Rob Hughitt v. Steven Bramlett ( 2022 )


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  •              In the
    Court of Appeals
    Second Appellate District of Texas
    at Fort Worth
    ___________________________
    No. 02-22-00056-CV
    ___________________________
    ROB HUGHITT, Appellant
    V.
    STEVEN BRAMLETT, Appellee
    On Appeal from the 355th District Court
    Hood County, Texas
    Trial Court No. C2020128
    Before Kerr, Birdwell, and Walker, JJ.
    Memorandum Opinion by Justice Walker
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    This is an appeal from a one-day bench trial on a claim for breach of a contract
    involving a tract of real property that is subdivided into four lots (the Property), and
    on which two homes are located, each home being situated on two of the four lots.
    In the judgment, the trial court found that the Legal Agreement entered into between
    Appellant Rob Hughitt and Appellee Steven Bramlett is valid and enforceable and
    that, pursuant to the Agreement, the Property is “mutual property” of Hughitt and
    Bramlett. Based on Bramlett’s claim of anticipatory repudiation of the Agreement’s
    sale provision, the trial court ordered Hughitt “to sell whichever of the two [lots] he
    would so desire, by placing [them] on the market within 30 days from August 18,
    2021,” and after selling those two lots, to “convey the other . . . two” to Bramlett.1
    On appeal, Hughitt contends that the trial court erred by finding that he and Bramlett
    “jointly” owned the Property, erred by rendering judgment “forcing [him] to sell a
    tract of land,” and erred by ordering a sale deadline––September 17, 2021––that
    occurred before the date the trial court signed the judgment on November 17, 2021.
    We affirm.
    1
    The trial court also denied Hughitt’s request for contribution from Bramlett
    for costs incurred in building the two homes on the Property.
    2
    I. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND AND TRIAL EVIDENCE
    Hughitt and Bramlett entered into the following Agreement in September 2016:
    Let it hereby be known that the lots having been purchased by Rob Roy
    Hughitt from Victoria and Steven Wayne Bramlett, currently located and
    identified as lots 53, 54 and 55, 56 located in the Wildwood Estates
    edition in Granbury, Texas [the Property], do[] currently possess two
    homes, one being on lots 53 and 54 adjoined and another home being
    located on lots 55 and 56 adjoined. The two homes and the properties
    on which they are located, and together having been mutually
    constructed by Rob Roy Hughitt and Steven Jeffery Bramlett
    commensurate, are each considered as mutual property with mutual
    expense and responsibility until such time that one home has been sold.
    With the culmination of the sale of either of the subject homes, the
    home remaining un-sold becomes the full and total possession and
    responsibility of Steven Jeffery Bramlett both in word and in title
    for said home and inclusive of those lots on which that home
    stands.
    On July 8, 2020, Bramlett sued Hughitt for breach of the Agreement and
    breach of fiduciary duty; his petition also included a declaratory-judgment claim.
    Bramlett requested specific performance of the Agreement, partition of the Property,
    and damages in the alternative. In his answer, Hughitt raised the statute of frauds as
    an affirmative defense2 and, alternatively, failure of consideration. He also filed a
    counterclaim seeking to remove the lis pendens that Bramlett had filed in the Hood
    County property records.
    2
    Hughitt’s counsel repeatedly objected that the Agreement is unenforceable
    under the statute of frauds. But on appeal, Hughitt does not challenge the trial court’s
    declaration that the Agreement is valid and enforceable other than to claim it is
    unenforceably ambiguous.
    3
    At trial, the evidence focused on the circumstances leading to the Agreement’s
    signing and on the parties’ conduct thereafter.
    Victoria Bramlett––Bramlett’s mother––testified that she purchased the
    Property in 1985 and that she had promised it to Bramlett. But on September 26,
    2016, Victoria and her husband conveyed the title to the Property to Hughitt, her
    brother, for $9,500.
    According to Victoria, she signed the deed to Hughitt at his request: “When I
    went to the title office, I was not signing a document signing it over to my son. It was
    saying I had to sign it over to Rob Hughitt, and that’s when I went and drafted this
    document [the Agreement] because the property was my son’s.” Thus, before signing
    the deed to Hughitt, Victoria drafted the Agreement, talked to both Hughitt and
    Bramlett about it, and submitted it to the title company.
    Bramlett signed the Agreement on September 20, 2016, and Hughitt signed it
    on September 22, 2016. Victoria said she would not have conveyed the Property to
    Hughitt if he had not first signed the Agreement.
    Victoria further testified that before Hughitt and Bramlett signed the
    Agreement, she viewed the homes that had already been constructed on the four lots;
    one home had been built on lots 53 and 54 (Home 1), and the other had been built on
    lots 55 and 56 (Home 2).3 She noticed that both homes had been substantially
    3
    Victoria estimated that Home 1 was valued at around $140,000 and that Home
    2 was valued at around $125,000.
    4
    completed,4 that Home 1 “was simply in need of some trim work and . . . appliances,”
    and that Home 2 “was complete with appliances in it.”5 According to Victoria, when
    Hughitt and Bramlett signed the Agreement, “other parties” were living in Home 16
    and Bramlett was living in Home 2. According to Bramlett, however, he moved into
    Home 2 in January 2017.7 At the time of trial, Bramlett was incarcerated.8
    According to Bramlett, during construction of the homes, Hughitt was to
    provide the materials while Bramlett “was to stay on the job site and build the
    houses.”   Bramlett worked for Hughitt, who deducted taxes for Home 2 from
    Bramlett’s paycheck.9 But Bramlett lost his job when he was incarcerated.
    Bramlett also testified that Home 1 and Home 2 had been substantially
    4
    completed by the time he signed the Agreement.
    5
    Two other witnesses testified that the homes were substantially complete at
    the time the parties signed the Agreement.
    6
    According to Bramlett, Hughitt had rented out Home 1 continuously since
    then, and he had not paid Bramlett any part of the rental income. Hughitt testified
    that he charged $1,200 monthly as rent.
    7
    Bramlett’s testimony is confusing and somewhat inconsistent in that he also
    testified that different people had lived in the house with his permission, but he did
    not say when those people lived there.
    8
    Sometime before filing suit, Bramlett was arrested for DWI.
    According to Hughitt, he deducted only $61 a month for seven months.
    9
    Hughitt also paid Bramlett’s water bill and deducted money for that.
    5
    After Bramlett’s DWI arrest, Hughitt filed a forcible-detainer suit to oust
    Bramlett of possession of Home 2.10 According to Victoria, Hughitt told her at the
    time that “his intent was to put both of the homes into a trust that would be in effect
    even after he died and that the houses would never be sold and that he was going to
    give $200 a month to Sarah Bramlett,” who is Bramlett’s daughter. Hughitt did not
    deny having this discussion with Victoria, but he explained that he had told her, “[W]e
    need to . . . . resolve . . . this . . . problem because [Bramlett] never paid anything for
    four years, never paid the taxes, never paid the electric bills, never paid any part of any
    construction. I need some resolution to some money that is owed to me.” Although
    the forcible-detainer suit was eventually dismissed, it precipitated this suit.
    Bramlett explained the Agreement thusly: “Our deal was two houses were to
    be constructed. One was to be sold out of the company owner [sic] of the property
    that was not sold.” Bramlett agreed, however, that the Agreement does not provide a
    date by which Hughitt was to sell one of the homes; he expressly stated, “There was
    no sale date.”11 But he then clarified, “[A]s far as I knew, as soon as they were
    constructed, they were both to be put up for sale, and whichever one sold first, the
    other one became my property.” Bramlett testified that Hughitt had breached the
    Agreement because it “stated that the house be sold.”
    However, according to Hughitt, Bramlett was not actually living in Home 2 at
    10
    the time.
    He also agreed that the Agreement does not define “mutual expense” or
    11
    “mutually constructed.”
    6
    Hughitt testified that he had been a builder in Hood County for almost forty
    years. He testified that he does not start construction on a home before obtaining
    title to the property because to do so would cause any first-lien position to be null and
    void. When asked whether he had begun any work on Home 1 and Home 2 before
    September 26, 2016, he answered, “I don’t believe so.” According to Hughitt, when
    he bought the land from Victoria, it had “two old mobile homes and a three-stall . . .
    carport” on it. It took him a month to remove them and clear the lots so that he
    could begin building the homes. At the time, Bramlett was working for him.
    After the lots were cleared, about a month after Hughitt bought the Property,
    his crews began to build Home 1 and Home 2. Hughitt denied that Home 1 and
    Home 2 had been mutually constructed as stated in the Agreement. According to
    Hughitt, Bramlett did some plumbing work on the homes, for which Hughitt paid
    him hourly, and Bramlett moved into Home 2 after they were both completed.
    According to Hughitt, he signed the Agreement because he was going to “take
    those two abandoned mobile homes and . . . get rid of them, take the four lots[,] and
    build two houses on the lots.” Hughitt said that the Property “needed to be cleaned
    up” and that he agreed “to buy the lots and build two houses on them and then go
    from there.”    When asked why he signed the Agreement, Hughitt said, “[T]he
    agreement was . . . that if we sold one of them, we would get part of the proceeds if
    everything went good.”
    7
    Hughitt testified that Bramlett never contributed financially to the Property.
    Instead, Bramlett lived in Home 2 for only three or four months; the rest of the time,
    other family members lived there. Hughitt also testified that when he signed the
    Agreement, he had not been able to read it because he is dyslexic.12 He said he never
    had any intent to sell or convey property when he signed the Agreement, nor did he at
    the time of trial.
    Despite not filing a pleading seeking such relief, Hughitt asked Bramlett to sell
    “his house . . . that he claimed.” But Hughitt wanted his “proceeds” from that sale:
    $85,000 plus four years of rent at $1,200 per month.
    At the close of trial, the judge stated his ruling on the record, specifically
    finding that “there is a valid and enforceable agreement that is titled ‘Legal
    Agreement,’” that “[b]y the terms of the [A]greement, . . . the [P]roperty is mutual
    property of . . . Hughitt and . . . Bramlett,” and “that . . . Hughitt is to sell whichever
    of the two properties he would so desire.” The trial court then asked the parties how
    much time would be needed to complete the sale, and Bramlett’s counsel suggested “a
    reasonable amount of time.” The trial court then ruled “that whichever lot . . .
    Hughitt also testified that he was nevertheless able to maintain his
    12
    construction business by having his secretary and others read documents to him. On
    cross-examination, he admitted that the title company representative had read the
    Agreement to him. See, e.g., Nat’l Prop. Holdings, L.P. v. Westergren, 
    453 S.W.3d 419
    , 425
    (Tex. 2015) (“Instead of excusing a party’s failure to read a contract when the party
    has an opportunity to do so, the law presumes that the party knows and accepts the
    contract terms.”).
    8
    Hughitt desires [is to] be put on the market within 30 days of today’s date, and the
    other of the two will then be conveyed to . . . Bramlett.” Although the trial court
    made its ruling on August 18, 2021, it did not sign a written judgment until
    November 17, 2021.
    After the trial court signed the judgment, Hughitt filed a motion for new trial,
    in which he contended that the trial court could not have ordered him to sell one of
    the homes because the Legal Agreement did not provide for such a remedy; he also
    argued that the judgment imposes an impossible requirement: “It is impossible to
    comply with a September 17 deadline on November 17.”
    II. EVIDENCE SUPPORTS “MUTUAL PROPERTY” FINDING
    In his first issue, Hughitt argues that the trial court erred by finding that the
    Property “is mutual property of” the parties because the Agreement is ambiguous as
    to the percentage owned by each of them and because no evidence was presented
    about their respective ownership percentages from which the trial court could make
    such a finding of mutual ownership.
    Hughitt bases much of his argument in this issue and his second issue on the
    premise that any partition of the Property was error. But although Bramlett had
    pleaded for partition, the trial court did not employ the partition process. See Tex. R.
    Civ. P. 756–70 (partition-specific procedural rules); see also 
    Tex. Prop. Code Ann. §§ 23.001
    -.006 (statutes governing partition suit). Instead, the trial court granted
    9
    relief on Bramlett’s claim for anticipatory breach with specific performance as the
    remedy.13
    As Hughitt points out, the evidence showed that he holds legal title14 to the
    Property under a deed from Victoria. But the Agreement itself acknowledges that
    title. According to the Agreement, in light of the fact that the homes were “mutually
    constructed,” Hughitt was to hold his legal title for both his and Bramlett’s benefit,
    “as mutual property with mutual expense and responsibility,” until the sale of either
    Home 1 or Home 2, at which point Bramlett’s legal title to the remaining home would
    ripen.        Thus, the trial court did no more than make a finding based on the
    Agreement’s plain language.15 We therefore overrule Hughitt’s first issue.
    For that reason, Barstow v. State, a partition case upon which Hughitt relies, is
    13
    inapposite. 
    742 S.W.2d 495
    , 510 (Tex. App.––Austin 1987, writ denied).
    See Longoria v. Lasater, 
    292 S.W.3d 156
    , 165 (Tex. App.––San Antonio 2009,
    14
    pet. denied) (op. on reh’g) (explaining title types: record, legal, and equitable).
    In his brief, Hughitt refers to the Agreement as “unenforceably ambiguous.”
    15
    To the extent his issue could be liberally construed to include an argument that the
    Agreement failed to include an essential term by omitting the exact ownership
    percentages meant by “mutual property with mutual expense and responsibility,” we
    disagree. The Agreement’s terms are “sufficiently definite to ‘enable a court to
    understand the parties’ obligations’” and to provide the proper remedy upon a breach.
    See Fischer v. CTMI, L.L.C., 
    479 S.W.3d 231
    , 237 (Tex. 2016) (quoting Fort Worth ISD
    v. City of Fort Worth, 
    22 S.W.3d 831
    , 846 (Tex. 2000), and citing Restatement (Second)
    of Contracts § 33(2) (1981)). Although Hughitt made other challenges to the
    Agreement’s enforceability in the trial court, he has abandoned them here.
    Hughitt also states in the argument summary of his brief, without support, that
    “the purported agreement was not supported by consideration.” To the extent that
    this sentence could be construed as raising the issue, we note that Hughitt argued in
    10
    III. ORDER TO SELL PROPERTY PROPER
    Hughitt contends in his second issue that the trial court erred by ordering him
    to sell one of the two homes because the Agreement does not require such a sale and
    because “[t]he trial court added a deadline . . . that was absent from the document.”
    According to Hughitt, because the Agreement contained no time by which Hughitt
    was required to sell one of the homes––if required to sell at all––“any duty to transfer
    ownership [of the other home to Bramlett] was not ripe.”
    Hughitt does not challenge the trial court’s implied finding that he breached the
    Agreement. See Kelly v. Tracy, No. 01-18-00913-CV, 
    2022 WL 2837335
    , at *5 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [1st Dist.] July 21, 2022, no pet.) (mem. op.) (explaining that
    anticipatory breach, or repudiation, of a contract is “a positive and unconditional
    refusal to perform the contract in the future, expressed either before performance is
    due or after partial performance”). Instead, he challenges the availability of specific
    performance as a remedy.
    the trial court that the Agreement was not supported by consideration because
    Bramlett had failed to perform his obligations to mutually construct the homes and
    because he had not shared in the Property’s expenses. See Yu v. Lu, No. 03-22-00036-
    CV, 
    2022 WL 2056362
    , at *4 (Tex. App.––Austin June 8, 2022, pet. denied) (mem.
    op.) (explaining difference between lack of consideration and failure of consideration,
    noting that the latter “is a defense to a party’s prevailing on a cause of action brought
    under a contract, but . . . does not render a contract unenforceable or invalid”). But
    the trial court was entitled to believe the other witnesses’ testimony over Hughitt’s.
    See McGalliard v. Kuhlmann, 
    722 S.W.2d 694
    , 697 (Tex. 1986).
    11
    Specific performance is an equitable breach-of-contract remedy that substitutes
    for monetary damages when they would be inadequate. Lockheart Chapel, Inc. v. Katim
    Endeavors, Inc., No. 02-21-00405-CV, 
    2022 WL 3456834
    , at *3 (Tex. App.—Fort
    Worth Aug. 18, 2022, no pet.) (mem. op.). The specific performance ordered must be
    according to the contract’s terms. See Hubler v. Oshman, 
    700 S.W.2d 694
    , 699 (Tex.
    App.––Corpus Christi–Edinburg 1985, no writ); Brantley v. Etter, 
    662 S.W.2d 752
    , 757
    (Tex. App.––San Antonio 1983), writ ref’d n.r.e., 
    677 S.W.2d 503
     (Tex. 1984).
    In effect, Hughitt argues that the Agreement does not contemplate a sale of
    one of the homes but merely protects Bramlett in the event they ever did decide to
    sell one. Bramlett, on the other hand, testified that it was always contemplated that
    one of the homes would be sold, giving him legal title to the other home at that time.
    We construe a contract’s words in context, which is not “confined to the two-
    dimensional contractual environs in which the words exist but may also encompass
    ‘the circumstances present when the contract was entered.’” URI, Inc. v. Kleberg Cnty.,
    
    543 S.W.3d 755
    , 764 (Tex. 2018) (quoting Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. v. New Ulm
    Gas, Ltd., 
    940 S.W.2d 587
    , 589 (Tex. 1996)). Facts and circumstances surrounding the
    contract’s execution can aid in construing its language, but such evidence may give
    those terms only meanings to which they are reasonably susceptible. Id. at 765.
    The Agreement’s language contemplates that one of the homes will be sold
    although Hughitt is correct that it does not give a timeframe by which such a sale was
    to occur. Indeed, the parties agreed that the Property would be “mutual property”
    12
    until that time. But the evidence shows that after several years of their mutual
    arrangement, Hughitt––contrary to the Agreement––expressed an intent never to sell
    one of the homes, thus making it impossible for Bramlett to ever obtain full legal title
    of the unsold home; in other words, Hughitt expressed an intention never to comply
    with the sale term of the Agreement. The Agreement does not contemplate that
    Hughitt would be able to retain sole legal title of the Property indefinitely. See
    Allegiance Hillview, L.P. v. Range Tex. Prod., LLC, 
    347 S.W.3d 855
    , 869 (Tex. App.—
    Fort Worth 2011, no pet.) (“[W]here no time for performance is stated in a contract,
    the law will imply a reasonable time.”). Thus, we conclude that the relief granted by
    the trial court was in conformance with, rather than contrary to, the Agreement’s
    terms. See Hubler, 
    700 S.W.2d at 699
    .
    We hold that the trial court did not err by ordering Hughitt to sell one of the
    homes and convey title of the other home to Bramlett. We therefore overrule
    Hughitt’s second issue.
    IV. WRITTEN JUDGMENT COMPLIES WITH ORAL RENDITION
    In his third issue, Hughitt contends that the judgment is void because it orders
    him to do an impossible task: market and sell one of the homes on a date preceding
    the date the trial court signed the judgment.
    Hughitt cites constructive-contempt law holding that a judgment of civil
    contempt imposing a coercive restraint is void if the conditions for purging the
    contempt are impossible to perform. See, e.g., In re Smith, 
    354 S.W.3d 929
    , 930 (Tex.
    13
    App.––Dallas 2001, orig. proceeding). But this authority is inapposite; Bramlett has
    not sought to enforce the judgment by contempt.
    Although the judgment was signed on November 17, 2021, the trial court orally
    rendered judgment at the August 18, 2021 hearing: “So what the Court is going to
    rule is that whichever lot . . . Hughitt desires [is to] be put on the market within 30
    days of today’s date, and the other of the two will then be conveyed to . . . Bramlett.”
    See Dunn v. Dunn, 
    439 S.W.2d 830
    , 832 (Tex. 1969) (“[A] judgment is ‘rendered’ when
    the decision is officially announced either orally in open court or by memorandum
    filed with the clerk.”). Thus, the written judgment reciting that “Hughitt is to sell
    whichever of the two properties he would so desire, by placing it on the market within
    30 days from August 18, 2021, the date of the hearing,” merely restated the trial
    judge’s oral rendition and was a ministerial act. See id.; Dorrough v. Cantwell, No. 2-05-
    208-CV, 
    2006 WL 2034016
    , at *3 (Tex. App.––Fort Worth July 20, 2006, pet. denied)
    (mem. op.); see also In re Bennett, 
    960 S.W.2d 35
    , 38 (Tex. 1997) (orig. proceeding)
    (noting that the date of signing of a judgment or order is for determining plenary
    power and appellate timetables). Hughitt did not attempt to supersede or stay the trial
    court’s ruling.
    At the time the trial court rendered its ruling, the date for putting one of the
    homes on the market for sale had not yet passed. That Hughitt did not timely comply
    with the court’s ruling or seek to have it stayed, or that Bramlett did not initiate
    contempt proceedings during the trial court’s plenary power, does not make the
    14
    judgment void. See In re D.S., 
    602 S.W.3d 504
    , 512 (Tex. 2020) (explaining that a
    judgment is void “when it is apparent that the court rendering judgment ‘had no
    jurisdiction [over] the parties or property, no jurisdiction [over] the subject matter, no
    jurisdiction to enter the particular judgment, or no capacity to act’” (quoting Browning
    v. Prostok, 
    165 S.W.3d 336
    , 346 (Tex. 2005)).
    Accordingly, we overrule Hughitt’s third issue.
    V. CONCLUSION
    Having overruled Hughitt’s three issues, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    /s/ Brian Walker
    Brian Walker
    Justice
    Delivered: December 8, 2022
    15