Court Opinion

ID: 4693180
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-06-07 07:17:10.499356+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:05:21.063918
License: Public Domain

In the
                             Court of Appeals
                     Second Appellate District of Texas
                              at Fort Worth
                             ___________________________
                                  No. 02-19-00064-CV
                             ___________________________

             SIMONE BARRON AND WALID YAMMINE, Appellants

                                               V.

             ISSAM AL SHMAISANI AND SHARON SMITH, Appellees

                         On Appeal from the 348th District Court
                                 Tarrant County, Texas
                             Trial Court No. 348-264569-13

                           Before Sudderth, C.J.; and Kerr, J. 1
                          Memorandum Opinion by Justice Kerr

       1
        Justice Lee Gabriel was a member of the original panel but has since retired. Because they
agree on the judgment, the two remaining justices decided the case. See Tex. R. App. P. 41.1(b).
                           MEMORANDUM OPINION

      In separate briefing raising a plethora of issues, Simone Barron and her brother

Walid Yammine appeal the trial court’s judgment following a jury trial concerning a

real-estate transaction involving Plaintiff–Appellee Issam Al Shmaisani and (in varying

roles) Defendants–Appellants and two of their siblings. Reversing the judgment below

in part, we hold that the amount of attorney’s fees assessed against each Appellant

and awarded to Shmaisani under Chapter 12 of the Texas Civil Practice & Remedies

Code must be reversed and remanded to the trial court for a new trial. We also hold

that Appellee Sharon Smith—a third-party defendant below—cannot recover

sanctions in the form of attorney’s fees against Simone Barron and render judgment

accordingly. In all other respects, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

                                        PARTIES 2

      Plaintiff–Appellee Issam Al Shmaisani: Fort Worth businessman who in late March

2012 agreed to buy certain property owned by Wahid Yammine to stop a foreclosure

sale set for two days later by Wahid’s lienholder David Healy. Through an option

agreement, Wahid could later buy it back from Shmaisani.

      Defendant Joseph Imad3Yammine (“Joseph”): Original purchaser, in 2001, of

commercial properties located at 701, 705, and 709 North Main Street in Fort Worth

      2
        We set out this guide to the parties for clarity. We intend no disrespect by
using first names for Yammine family members.

                                            2
that are the subject of this lawsuit (collectively, “the 701 Property”), as well as a

nearby commercial property located at 717 North Main (“717 Main”), all of which

secured debt that Joseph owed Wahid. At the close of evidence, Shmaisani nonsuited

his claims against Joseph.

      Defendant Wahid Joseph Yammine (“Wahid”): Resident of Lebanon who conducts

his Texas real-estate dealings through his siblings, who live here. In January 2012, in

the name of his dba New Frontier Financial, Wahid foreclosed on and took

ownership from Joseph of 717 Main and of the 701 Property. In August 2013, some

six months after Shmaisani sued Wahid and Joseph, Wahid filed for bankruptcy and

ultimately received a full discharge. Wahid appealed from the trial-court judgment but

dismissed his appeal without filing a brief.

      Defendant–Appellant Walid Joseph Yammine (“Wally”): Goes by the nickname

Wally, which we will use to more easily distinguish between Wahid and Walid. Wally

was involved with the April 2012 closing of the Wahid–Shmaisani transaction and

same-day ostensible conveyances from New Frontier/Wahid to Wally and to Wally’s

business BW Construction of interests in the 701 Property. On that day, Wally also

received Wahid’s assignment of the 701 Property repurchase option.

      Defendant–Appellant Simona Barron (“Simone”): Also involved with the closing,

and held a power of attorney for Wahid. Simone provided a recorded deed’s

      3
       Numerous documents show Joseph’s middle initial as “K.” The discrepancy is
not legally significant here.

                                               3
instrument number for attorney Michael Newman to insert into the April 2 contract

between Wahid and Shmaisani; she later attempted to exercise the repurchase option

on Wahid’s behalf; and in 2014, she purchased assets, ostensibly including the 701

Property, from Wahid’s bankruptcy estate. Simone represented herself at trial.

       Third-Party Defendant–Appellee Sharon Smith: Fee attorney working with Stewart

Title Company. Smith handled the April 2, 2012 closing of the sale to Shmaisani. The

trial court directed a verdict in Smith’s favor.

                                      BACKGROUND

       Joseph buys properties on North Main Street; Wahid forecloses on
       Joseph’s debt to him and acquires the 701 Property in 2012.

       Joseph bought the 701 Property in August 2001. Its legal description

encompasses 12 discrete lots: Lots 1 through 6 and 43 through 48 of Block 27, North

Fort Worth Addition to the City of Fort Worth. The next month, Joseph bought

nearby 717 Main.

       On April 3, 2009, several things happened with the 701 Property:

   • Joseph conveyed it to Wahid by a special warranty deed;

   • Wahid simultaneously conveyed the 701 Property back to Joseph by special
     warranty deed; and

   • To secure Joseph’s $498,000 indebtedness to New Frontier, Joseph executed a
     deed of trust, with Lee Woodburry as trustee, on the 701 Property—a
     document not recorded for over two and a half years.4

       Conveyances of real property among the Yammine family, sometimes with
       4

delayed filings and for opaque reasons, have yielded other lawsuits that have made

                                             4
      After Joseph signed the deed of trust for New Frontier’s benefit but long

before it was recorded, Joseph executed a second deed of trust in January 2010 on the

701 Property, this time to secure a $300,000 loan from David Healy that matured a

year later. Joseph signed a third deed of trust—the second in Healy’s favor—on

March 7, 2011 to secure a 12-month, $342,980 loan, again secured by the 701

Property.

      Through trustee Lee Woodburry, Wahid/New Frontier later foreclosed on its

liens and received trustee’s deeds to the 701 Property and to 717 Main, each dated

their way to us. In a case from several years ago, Joseph sought unsuccessfully to
avoid a deed of trust he had executed to secure a loan from a third party (Lillian
Wilson, LLC) by transferring the property to Wahid four days before the deed of trust
was recorded. 1901 NW 28th St. Tr. v. Lillian Wilson, LLC, 535 S.W.3d 96, 100 (Tex.
App.—Fort Worth 2017, no pet.) (affirming vexatious-litigant ruling entered against
Joseph and noting, “Excluding any consideration of whether [Joseph] Yammine
defrauded Lillian Wilson by securing a loan for delinquent ad valorem taxes on a
property that he had previously conveyed [to Wahid], the tax lien that Tarrant County
transferred to Lillian Wilson had attached to the Property before the deed of trust was
recorded in June 2009.”).

        And in that case as well as here, Joseph repeatedly claimed to have difficulty
recalling events because of a car wreck. Id. at 98 & n. 2 (“[Joseph] claimed to have
been suffering from the effects of a different car accident when Lillian Wilson
deposed him on an earlier date.”). High blood pressure was added at this trial to
explain Joseph’s difficulty fielding questions. A question as simple as whether Joseph
had ever signed documents as “Joseph K. Yammine” was met with, “I don’t
remember. And the reason I don’t remember is that I’ve been in two different
accidents. I’ve been struck with trauma, facial trauma . . . .” Wally also blamed medical
issues for his own extensive memory lapses at trial, frequently invoking chemotherapy
treatments and pneumonia. Wahid—a commercial-airline captain based in Lebanon—
offered no medical excuses but likewise professed extraordinary difficulty recalling
even basic events and documents concerning the 701 Property.

                                           5
January 3, 2012. The 701 Property remained encumbered by the Healy liens, but 717

Main had no Healy liens against it.

      Healy schedules the 701 Property for foreclosure on April 3, 2012;
      the Yammines enlist Shmaisani to keep that from happening.

      Because of the unpaid and past-due Healy debt, a foreclosure sale of the 701

Property was scheduled for April 3, 2012, a Tuesday. Acting on Wahid’s behalf,

Simone and Joseph visited Shmaisani on Saturday, March 31, 2012, seeking to borrow

money to pay off Healy and stop the foreclosure. After Shmaisani explained that he

was “not a bank,” Simone and Joseph suggested that Shmaisani buy the property

outright and give Wahid an option to buy it back in four months. According to

Shmaisani, to “kind of give [him] a good comfort level in doing the deal” Simone

offered to get attorney Michael Newman—who had done earlier legal work for both

Shmaisani and the Yammines—involved in the transaction.

      Simone called Newman while still at Shmaisani’s office and, as Shmaisani

recounted at trial, explained to Newman that Shmaisani would be buying the

properties that were on “Healy’s foreclosure list.” At trial, Simone insisted that

Shmaisani was instead buying the non-Healy-burdened 717 Main.

      Simone gives Newman an instrument number to put in the sales
      contract, but the associated warranty deed does not match any
      property on Healy’s foreclosure list.

      Because of the looming Tuesday foreclosure sale, the parties were “very

frantic,” in Newman’s words, to finalize the transaction on Monday, April 2, 2012.

                                        6
That morning, then, Shmaisani, Simone, Wally, and Wahid (who had flown in from

Lebanon) went to Newman’s office to get a contract drafted and signed. According to

both Shmaisani and Newman, Simone provided Newman a warranty deed’s

instrument number—D201239958—for him to insert into the $535,000 sales

contract. But D201239958 actually refers to 717 Main, not the 701 Property. Newman

explained:

      Simone had brought a piece of paper with her -- that’s all she had -- and
      said, “We need to draft a contract to take to the title company,” so they
      could then proceed with the -- the closing or the sale.

             And Simone was just very adamant about this piece of paper
      [that] had a -- it referred to an instrument number, the recording of a
      deed in the Tarrant County deed records, and said, “We need to put a
      contract together. We don’t have time to look anything up or research.
      Just put this number down. This is the instrument number to the deed
      for 701, 705, 709.”

      ....

      [T]hat’s what she gave me and said that that’s what we need to put on
      the contract because that’s the deed that refers to 701, 705, 709 Main
      Street.

      Even when Newman suggested that he pull up the instrument number online,

Simone responded that “she was in just such a rush, that we didn’t need to do that,

that we needed to hurry up and get to the title company.” Newman testified that

Wahid was present and everyone was “on the same agenda: We need to get this done.

We need to stop the foreclosure.” Newman did not recall anyone’s discussing 717

Main that day.

                                         7
       The hastily prepared sales contract that Wahid and Shmaisani signed and that

was shortly afterward taken to the title company for closing was bare-boned, as this

snippet reflects:

       After the parties and Newman arrived at the title company following an early

lunch together, Sharon Smith—a fee attorney who worked with Stewart Title—took

the signed contract and began an unusually rushed closing process. Smith understood

that the property being sold to Shmaisani was “the property being posted for

foreclosure, which makes sense, because nothing else would be a super-rush. If it

wasn’t going to be lost within 24 hours, there’s no way I would ask my [title] plant or

my office to put forth that effort.” Asked whether, in her 37 years of experience, she

had “ever had someone come in and pay money to pay off a lien against a property

                                          8
and not purchase that property,” Smith replied, “Not in a commercial transaction or a

foreclosure transaction, no.” As Smith also testified,

       They brought us this contract. Out of due diligence, we pulled that
       instrument number up, and where I had heard nothing but we were
       working the foreclosed -- the posted foreclosure property, they did not
       match.

              At that point we went back to the parties, who were sitting in our
       conference room, and told them: This is not the property that is subject
       to foreclosure tomorrow. So if it’s this property, we’re not going to be
       closing this property on a rush order.

              And they go: Oh, no. That is a mistake. It is the property that’s
       posted for foreclosure. . . . The buyer and the seller and Mr. Newman
       and Simone told me that it was definitely the property that was going to
       be foreclosed.

       Smith’s testimony corroborated Shmaisani, who asserted that Simone had had

him believe that “this is the instrument number for what Mr. Healy was foreclosing

on.”

       The parties agree to Newman’s writing in the 701 Property
       addresses on the contract, and the closing goes forward.

       After Smith had determined that the instrument number did not match

anything on the foreclosure list, Smith recalled that Newman said he would “add

some addresses, if that will help,” and did so while Wahid and Shmaisani were

present: 701, 705, and 709 Main Street. 5 Newman testified that when he wrote in the

       5
         Although Newman omitted “North” from the written-in addresses, he
testified that everyone knew that the reference was to 701, 705, and 709 North Main
Street: “[T]he Yammines knew what property they owned. They knew what property
that they were dealing with.”

                                            9
addresses on the contract, “Wahid was there. . . . [Simone] was there and fully aware

of these changes, and everybody was in agreement.” The first part of the contract now

looked like this:

       From Shmaisani’s $535,000 consideration, Healy’s liens against the 701

Property were paid off and released the same day. Smith explained that taking care of

Healy was the “biggest concern, because if we didn’t take care of him, it didn’t matter;

the property would be gone the next morning on the courthouse steps.”

       At closing, Wahid executed a warranty deed describing the conveyed property

as “See Attached Exhibit ‘A’” although no Exhibit A was attached at the time.

Instead, due to the transaction’s rushed nature, everyone involved agreed that the legal

description would be added after the title company completed its property report.

According to Newman, everyone was “comfortable” in letting the title company

                                          10
finish its work and later “attach the legal description based on the research that they

did.” Newman testified that Smith had told everyone present that “once they had the

title work finished, they would attach the legal description that they ultimately [came]

up with, and everybody understood and agreed and allowed her to proceed in that

fashion.”

      Shmaisani said the same thing: they had all understood and agreed that they

“were leaving that date without exhibits because the title company was, again, still

trying to figure out what is residential and what is commercial,[6] and legal descriptions

or exhibits would follow, and we all had that understanding. None of us had a

problem with it.” Shmaisani answered, “Absolutely,” when asked if he had

understood that “the exhibit that was going to be attached to that deed would have a

description of all the commercial property on which Mr. Healy had a lien”—which

would have included all 12 of the 701 Property lots but not 717 Main. Both Shmaisani

and Wahid signed the requisite settlement statement, which showed the property

addresses as “701 N. Main Street, Fort Worth, TX 76164, 705 N. Main Street, Fort

Worth, TX 76164; 709 N. Main, Fort Worth, TX 76164.”

      Also on April 2, Shmaisani and Wahid executed an option agreement giving

Wahid until August 2, 2012 to buy back, for $685,000, property described on “Exhibit

      6
        Healy had a lien against residential property that was also on the foreclosure
list, but Shmaisani was not interested in buying anything other than commercial
property from Wahid.

                                           11
A,” which, when finalized and recorded, mirrored the Exhibit A ultimately attached to

the warranty deed.

      The deed’s Exhibit A legal description is added after the
      postclosing title work.

      With the flurry of Healy-focused activity at an end on April 2, Smith’s office

turned its attention to finalizing the legal description for the warranty deed’s Exhibit

A, a process that included ensuring that Shmaisani had acquired only commercial lots.

To that end, Smith, her escrow assistant Laura White, and Newman corresponded by

email over several days. Smith and White were initially confused about whether Lots

43 through 48 of the 701 Property were residential (they weren’t), with Smith’s having

understood at first that those six lots weren’t being conveyed to Shmaisani for that

reason. Newman corrected Smith by pointing her to the deeds of trust for “all of the

lots.” In that same email, Newman informed Smith that he had “had lunch with

[Wally] and Joseph today and they agreed with the lots I told you.” At trial, in

response to being asked if that email looked like “they had at least expressed their

consent that all [12] lots were to be included and attached on Exhibit A,” Newman

said, “I mean, that’s always been the understanding the whole week” of April 2, 2012.

Newman later instructed White in an April 5 email: “The deed needs to contain the

legals for 701, 705 & 709 Main which is lots 1-6 & 43-48.”

      When Exhibit A was finalized and the deed recorded in May 2012, the

description matched the entire 701 Property. Newman testified that throughout

                                          12
various and numerous meetings up through the fall of 2012 with Simone, and several

meetings with Wally and Joseph, none of them claimed that the warranty deed to

Shmaisani was wrong and should instead have described 717 Main; “no one ha[d] ever

mentioned that.”

      The option agreement—which Newman recorded on June 13, 2012—also

attached the 12-lot 701 Property legal description as its Exhibit A. Simone

acknowledged that Newman gave her a copy of the option and that it “specifically

describe[d] the 701, 705, and 709 North Main properties.” Wahid testified that he had

learned about Exhibit A maybe two to three weeks after closing and definitely knew

about it by August 2012. Neither of them complained.

      After the closing, Wahid and Wally continue to assert interests in
      the 701 Property; Wally “re-forecloses” on Wahid’s debt to Joseph.

      Wahid and Wally were not through with the 701 Property even after Wahid

sold it to Shmaisani on April 2. Later that same day—around 5:00 or 5:30 p.m.—and

using a different notary, Wahid purported to convey an undivided 50% interest in the

701 Property to Wally and to convey Lots 5 and 6 to BW Construction, Wally’s dba.

These two deeds were recorded in October 2012, after the option agreement had

expired.

      And even though the option was expressly nontransferrable, also on April 2

and using yet another notary, Wahid assigned it to Wally, an assignment that—like the

option agreement itself—contained the 701 Property legal description. This

                                         13
assignment stayed out of the official records until Wahid submitted it for recording in

late August 2012, also after the option had expired.

      More was to come: in late August 2012, a July 3, 2012 trustee’s deed executed

by a “W. Yammine” as trustee was recorded, reflecting a foreclosure sale after Joseph

failed to pay his April 2009 $498,000 debt to New Frontier/Wahid. This trustee’s

deed has a whiff of déjà vu: New Frontier/Wahid (through the real trustee,

Woodburry) had already foreclosed on the 701 Property in January, which is how

Wahid had title in the first place and could therefore convey the 701 Property to

Shmaisani in April.7 Additionally, the W. Yammine trustee’s deed falsely recited that a

deed of trust dated April 3, 2009 was delivered to W. Yammine as trustee on that date

and   “recorded    December      30,   2011     under   Tarrant   County    Clerk’s   file

      7
       When Wally was questioned about whether it was his “W. Yammine” signature
on the July 2012 deed, he said, “I don’t remember if it’s mine, you know,” and, “I’m
not sure. Let me see. No, I’m not sure. I can’t see very well. Sorry. It’s strong cancer
chemo,” something he invoked multiple times in claiming a lack of memory. Asked by
his own lawyer whether he had “anything to do with” that document, Wally
responded, “I don’t remember. I -- my chemo, cancer chemo . . . .”

       As for Wahid, at trial he claimed total ignorance of the “W. Yammine” July
2012 trustee’s deed. This sequence of events echoes those in still another appeal
involving Wahid, which originated in our court before being transferred. Yammine v.
HDH Fin., LLC, No. 07-14-00169-CV, 2015 WL 3750339, at *1 (Tex. App.—
Amarillo June 12, 2015, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (“The dispute arose after Wahid
released liens attaching to various parcels of realty. The liens arose from deeds of trust
executed in his favor by the landowner. After the liens were released, the landowner
sold the property to HDH via warranty deeds. After the latter transaction occurred,
the trustee under the prior deeds of trust conveyed to Wahid title to the realty. HDH
then sued Wahid to remove the cloud on its title.”).

                                           14
#D211315107”—but that was the instrument number and date associated with the

Woodburry deed of trust.

      Simone exercises Wahid’s option to reacquire the 701 Property,
      although the purchase never materializes.

      During the time before the Wahid–Wally/BW deeds, the option assignment, or

the “re-foreclosure” trustee’s deed was filed of record, Wahid’s repurchase option

faced an August 2, 2012 deadline. Despite Wahid’s having assigned the option to

Wally in April, Simone went to Newman’s office on July 31, 2012 and signed, as

Wahid’s agent under a power of attorney, a document stating that Wahid was

exercising his option “concerning the property located at 701, 701 [sic], 705 and 709

N. Main Street, Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas.” And on the option period’s final

day, Simone—again acting for Wahid—recorded his “notice of exercise of option.”

That notice attached the same legal description of the 701 Property as the option

agreement’s Exhibit A, which in turn was the same legal description as the Wahid–

Shmaisani warranty deed’s Exhibit A.

      The option was never consummated, and Shmaisani remained as the record

owner of the 701 Property—or so he thought, until February 14, 2013.

      Shmaisani finds out about Wahid’s and Wally’s postclosing mis-“deeds.”

      On that 2013 Valentine’s Day, Shmaisani visited the Tarrant County Appraisal

District offices and not only learned of Wahid’s April 2 conveyances to Wally and BW

Construction but also saw why his recent online property search had revealed that in

                                         15
the summer of 2012, the 701 Property’s ownership had been changed in the official

records from him to New Frontier. That change was of course based on “W.

Yammine”’s having foreclosed Joseph’s earlier debt to Wahid, for the second time, by

a different trustee—and allegedly with no knowledge whatsoever on Wahid’s part.

      Litigation ensues.

      Shmaisani sued Wahid and Joseph almost immediately. Six months later, in

August 2013, things came to a grinding halt when Wahid filed bankruptcy.8 The

automatic stay was eventually lifted and this litigation continued, but among the

Yammines the 701 Property remained a hot potato (or a pea under a shell, depending

on one’s point of view). In the bankruptcy proceeding, Wahid had listed Lots 1

through 6 of the 701 Property among his bankruptcy estate’s three pages of real-

property interests held during the statutory pre-petition period, all of which he valued

collectively at over $2 million. In October 2014, the bankruptcy court entered an

order approving the sale of all of Wahid’s real-estate assets to Simone for—$10,000.

      The bankruptcy court apparently approved this massive discount because of

uncertainty over whether Wahid owned all or any part of the assets, noting in its order

      8
        Wally himself had filed bankruptcy earlier, around August 2012, initially listing
among his estate’s personal-property assets the assigned option agreement and, in
amended schedules, a 50% interest in the 701 Property. Soon after we heard oral
argument, Wally filed bankruptcy again, triggering an abatement of this appeal until
Shmaisani obtained an order lifting the automatic stay. Brother Joseph was also no
stranger to serial bankruptcy proceedings, unable to recall at trial even whether he had
filed bankruptcy fewer or more than five times.

                                           16
that the court “has not made and is not making any determination that the

[Bankruptcy] Estate has any interest in the Scheduled [Real] Property listed on

Amended Schedule A.” Simone promptly transferred Lots 1 through 6 of the 701

Property to an entity she controlled called the “701, 705, & 709 N. Main Street Trust”

although that October 2014 warranty deed was not recorded until December 2015,

over two years after this lawsuit started. 9

       Shmaisani amended his petition in May 2015 to add Wally and Simone as

defendants. Shortly afterward, Wahid filed a third-party action against Smith and

Stewart Title. Wally later filed his own counterclaims against Smith, Stewart Title, and

Shmaisani to quiet title, for real-estate fraud, and for violations of the Texas Theft

Liability Act.10 See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. §§ 134.001–.005.

       In December 2016, Simone filed a voluntary Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition,

putting yet another halt to the trial-court proceedings. On Shmaisani’s motion to lift

stay, a motion that is not in our record, the bankruptcy court ordered that the “stay

afforded by 11 U.S.C. § 362 is hereby terminated with respect to [Shmaisani] in order

       9
         Simone testified that she was the trustee of that trust and believes that she was
also the trust’s beneficiary, but that the trust had been dissolved and its assets “went
back to” her by way of some document she could not describe at trial; nor could she
recall the attorney who had created the trust documents for her.
       10
         Stewart Title won summary judgment on Wally’s claims against it, and Wahid
later dismissed his claims against Stewart Title. Smith was thus the only third-party
defendant at trial. The trial court directed a verdict in her favor, and no one has
complained to us about that ruling.

                                               17
to pursue state court litigation in a matter entitled Issam Al Shmaisani v. Wahid J.

Yammine, et al, 348-264569-13 and related, inter alia, to” the 701 Property.

      Shmaisani later supplemented his petition against Wahid and Wally to assert

waiver, estoppel, and ratification as bars to Wahid’s or Wally’s attempts to “reform,

modify or void the deed conveying” the 701 Property.

                             JURY VERDICT; JUDGMENT

      At the end of a six-day trial, the jury returned a unanimous verdict finding that:

   • Wahid and Shmaisani agreed that Smith was authorized to add an Exhibit A
     legal description of the 701 Property after postclosing title work was completed
     (Question 1);

   • Wahid ratified the April 2 conveyance of the 701 Property to Shmaisani
     (Question 2); waived his right to contest the Exhibit A legal description that
     was added to the warranty deed (Question 3); and was estopped from asserting
     that the warranty deed did not convey the 701 Property, as described in Exhibit
     A, to Shmaisani (Question 4);

   • Shmaisani did not obtain the deed to the 701 Property by fraud (Question 6);

   • Shmaisani was a good-faith purchaser for value without notice of Wahid’s near-
     contemporaneous deeds to Wally and to BW Construction (Question 7);

   • Wally was not a good-faith purchaser for value without notice of the deed
     conveying the 701 Property to Shmaisani (Question 8);

   • Wahid fraudulently executed, and Wally fraudulently caused to be filed, the
     April 2 warranty deeds to Wally (50% interest in the 701 Property) and to BW
     Construction (Lots 5 and 6) (Questions 9(a) and (b));

   • Wally fraudulently executed and caused to be filed the W. Yammine July 2012
     trustee’s deed conveying the 701 Property to New Frontier/Wahid (Question
     9(c)); and

                                          18
   • Simone fraudulently executed and caused to be filed the deed conveying Lots 1
     through 6 to the “701, 705, and 709 N. Main Street Trust.” (Question 9(d))

      After a number of postverdict motions went back and forth, including ones

involving Shmaisani’s attorney’s fees and Smith’s motion for sanctions against Wahid

under Rule 13 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, the trial court entered its final

judgment in November 2018, ordering that Shmaisani recover—

   • title to and possession of the 701 Property;

   • nothing from Wahid (because of his discharge in bankruptcy);

   • $30,000 from Wally for three fraudulent property-records filings;

   • $10,000 from Simone for her fraudulent property-records filing;

   • $120,000 in reasonable and necessary attorneys’ fees from Wally, together with
     conditional appellate attorneys’ fees, under the Fraudulent Lien Act, Chapter 12
     of the Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code (CPRC); and

   • $40,000 in reasonable and necessary attorneys’ fees under Chapter 12 from
     Simone, plus conditional appellate attorneys’ fees.

      As to Smith’s Rule 13 motion against Wahid, the trial court awarded Smith

$21,265 as reasonable and necessary attorneys’ fees, but against Simone and not

Wahid. The trial court also ordered that “Defendants, as Counterclaimants, take

nothing by their counterclaims” against Shmaisani. This appeal followed.

                                 ISSUES ON APPEAL

Simone has raised five issues, which we paraphrase:

   1. The Wahid–Shmaisani warranty deed is void because no property description
      was attached when Wahid executed it, with these subissues:

                                         19
          (a) Whether the statute of frauds allowed the contract to be orally
              modified;

          (b) Whether sufficient evidence supported the submission of a jury
              question asking if Wahid was estopped from asserting that the deed did
              not convey the 701 Property to Shmaisani; and

          (c) Whether sufficient evidence supported the jury’s finding that Wahid
              had ratified the conveyance of the 701 Property to Shmaisani;

   2. The evidence was legally and factually insufficient to establish that Simone
      violated CPRC Section 12.002;

   3. The lift-stay order in Simone’s bankruptcy case was not so broad as to allow
      the trial court to award monetary damages or attorneys’ fees against her;

   4. Simone cannot be tagged with Rule 13 sanctions when Smith sought them only
      against Wahid; and

   5. Shmaisani failed to segregate his attorney’s fees.

Wally’s five issues overlap with Simone’s to varying degrees:

   1. The trial court abused its discretion by overruling Wally’s jury-charge
      objections;

   2. The Wahid–Shmaisani conveyance was void for lack of a legal description or,
      alternatively, for an erroneous legal description, with three subparts:

      (a) Wahid and Shmaisani had no meeting of the minds about modifying the
          contract;

      (b) The evidence was not legally or factually sufficient to show that Wahid
          ratified the contract; and

      (c) The evidence was not legally or factually sufficient to show that Wahid was
          estopped from challenging the contract’s validity or that he waived his
          right to do so;

   3. Shmaisani did not meet his Section 12.002 burden with legally or factually
      sufficient evidence and is thus not entitled to a judgment against Wally;

                                           20
   4. The trial court erred by entering a take-nothing judgment on Wally’s
      counterclaims; and

   5. Because Shmaisani’s Section 12.002 claim fails, Shmaisani is not entitled to
      attorney’s fees; alternatively, Shmaisani failed to segregate his fees as required.

       Because of their commonalities, we will discuss certain issues together.

                                STANDARDS OF REVIEW

       We may sustain a legal-sufficiency challenge—that is, a no-evidence

challenge—only when (1) the record bears no evidence of a vital fact, (2) the rules of

law or of evidence bar the court from giving weight to the only evidence offered to

prove a vital fact, (3) the evidence offered to prove a vital fact is no more than a mere

scintilla, or (4) the evidence establishes conclusively the opposite of a vital fact. Shields

v. Ltd. P’ship v. Bradberry, 526 S.W.3d 471, 480 (Tex. 2017); see also Ford Motor Co. v.

Castillo, 444 S.W.3d 616, 620 (Tex. 2014) (op. on reh’g); Uniroyal Goodrich Tire Co. v.

Martinez, 977 S.W.2d 328, 334 (Tex. 1998) (op. on reh’g). In determining whether

legally sufficient evidence supports the finding under review, we must consider

evidence favorable to the finding if a reasonable factfinder could, and we must

disregard contrary evidence unless a reasonable factfinder could not. Cent. Ready Mix

Concrete Co. v. Islas, 228 S.W.3d 649, 651 (Tex. 2007); City of Keller v. Wilson, 168 S.W.3d

802, 807, 827 (Tex. 2005). We indulge “every reasonable inference deducible from the

evidence” in support of the challenged finding. Gunn v. McCoy, 554 S.W.3d 645, 658

(Tex. 2018).

                                             21
      Neither Simone nor Wally preserved factual-sufficiency complaints for appeal

as we explain later, so we do not recite that standard of review.

      A trial court abuses its discretion if it fails to analyze the law correctly or

misapplies the law to established facts, In re Dawson, 550 S.W.3d 625, 628 (Tex. 2018)

(orig. proceeding) (per curiam); Iliff v. Iliff, 339 S.W.3d 74, 78 (Tex. 2011), or if its

decision is so arbitrary and unreasonable that it amounts to a clear and prejudicial

error of law. In re Olshan Found. Repair Co., LLC, 328 S.W.3d 883, 888 (Tex. 2010)

(orig. proceeding).

      We review claims of jury-charge error for an abuse of discretion. See Thota v.

Young, 366 S.W.3d 678, 687 (Tex. 2012) (“We review a trial court’s decision to submit

or refuse a particular instruction under an abuse of discretion standard of review.”);

Matlock Place Apartments, L.P. v. Druce, 369 S.W.3d 355, 382 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth

2012, pet. denied). When the appellant challenges an instruction or definition as

legally incorrect, we review the instruction or definition de novo. Matlock Place, 369

S.W.3d at 382. If the charge is legally correct, the trial court has broad discretion in

submitting questions, definitions, and instructions. Id.

                                           22
                                    DISCUSSION

                      Simone’s Issue 1/Wally’s Issues 1 & 2
      A. The April 2, 2012 Wahid–Shmaisani deed was not incurably
         void; the parties agreed that the legal description for the 701
         Property could be added later, and it was.

      Wahid and Shmaisani signed a real-estate contract that, at Simone’s insistence,

referred to property by an instrument number only. Simone told Newman not to

bother looking up that number online. When closing attorney Smith, who did look it

up, became puzzled because the instrument number’s associated deed didn’t match

any property on the Healy foreclosure list, Newman added—with the buyer’s and

seller’s knowledge and in their presence—the imperiled 701 Property addresses to the

contract. When Wahid signed the warranty deed that day, no property description was

included or attached; Smith added it later and then recorded the deed with an Exhibit

A that described the 701 Property. Although conflicting, the trial testimony indicated

that Smith did so with both Wahid’s and Shmaisani’s blessing, and the jury agreed.

      Simone and Wally argue that the deed was void when it was executed because it

lacked a property description. See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code Ann. § 26.01(b)(4); Tex.

Prop. Code Ann. § 5.021. Accordingly, they contend, the trial court should not have

even asked the jury whether Wahid and Shmaisani had agreed that Smith could add

the property description; nothing could animate a void deed, they say, so Question 1

was an incorrect statement of the law.

                                         23
       If the issue was simply whether the deed was valid when executed, the answer

would be no. See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code Ann. § 26.01(b)(4); Tex. Prop. Code Ann.

§ 5.021; AIC Mgmt. v. Crews, 246 S.W.3d 640, 645 (Tex. 2008) (holding that valid

conveyance of real property must contain sufficient description of property). The

deed’s validity would thus have been a purely legal matter for the trial court to

determine. But Shmaisani presented evidence that he and Wahid had agreed that the

title company could add an Exhibit A that would describe the 701 Property.

       The evidence and the jury’s answer to Question 1 place this case squarely

within the holdings of cases like Foster v. Lessing, 346 S.W.2d 939 (Tex. App.—Waco

1961, writ ref’d n.r.e.), which recognize that a seller or grantor can authorize someone

to add descriptions later to cure an initial and otherwise fatal defect.

       In Foster, a specific-performance case, the jury found that the parties had

authorized a real-estate agent to add a legal description to their signed contract after a

survey was completed. The appellate court affirmed the trial court’s resulting

judgment, holding that the reneging seller could not invoke the statute of frauds to

invalidate the contract after the agent added the description. Id. at 942–43. That is,

because the evidence established the parties’ authorization to the agent, the later-

added description converted an initially unenforceable contract into an enforceable

one:

       The contracts as prepared and signed, and containing no description of
       the land involved were not so wholly void that they were not thereafter

                                            24
      operative and effective by the insertion, if authorized by the seller, of a
      correct description of the land intended to be sold.

Id. at 942. Foster also supports the trial court’s submission of Question 1, which asked:

             Did Wahid Yammine and Issam Al Shmaisani agree on April 2,
      2012 that Sharon Smith was authorized to add the legal description of
      “The Property” (see Definition No. 1) as Exhibit “A” to the General
      Warranty Deed (dated April 2, 2012) after she completed the title work
      after the closing on April 2, 2012 for filing of the deed in the public deed
      records?

The jury answered yes, just as the Foster jury did in response to a substantively

identical question. Id. at 942–43. On our facts, Question 1 was entirely proper.

      Like here, the issue in Foster “was not whether the writings contained an

adequate description of the property, but whether the statute of frauds could be

invoked after the initial writings . . . were later supplemented to include descriptions

sufficient for statute of frauds purposes.” Lawler v. Dixtor Int’l, Inc., No. 05-97-00286-

CV, 1999 WL 588097 at *3 (Tex. App.—Dallas Aug. 6, 1999, no pet.) (not designated

for publication). If evidence shows the parties’ agreement to add a property

description after a deed is executed, the deed as augmented is valid and conveys real

property. Foster, 346 S.W.2d at 942; cf. Republic Nat’l Bank of Dallas v. Stetson, 390

S.W.2d 257, 261 (Tex. 1965) (holding that deed lacking description when it was

executed conveyed nothing, where undisputed evidence showed that grantor “gave no

authority to anyone to fill in the description or alter the document”); Glasscock v.

Farmers Royalty Holding Co., 152 F.2d 537, 538–39 (5th Cir. 1945) (holding that parties’

stipulation—that grantor had executed two mineral deeds lacking property

                                           25
descriptions but with the understanding that grantees could later insert descriptions

on grantor’s authority—established that deeds were “title[-]passing instruments and

passed title to the minerals in question,” as the trial court found, thereby making it

unnecessary to determine separate ratification argument). Indeed, the Glasscock court

observed what had long been true even in 1945:

      Whatever may be the state of the law [] elsewhere as to whether a deed
      which has been signed in blank, authority and specific direction being
      given to the grantee to fill in the descriptive data, is operative or
      inoperative, it has been many times declared by the Texas courts that
      such a deed, after the description has been properly filled in, would be
      operative to pass title[.] Threadgill v. Butler, 60 Tex. 599[, 600–01 (1884)];
      Tarrant County v. McLemore, Tex. Sup., 8 S.W. 94[, 96 (Tex. 1888)].

Id. (footnotes omitted).

      The jury here faced competing views of what the parties did and didn’t agree to

on April 2, 2012. It resolved those differences in Shmaisani’s favor, in the process

making the weight and credibility determinations that are a jury’s exclusive province.

See Golden Eagle Archery, Inc. v. Jackson, 116 S.W.3d 757, 761 (Tex. 2003) (holding that

factfinder is the sole judge of the witnesses’ credibility and the weight to be given their

testimony). Moreover, none of the Yammines argued to the trial court—or to us—

that the evidence was legally or factually insufficient to support the jury’s finding of an

agreement that the 701 Property legal description could be added after closing.11 See In

      11
         Wally and Wahid filed a JNOV motion combined with a motion to disregard
jury findings in which they argued that Question 1 “{i} is not supported by Plaintiff’s
pleadings and {ii} constitutes a legal conclusion and an improper statement of the
law.” They contended that if the trial court relied on the jury’s answer to Question 1

                                            26
re M.S., 115 S.W.3d 534, 547 (Tex. 2003) (noting that Rule 324(b)(2) requires a motion

for new trial to preserve factual-sufficiency complaint); T.O. Stanley Boot Co. v. Bank of

El Paso, 847 S.W.2d 218, 220–21 (Tex. 1992) (explaining that a no-evidence issue must

be preserved by moving for an instructed verdict, moving for judgment

notwithstanding the verdict, objecting to submitting the question to the jury, moving

to disregard the jury’s answer to a vital fact question, or moving for a new trial). Thus,

to the extent that Simone or Wally tacitly complains that legally or factually

insufficient evidence supported the answer to Question 1, they have waived that

complaint. 12

       Wally raises a related subissue arguing that there was no meeting of the minds

between Wahid and Shmaisani about modifying the contract by Newman’s inserting

the 701 Property addresses or by Smith’s adding Exhibit A. He also argues that a valid

contract modification must be supported by consideration, citing White v. Harrison,

390 S.W.3d 666, 674 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2012, no pet.). Wally did not raise these

in rendering a judgment, the court “would improperly find that a written contract to
sell real estate could be orally modified and that the oral modification of the written
contract was enforceable.” This contention is not the same as one that challenges
evidentiary sufficiency. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a)(1); Banda v. Garcia, 955 S.W.2d 270,
272 (Tex. 1997) (holding that complaint on appeal must match that presented in trial
court).
       12
         Simone was the only defendant to move for a new trial, but her new-trial
motion contained no specific grounds, stating only that she “re-urge[d] the points
raised in the post-judgment motions and responses and ask[ed] the Court to grant her
a new trial in this case.”

                                           27
specific arguments in the trial court, although we suppose that arguing no meeting of

the minds at this stage might theoretically be tantamount to complaining that the jury

should not have been asked, or should not have answered yes to, Question 1. Cf.

Musallam v. Ali, No. 02-16-00282-CV, 2019 WL 1950179, at *8 (Tex. App.—Fort

Worth May 2, 2019, no pet.) (mem. op. on remand) (rejecting argument that jury

should not have been asked whether parties had agreed to certain terms; although

whether an agreement constitutes a contract is generally a legal question, “when a

meeting of the minds is contested, determination of the existence of a contract is a

question of fact”). We have already resolved the Exhibit A issue in Shmaisani’s favor;

the balance of Wally’s subissue has been waived. 13 See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a)(1)(A);

Banda, 955 S.W.2d at 272.

      In short, by finding an agreement that Smith could add an Exhibit A describing

the 701 Property, the jury effectively revived the warranty deed, thereby justifying the

trial court’s judgment decreeing that Shmaisani owns the 701 Property.

           1. With the jury’s “yes” answer to Question 1, Questions 2 through 4
              became immaterial to the final judgment.

      Although it could have, the trial court did not condition the jury’s answering

Question 2 (Wahid’s ratification), Question 3 (Wahid’s waiver), or Question 4

(Wahid’s estoppel) upon answering “no” to Question 1. That is, finding an agreement

      13
        Regardless, Wally was a stranger to the contract, and we have serious
concerns in any event about whether a stranger to a contract can assert that the
contracting parties did not have a meeting of the minds.

                                          28
consisting of “X” does not need belt-and-suspenders findings that a party also later

ratified the agreement for X by doing Y, or waived a challenge to its validity, or is

estopped from denying its validity. Once a jury finds that parties agreed to something,

that agreement is enforceable unless the opposing party has some legal excuse for

avoiding it. See, e.g., Tex. R. Civ. P. 94 (listing examples of affirmative defenses). Here

it was Shmaisani, not Wahid, who pleaded these three affirmative “defenses” as

supplements to his live petition, apparently as alternative ways to obtain a judgment

that Shmaisani owned the 701 Property in case the jury declined to find that Wahid

and Shmaisani had affirmatively agreed to let Smith add Exhibit A.

      For example, even if the jury had answered Question 1 “no,” Wahid could

nonetheless have ratified the conveyance to Shmaisani by Wahid’s assigning the

purchase option to Wally or by attempting to exercise the original option himself,

because both the assignment and the option contract identified the 701 Property and

necessarily recognized that Shmaisani owned it. See Reserve Petroleum Co. v. Hodge, 213

S.W.2d 456, 457–58 (Tex. 1948) (holding that by executing mineral lease referring to

“mineral deeds properly executed and now of record,” mineral owners had ratified

conveyance even though earlier mineral deeds lacked property descriptions when

signed and owners had not authorized adding descriptions to deeds before they were

recorded); see also Glasscock, 152 F.2d at 540 (approving trial court’s finding that,

because deeds were effective to pass title, determining the question of later ratification

through grantor’s executing a lease was unnecessary, but nevertheless concluding that

                                            29
grantor’s entering into lease constituted ratification and noting “settled law in Texas

that the execution by the grantor in questioned instruments of later instruments,

recognizing the prior instruments as valid and effective, operates as a complete

ratification and validation of them, whether as originally executed they were void or

voidable”).

      Because we affirm the trial court’s judgment based on the Question 1 finding,

we need not consider Simone’s and Wally’s arguments concerning the ratification,

waiver, and estoppel findings in Shmaisani’s favor. Those findings were not material

to the judgment. See Spencer v. Eagle Star Ins. Co. of Am., 876 S.W.2d 154, 157 (Tex.

1994) (noting that answer to a jury question is immaterial “when it was properly

submitted but has been rendered immaterial by other findings”).

          2. Wally’s charge-related complaints fail.

      In his first issue, which overlaps somewhat with his second, Wally complains

that the trial court erred in overruling his jury-charge objections to Questions 1, 4, and

7. To preserve error about an incorrect jury question or instruction, the complaining

party must timely and plainly make the trial court aware of the complaint and obtain a

ruling. Ford Motor Co. v. Ledesma, 242 S.W.3d 32, 43–44 (Tex. 2007); State Dep’t of

Highways & Pub. Transp. v. Payne, 838 S.W.2d 235, 241 (Tex. 1992) (op. on reh’g); see

Tex. R. Civ. P. 274.

      The record shows that although Wally and Wahid objected jointly to Question

1 (authority to add Exhibit A) as an “improper statement of the law” and to Question

                                           30
7 (Shmaisani as a good-faith purchaser) as “not a controlling issue” and as

“immaterial,” only Wahid objected to Question 4 (estoppel). The defendants did not

adopt one another’s charge objections, so to the extent we might otherwise be called

upon to consider Wally’s complaint about Question 4, we need not do so. See Wolfe v.

Devon Energy Prod. Co., 382 S.W.3d 434, 451 (Tex. App.—Waco 2012, pet. denied)

(observing that if a party did not make its own objections in the trial court and did not

adopt another party’s objections, “it is foreclosed from relying on the objection of

another party to preserve its complaint for appellate review”). In any event, as we

explained above, the estoppel finding was immaterial to the eventual judgment.

      As for Question 1, Wally argues as he did at the charge conference that it was

an improper statement of the law. For the reasons we have already explained, the

question was proper. See Foster, 346 S.W.2d at 942–43.

      Finally, Wally assails Question 7—in which the jury found that Shmaisani was a

good-faith purchaser for value without notice of Wahid’s (later-recorded) April 2

conveyances to Wally and BW Construction—as immaterial to the case’s outcome,

surplusage, and a comment on the weight of the evidence. Wally cites no authority for

and does not analyze these assertions. See Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(i) (stating that “brief

must contain a clear and concise argument for the contentions made, with appropriate

citations to authorities and to the record”); Hamilton v. Williams, 298 S.W.3d 334, 337

(Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2009, pet. denied) (noting that appellate court will not

consider an appellant’s issue where appellant fails to provide legal argument in

                                           31
support). Nor does Wally explain how the trial court might have reversibly erred by

including Question 7. To obtain reversal of a judgment based on trial-court error, an

appellant must show that the error occurred and that it probably caused rendition of

an improper judgment or probably prevented the appellant from properly presenting

the case to this court. Tex. R. App. P. 44.1(a); Romero v. KPH Consolidation, Inc., 166

S.W.3d 212, 225 (Tex. 2005). Wally has not made the requisite showing.

       We overrule Simone’s first issue and Wally’s first and second issues.

                                    Simone’s Issue 3
       B. The bankruptcy court terminated the automatic stay
          unconditionally and thus allowed money damages and
          attorneys’ fees to be assessed against Simone.

       Simone argues in her third issue that the bankruptcy court terminated the

automatic stay of this litigation only so that the trial court could determine title and

possession issues, characterizing the order as “lifting the stay of state court activity for

the limited purpose of ‘any future actions taken by [Shmaisani] to exercise [his] rights

to ownership or to obtain exclusive possession of the Real Property.’” As a result,

Simone contends, the trial court erred by entering a judgment against her on anything

other than ownership and possession issues—that is, Shmaisani cannot recover

Section 12.002 damages or associated attorney’s fees from her. We disagree with

Simone’s interpretation.

       Section 362(d) of the Bankruptcy Code authorizes a bankruptcy court to grant

relief from the automatic stay “such as by terminating, annulling, modifying, or

                                            32
conditioning” the stay. 11 U.S.C.A. § 362(d). “We strictly construe an order modifying

the automatic stay.” Dickinson v. Dickinson, 324 S.W.3d 653, 656 (Tex. App.—Fort

Worth 2010, no pet.) (discussing bankruptcy-court order modifying stay to allow

divorce to be finalized for specific itemized matters); see also Stephens v. Hemyari, 216

S.W.3d 526, 529 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2007, pet. denied) (strictly construing order

conditionally lifting stay to allow foreclosure on specific date and holding that creditor

failed to establish as matter of law that foreclosure that occurred the following month

did not violate automatic stay).

       But the order at issue here, entered after an evidentiary hearing, did not

“modify” or “condition” the stay—it terminated the stay so that Shmaisani’s case

could proceed. See 11 U.S.C.A. § 362(d) (using “terminating, annulling, modifying, or

conditioning” disjunctively). The order allowed Shmaisani “to pursue state court

litigation in a matter entitled Issam Al Shmaisani v. Wahid J. Yammine, et al[.], 348-

264569-13 and related, inter alia, to the real property described below”—the 701

Property. The language used is broad and does not purport to limit Shmaisani’s causes

of action or remedies to purely nonmonetary or title-related ones. As our sister court

in Austin has noted, “[i]n ordinary use, ‘relates to’ means to have a connection with,

to refer to, or to concern. . . . The terminology ‘relates to’ is very broad in its ordinary

usage . . . .” Tex. Dep’t of Pub. Safety v. Abbott, 310 S.W.3d 670, 674–75 (Tex. App.—

Austin 2010, no pet.) (construing “relates to” language in statute in accordance with

ordinary use); see also O’Banion v. Inland W. Clear Lake Gulf Shores GP, LLC, No. 01-15-

                                            33
00704-CV, 2017 WL 5494695, at *10 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Nov. 16, 2017,

no pet.) (mem. op.) (broadly construing court decree requiring party to indemnify

another for debts, etc. “in relation to” particular business and noting that “[t]he

phrase ‘relates to’ is recognized as ‘very broad’ in scope,” citing numerous cases). By

lifting the stay for litigation “related to” the 701 Property, the bankruptcy court thus

expanded rather than cabined what Shmaisani might be able to claim, prove, and

recover when it came to issues involving the 701 Property. 14 And if the court had

simply ended the sentence after giving the cause number, its intent would have been

equally clear.

       We are similarly unpersuaded by Simone’s argument that the order’s second

part—terminating the stay also “with respect to any future actions” taken “to exercise

[Shmaisani’s] rights to ownership or to obtain exclusive possession of the Real

Property”—lifted the stay only as to nonmonetary relief and is the decretal language

that matters. The second decretal paragraph is untethered from the one allowing the

pending litigation to proceed without conditions. Reading the order in its entirety and

considering its express terms and plain language, its most salient feature is that the

       14
          The parties have focused their attention on arguing over what the “inter alia”
in the lift-stay order meant. To us, because “related to” is broad to begin with, adding
“inter alia” simply reinforces that the stay was lifted so that Shmaisani could pursue his
701 Property-related claims—whatever they were. We are particularly confident in
how we read the order considering that Shmaisani’s Section 12.002 and attorneys’-fee
claims against Simone (and Wally) had been on file for three months before Simone
filed bankruptcy and for six months when the stay was lifted.

                                           34
stay was lifted for Shmaisani to pursue state-court litigation related to the 701

Property without restricting the type of judgment the state court might enter. The

follow-on paragraph authorizing Shmaisani to take “any future actions” hews more

closely to the idea that he might eventually need a writ of possession or similar

postjudgment assistance and could take such steps without coming back to the

bankruptcy court.

          We overrule Simone’s third issue.

                            Simone’s Issue 2/Wally’s Issue 3
          C. Evidence abounded that both Simone and Wally violated CPRC
             Section 12.002(a), the Fraudulent Lien Act.

          In their respective second and third issues, Simone and Wally argue that the

evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s answers to

Questions 9(b), (c), and (d) (finding CPRC Section 12.002(a) violations on both their

parts). Because neither Simone nor Wally moved for a new trial, we need not consider

factual sufficiency, see In re M.S., 115 S.W.3d at 547, and will instead ask whether more

than a scintilla of evidence existed that either Simone or Wally violated the Act.

Keeping in mind that we indulge “every reasonable inference deducible from the

evidence” in support of the challenged findings, Gunn, 554 S.W.3d at 658, the answer

is yes.

          The elements of a claim for a fraudulent lien or claim against real property are

that a person (1) makes, presents, or uses a document knowing that it is a fraudulent

                                              35
claim against real property; (2) intends that the document be given legal effect; and

(3) intends to cause physical, financial, or mental or emotional injury to another

person. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 12.002(a); Brewer v. Green Lizard

Holdings, L.L.C. Series SR, 406 S.W.3d 399, 403 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2013, no

pet.); Preston Gate, LP v. Bukaty, 248 S.W.3d 892, 896–97 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2008, no

pet.).15 Here, the jury was instructed on these elements and found in answer to

Questions 9(b) and (c) that Wally fraudulently caused to be filed two documents—the

late-in-the-day April 2 warranty deeds from Wahid to Wally and to BW

Construction—and fraudulently executed and caused to be filed a third document—

the W. Yammine July 2012 trustee’s deed. In answering Question 9(d), the jury found

       Section 12.002(a) provides:
      15

      (a) A person may not make, present, or use a document or other record with:

            (1) knowledge that the document or other record is a fraudulent
      court record or a fraudulent lien or claim against real or personal
      property or an interest in real or personal property;

             (2) intent that the document or other record be given the same
      legal effect as a court record . . . , evidencing a valid lien or claim against
      real or personal property or an interest in real or personal property; and

             (3) intent to cause another person to suffer:

                    (A) physical injury;

                    (B) financial injury; or

                    (C) mental anguish or emotional distress.

                                               36
that Simone fraudulently executed and caused to be filed one document—the deed

conveying Lots 1 through 6 to her trust after she acquired Wahid’s real-estate

portfolio from his bankruptcy estate. As a result of those findings, the trial court

awarded Shmaisani the statutory maximum of $10,000 per fraudulent filing, for a total

of $30,000 against Wally and $10,000 against Simone. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.

Code Ann. § 12.002(b)(1)(A) (providing that a person who violates the Act is liable

for the greater of $10,000 or actual damages caused by the violation).

          1. Evidence of Simone’s Section 12.002 violation.

      Simone claims that the evidence shows nothing more than that someone filed the

October 2014 deed from her to her trust. The deed recites that the trust’s mailing

address is P.O. Box 11781 in Fort Worth; the deed was submitted for recording by

the 701, 705, & 709 N Main Street Trust; and the address to which the deed was to be

returned after recording was P.O. Box 11781. Not only is this the same post-office

box Simone used for herself in recording Wahid’s August 2012 option-exercise notice,

but in her appellate brief she affirmatively represented that she in fact filed this deed

in December 2015.

      She next claims that even if she filed it, there was no evidence that she knew

the deed was fraudulent. But the jury heard from Simone that the deed conveyed Lots

1 through 6 of the 701 Property to the trust; that she had known since 2012 that

Wahid had conveyed those lots to Shmaisani; and that she had testified under oath in

Wahid’s bankruptcy proceeding that Shmaisani had acquired Lots 1 through 6. The

                                           37
fact that the bankruptcy court approved the trustee’s sale to Simone of Wahid’s real-

estate holdings, allegedly including Lots 1 through 6, is irrelevant in the face of her

superior knowledge, especially since the bankruptcy court effectively threw up its

hands in the approval order by explicitly disavowing any determination that Wahid

owned any of the listed real-property interests.16 Simone acknowledged that she knew

in October 2014 what the bankruptcy court’s order said in that regard.

      As for intent to cause injury, the third element, we start with the overarching

principle that “[i]ntent is a fact question uniquely within the realm of the trier of fact

because it so depends upon the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given

to their testimony” and “invariably must be proven by circumstantial evidence.”

Spoljaric v. Percival Tours, Inc., 708 S.W.2d 432, 434, 435 (Tex. 1986). See also Consol.

Reinforcement, L.P. v. Cheraif, No. 04-18-00443-CV, 2019 WL 2272890, at *2 (Tex.

App.—San Antonio May 29, 2019, no pet.) (applying Spoljaric in Chapter 12 context).

Because Simone, on Wahid’s behalf, had tried to exercise the option to repurchase the

701 Property and filed a notice to that effect on August 2, 2012, she knew in October

      16
        Simone’s theory seems to be that she cannot have violated the Act because
she “believed she was a bona fide purchaser [BFP] for good value because she
purchased the property from the bankruptcy trustee.” More than a scintilla of
evidence negates the idea that Simone was a BFP. See, e.g., Madison v. Gordon, 39
S.W.3d 604, 606 (Tex. 2001) (noting that to receive special protection as BFP, “one
must acquire property in good faith, for value, and without notice of any third-party
claim or interest”); Aston Meadows, Ltd. v. Devon Energy Prod. Co., 359 S.W.3d 856, 859
(Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2012, pet. denied) (reciting that notice sufficient to defeat
BFP status may be actual or constructive and that actual notice “rests on personal
information or knowledge”).

                                           38
2014 that Wahid did not own that property despite her disingenuous argument that

laundering it through Wahid’s bankruptcy trustee cured all ills. That fact, combined

with her obfuscating the entire April 2012 transaction by giving Newman what was

really a decoy instrument number for the contract, is more than a scintilla of evidence

that Simone intended to cause injury to Shmaisani. Had Simone’s and her brothers’

legerdemain succeeded in putting the 701 Property back into Yammine hands,

Shmaisani would have paid $535,000 for exactly nothing—and thus been financially

injured—as this exchange suggests:

             Q. [Shmaisani’s counsel] -- once again, the question is: My client
      paid $535,000 at closing. Your family got the benefit of paying off the
      Healy liens. You’re claiming an interest in the property. Your brother
      Wally is claiming an interest in the property. What did my client get for
      his $535,000?

             A. [Simone] I don’t have an answer. 17

      Simone relies heavily on a Chapter 12 case from our sister court in Dallas

concerning legally insufficient evidence of intent to cause injury. Aland v. Martin, 271

S.W.3d 424 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2008, no pet.). That case held that a husband could

not recover under the Act after his wife’s divorce lawyer placed a lien against

community property to secure payment of fees and failed to remove the lien at the

husband’s request. Id. at 432–33. The appellate court looked at the evidence as a

       Wahid’s lawyer took the position that because Wahid had been discharged in
      17

bankruptcy, Wahid “had nothing he could give back” to Shmaisani if the deal was
unwound.

                                          39
whole and concluded that it was “equally consistent” with both an intent and a lack of

intent on the lawyer’s part to cause injury. Id. at 433 (noting that “[w]hen the

circumstances are equally consistent with either of two facts, neither fact may be

inferred”) (quoting City of Keller, 168 S.W.3d at 813). “The final test for legal

sufficiency must always be whether the evidence at trial would enable reasonable and

fair-minded people to reach the verdict under review.” City of Keller, 168 S.W.3d at

827.

       Here, in view of Simone’s cagey explanations, and deferring as we must to the

jury’s weight and credibility assessments, we cannot agree that intent versus lack of

intent were anything like reasonably equivalent options on this record. The facts more

closely resemble those of such cases as Brewer v. Green Lizard Holdings and Bernard v.

Bank of America. See Brewer, 406 S.W.3d 399; Bernard v. Bank of Am., No. 04-12-00088-

CV, 2013 WL 441749 (Tex. App.—San Antonio Feb. 6, 2013, no pet.) (mem. op.). In

Brewer, we affirmed summary judgment for Green Lizard, which had purchased a lot

at a delinquent-tax sale only to discover that Brewer was occupying the property

under a deed purportedly given him by a representative of the former owner. Brewer,

406 S.W.3d at 401. Brewer had also filed a mechanic’s lien on the property for

services ostensibly rendered after he recorded the deed. Id. In holding that Green

Lizard had established all elements of its Chapter 12 claim—including intent to

injure—as a matter of law, we recapped the evidence this way:

                                         40
      Appellee [Green Lizard] presented evidence that a corporate officer of
      the entity from which appellant [Brewer] purported to take his title to
      the property had no knowledge of appellant and that the entity never
      conveyed [the] property to appellant. The deed appellant recorded in the
      property records is dated before the foreclosure [on the lender’s deed of
      trust from the former owner] but was not recorded until several months
      later. . . . Nor did he provide any evidence that he filed the documents to
      protect a legitimate interest in the property. Additionally, the mechanic’s
      lien and certificate of acknowledgement were both filed . . . the day
      before the tax sale.

Id. at 404. Bernard involved defaulting homeowners who, after receiving notice of the

bank’s scheduled foreclosure sale, executed and filed a “substitution of trustee”

document reflecting that the Bernards, not the bank, were the deed of trust’s

beneficiaries and purporting to name a substitute trustee. 2013 WL 441749, at *1.

Relying on that document, the Bernards then sought an injunction to stop the bank’s

foreclosure and succeeded in dragging things out in court before the bank finally won

summary judgment on its Chapter 12 counterclaim. Id. at *4. Affirming, the San

Antonio court noted that the Bernards’ unilaterally drafting, signing, and filing the

“substitution of trustee” document to stop the foreclosure, coupled with their failing

to pay their mortgage “for nearly two years while still residing in the home,

demonstrate[d] an intent to cause the Bank financial harm.” Id. Additionally, there was

“nothing in the record to suggest that the Bernards filed the ‘Substitution of Trustee’

document to legitimately protect their property interests.” Id.

      Similar to Brewer’s and the Bernards’ shenanigans, we find nothing here to

suggest any intent other than to harm Shmaisani through (a) Simone’s purchase of

                                           41
Wahid’s alleged real-property assets, including some of the 701 Property, from the

bankruptcy trustee over a year after Shmaisani had sued Wahid, (b) Simone’s

immediate transfer of that property to her trust in October 2014 (a transfer not

recorded until December 2015), or (c) her vague testimony about title having

somehow returned from the trust to her with the assistance of some lawyer whose

name she could not recall. As in Brewer and Bernard, none of this evidence points to an

intent to legitimately protect Simone’s (or her brothers’) property interests; Simone

knew that Shmaisani had bought the 701 Property, but she nevertheless executed and

filed a deed transferring part of that property to a trust she controlled.

       The evidence of Simone’s Section 12.002 violation is legally sufficient, and we

overrule her second issue.

           2. Evidence of Wally’s Section 12.002 violations.

       Wally’s combined JNOV motion and motion to disregard jury findings argued

only that there was no evidence that Wally had “filed or caused to be filed the

Warranty Deed documents conveying” a half interest in the 701 Property to Wally

and Lots 5 and 6 to BW Construction, or that he had “fraudulently executed or

caused to be filed” or “prepared or filed” the W. Yammine trustee’s deed. In his

appellate briefing, Wally has added a new argument: that there was no evidence that

he “intended to cause financial injury to anyone.”18

       Unlike Wahid, Wally did not raise a no-evidence argument in the trial court
      18

on the intent-to-injure element, even though Wahid and Wally jointly filed their

                                            42
        At trial, Wally claimed to recall virtually nothing about the two warranty deeds

or the trustee’s deed. Concerning the April 2012 deed to Wally of the half interest,

Wally each time responded “I don’t remember” when asked if he had submitted the

document for filing (as the document reflects on its face, showing as it does “Wally

Yammine” as the “Submitter”). Wally gave the same response when asked why he had

waited until October to file it. As for the deed to BW Construction, “I don’t

remember” was also the word-for-word answer to questions about the “circumstances

surrounding the execution of [that] document” and “why [he] waited until October

31st of 2012 to file this document after it was purportedly executed in April.” The

“Submitter” shown on this deed was Wally’s dba, BW Construction. Notably, Wally

never denied having filed the two deeds.

        Wally similarly “d[id]n’t remember” if it was his signature on the July 2012

trustee’s deed, whether he had “ever been a trustee associated with a deed of trust,” or

where that document—which, like the warranty deeds, was notarized—had come

from.

postverdict motion. Their specific attacks on the jury’s answers to Questions 9(a), (b),
and (c) were personalized, and each brother’s attack was substantively different from
the other’s. See Dupree v. Piggly Wiggly Shop Rite Foods, Inc., 542 S.W.2d 882, 892 (Tex.
App.—Corpus Christi 1976, writ ref’d n.r.e.) (op. on reh’g), (disapproved of on other
grounds, Fifth Club, Inc. v. Ramirez, 196 S.W.3d 788 (Tex. 2006)) (setting forth elements
required in motion to disregard findings, including “specify[ing] the reason why the
finding or findings should be disregarded”). Although Wally has thus not preserved
this particular complaint, we would conclude that the evidence of intent to injure was
legally sufficient for the same reasons as in our analysis of Simone’s Section 12.002
issue, above.

                                           43
              Q. [by Shmaisani’s counsel] All right. Mr. Yammine, let me ask
       you this: This document, this trustee’s deed that we have in Exhibit 18,
       that reflects that somebody by the name of W. Yammine held a
       foreclosure sale . . . on July 3rd of 2012 and sold the property at
       foreclosure to New Frontier Financial. Do you have any recollection of
       acting as a trustee and attempting to sell property at a foreclosure sale to
       New Frontier Financial on July 3rd, 2012?

              A. [Wally] I don’t remember, Mr. Parrish.

Again, this is not a denial.

       The jury had before it various exhibits signed by Wahid, who was the only

other candidate to be “W. Yammine,”19 and could easily contrast those signatures

with the one on the trustee’s deed. In fact, Wahid agreed that the “W. Yammine”

signature on the trustee’s deed was not his own, but when asked if it was Wally’s,

Wahid said only that he wasn’t sure. The jury also heard Joseph respond, “I don’t

remember” when he was asked, in connection with that deed, whether he had ever

executed a deed of trust in favor of Wally that was secured by the property; like

Wahid, Joseph couldn’t identify Wally’s signature. The jury also heard from Newman

that Wally knew and understood that the entire 701 Property was being sold to

Shmaisani and that Wally never said otherwise in later meetings with Newman. The

jury also knew that Wahid had assigned the option to repurchase the 701 Property to

        Wally was asked if he knew “anybody else [other than himself and Wahid] not
       19

related to the family that goes by W. Yammine” and responded, “I’m not sure. I
haven’t looked up anybody else.”

                                           44
Wally and that that option—another document Wally couldn’t remember—was

notarized and recorded.

      In contrasting Wally’s (indeed, all the Yammines’) near-constant memory

failures with the contents of recorded, notarized instruments, the jury was well within

its rights to answer “yes” to Questions 9(b) and (c). Cf. Thomas v. Bobby D. Assocs., No.

12-01-00361-CV, 2002 WL 1429821, at *2 (Tex. App.—Tyler June 28, 2002, pet.

denied) (not designated for publication) (affirming denial of postdefault new-trial

motion where record contained proper return of service and noting that where

appellant’s affidavit statements were “contradictory as, in one instance, he denies

being served with citation, but in another, states that he cannot remember being

served with citation,” the trial court, as judge of weight and credibility issues, was free

to resolve inconsistencies); see also 3A J. Wigmore, Evidence § 1043 at 1061

(Chadbourn rev. 1970) (observing, in context of impeaching forgetful witness with

prior statements, that “the unwilling witness often takes refuge in a failure to

remember, and the astute liar is sometimes impregnable unless his flank can be

exposed to an attack of this sort”).

      We overrule Wally’s third issue.

                                            45
                                     Wally’s Issue 4
      D. Wally did not preserve error regarding his counterclaims, nor
         did he put on any evidence to support them.

      In his fourth issue, Wally argues that the trial court erred by entering a take-

nothing judgment on his counterclaims against Shmaisani to quiet title, for real-estate

fraud, and for violations of the Texas Theft Liability Act. Wally waived his fourth

issue by failing to request a jury question on his counterclaims, by failing to preserve

error about any such omissions from the charge, and by failing to seek a ruling from

the court on his counterclaims as a matter of law. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a)(1)(A);

Raymax Mgmt., L.P. v. SBC Tower Holdings LLC, No. 02-16-00013-CV, 2017 WL

3821897, at *3 n.11 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Aug. 31, 2017, pet. denied) (mem. op.

on reh’g) (noting that party waived ability to recover on particular claim when party

“failed to request a jury question on that cause of action in the court’s charge and to

preserve error regarding its omission from the charge, or to obtain a ruling from the

court on the claim as a matter of law”). In fact, when expressly given the chance to

tell the jury what he was claiming, Wally punted: “I have to read the -- my petition. I

don’t have it with me now.” Wally never put on evidence of his counterclaims.

      We overrule Wally’s Issue 4.

                                           46
                                  Simone’s Issue 4
      E. Smith is not entitled to recover Rule 13 sanctions from Simone.

      In her fourth issue, Simone argues that the trial court erroneously awarded

sanctions in the form of attorney’s fees to Smith. We agree.

      Smith filed a postjudgment motion for sanctions against Wahid. In its final

judgment, the trial court ordered that “Sharon Smith’s Rule 13 Motion for Sanctions

[be] granted and that Sharon Smith recover from Simone Barron the sum of $21,265

as reasonable and necessary attorneys’ fees.” Simone points out that Smith did not

seek sanctions against Simone and so this aspect of the judgment has no pleadings to

support it. Smith has not filed a brief with us nor otherwise appeared in this appeal,

and the record offers no basis on which to affirm the award.

      We sustain Simone’s fourth issue and reverse and render this part of the trial

court’s judgment.

                         Simone’s Issue 5/ Wally’s Issue 5
      F. Shmaisani failed to segregate his attorney’s fees, and we cannot
         tell how the trial court arrived at the amount of fees it awarded.

      In their fifth and final issues, Simone and Wally challenge the trial court’s

award of attorneys’ fees to Shmaisani under Chapter 12. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.

Code Ann. § 12.002(b)(3) (providing that a “person who violates Subsection (a) . . . is

liable to each injured person for . . . reasonable attorney’s fees”). Because we have

upheld the jury’s findings and affirmed the resulting judgment that Simone and Wally

                                          47
violated the Act, Shmaisani is entitled to recover his reasonable attorneys’ fees. But we

must remand this issue to the trial court because the record does not support the

amounts awarded.

       During trial, the parties announced their agreement to submit the issue of

attorneys’ fees postverdict. In accordance with that agreement, Shmaisani later

submitted his attorney’s affidavit, a supplemental affidavit, and billing records. In all,

Shmaisani requested $265,811 in fees from Wahid, Wally, and Simone, jointly and

severally. The trial court’s eventual judgment awarded Shmaisani $120,000 in

reasonable and necessary attorney’s fees under Chapter 12 from Wally and $40,000

from Simone, for a total of $160,000. The trial court also awarded conditional

appellate attorneys’ fees in differing amounts.

       Several weeks after it entered judgment, the trial court prepared and filed

findings of fact and conclusions of law. The trial court’s findings of fact read, in their

entirety:

              The equivalent jury findings, had the matter been submitted to a
       jury, would have been submitted substantially as follows:

             What is a reasonable fee for the necessary services of Issam Al
             Shmaisani’s attorney incurred for the prosecution of his claim
             against Walid ‘Wally’ Yammine for which you answered ‘yes’ in
             answer to Question 9c, stated in dollars and cents:

             Answer with an amount for each of the following:

             1.     For representation through trial and the completion of the
                    proceedings in the trial court:

                                           48
                    Answer: $120,000

             2.     For successful representation through appeal to the court
                    of appeals:

                    Answer: $16,000

             3.     For successful representation through the Supreme Court:

                    Answer: $8,000

             4.     The Court makes these findings as its Findings of Fact
                    regarding reasonable and necessary attorneys’ fees pursuant
                    to Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code, section 12.002(b)(1)(B)(3)
                    [sic].

There were no similar findings made in connection with the fee award against Simone,

and we do not have a reporter’s record of any postverdict hearing.

      The attorneys’-fee awards have several problems that necessitate a remand.

First, the trial court appears to have simply quadrupled the Chapter 12 $10,000-per-

violation statutory penalties against Wally and Simone in arriving at its attorney’s-fee

amounts—but Chapter 12 calls for an award of “reasonable” fees, not one tied in

some way to the statutory penalty. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann.

§ 12.002(b)(3). Second, the $120,000 that would result from multiplying Wally’s three

Chapter 12 violations by $40,000 doesn’t mesh with the trial court’s finding of fact

that refers only to Question 9(c), which involved only one of Wally’s three fraudulent

filings. Third, although the billing records predate by many months the addition of

Simone and Wally as defendants, we can find nothing to suggest that Shmaisani or the

trial court attempted to carve out any fees from that earlier time. Fourth, attorneys’

                                          49
fees are not recoverable for any of Shmaisani’s non-Chapter 12 causes of action (to

quiet title or, alternatively, for trespass to try title), so Shmaisani either had to

segregate his recoverable from his nonrecoverable fees or show that his claims were

so intertwined as to make segregation not reasonably possible. See Tony Gullo Motors I,

L.P. v. Chapa, 212 S.W.3d 299, 311–13 (Tex. 2006) (discussing obligation to segregate

fees unless claims are intertwined); Poag v. Flories, 317 S.W.3d 820, 828–29 (Tex.

App.—Fort Worth 2010, pet. denied) (noting that attorneys’ fees are not recoverable

in title-related suits).

       In response to Wally’s (and Wahid’s) opposition to Shmaisani’s motion for

attorneys’ fees, Shmaisani asserted that the claims “were so intertwined that they

could not be segregated” and that “[e]ven if the Court were persuaded that some

segregation should have been made, the aggregate amount of attorney’s fees is some

evidence of what the segregated amount should be.” Shmaisani then asked the trial

court to determine the appropriate amount. Neither the judgment nor the findings of

fact and conclusions of law, however, mentioned whether the fees should have been

segregated and, if so, how the trial court arrived at an appropriate amount out of the

roughly 250 pages of billing records. Cf. 4922 Holdings, LLC v. Rivera, No. 14-19-

00922-CV, 2021 WL 1745384, at *12 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] May 4, 2021,

no pet. h.) (deferring to trial court’s award where party’s “concerns about double

billing and hours billed for unrecoverable post-trial work [were] addressed by the trial

court’s findings of fact, wherein the court reduced the hours billed and removed

                                          50
potential double billing issues” after the trial court “combed through Obialo’s invoice,

reducing many of the hourly amounts reflected, removing all hours reflected for

services connected with Rivera’s claims against 4922 Holdings, and reducing by half

the amount billed for paralegal hours,” citing El Apple I, Ltd. v. Olivas, 370 S.W.3d 757,

763 (Tex. 2012)). The trial court here does not seem to have engaged in such analysis.

In addition, Shmaisani’s attorneys’-fee affidavits do not include evidence of the Arthur

Andersen factors that were reaffirmed in Rohrmoos Venture v. UTSW DVA Healthcare,

LLP, 578 S.W.3d 469, 494 (Tex. 2019), and without which “the fact finder has no

meaningful way to determine if the fees sought are in fact reasonable and necessary.”

Id. (citing Arthur Andersen & Co. v. Perry Equip. Corp., 945 S.W.2d 812, 818–19 (Tex.

1997)).

      We sustain Simone’s and Wally’s fifth issues, reverse the trial court’s awards of

attorneys’ fees, and remand the fee issue for a new trial.

                          Simone’s Additional Complaints
      G. Lacking any analysis at all, Simone’s concluding kitchen-sink
         complaints are inadequately briefed and borderline frivolous.

      The final section of Simone’s opening brief, consisting of one seven-line

paragraph and no citations to authorities, mentions three things she claims warrant a

new trial. First, Simone cites to two pages of the record in asserting that she had

objected to a particular juror’s continuing to serve. Those record citations are not only

flat wrong, but the trial court specifically stated that “if anybody wants to move to

                                           51
excuse [the juror in question] and use the alternate, now is your time to do it.” Getting

no response, the trial court followed up with, “All right. There are no takers.” Next,

Simone asserts that a mistrial should have been granted after Newman allegedly

referred to Shmaisani’s attorneys’ fees being paid by Stewart Title, but she gives us no

record citation either to such testimony or to any mistrial motion. Finally, Simone

asserts that a proposed jury question was wrongly excluded from the charge.20

        Although arguing the substance of an appellate complaint within the body of a

brief can overcome a failure to list it as an issue presented, a party must still do some

actual analysis. See Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(f), (i); Baumgart v. Archer, 581 S.W.3d 819, 827

n.5 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2019, pet. denied) (noting that the court would

consider appellant’s evidence of defamation discussed in body of brief even though

appellant did not challenge trial court’s finding on Texas Citizen Participation Act

claim in his list of issues); Hamilton, 298 S.W.3d at 337 (noting that appellate court will

not consider issue where appellant fails to provide legal argument in support). Simone

made zero effort to explain why any of these three alleged errors should entitle her to

a new trial, so to the extent we might consider these as issues raised, we overrule

them.

        Simone’s proposed question was, “Did Issam Al Shmaisani fraudulently alter
        20

the deed through his lawyer, Michael Newman, after April 2, 2012?” The trial court
denied her request.

                                            52
                                     CONCLUSION

      Having sustained Simone’s fourth issue, we reverse and render the trial court’s

award to Sharon Smith of $21,265 from Simone. Having sustained Simone’s and

Wally’s fifth issues, we reverse the award of attorneys’ fees to Shmaisani and remand

those issues to the trial court for a new trial. In all other respects, we affirm the trial

court’s judgment.

                                                       /s/ Elizabeth Kerr
                                                       Elizabeth Kerr
                                                       Justice

Delivered: June 3, 2021

                                            53