Thomas, Roosevelt C. v. Olympus/Nelson Property Management, D/B/A Weyrich Real Estate, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 27, 2004
Docket14-02-01212-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Thomas, Roosevelt C. v. Olympus/Nelson Property Management, D/B/A Weyrich Real Estate, Inc. (Thomas, Roosevelt C. v. Olympus/Nelson Property Management, D/B/A Weyrich Real Estate, Inc.) 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
Thomas, Roosevelt C. v. Olympus/Nelson Property Management, D/B/A Weyrich Real Estate, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Affirmed in Part, Reversed and Remanded in Part, and Opinion filed May 27, 2004

Affirmed in Part, Reversed and Remanded in Part, and Opinion filed May 27, 2004.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-02-01212-CV

ROOSEVELT C. THOMAS, Appellant

V.

OLYMPUS/NELSON PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

A/K/A WEYRICH REAL ESTATE, INC., Appellee

___________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 269th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 01-25314

O P I N I O N


At issue in this case is the meaning of Ahome address@ under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 742a, governing service of citation by delivery to premises.  For service to be appropriate under this rule, the plaintiff must list in the complaint Aall home and work addresses of the defendant which are known to the [plaintiff].@  We must decide whether service is proper under this rule if the plaintiff knows the defendant is being treated at an out-of-town hospital yet does not list this hospital as an address in its complaint.  Concluding that service under Rule 742a is not proper in these circumstances, we reverse the trial court=s directed verdict as to appellant=s wrongful-eviction claim. Finding no other reversible error, we affirm the remainder of the trial court=s judgment.

I.  Factual and Procedural Background

At the time of the events made the basis of this suit, plaintiff/appellant Roosevelt C. Thomas had lived in the same apartment in Houston, Texas, for more than twenty years.  He leased it from an owner who had appointed defendant/appellee Olympus/Nelson Property Management a/k/a Weyrich Real Estate, Inc. (hereinafter AWeyrich@) to manage the apartment complex and, among other things, collect rents due from tenants.

Thomas, a United States Marine Corps veteran from World War II, has been treated over the years for posttraumatic stress disorder dating from his military service.  A document admitted in evidence at trial shows that in February of 2000, Thomas was reported as missing and that, on February 23, 2000, police officers broke down the door to Thomas=s apartment in an attempt to locate him.  The president of Weyrich testified that, upon opening Thomas=s apartment, the police officers observed that the apartment was full of old papers and trash.  In Weyrich=s judgment, the condition of the apartment constituted a health-and-safety hazard that allegedly violated a provision in the lease requiring Thomas to keep his apartment clean and sanitary and to use reasonable diligence in the care of his apartment.  Therefore, Weyrich decided to evict Thomas from his apartment based on this alleged nonmonetary default under the lease.

Thomas testified at trial that in January of 2000, he left his Houston apartment and checked into the Veterans Affairs Hospital (AVA Hospital@) in Waco, Texas, for treatment for posttraumatic stress disorder.  Thomas stated that he returned briefly to his Houston apartment in February of 2000, to find that it had been broken into and that, after his return to the VA  Hospital, Thomas wrote a letter to Weyrich.  In this letter, Thomas identified himself and his apartment unit, and stated the following, among other things:


I am now a patient in the Veterans Hospital, Waco[,] Texas.  I hope that my stay hear [sic] will be brief.  I have be [sic] here for about three 3 weeks.

The purpose for this letter is to inform you that I returned last week Saturday to find that my apartment had be [sic] broken into, and burgarized. [sic]

The door was broken into and some of my property was stolen and gone through. 

Thomas testified that he sent this letter on or about February 29, 2000, along with a rental payment to Weyrich at a Houston post office box C the address to which Thomas was instructed to mail all of his correspondence.  The president of Weyrich testified that this was Weyrich=s post office box under Bank One=s control and that the tenants of Thomas=s apartment complex were instructed to mail their rent payments to this address.  Weyrich admitted at trial that Bank One received the above-quoted letter from Thomas on March 6, 2000.  The envelope containing this letter bore a Waco postmark, although Thomas put his Houston apartment as the return address on the envelope. 

Thomas testified that, when he left his Houston apartment to be hospitalized in Waco in January of 2000, the apartment was clean and livable and it did not look the way that it did in the photographs admitted in evidence at trial. Thomas testified to his belief that, after he left for the VA Hospital, but before the police officers entered his apartment on February 23, 2000, someone gained entry to his apartment and Atrashed@ it.

On or about March 8, 2000, two days after Bank One received Thomas=s February 29th letter, Weyrich posted a Anotice to vacate

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Thomas, Roosevelt C. v. Olympus/Nelson Property Management, D/B/A Weyrich Real Estate, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-roosevelt-c-v-olympusnelson-property-manage-texapp-2004.