C.I.A. Hidden Forest, Inc. v. Deborah Watson and Larry Harris ( 2018 )


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  •                                       In The
    Court of Appeals
    Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont
    ________________
    NO. 09-17-00117-CV
    ________________
    C.I.A. HIDDEN FOREST, INC., Appellant
    V.
    DEBORAH WATSON AND LARRY HARRIS, Appellees
    __________________________________________________________________
    On Appeal from the 284th District Court
    Montgomery County, Texas
    Trial Cause No. 15-04-04197-CV
    __________________________________________________________________
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    C.I.A. Hidden Forest, Inc. (“C.I.A.”) appeals from a summary judgment in
    favor of Deborah Watson and Larry Harris (collectively “appellees”) in a declaratory
    judgment action regarding C.I.A.’s authority to assess fees and obtain liens. In two
    appellate issues, C.I.A. challenges the trial court’s granting of summary judgment in
    favor of appellees and the trial court’s denial of C.I.A.’s motion for summary
    judgment. We reverse the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of the appellees
    and remand the cause for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    1
    BACKGROUND
    Appellees filed a declaratory judgment action against C.I.A., in which they
    asserted that they own six lots in section one of Hidden Forest Estates subdivision
    in Montgomery County. According to appellees, none of the deed restrictions
    applicable to their property impose a maintenance assessment or grant authority for
    a lien against the property. Appellees alleged that C.I.A.’s attempt to enforce an
    implied assessment lien against their property was invalid because C.I.A. “was never
    properly formed or adopted by Hidden Forest property owners as a property owners
    association.” According to appellees’ petition, C.I.A. “has attempted to impose rules,
    regulations, and assessment charges against [appellees].”
    Appellees asserted that in September 2011, they received an initial demand
    from C.I.A. for $277.00, in which C.I.A. threatened to pursue a lawsuit for non-
    payment. Appellees pleaded that they advised C.I.A. that (1) no valid restrictions
    imposed a maintenance assessment or lien on their property, and (2) C.I.A. was not
    properly formed in accordance with the Texas Property Code and, therefore, lacked
    authority over appellees’ property. According to appellees, C.I.A. demanded an
    additional $158.00 in February 2012, and asserted that appellees were bound by a
    1997 judgment against another property owner, which permitted C.I.A. to collect
    maintenance fees and to impose a lien. Appellees state that they responded by
    2
    informing C.I.A. that they were not parties to the 1997 case. Appellees further
    pleaded that they requested an inspection of C.I.A.’s records, and that said inspection
    “provided nothing that authorized a maintenance assessment or lien and produced
    no statements, invoices, or other documents showing that [appellees] owed a debt or
    the amount of that debt.” In addition, appellees alleged that C.I.A. sent another letter
    demanding $556.43 in fees and assessments in September 2014, followed by another
    letter demanding payment of legal fees in the amount of $785.94.
    Appellees requested that the trial court declare that C.I.A. is not a valid
    property owners association under Texas law and therefore lacks authority to assess
    any sums against appellees’ property or to impose liens on their property. Appellees
    also sought to recover attorney’s fees and costs.
    APPELLEES’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
    Appellees filed a traditional motion for summary judgment in which they
    asserted that no genuine issue of material fact exists as to their claim that C.I.A. is
    not a valid property owners association and therefore lacked the right to impose
    maintenance fees. Appellees also asserted that C.I.A.’s contention that implied rights
    and implied covenants allow it to charge maintenance fees is without merit, as is
    C.I.A.’s assertion that a twenty-year-old holding in a case to which appellees were
    not parties grants C.I.A. the authority to impose assessments and fines. According
    3
    to the appellees’ motion for summary judgment, none of the deed restrictions
    applicable to the appellees’ property imposed a maintenance assessment or granted
    authority for a lien against the property. Appellees stated that they had inspected
    C.I.A.’s records, checked public filings, and concluded that C.I.A. had not taken the
    required steps to become a valid property owners association.
    Attached to appellees’ motion for summary judgment as an exhibit was the
    affidavit of Larry Harris. In his affidavit, Harris averred that he and Watson own six
    lots in section one of Hidden Forest Estates. Harris averred that prior to September
    2011, C.I.A. “had never sent us a statement purporting to charge us maintenance or
    other fees in connection with our ownership of property in Hidden Forest.” Harris
    acknowledged that he and Watson paid a pool usage fee of $100 per year between
    1993 and 2005. According to Harris’s affidavit, he and Watson investigated records
    of public agencies, including Montgomery County and the State of Texas, to
    determine whether C.I.A. had taken the proper steps to become a property owners
    association, and they determined that C.I.A. had not done so. Harris averred that he
    and Watson have never been asked to sign a petition to create a property owners
    association in Hidden Forest and are unaware of such a petition being circulated
    during the time they have owned property or lived there. In addition, Harris averred
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    that he and Watson were not parties to the 1997 litigation between C.I.A. and another
    homeowner.
    Appellees also attached as an exhibit excerpts from Watson’s deposition.
    During the deposition, Watson testified that nothing in her deed restrictions allows
    C.I.A. to assess dues or maintenance fees, and the deed restrictions do not mention
    a homeowners association. Watson testified that she had never paid dues, but only
    paid $100 annually to use the pool from 1996 until 2005. Also attached as exhibits
    were fee statements from C.I.A. to Watson. In addition, appellees attached as an
    exhibit a chain of title summary for the six lots. Furthermore, appellees included as
    an exhibit a letter from C.I.A.’s counsel, in which C.I.A.’s counsel explained that
    since the 1997 lawsuit, “it has been the position of [C.I.A.] . . . that it has the good
    faith, right and obligation to collect assessments [on] behalf of the property owners
    in the Subdivision . . . [C.I.A.] represents.” Counsel’s letter also stated that counsel
    was enclosing C.I.A.’s certificate of account status with the Texas Comptroller of
    Public Accounts, “which confirms that [C.I.A.] is in good standing with the State of
    Texas.”
    C.I.A. filed a motion to strike Harris’s affidavit, the chain of title summary,
    and the letter from counsel. The trial court signed an order striking only appellees’
    chain of title summary. C.I.A. also filed a response to appellees’ motion for summary
    5
    judgment, in which it argued that it was incorporated in 1977, twenty years before
    appellees bought their first lot in the subdivision. C.I.A. asserted that it “gleaned the
    legal right, duty, and obligation to collect reasonable maintenance fees from
    subdivision lot owners based on the contracts entered into between it and Lake
    Hidden Forest Development Company. . . . Any authority Lake Hidden Forest had
    could be (and was) transferred to [C.I.A.].”
    In addition, C.I.A. argued that, by paying fees from 1997 until 2005, appellees
    waived the right to later argue that C.I.A. lacks the proper authority to assess and
    collect fees. Furthermore, C.I.A. maintained that appellees “offer no explanation for
    why this Court should examine the same evidence that was available in [the 1997]
    case, and yet come to a different finding.” C.I.A. argued that the trial court should
    grant C.I.A.’s own traditional motion for summary judgment, which we discuss
    below.
    C.I.A.’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
    C.I.A. filed its own motion for traditional summary judgment, in which it
    stated, “After conducting discovery in this matter, the parties have concluded that
    there are no fact issues in dispute. Instead, the parties have agreed to file competing
    motions for summary judgment addressing [appellees’] declaratory judgment,
    namely whether [C.I.A.] possesses authority to assess any sums on [appellees’]
    6
    property.” C.I.A. asserted that the issue of its entitlement to collect reasonable
    maintenance fees had already been decided by the 221st District Court of
    Montgomery County in the aforementioned 1997 litigation. In addition, C.I.A.
    argued that appellees’ properties are subject to an enforceable covenant to collect
    maintenance fees; appellees waived their right to dispute C.I.A.’s legal right to
    collect maintenance fees by paying fees until 2005; and C.I.A. must be allowed to
    collect maintenance fees “[a]s a matter of public policy[.]”
    According to C.I.A.’s motion, Hidden Forest Estates is an unrecorded
    subdivision in Montgomery County, Texas, and C.I.A. “is a non-profit corporation,
    incorporated under the laws of the State of Texas in 1977.” C.I.A. asserted that the
    original developer had the original purchasers of the lots sign a contract for deed,
    which notified the purchasers that they were taking the property subject to restrictive
    covenants, which would also be binding upon their successors. According to C.I.A.,
    “[t]he contract for deed further informed the purchaser that they would be assessed
    a monthly levy for maintenance of streets and recreational facilities.” C.I.A. pleaded
    in its motion that through a subsequent foreclosure purchase, Lake Hidden Forest
    Development Company became the successor in interest, and that in 1978 and 1979
    Lake Hidden Forest Development Company agreed to convey its interests to C.I.A.,
    including its interest in all deeds and contracts “relating to maintenance fees that
    7
    were due from any Hidden Forest Estate lot owner.” C.I.A. alleged in its motion for
    summary judgment that it has assessed and collected annual maintenance fees since
    1979. According to C.I.A.’s motion, Watson owns six lots and her husband, Harris,
    owns a lot, but the appellees have not paid their maintenance assessments since 2006.
    C.I.A. asserted that its covenant to collect maintenance fees was created as a
    covenant running with the land and as an equitable servitude.
    Attached to C.I.A.’s motion as evidence were (1) findings of fact and
    conclusions of law from the 1997 litigation; (2) a contract for deed signed by an
    original purchaser; (3) a memorandum of agreement dated November 21, 1978; (4)
    an agreement and bill of sale dated January 2, 1979; (5) appellees’ original petition
    for declaratory judgment; (6) a deed from Billy Hardin, conveying lots 31 and 32 in
    section one, executed in February, 1967; (7) Hidden Forest Estates Restrictions; (8)
    a check dated February 8, 2005; and (9) excerpts from Watson’s deposition. In its
    findings of fact and conclusions of law from the 1997 case, the judge of the 221st
    District Court found that the original developer of Hidden Forest Estates had all
    purchasers sign a contract for deed; however, that court also found that only the
    restrictions for sections four and five specifically refer to a monthly assessment for
    8
    the streets and recreational facilities.1 The judge in the 1997 case further found that
    “[a]side from references to maintenance fees found in the deed restrictions for
    Sections 4 and 5 of the subdivision, there is no other reference to maintenance fee
    assessments for Hidden Forest Estates found of record in the Real Property Records
    of Montgomery County, Texas.”
    In addition, the judge in the 1997 case found that Lake Hidden Forest
    Development Company agreed to convey its interest in all deeds and contracts
    relating to maintenance fees that were due from any lot owner in sections 1 through
    5 of Hidden Forest Estates to C.I.A., as evidenced by the November 1978
    memorandum of agreement and the January 1979 agreement and bill of sale. In its
    conclusions of law, the judge of the 221st District Court found that an implied
    covenant to pay maintenance fees runs with the lots in Hidden Forest Estates. The
    judge in the 1997 litigation further found that as owner of all common roadways,
    lake, dam, pool, buildings, park, and other facilities, C.I.A. “has a right as a matter
    of public policy to collect monthly maintenance assessments[.]” In addition, that
    court found that the original purchasers of lots in the subdivision intended to pay a
    maintenance assessment “and thereby committed themselves and their successors to
    1
    As discussed above, the property owned by appellees is in section 1 of the
    subdivision.
    9
    pay maintenance fees, for the mutual benefit of all the property owners of the entire
    subdivision, even if this intent was never recorded in any document of record.”
    ISSUES ONE AND TWO
    In issue one, C.I.A. challenges the trial court’s granting of summary judgment
    in favor of appellees, and in issue two, C.I.A. challenges the trial court’s denial of
    C.I.A.’s motion for summary judgment. We address C.I.A.’s issues together.
    We review summary judgment orders de novo. Provident Life & Accident Ins.
    Co. v. Knott, 
    128 S.W.3d 211
    , 215 (Tex. 2003). The party moving for traditional
    summary judgment must establish that no genuine issue of material fact exists and
    it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Tex. R. Civ. P. 166a(c); Randall’s Food
    Mkts., Inc. v. Johnson, 
    891 S.W.2d 640
    , 644 (Tex. 1995). If the moving party
    produces evidence entitling it to summary judgment, the burden shifts to the non-
    movant to present evidence that raises a fact issue. Walker v. Harris, 
    924 S.W.2d 375
    , 377 (Tex. 1996). In determining whether there is a disputed material fact issue
    precluding summary judgment, evidence favorable to the non-movant will be taken
    as true. Nixon v. Mr. Prop. Mgmt. Co., 
    690 S.W.2d 546
    , 548-49 (Tex. 1985). We
    review the summary judgment record in the light most favorable to the non-movant,
    “indulging every reasonable inference and resolving any doubts against the motion.”
    City of Keller v. Wilson, 
    168 S.W.3d 802
    , 824 (Tex. 2005). When, as in this case,
    10
    both parties move for summary judgment and the trial court grants one motion and
    denies the other, we review the summary judgment evidence presented by both sides,
    determine all of the questions presented, and render the judgment that the trial court
    should have rendered. Tex. Workers’ Comp. Comm’n v. Patient Advocates of Tex.,
    
    136 S.W.3d 643
    , 648 (Tex. 2004). We must affirm the summary judgment if any of
    the grounds asserted in the motion are meritorious. 
    Id. Pleadings do
    not constitute competent summary judgment evidence. Laidlaw
    Waste Sys. (Dallas), Inc. v. City of Wilmer, 
    904 S.W.2d 656
    , 660 (Tex. 1995).
    Opposing affidavits must be made on personal knowledge and must set forth facts
    that would be admissible in evidence. Tex. R. Civ. P. 166a(f). To be competent
    evidence to oppose a summary judgment, an affidavit must do more than make
    conclusory, self-serving statements that lack factual detail. Haynes v. City of
    Beaumont, 
    35 S.W.3d 166
    , 178 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2000, no pet.). “Conclusory
    affidavits are not sufficient to raise fact issues because they are not credible or
    susceptible to being readily controverted.” Pipkin v. Kroger Tex., L.P., 
    383 S.W.3d 655
    , 670 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2012, pet. denied). The thoughts and
    opinions of an interested witness, when related in a self-serving affidavit, are not
    easily disproved by his opponent. Wise v. Dallas Sw. Media Corp., 
    596 S.W.2d 533
    ,
    536 (Tex. Civ. App.—Beaumont 1979, writ ref’d n.r.e.).
    11
    Neither party produced the deeds executed by appellees. In addition, neither
    party produced competent summary judgment evidence regarding whether C.I.A.
    was a non-profit corporation in good standing with the State of Texas. See Tex. Prop.
    Code Ann. § 204.004(b) (West 2014) (providing that a property owners association
    must be a non-profit and may be incorporated as a Texas non-profit corporation);
    
    Pipkin, 383 S.W.3d at 670
    ; 
    Wise, 596 S.W.2d at 536
    . Moreover, neither party
    produced evidence, whether by documents or affidavit, that the deeds signed by
    appellees contained the same restrictions as those signed by the original grantees, an
    example of which was included in the summary judgment evidence. Reviewing the
    summary judgment evidence presented by both sides, we conclude that neither
    appellees nor C.I.A. demonstrated that no genuine issues of material fact exist and
    that they are entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Tex. Workers’ Comp.
    
    Comm’n, 136 S.W.3d at 648
    . We sustain issue one, overrule issue two, reverse the
    trial court’s summary judgment in favor of the appellees and remand the cause to the
    trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    ______________________________
    STEVE McKEITHEN
    Chief Justice
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    Submitted on February 6, 2018
    Opinion Delivered March 29, 2018
    Before McKeithen, C.J., Kreger and Johnson, JJ.
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