Michael Glenn Mott v. Willie Edward Kellar A/K/A W. E. Kellar Joseph G. Tuck, Individually And Tuck & Kizer, PLLC, a Professional Limited Liability Company ( 2015 )


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  •                                                            June 26, 2015
    NO. 03-14-00291-CV
    IN THE THIRD COURT OF APPEALS
    AUSTIN, TEXAS
    MICHAEL GLENN MOTT,
    Appellant
    vs.
    WILLIE EDWARD KELLAR AKA WE. KELLAR;
    JOSEPH G TUCK, Individually;
    TUCK & KIZER PLLC, a professional limited liability company;
    Appellees.
    Appeal from the 423rd District Court
    Bastrop County, Texas
    Appellant's Reply Brief
    Michael Glenn Mott
    8515 IngridAve
    Elgin TX 78621
    512 718-4864
    Appellant Pro Se
    RECEIVED
    AUG 2 8 2014
    THIRD COURT OF APPEAL
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    INDEX OF AUTHORITIES                             3
    SUMMARY OF FACTS                                 4
    1. THE DISTRICT COURT ERRED WHEN IT              5
    GRANTED SUMMARY JUDGMENT AGAINST
    THE APPELLEE MICHAEL GLENN MOTT.
    2. THE DISTRICT COURT DENIED THE                 6
    APPELLANT DUE PROCESS OF LAW GUARANTEED
    BY BOTH THE STATE AND FEDERAL CONSTITUTIONS.
    3. THE DISTRICT COURT ERRED WHEN IT              9
    GRANTED SUMMARY JUDGMENT BASED
    ON THE FORECLOSURE AND SALE OF THE
    APPELLANT'S HOME AND REAL PROPERTY
    THAT WAS NOT CONDUCTED IN ACCORDANCE
    WITH SECTION 5.066 OF THE TEXAS PROPERTY CODE.
    4. THE DISTRICT COURT ERRED WHEN IT              10
    GRANTED SUMMARY JUDGMENT TO THE
    APPELLEE JOSEPH G TUCK, INDIVIDUALLY AND
    APPELLEE TUCK & KIZER PLLC.
    5. MORE FACTUAL MISSTATEMENTS BY                 11
    APPELLEES' COUNSEL IN THE RESPONSE TO
    THE APPELLANT'S BRIEF IN CHIEF
    CONCLUSION AND PRAYER                            12
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE                        14
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE                           14
    INDEX OF AUTHORITIES
    CASES
    Armstrong v. Manzo, 
    380 U.S. 545
    , 552 (1965).          8
    Fuentes v. Shevin, 
    407 U.S. 67
    (1972).                 8
    Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee v. McGrath,       8
    
    341 U.S. 123
    (1951).
    Nelson v. Adams, 
    529 U.S. 460
    , 
    120 S. Ct. 1579
    (2000).   8
    STATUTES AND COURT RULES
    Texas Property Code, Section 5.066.
    APPELLANT'S REPLY BRIEF
    Appellant Michael Mott appeals the judgmentof the trial courtprematurely
    granting summaryjudgment to the appellees. This reply to the appellees'
    responsive brief is necessary because that response brief mischaracterizes the
    record.
    SUMMARY OF FACTS
    Appellant Mott owns real property which he purchased in a contract for deed
    from appellee / defendant Kellar. After purchasing the property, Kellar refused to
    deliver Mott a general warranty deed to the property. Kellar and appellee /
    defendant Joseph Grady Tuck then conspired together to fraudulently convert the
    title and ownership ofthe property to themselves.1 In furtherance of that
    conspiracy, Kellar and Tuck denied that Kellar had in fact already been paid,
    apparently hoping to take advantage ofthe destruction of plaintiff's personal
    property, financial records, and personal effects caused by the recent Bastrop fire.
    Mott then filed the petition in the present case requesting injunctive reliefand the
    imposition of a constructive trust. (Appellant's Appendix B)     Defendant /
    appellees Kellar and Tuck requested the trial court to grant summary judgment
    based solely based on the false contention that after more than ten years of
    See Notice ofTrustee's Sale attached to the Appendix to Appellees' Response
    Briefas Exhibit K in which defendant / appellee Tuck is designated as trustee.
    payments Mott had arbitrarily stopped payment on the contract for deed.
    (Appellant's Appendix B)      On appeal, Kellar and Tuck attach defendant /
    appellee Kellar's own record of payments supposedly made, but actually that
    "record" is incomplete in that it does not include payments that were made on the
    contract for deed after August 2012.. (Appellees'Appendix E)        It appears that
    Kellar and Tuck simply tore the final pages out of Kellar's receipt book. In any
    event, that incomplete record of receipts was never presented to the trial court
    judge and was instead attached as an appendix to the appellees' responsive brief
    on appeal. (Motion for Summary Judgment attached as Appellant's Appendix G)
    1.     THE DISTRICT COURT ERRED WHEN IT GRANTED
    SUMMARY JUDGMENT AGAINST THE APPELLEE MICHAEL GLENN
    MOTT.
    To determine the legitimacy of the subject order granting summaiy
    judgment, one need look no further than the defendant/ appellees' motion for
    summaryjudgment (Appellant's Appendix G) and appellant Mott's response to
    that motion (Appellant's Appendix H) . Notably absent from that motion for
    summary judgment is any meaningful contention that the contested issues in this
    case are so undisputed as to warrant summaiy disposition. As his own attorney, the
    defendant Tuck did not even bother to submit a sworn affidavit or declaration in
    support. On the other hand, the plaintiff/ appellant's response to that motion
    5
    shows the following principal fact to be in dispute, i.e., whether Mott defaulted in
    his payments on the contract for deed.
    Apparently recognizing this deficient basis for summaiy judgment,
    appellees' response on appeal includes a handwritten and partial record of receipts
    purported to have been received by Kellar. This was never presented to the trial
    court judge, and the learned counsel for the appellee must realize that she can't just
    throw anything she wants into the appellate record that was never shown to the
    trial court judge first.
    As for the trial court, the one sentence order granting summaiy judgment
    being appealed from states absolutely no basis for summaiy judgment other than to
    state that the motion for summaiy judgment should be granted. Appellant's
    Appendix I)       The defendant Tuck was successful in' sliding this by' the trial
    court judge, and now he has hired a new face just out of law school to tiy to pull
    the same thing with the Court ofAppeals.2
    2.  THE DISTRICT COURT DENIED THE APPELLANT DUE
    PROCESS OF LAW GUARANTEED BY BOTH THE STATE AND
    FEDERAL CONSTITUTIONS.
    Appellant's second proposition of error focuses on the outright denial of due
    The appellant congratulates appellees' new counsel, Ms. Michelle Lubbert, on her
    recent graduation from law school and admission to the bar within the past few
    months.
    process by the trial court in rushing this case to judgment:
    When it was discovered that defendant Joseph Grady Tuck was personally
    implicated as a co-conspirator with the defendant Kellar, and that he (Tuck)
    intended to represent all ofthe defendants (including himself his firm, and
    defendant Kellar), the plaintiff Mott immediately moved to disqualify both Tuck
    and his firm from acting as counsel. The trial court completely ignored the motion
    to disqualify and refused to set the matter for hearing. On appeal the new lawyer
    for the appellees, Ms. Lubbert, repeatedly claims in her response brief that the
    plaintiffMott never requested a hearing. (Appellant's Appendix F & K) This is
    not true. Along with his motion to disqualify counsel, Mott submitted a request
    and notice of hearing which the trial court never considered.
    Secondly, as indicated in the appellant's brief in chief, at the hearing on the
    motion for summaiy judgment, the trial court went off the record and proceeded to
    conduct what amounted to an evidentiary hearing, or better put, a one-on-one
    unsworn private conference with Joseph GradyTuck.         Immediately thereafter, the
    trial court judge granted summaiy judgment.
    Third, the trial courtjudge amended his order of summaiy judgment to
    handwrite an award of attorney fees and costs. (See Amended Order atAppellees'
    Appendix D)     The amendment of a judgment to impose attorney fees and costs is
    invalid without giving the opposing party notice and the opportunity to dispute.,
    Nelson v. Adams. 
    529 U.S. 460
    , 
    120 S. Ct. 1579
    (2000)(reversing the court of
    appeals on the basis of Fifth Amendment due process) . On appeal, the new
    lawyer for the defendant / appellees repeatedly complains that the plaintiff/
    appellant did not object to these blatant violations of due process. How could he
    have done so? By the time the plaintiff knew about the deprivation of due process
    the case before the trial court was over.   The appellant specifically delineated this
    error in his brief-in-chief- What more could he have done? In this respect, the
    arguments of appellee that error was not preserved are frivolous.
    The right to due process is a "basic aspect of the duty of government to follow
    a fair process of decision making when it acts to deprive a person of his
    possessions. The purpose of this requirement is not only to ensure abstract fair play
    to the individual. Its puipose, more particularly, is to protect his use and possession
    of property from arbitrary encroachment..." Fuentes v. Shevin> 
    407 U.S. 67
    , 80-
    81 (1972). See Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee v. McGrath. 
    341 U.S. 123
    ,
    170-71(1951) (Justice Frankfurter concurring). Thus, notice of hearing and the
    opportunity to be heard "must be granted at a meaningful time and in a meaningful
    manner." Armstrong v. Manzo. 
    380 U.S. 545
    , 552 (1965).
    3.  THE DISTRICT COURT ERRED WHEN IT GRANTED
    SUMMARY JUDGMENT BASED ON THE FORECLOSURE AND SALE
    OF THE APPELLANT'S HOME AND REAL PROPERTY THAT WAS NOT
    CONDUCTED IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 5.066 OF THE TEXAS
    PROPERTY CODE.
    With respect to this proposition of error, appellees' motion for summary
    judgmentdoes not pretendto have complied with this section of the Property
    Code. At paragraph 5 of that motion, defendant appellee Joseph Grady Tuck
    states
    On August 7, 2012, the Property was foreclosed upon by Willie Edward
    Kellar, as evidenced by Trustee's Deed ofthe same date, naming Willie
    Edward Kellar as the foreclosure buyer.
    In her responsive brief on appeal, appellees' new counsel once again attempts to
    include a series of documents thatwere never presented to the trial court in support
    of appellees' motion for summaiy judgment.        She is either being intentionally
    loyal and/or intentionally deceitful respecting her marching orders from her
    defendant boss (Joseph Grady Tuck), or she doesn'tknow the rules. In this case,
    what is important is not whatever she can now come up with on appeal to buttress
    the record. Instead, the Court of Appeals is entitled to focus its attention on what
    was presented to the trial court as a basis for summary judgment in the first place.
    My bet is that she simply does not have sufficient experience with appellate
    procedures to understand how the appellate record is legitimately established and
    9
    considered.    (As the Court ofAppeals register indicates, Ms. Lubbert's original
    attempt to file a response to the appellant's brief-in-chief was rejected because she
    had failed to follow the appellate rules of procedure.)
    Appellees' counsel has now on appeal included documentation that is
    helpful to the appellant rather than to her client. For example, as discussed above,
    it is appellees' counsel that included a copy of the Notice of Trustee's Sale
    (attached to the Appendix to Appellees' Response Brief as Exhibit K) in which
    defendant / appellee Tuck is designated as trustee. This itself casts doubt on the
    validity of the sale of the property itself, to say nothing of personally implicating
    Joseph Grady Tuck as being something more than just a disinterested advocate for
    the defendant Kellar.    The sale of the property that is the subject of this lawsuit
    was not accomplished in accordance with Texas law and should be set aside.
    4.      THE DISTRICT COURT ERRED WHEN IT GRANTED
    SUMMARY JUDGMENT TO THE APPELLEE JOSEPH G TUCK,
    INDIVIDUALLY AND APPELLEE TUCK & KIZER PLLC.
    As pointed out in the appellant Mott's brief-in-chief, a thorough review of
    the defendant appellees' motion for summaiy judgment does not reveal any request
    for summary judgment in favor of defendants Joseph Grady Tuck, individually, or
    his law firm. These named defendants are not even mentioned.
    Apparently this is a subject to be avoided because Ms. Lubbert makes no
    mention of this issue - and for good reason. How can a trial court grant summaiy
    10
    judgment on behalf of a party when it is not even requested? She is hoping the
    Court ofAppeals will not notice this deficiency, so she attempted to obscure her
    supervisor's failure.   It is perhaps no coincidence that Ms. Lubbert did not include
    in her appendix the principal documents germane to the disposition of this appeal,
    namely the defendants' motion for summary judgment and the appellant's response
    to that motion. The error of the trial court judge is apparent when the portions that
    Ms. Lubbert has redacted are considered.
    5.     MORE FACTUAL MISSTATEMENTS BY APPELLEES'
    COUNSEL IN THE RESPONSE TO THE APPELLANT'S BRIEF IN CHIEF
    Giving Ms. Lubbert (appellees' counsel) the ethical benefit of the doubt, it is
    quite possible that she never read the case file before she wrote her response brief.
    At page 4 of that brief she states, "Michael Glenn Mott has failed to respond to
    appellees' discoveiy requests and to pursue this litigation any further." That is not
    true. The plaintiff submitted a full set of written discoveiy (including requests for
    admission, interrogatories, and requests for production) to the appellees and their
    counsel. The appellees provided no substantive response, only a series of
    frivolous objections. On the other hand, the plaintiff appellant received and
    responded to the discoveiy served on him by the appellees' counsel      Any
    suggestion by Ms. Lubbert that "Michael Glenn Mott failed to respond to
    u
    appellees' discoveiy requested and to pursue this litigation any further" is
    mistaken and misinformed.
    Ms. Lubbert's responsive brief states at page 3:
    "Appellant filed a Petition ... against Appellee Willie Edward Kellar, and
    adding Appellees Joseph G Tuck and his partnership Tuck & Kizer Law
    Group, PLLC ... requesting injunctive relief from foreclosure."
    "Adding Tuck and his law firm as defendants"? Hardly. Notwithstanding
    Lubbert's transparent attempt to mischaracterize plaintiff Mott as some kind of
    vexatious litigant, Tuck was immersed in this conspiracy with Kellar from the start,
    and his involvement in the fraudulent transfer as an active party rather than merely
    as an advocate invokes his (Tuck's) personal liability. In preparing her responsive
    brief in this appeal, Ms. Lubbert was presented with a record in which the trial
    court had prematurely granted summaiy judgment with no legal or factual basis for
    doing so. Instead of attempting to show that the trial court judgment should be
    affirmed, Ms. Lubbert has attempted to obscure that record so that the appeals
    court will never reach the merits of this appeal. This is not effective appellate
    advocacy, it is blatant deceit. Neither Mi*. Lubber, her boss, nor her clients do not
    deserve serious consideration.
    CONCLUSION AND PRAYER
    Where is the proof that was presented to the trial court that conclusively
    disproves at least one element of the plaintiff's stated cause of action? That
    12
    "proof doesn't exist, but Ms. Lubbert avoids this critical dispositive issue by not
    including the motion for summaiy judgment in her appendix, and she certainly
    doesn't argue that the trial court's actions were justified by the documents
    submitted with that motion for summaiyjudgment.         The papers she does file are
    largely irrelevant (if not purposely misleading) for present consideration. Ms.
    Lubbert's response brief serves only to demonstrate that she, as a new lawyer, was
    pressured to write by a boss who himself should not be representing anyone
    because of his own personal scurrilous involvement in this case.    Insofar as
    liability is concerned, Joseph Grady Tuck is involved up his neck, and no amount
    of eloquent words from the charming Ms. Lubbert should be of any consequence.
    Appellees are not entitled to summaiy judgment, and they are not entitled to have
    the actions of the trial court judge sustained on appeal.
    WHEREFORE, appellant Michael Glenn Mott prays that this court vacate
    the summary judgments granted to the appellees, and that the case be remanded to
    another district court judge.   Appellant also requests an award of costs.
    Respectfully submitted,
    Michaer Glenn Mott
    8515 Ingrid Ave
    Elgin TX 78621
    512 718-4864
    Appellant Pro se
    13
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
    This document complies with the typeface requirements of Tex. R. App. P.
    9.4(e) because it has been prepared in a conventional typeface no smaller than 14-
    point for text and 12-point for footnotes. This document also complies with the
    word-count limitations.
    Michael Glenn Mott
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    This to certify that on the 22 day ofAugust, 2014, a true and complete copy of
    the above and foregoing APPELLANT'S REPLY BRIEF was mailed to opposing
    counsel at the following address via United States Postal Service:
    Joe Grady Tuck
    Tuck & Kizer, PLLC
    906 Main Street
    Bastrop, TX 78602
    DEFENDANT-APPELLEE PROSE
    Michelle Lubbert
    Tuck & Kizer, PLLC
    906 Main Street
    Bastrop, TX 78602
    ATTORNEY FOR THE DEFENDANT - APPELLEE WILLIE EDWARD
    KELLAR AND JOE GRADY TUCK
    Michael Glenn Mott, Appellant
    14
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