URI Cohen v. Delores Hawkins

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 15, 2008
Docket14-07-00043-CV
StatusPublished

This text of URI Cohen v. Delores Hawkins (URI Cohen v. Delores Hawkins) 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
URI Cohen v. Delores Hawkins, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed April 15, 2008

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed April 15, 2008.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-07-00043-CV

URI COHEN, Appellant

V.

DELORES HAWKINS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 334th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2004-36442

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N


Uri Cohen appeals the portions of a judgment that favor Delores Hawkins.  Hawkins sued Cohen and Brian Culwell seeking, among other things, return of her real property, which Culwell sold to Cohen.[1]  Hawkins had signed a power of attorney authorizing Culwell to handle certain of her affairs including real estate transactions.  Under color of this document, Culwell sold Hawkins= property to Cohen in exchange for credit on an antecedent debt Culwell owed to Cohen.  In his response to Hawkins= lawsuit, Cohen raised claims for reimbursement of property taxes paid and indemnification among other things.  After a bench trial, the trial court entered judgment setting aside the conveyance deed from Culwell to Cohen and holding that the power of attorney from Hawkins to Culwell was void.  The court further found that Culwell committed fraud and breached his fiduciary duty to Hawkins.  The court also denied all of Cohen=s requests for relief, finding that he did not have clean hands in the underlying transaction.  The court awarded the property to Hawkins and found Culwell liable for monetary damages.

On appeal, Cohen raises nine issues, contending: (1) Culwell was vested as Hawkins= agent with authority to convey the property and accept the proceeds; (2) the power of attorney was not rendered invalid as to Cohen simply because it may have resulted from fraud between Culwell and Hawkins; (3) Hawkins is estopped from denying the validity of the power of attorney; (4) the conveyance deed, conveying the property to Cohen, is not void; (5) the second corrected warranty deed, purporting to correct an error in the conveyance from a prior owner to Hawkins, is not void; (6) Cohen was a bona fide purchaser who took the property for value and without notice of another=s claim of interest in the property; (7) Cohen is entitled to reimbursement for taxes he paid on the property; (8) Cohen is entitled to indemnification for costs he has incurred in defending title; and (9) Hawkins= negligence was more than 50% responsible for the damages incurred by all parties.  We affirm.

I.  Background


Hawkins testified that in late 2002, she was having trouble buying a car because of her credit record.  Culwell offered to help, drafted a document, and arranged for Hawkins to sign the document in front of a notary.  The record contains a power of attorney apparently signed by Hawkins, granting Culwell the power to:  Aact in [her] name, place and stead in any way which [she herself] could do . . . with respect to the following matters . . . Real estate transactions . . . Claims and litigation . . . Records, reports and statements . . . [and granting authority] to delegate his powers to any other person.@  The document also required Culwell to act in Hawkins= Abest interest.@  Sometime after signing the document, Hawkins began receiving mail from the City of Houston indicating that a piece of property she owned was now owned by Cohen.  She went to see Culwell, who told her Athat=s no good,@ that he didn=t do it, and that he would try to get her some money.  She told him that she didn=t want money, she wanted her property back.  She testified that she knew nothing about the sale of the property until she received  notice from the City.  Subsequently, Hawkins and Culwell met again, and Culwell told Hawkins that someone wanted to give her $27,000.  She said that was the last meeting she had with Culwell.  Thereafter, a notice to vacate was stapled to the house located on the property.  Hawkins was given the notice by Flora Binkley, the tenant who lived at the property.  Hawkins denied that she ever gave Culwell written or oral authority to transfer her property for his benefit.

Cohen testified that he is in the business of buying and selling diamonds.  He met Culwell sometime around 2002 when Culwell began buying diamonds from him.  Eventually, Culwell came to owe Cohen about $190,000 for diamonds Cohen had given him.  Cohen made repeated but unsuccessful requests for payment.  Finally, Culwell offered Cohen several pieces of property against the amount owed.  Apparently, two of the properties were in Culwell=s name and the third was owned by Hawkins.   Cohen said that he investigated the properties and chose the one owned by Hawkins.  At the back of the property was what Cohen described as a A[s]hack, little small building in the back where the big building in front had been taken down.@  Cohen said that Culwell told him that he (Culwell) owned the property.  Cohen further said that he believed Culwell owned the property because of the power of attorney signed by Hawkins.

In November, 2002, Culwell conveyed Hawkins= property to Cohen in exchange for a $55,000 credit against the outstanding debt and an extension of time to pay the remaining balance.  In an effort to clear title, Cohen=s attorney, Lana Dieringer, obtained a Second Corrected Warranty Deed from George Raft Washington, who had previously deeded the property to Hawkins.  Cohen listed the property for sale approximately three months later.


In March 2004, Dieringer received a letter from an attorney representing Hawkins and claiming that Hawkins= property had been stolen.  Several months later, Cohen received a letter from the Harris County District Attorney=s office informing him that Hawkins had filed criminal charges against Culwell.  The district attorney=

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URI Cohen v. Delores Hawkins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uri-cohen-v-delores-hawkins-texapp-2008.