Title Resources Guaranty Company as Subrogee of SLS Properties v. the Lighthouse Church & Ministries

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 23, 2019
Docket01-18-00015-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Title Resources Guaranty Company as Subrogee of SLS Properties v. the Lighthouse Church & Ministries (Title Resources Guaranty Company as Subrogee of SLS Properties v. the Lighthouse Church & Ministries) 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
Title Resources Guaranty Company as Subrogee of SLS Properties v. the Lighthouse Church & Ministries, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 23, 2019

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-00015-CV ——————————— TITLE RESOURCES GUARANTY COMPANY AS SUBROGEE OF SLS PROPERTIES, Appellant V. THE LIGHTHOUSE CHURCH & MINISTRIES, Appellee

On Appeal from the 11th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2015-25934

OPINION Appellant Title Resources Guaranty Company (“TRG”), as subrogee1 of

SLS Properties (“SLS”), appeals the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of

Appellee / Cross-Appellant The Lighthouse Church & Ministries (the “Church”).

In its summary judgment order, the trial court ruled that TRG take nothing by its

contract cause of action. TRG asks that we reverse and render judgment in its favor

on this claim. It contends that SLS and the Church’s contract for the sale of land

unambiguously obligated the Church to pay taxes that were imposed on the land

post-sale under Tax Code Section 11.201(a). It also asks that we either render

judgment in its favor on its claim for attorneys’ fees or, if we affirm the summary

judgment, affirm the ruling that neither party is entitled to attorneys’ fees.

The trial court also granted summary judgment in TRG’s favor, ruling that

the Church take nothing by its counterclaims. The Church has now abandoned its

counterclaims. It also cross-appeals for a rendition of judgment in its favor on its

claim for attorneys’ fees.

The contract gives rise to an ambiguity, even after interpreting the plain

language of the competing contract provisions and applying the interpretive canons

advanced by the parties. We therefore reverse the summary judgment in part and

remand the case for further proceedings.

1 The Church disputed in the trial court whether SLS was properly subrogated to TRG for purposes of this suit. The Church has conceded that issue in its appellate brief, so we need not analyze it.

2 Background

The Church acquired a tract of land in late 2011 and received an exemption

from ad valorem taxes on the land under Tax Code Section 11.20(a)(6). That

statute applies to certain land upon which a religious organization plans to expand

or build a place of regular religious worship. TEX. TAX CODE § 11.20(a)(6)(A)–(B).

If, however, the religious organization sells or transfers the land in a year in which

the land is receiving the exemption, “an additional tax is imposed on the land equal

to the tax that would have been imposed on the land had the land been taxed for

each of the five years preceding the year in which the sale or transfer occurs in

which the land received an exemption . . . .” Id. § 11.201(a).

Later, the Church agreed to sell the land to SLS. The parties entered into an

Unimproved Property Contract in April 2014 to govern the sale. The Unimproved

Property Contract stemmed from a form “promulgated by the Texas Real Estate

Commission.” Paragraphs 13(A) and 13(B) of the Unimproved Property Contract

address “Prorations” and “Rollback Taxes,” respectively. Because the land

received the exemption under Section 11.20(a)(6) for tax years 2012, 2013, and

2014, the Church had not been required to pay taxes on the land for those years.

The Church and SLS closed the sale on May 30, 2014. Also on that day,

they and the escrow agent for the sale executed an “Escrow With[h]old

Agreement” (the “EWA”). Under the EWA, the escrow agent held an amount of

3 money deposited by the Church “for possible Tax Rollbacks until” the agent

“receive[d] proof of . . . no additional taxes due from [the] Harris County Tax

Assessor.” If there were “additional amounts due beyond the amount withheld,”

the EWA required that “the seller will pay the additional monies to satisfy the

amount due to the Tax assessor/collector.”

SLS’s title insurer for the sale was TRG, under an Owner’s Policy of Title

Insurance.

In October 2014, the Harris County Appraisal District (“HCAD”) sent a

letter to the Church and a copy of it to SLS. The letter advised that HCAD “has

canceled the exemption on the” land sold by the Church to SLS, and it identified

the exemption as the one provided by Section 11.20(a)(6). The letter went on to

cite and paraphrase most of the language of Section 11.201(a).

Three taxing entities then demanded payment from SLS for ad valorem taxes

relating to the land for tax years 2012, 2013, and 2014. TRG, on SLS’s behalf due

to the subrogation provisions of the title-insurance policy, demanded that the

Church pay those taxes, as allegedly required by the provisions of SLS and the

Church’s contract of sale. The Church refused. TRG then paid the 2012 and 2013

taxes on SLS’s behalf—ultimately $111,813.95 after certain refunds—in part to

avoid accrual of penalties and interest and to allow SLS to protest the appraised

value of the land that the taxing authorities used to calculate the taxes they

4 imposed under Section 11.201(a). For the 2014 taxes, SLS paid the amounts that

accrued after the May 30, 2014 closing, and the funds that the Church deposited in

escrow under the EWA paid off the amounts that had accrued for January through

May 2014.

After SLS’s appraisal protest was denied, SLS petitioned for judicial review

of the protest in court. The protest suit was ultimately settled.

TRG, as subrogee of SLS, filed this suit against the Church. TRG pleaded

causes of action for breach of contract and quantum meruit. It sought as damages

the $111,813.95 that it had paid for 2012 and 2013 taxes, recovery of $44,776.50

for costs it allegedly incurred to mitigate its damages, and attorneys’ fees. The

Church answered and counterclaimed, but the Church represents on appeal that it

has “clearly abandoned its counterclaims.” However, it has not abandoned its

claims for attorneys’ fees under the Unimproved Property Contract’s “prevailing

party” provision.

TRG and the Church’s dispute arises largely out of their competing

interpretations of the documents that constitute SLS and the Church’s contract of

sale. In short, the Church contends that Paragraph 13(B) of the Unimproved

Property Contract unambiguously required SLS to pay the 2012 and 2013 taxes

imposed by the taxing authorities under Section 11.201(a). TRG contends that the

EWA unambiguously required the Church to pay those taxes.

5 The parties cross-moved for summary judgment on their competing theories.

On TRG’s causes of action for breach of contract and quantum meruit, the trial

court granted summary judgment in the Church’s favor that TRG take nothing. On

the Church’s counterclaims, the trial court granted summary judgment in TRG’s

favor that the Church take nothing. The trial court also ruled that neither party was

entitled to attorneys’ fees.

The trial court’s judgment, in effect, returned the parties to the status quo

ante—TRG had paid the 2012 and 2013 taxes imposed under Section 11.201(a),

and both parties took nothing by this suit. TRG appealed, and the Church

cross-appealed.

Contractual Obligation for Taxes Imposed Under Tax Code Section 11.201(a)

In its first issue, TRG contends that the contract unambiguously obligated

the Church to pay the taxes imposed under Section 11.201(a). The Church’s first

issue is the mirror image of TRG’s—that the contract unambiguously obligated

TRG to pay those taxes.

I. Standard of Review

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Title Resources Guaranty Company as Subrogee of SLS Properties v. the Lighthouse Church & Ministries, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/title-resources-guaranty-company-as-subrogee-of-sls-properties-v-the-texapp-2019.