Unifund CCR Partners v. Sara Morgan Gellatly

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 3, 2008
Docket01-07-00552-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Unifund CCR Partners v. Sara Morgan Gellatly (Unifund CCR Partners v. Sara Morgan Gellatly) 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
Unifund CCR Partners v. Sara Morgan Gellatly, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 3, 2008

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

NO. 01-07-00552-CV

SARA MORGAN GELLATLY, AppellantV.UNIFUND CCR PARTNERS, Appellee

On Appeal from the County Court at Law Number 4Harris County, TexasTrial Court Cause No. 880,265

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Sara Morgan Gellatly, appeals the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of appellee, Unifund CCR Partners (“Unifund”). We affirm.

BACKGROUND

As successor-in-interest to Citibank (South Dakota),Unifund sued Gellatly for money allegedly owing on an unpaid credit card account. Unifund asserted causes of action for “suit on open & stated account/debt” and, in the alternative, “quantum meruit/unjust enrichment.” In its original petition, Unifund served Gellatly with twenty-nine requests for admission and requests for disclosure. The requested admissions stated that Gellatly: (1) opened a credit card account with Unifund’s predecessor-in-interest, (2) made payments and received monthly account statements,

(3) never disputedthecharges or sought verification, (4) owed Unifund a certain sum of money plus prejudgment interest, and (5) contractually agreed to an interest rate of 28.74%. Specifically, request for admission number 11 stated, “Defendant presently owes Plaintiff the amount of $17,842.72, along with pre-judgment interest.” Request for admission number 12 stated, “The attached statement accurately states the amount of money that Defendant owes to Plaintiff on the account.” Request for admission number 14 stated, “Defendant’s breach has damaged Plaintiff in the amount of $17,482.72.”

Two documents were attached to the original petition: (1) a document entitled, “Unifund Statement,” and (2) an affidavit of indebtedness, sworn to by Kim Kenney, Unifund’s media supervisor. The Unifund Statement, which was referenced in request for admission number 12, showed a balance of $31,442.47 on Gellatly’s

account. Kenney’s affidavit states:

The defendant is not in any branch of the military.

There is due and payable from SARA M. GELLATLY, Account Number 5424180427984106, the amount of $31442.47 (principal balance in the amount of $17482.72 plus interest up through 01/19/2006 in the amount of $13959.75). By the terms of the agreement between the defendant and the original creditor, interest is accruing from the aforesaid date at the rate of 28.74 percent per annum. This balance reflects any payments, credits or offsets made since the account was charged off.

Citibank (South Dakota) National Association’s account was issued under the name of Citibank. Unifund CCR Partners purchased this account from Citibank (South Dakota) National Association.

Gellatly filed a general denial, and she specifically denied that Unifund had

made a sworn account claim. The record shows no responses to Unifund’s requests

for admissions and disclosures on file.

Unifund filed a motion for summary judgment and an amended petition.

Unifund attached the following documents to its motion for summary judgment:

(1) the affidavit of Joseph Lutz, a record specialist for Unifund, who offered testimony to prove that the account statements were business records; (2) account statements; and (3) a photocopy of a credit card agreement, and (4) an affidavit from Unifund’s attorney regarding attorney’s fees. The attached credit card agreement recited standard terms and conditions. In addition, Unifund argued, “The deemed admissions establish that Defendant entered into an agreement with Plaintiff/Plaintiff’s predecessor in interest, that Defendant received the credit, that Plaintiff/Plaintiff’s predecessor in interest extended credit to Defendant, and that Defendant made payments less than the total of the purchases.”

Gellatly responded to Unifund’s motion for summary judgment and filed a counter-motion for summary judgment. Gellatly argued that Unifund lacked standing to sue, stating, “The party asserting that a debt is due to it by virtue of an assignment must prove that the debt was in fact assigned to it.” She also argued that: (1) suit on a credit card account cannot be brought as a suit on a sworn account and Unifund must produce evidence of the assignment from Citibank; (2) Unifund’s quantum meruit claim must fail because Unifund produced no evidence that it provided Gellatly with materials or services; (3) Unifund had not produced evidence of a valid contract; (4) the Lutz business records affidavit did not meet the predicate for the hearsay exception because Lutz is not a person with knowledge from the original lender; (5) the “affidavits attached to the original Petition and to the Motion for Summary Judgment are not made by someone with the knowledge of the records of CITIBANK but rather an employee of UNIFUND CCR partners, a debt buyer and collector.”

In response, Unifund argued that the cardmember agreement and account statements showed the existence of a valid contract, because the cardmember agreement stated, under “Acceptance of Agreement,” that “the use of your Account or a Card, by you or an Authorized User, or your failure to cancel your Account within 30 days after receiving a Card, means you accept this agreement.”

The trial court granted Unifund’s motion for summary judgment, awarding $31,442.47 plus $7,861.00 attorney’s fees, $7,861.00 if Gellatly unsuccessfully appeals, 28.74% prejudgment interest, 18% post-judgment interest on the principal amount, and 8.25% interest on attorney’s fees. The order also stated, “All relief not expressly granted herein is denied.”

Gellatly filed a motion for new trial and objections to affidavits. She reurged her hearsay and lack of personal knowledge objections to the Lutz affidavit, and elaborated on those arguments. In addition, she objected to the Lutz affidavit on the grounds that it lacked foundation in multiple ways and was conclusory. She reurged her lack of personal knowledge objection to the Kenney affidavit, and she objected to it as conclusory, hearsay, and based on lack of foundation and authentication. The trial court denied Gellatly’s motion for new trial and expressly overruled her objections to the Lutz and Kenney affidavits.

On appeal, Gellatly argues that the court erred in overruling her objections to the Lutz and Kenney affidavits and by granting summary judgment in favor of Unifund. Specifically, she again argues that the Lutz and Kenney affidavits are not based on personal knowledge, are hearsay, and are conclusory. She also argues that

(1) summary judgment was not merited under any of Unifund’s asserted causes of action (open account, stated account, breach of contract, or quantum meruit) and (2) Unifund lacks standing and has produced no evidence that it owns her account.

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Unifund CCR Partners v. Sara Morgan Gellatly, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unifund-ccr-partners-v-sara-morgan-gellatly-texapp-2008.