 670 contour line. The survey also showed that the shoreline, or water's edge, of Lake Travis was not on the Property at that time. (4) Polston was aware prior to the closing that the water level in Lake Travis was below the 670 contour line, and he knew that the adjoining land below the 670 contour line was owned by someone else.

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Sierra Associate Group, Inc. D/B/A New Austin Homes v. Bryan Hardeman Hardeman Family Joint Venture, Ltd. Richard A. Smith Sandion G.P. and Tosca Gruber, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sierra-associate-group-inc-dba-new-austin-homes-v-bryan-hardeman-texapp-2009.