SMB Partners, Ltd. v. Osloub

4 S.W.3d 368, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 7258, 1999 WL 771566
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 30, 1999
Docket01-98-00926-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 4 S.W.3d 368 (SMB Partners, Ltd. v. Osloub) 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
SMB Partners, Ltd. v. Osloub, 4 S.W.3d 368, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 7258, 1999 WL 771566 (Tex. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVIE L. WILSON, Justice.

Appellant SMB Partners, Ltd., the defendant below, appeals a judgment in favor of appellee Hassan Osloub, the plaintiff in the nonjury trial below. We affirm.

PROCEDURAL AND HISTORICAL BACKGROUND

Osloub sued five defendants: SMB, Texas American Title Company (“TATCO”), Apollo Hicks, Inc., Herbert L. Hicks, Jr., and Stewart Title Guaranty Company. 1 In addition to actual damages, the trial court awarded Osloub exemplary damages from SMB based on SMB’s commission of statutory fraud with actual awareness. SMB appeals from that portion of the judgment awarding exemplary damages and attorney’s fees.

*370 Osloub’s cause of action arose from a real estate transaction between Osloub and SMB. In spring 1993, Osloub and John C. LaFave, Osloub’s attorney, met with Randall Joe Mayer, one of SMB’s limited partners, to discuss Osloub’s interest in buying real property owned by SMB and located at the intersection of Mykawa Road and Donoho Avenue. Osloub testified that, at one of the meetings, Mayer explained that Southwestern Bell owned a 40 foot easement along Donoho Avenue. LaFave testified Mayer also indicated that Bell was interested in buying another easement to construct a small “Box,” and Bell would contact Osloub. Mayer explained to Osloub that an easement meant that Osloub would not be able to build anything on that part of the property, but that both the owner of the property and owner of the easement would have access to it. Osloub indicated he would be willing to sell Bell an easement so long as Bell’s proposed use would not interfere with his use of the property.

On May 17, 1993, LaFave sent Mayer a letter presenting Osloub’s offer to buy the property. SMB subsequently sold an easement to Bell granting Bell the right to pave and fence a 2,588 square foot area. The easement covered an irregular four-sided tract of land extending approximately 60 to 69 feet into the property from the Donoho Avenue. Bell intended to construct, not a small “box,” but a building to house telecommunications facilities.

After SMB sold the easement to Bell, SMB and Osloub executed an earnest money contract in which Osloub agreed to buy the property from SMB. The contract provided in relevant part:

Purchaser has not entered into this Agreement based upon any representation, warranty, agreement, statement or expression of opinion by Seller or by any person or entity acting or allegedly acting for or on behalf of Seller as to the Property or the condition of the Property. Purchaser agrees that the Property is to be sold to and accepted by Purchaser at Closing, in its then present condition, AS IS, WHERE IS, WITH ALL FAULTS, IF ANY, AND WITHOUT ANY REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES WHATSOEVER, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, other than the warranty of title to be included in the Deed.... [I]t being understood and agreed that except for the warranty of title contained in the Deed; Seller makes no representations or warranties of any kind or nature in connection with this Agreement. Further, Purchaser represents and warrants to Seller that Purchaser has knowledge and expertise in financial and business matters that enable Purchaser to evaluate the merits and risks of the transaction contemplated by this Agreement and that Purchaser is not in a significantly disparate bargaining position.

The terms of the earnest money contract required SMB to provide a survey of the property, and the survey was to “[fjix ... any easements or building lines thereupon.” The contract also designated that TATCO furnish a “title insurance commitment.” Osloub had three days after delivery of the survey in which he could exercise his right to examine the survey and notify SMB of any material differences between the survey and the title commitment. If SMB did not cure the objections to title before closing, Olsoub could terminate the agreement.

William Green represented SMB, and either he or Mayer drafted the earnest money contract. Green was a “fee attorney” with TATCO and had an on-going relationship with TATCO.

On July 12, 1993, Stewart Title issued a title policy commitment that contained, as characterized by the trial court, a “misleading” description of the easement. It described an easement “forty (40) feet in width along the southerly property line.” Based on this description, Herbert Hicks, a surveyor hired by SMB, prepared a survey plat that contained an inaccurate drawing of the easement. Instead of *371 showing a portion of land 40 feet wide jutting 60 to 69 feet into the property from the south, it showed a strip of land extending 40 feet into the property and running along the entire southern boundary of the property.

At the July 23, 1993 closing, Osloub and LaFave saw the inaccurate survey plat prepared by Hicks. LaFave testified he would have advised Osloub not to proceed with the closing had he seen an accurate survey map. SMB and Osloub executed the deed, note, and deed of trust, which were all prepared by Green.

On July 27, 1993, Hicks prepared and delivered to SMB a corrected survey plat that accurately reflected the size, shape, and location of the easement. The following day, SMB delivered three copies of the corrected survey to TATCO. TATCO did not make the corrected plat available to Osloub until August 19, 1993, the day after TATCO had delivered Osloub’s money and note to SMB. Osloub testified that he first became aware of the nature of Bell’s easement sometime in 1996 when Bell came onto the property and began to survey it.

LEGAL EFFECT OF THE “AS IS” CLAUSE

Reliance is a necessary element of both common-law and statutory fraud. Schlumberger Tech. Corp. v. Swanson, 959 S.W.2d 171, 182 (Tex.1997). In issue one, SMB contends that, as a matter of law, the “as is” clause in the earnest money contract precludes Osloub from relying on any oral representations made by SMB. 2

“[A] release that clearly expresses the parties’ intent to waive fraudulent inducement claims, or one that disclaims reliance on representations about specific matters in dispute, can preclude a claim of fraudulent inducement.” Schlumberger, 959 S.W.2d at 181 (Tex.1997). Such a release may also preclude a claim of fraudulent nondisclosure. See id. An “as is” clause, however, is not determinative in every circumstance. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. v. Jefferson Assocs., Ltd., 896 S.W.2d 156, 162 (Tex.1995). An agreement to purchase something “as is” does not bind a buyer when a fraudulent representation or concealment of information induced the purchase. Id.

Moreover, the purported misrepresentation at issue in the present case was in a document (the plat survey) that related to the status of the title. Language in the earnest money contract specifically excluded representations in the warranty of title from the effect of the “as is” clause: “As is,” ... without any representations or warranties

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4 S.W.3d 368, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 7258, 1999 WL 771566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smb-partners-ltd-v-osloub-texapp-1999.