Theresa Elizabeth Trojacek and Ronald David Ludwig v. Estate of Magnolia Kveton

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 7, 2009
Docket14-07-00911-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Theresa Elizabeth Trojacek and Ronald David Ludwig v. Estate of Magnolia Kveton (Theresa Elizabeth Trojacek and Ronald David Ludwig v. Estate of Magnolia Kveton) 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
Theresa Elizabeth Trojacek and Ronald David Ludwig v. Estate of Magnolia Kveton, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Affirmed in Part, and Dismissed for Want of Jurisdiction in Part, and Memorandum Opinion filed April 7, 2009

Affirmed in Part, and Dismissed for Want of Jurisdiction in Part, and Memorandum Opinion filed April 7, 2009.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

_______________

NO. 14-07-00911-CV

THERESA ELIZABETH TROJACEK and RONALD DAVID LUDWIG, Appellants

v.

ESTATE OF MAGNOLIA KVETON, Appellee

On Appeal from the County Court at Law

Austin County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 7041

M E M O R A N D U M  O P I N I O N


This longstanding real-estate dispute arose in Austin County and involves unusual factual complexity.  The parties are:  (1) Magnolia Kveton (AKveton@), an elderly lady who owned 333 acres of land that she deeded to her putative fiancé, Ronald David Ludwig (ALudwig@); (2) Ludwig, an already-married young veterinarian who has since been incarcerated for capital murder, and (3) Ludwig=s ex-wife, Theresa Elizabeth Trojacek (ATrojacek@), who continues to litigate about ownership of the land in which she admittedly has no legal interest. 

In 1990, after discovering that Ludwig was married, Kveton sued him for fraud and breach of fiduciary duties, seeking a return of the property she deeded to him.  Following a bench trial conducted seventeen years later, in 2007, the trial court concluded that Ludwig in fact breached fiduciary duties to Kveton and restored ownership of the property to the estate of the now-deceased Kveton (the AEstate@).

In one issue on appeal, Ludwig challenges the trial court=s subject matter jurisdiction, contending that the amount in controversy in the underlying proceeding exceeded the jurisdictional limits for a statutory county court.  In addition, Trojacek has separately appealed, raising five issues, under the presumption that she has some legal rights to the acreage.  She does not.  Because Trojacek lacks standing to challenge the judgment, we dismiss her appeal for want of jurisdiction.  Otherwise, we affirm the judgment as to Ludwig.

                                                               BACKGROUND

In the late 1970s, Kveton owned roughly 333 acres of land located in Austin County and Colorado County.  When she was almost ninety years old, she was befriended by Ludwig, a veterinarian in his mid-20s.  As their friendship developed, Kveton apparently came under the impression that Ludwig intended to marry her.  Over a period of nine years that began in 1979,  Kveton transferred the 333 acres to Ludwig in the form of six real-estate deeds that were executed at different times.  She later alleged, and the trial court found, that Ludwig did not give consideration for these deeds.


During the time that Kveton claimed Ludwig as her fiancé, he was already married to Trojacek.  However, in 1989, Trojacek sued Ludwig for divorce in Harris County district court and, in that proceeding, characterized the 333 acres as the couple=s community property.  Kveton apparently learned of the divorce action and, realizing that Ludwig was already married, demanded that he return the real-estate deeds to her.  When he declined, Kveton intervened in the divorce proceeding.  She accused LudwigCand Trojacek, tooCof fraud and breach of fiduciary duties, and asked that the acreage be re-conveyed to her.  Kveton died during the pendency of the divorce action, however, and the petition for intervention was thereafter prosecuted by her estate.  Kveton=s will was probated in the County Court at Law of Austin County.

The Harris County district court ordered that the intervention be severed from the main divorce action but, after that point, the record indicates there was no further activity on the intervention until March 30, 2007, almost fifteen years later.[1]  Meanwhile, in February 1992, the district court signed a divorce decree that awarded the 333 acres to Ludwig, as his separate property.  Importantly, Trojacek has never appealed that determination, and she openly acknowledges that the divorce decree effectively extinguished any claim she might have in the acreage.

Ludwig did not hold title to the property for long.  During the pendency of the divorce action, Ludwig was indicted for the capital murder of his brother-in-law (Joseph Trojacek) and five-year-old nephew (Matthew Trojacek).  He was convicted and sentenced to incarceration for life.  See Ludwig v. State, 872 S.W.2d 771, 771 (Tex. App.CWaco 1994), aff=d, 931 S.W.2d 239 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996).  Katherine Marie Trojacek (AKatherine@), who was Joseph=s widow and Matthew=s mother, obtained a civil judgment against Ludwig for $50,016,962.00.  In 1993, Katherine, presumably collecting on the civil judgment, acquired whatever interest Ludwig had in the 333 acres pursuant to sheriffs= deeds in Austin County and Colorado County.


In 2007, Katherine attempted to sell some of the real property; however, a title company discovered that the acreage was subject to a lis pendens notice that the Estate had filed in Austin County in March 1992.  At that point, Theresa TrojacekCnot KatherineCapproached the Estate to terminate the lis pendens.  When the Estate refused, Trojacek threatened, apparently on her sister=s behalf, to bring litigation.

In March 2007, the Estate filed a motion asking that the intervention, which had lain dormant in Harris County for many years, be transferred to Austin County and consolidated with the Estate=

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Theresa Elizabeth Trojacek and Ronald David Ludwig v. Estate of Magnolia Kveton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/theresa-elizabeth-trojacek-and-ronald-david-ludwig-v-estate-of-magnolia-texapp-2009.