Victor Rodarte v. Investeco Group, LLC. Morad Mekhail, Individually and as Trustee of Certain Real Property and Vincent Rodriguez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 29, 2009
Docket14-08-00093-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Victor Rodarte v. Investeco Group, LLC. Morad Mekhail, Individually and as Trustee of Certain Real Property and Vincent Rodriguez (Victor Rodarte v. Investeco Group, LLC. Morad Mekhail, Individually and as Trustee of Certain Real Property and Vincent Rodriguez) 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
Victor Rodarte v. Investeco Group, LLC. Morad Mekhail, Individually and as Trustee of Certain Real Property and Vincent Rodriguez, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Affirmed and Majority Opinion and Concurring Opinion filed September 29, 2009.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-08-00093-CV

VICTOR RODARTE, Appellant

V.

INVESTECO GROUP, L.L.C., MORAD MEKHAIL, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS TRUSTEE OF CERTAIN REAL PROPERTY DESCRIBED AS THE SOUTH ONE-HALF (2) OF LOT TWO (2) AND ALL OF LOTS THREE (3), FOUR (4), FIVE (5), AND SIX (6), IN BLOCK TWENTY-FOUR (24), IN MRS. A.C. ALLEN=S ADDITION TO THE CITY OF HOUSTON, HARRIS COUNTY, TEXAS NSBB AND VINCENT RODRIGUEZ, Appellees

On Appeal from the 157th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2006-69640A

MAJORITY   O P I N I O N


In this property-foreclosure case, Victor Rodarte appeals the trial court=s summary-judgment orders in favor of Investeco Group, L.L.C., Morad Mekhail, and Vincent Rodriguez.  Victor contends that the summary-judgment orders were improperly granted because (1) he had standing to prosecute the suit on his brother=s behalf; (2) one summary-judgment order was based solely upon previously nonsuited claims; (3) the appellee-movants failed to meet the required burdens of proof; and (4) the trial court ignored Victor=s properly pleaded and proven affirmative defenses.  We affirm the trial court=s judgment.

I.        Background

In 1990, Paul Sanchez (a.k.a. Polo Sanchez) sold a piece of real property in Harris County to Eva Mendez.  Sanchez and Mendez executed a promissory note for $110,000, which was secured by a deed of trust granting Sanchez a lien on the property.  Mendez conveyed the property in 1997 to Marleny Serna, who assumed the note.  In 1999, Serna conveyed the property via a document entitled AAssumption Warranty Deed@ to Domingo Gonzales and Gregorio Rodarte, Vincent=s brother, and they assumed the note and executed a new deed of trust.  According to the pleadings, Gonzales and Gregorio assumed the note under an oral partnership agreement in which each agreed to pay one-half of the note=s payments and other expenses.  Gregorio eventually assumed the entire note, allegedly buying out Gonzales=s interest.   

According to the pleadings, in 2004 Gregorio had difficulty making the monthly payments and began searching for a buyer for the property.  Around the same time, Sanchez appointed Vincent Rodriguez as substitute trustee on the new deed of trust.  Gregorio allegedly located a buyer, Gomar Properties, Inc., but then learned indirectly that Rodriguez had taken action to foreclose upon the property.  In April 2004, Gonzales allegedly approached RodriguezCin his capacity as an agent to SanchezCto prevent the foreclosure, and the parties reached an oral agreement (the ASanchez Agreement@) to that effect.  The specific details of that agreement remain in dispute. 

In October 2004, Sanchez sold the note to Investeco.  Investeco then appointed Morad Mehkail as the substitute trustee of the deed of trust.  Mehkail executed a notice of foreclosure sale on the property and sold the property to the highest bidder, Investeco. 


About two years later, Gregorio executed special and general power-of-attorney documents appointing Victor as his agent, and giving Victor authority to prosecute any and all legal actions relating to the property on his brother=s behalf.

Victor filed suit against Investeco and Mekhail alleging claims for damages including breach of contract, negligence, improper foreclosure, and breach of fiduciary duty.  Under the heading AParties,@ Victor is identified as Aan individual who . . . is the lawful agent of real-party-in-interest, Gregorio Rodarte, with respect to all suits arising from the real property in question.@ 

Victor filed his first amended petition against Investeco and Mekhail alleging claims for (among other things) breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty (against Mekhail in his capacity as trustee only), and conversion; Victor effectively nonsuited the previously asserted improper-foreclosure claims by omitting them from his amended pleading.  After Victor filed his amended pleading, Investeco and Mekhail filed counter-claims seeking a declaratory judgment with respect to proper notice of foreclosure and the existence of surplus funds following foreclosure.

Investeco and Mekhail moved for summary judgment on several claims, including their newly asserted counter-claims.  The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Investeco and Mekhail with regard to the appellees= declaratory-judgment counter-claims, but denied the remainder of the summary-judgment motion.


Victor filed a fourth amended petition in June 2007, in which he added Gregorio and Gonzales as plaintiffs, and Sanchez and Rodriguez as new defendants.  In July, Investeco and Mekhail filed a fourth amended motion against Gonzales, Victor, and Gregorio seeking summary judgment on the remaining claims for breach of fiduciary duty, tortious interference and conspiracy.  Sanchez and Rodriguez subsequently joined Investeco and Mekhail in their motion.[1]  On August 17, the trial court granted the motion for summary judgment ordering that Victor and Gregorio take nothing.  For unspecified reasons, the trial court crossed out Gonzales=s name from the summary-judgment order.  But two weeks later, Gonzales nonsuited his claims. 

On October 9, a suggestion of death was filed with the trial court, noting that Sanchez had died on May 8, 2007.  The suggestion further indicated that no administration of Sanchez=s estate was pending.[2]

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Victor Rodarte v. Investeco Group, LLC. Morad Mekhail, Individually and as Trustee of Certain Real Property and Vincent Rodriguez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victor-rodarte-v-investeco-group-llc-morad-mekhail-texapp-2009.