Court Opinion

ID: 8205475
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-12 00:10:34.896148+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:41:09.037686
License: Public Domain

Opinion filed September 8, 2022

                                        In The

        Eleventh Court of Appeals
                                     __________

                                  No. 11-22-00158-CV
                                      __________

    THE CLIFFS PROPERTY OWNERS’ ASSOCIATION, INC.,
                      Appellant
                                          V.
  DOUBLE DIAMOND, INC. AND THE CLIFFS HOTEL CORP.,
                     Appellees

                     On Appeal from the 29th District Court
                           Palo Pinto County, Texas
                         Trial Court Cause No. C50111

                      MEMORAND UM OPI NI ON
      This is an appeal arising from a continuing dispute regarding the voting rights
of the members of a property owners’ association. Currently before us in this
accelerated appeal is the trial court’s order granting an application for temporary
injunction in favor of Appellees: Double Diamond, Inc. (DDI) and The Cliffs Hotel
Corp. (CHC). Appellant, The Cliffs Property Owners’ Association, Inc. (POA), asks
that we dissolve the temporary injunction, contending, inter alia, that the trial court
abused its discretion by entering an order granting injunctive relief that Appellees
never requested and that alters, rather than preserves, the status quo. For the reasons
that follow, we agree. We dissolve the temporary injunction and remand the cause
to the trial court.
                                     Background
       On October 21, 2021, we issued an opinion resolving a prior dispute between
these parties, among others. See Dipprey v. Double Diamond, Inc., 637 S.W.3d 784
(Tex. App.—Eastland 2021, no pet.). In Dipprey, the parties disagreed over the
required method for allocating votes to property-owning members of Appellant: The
Cliffs Property Owners’ Association, Inc. (POA). We held that owners of timeshare
estates were “entitled to one vote per timeshare estate owned.” Id. at 796. The
governing instruments and principles of contract interpretation compelled this result,
even though “timeshare estates” refer to “one-week increments,” such that a person
with only a transient presence on the property could possess as much voting power
as a year-round resident. Id. at 794. The parties also disagreed over whether the
“development period” for POA had ended. Id. at 798–800. This was important
because, unless POA was in a development period, the only way to amend its
governing instruments was by receiving sixty-seven percent of the total votes
allocated—including all timeshare votes. Id. at 799; see also TEX. PROP. CODE ANN.
§ 209.0041(h) (West Supp. 2021). We held that the development period for POA
had ended. Id. at 800. With this background in mind, we turn to the underlying facts
of the present dispute that brings these parties before this court once again.
       On January 1, 1997, DDI transferred property to Cliffs Lodging Company
(CLC). A timeshare estate known as “the Villas” was located on, and conveyed with,
that piece of transferred property. The parties disagree on whether the property
known as “the Villas” is within POA’s jurisdiction. Later that same year, CLC
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merged into Appellee CHC; CHC became the owner of the Villas and therefore
secured the rights to cast any votes corresponding to unsold Villas timeshare estates
(i.e., one vote per one-week increment per unit within the building).
       On January 5, 2019, long after the development period had ended, 1 the board
of directors of POA voted to amend POA’s declaration regarding its establishment
and voting rights, purporting to divest timeshare estates of one vote per timeshare
estate owned and, instead, to adopt a weighted voting system, whereby a property
owner’s voting power was a direct function of the amount of annual maintenance
fees paid by the owner (i.e., a proxy for the amount of time the property owners
actually spend on the property in a year).
       An election of POA’s board of directors was held on September 8, 2021.
Shortly before the election, DDI and CHC sought, and the trial court granted, a
temporary restraining order (TRO) enjoining POA from counting and tabulating
votes in the 2021 election “in any other manner other than one (1) vote per lot and/or
timeshare estate.” POA hired Timothy & Devolt (T&D) to independently tabulate
and certify votes cast in the 2021 election. T&D received a ballot from CHC
purporting to cast 997 votes corresponding to the Villas timeshare estates, but T&D
did not verify and certify those votes.
       In their first amended petition and verified application for temporary
injunction, DDI and CHC sought a declaratory judgment, asking the trial court to
declare (1) that the disputed POA amendment, purporting to change POA’s voting
system from a one-for-one to a weighted system, is void; (2) that the Villas, because
of its physical location on POA lots, did not require approval of POA’s board of

       1
         We explained in Dipprey that the development period ended once DDI conveyed the power to
amend The Cliffs’ declarations of covenants, conditions, and reservations (CCRs) to POA. 637 S.W.3d at
800. We also noted that DDI conveyed this power to POA when the CCRs were amended for the second
of fourteen times—with the fourteenth amendment occurring on May 31, 2011. Id. at 793, 800. Hence, a
purported amendment as late as 2019 falls well outside of the development period.

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directors to become an enfranchised constituent of POA; and (3) that the owners of
timeshare estates are entitled to have their votes counted—including CHC’s 997
Villas votes—in the 2021 election.        DDI and CHC also sought a temporary
injunction, asking the trial court to preserve the status quo by enjoining POA’s board
of directors from taking any action “outside normal day-to-day operations” until the
results of the 2021 election had been finally decided at trial.
      In its first amended answer, POA denied that DDI and CHC had satisfied all
of the conditions necessary to bring the Villas timeshare estates into the jurisdiction
of POA, including securing the approval of POA’s board of directors. In its second
amended counterclaim, POA argued that the votes in the 2021 election were
tabulated one-for-one, as mandated by the trial court’s TRO, and that the only reason
CHC’s 997 Villas votes were not certified is because DDI and CHC never secured
approval from POA’s board of directors to bring the Villas timeshare estates within
POA’s jurisdiction. POA also argued, contrary to Dipprey, that a development period
exception existed such that POA’s board of directors were entitled to change the
voting rights of POA’s members without securing the sixty-seven percent of total
allocated votes demanded by the Texas Property Code. See PROP. § 209.0041(h).
      DDI and CHC filed a second proposed temporary injunction order, which the
trial court signed on May 23, 2022. In the order, the trial court ordered POA “to
count the Villas Votes as certified votes in the 2021 Annual Election” and “to seat
the board of directors elected in the 2021 Annual Election as determined by adding
the certified Villas Votes to the Election Results.”
      In its first issue, POA argues that the trial court abused its discretion by
ordering POA to seat a new board of directors in accordance with the 2021 election
results because DDI and CHC never pleaded for this relief. In its second issue, POA
argues that the temporary injunction destroyed, rather than preserved, the status quo
by compelling POA to hand over control of its board of directors—and, hence,
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relinquish itself—to DDI and CHC: POA’s adversaries in this litigation. 2 In its third
issue, POA argues that the trial court abused its discretion in compelling POA to
certify the 997 Villas votes because the validity of such votes is the ultimate issue to
be decided at trial. In its fourth issue, POA argues that the trial court abused its
discretion by failing to “balance the equities” between the parties. In its fifth issue,
POA argues that the trial court abused its discretion in granting DDI and CHC a
temporary injunction because they introduced no evidence to demonstrate that, in
the absence of such an order, they would suffer imminent and irreparable injury.
        We agree with POA as to its first and second issues. That is, we agree that the
temporary injunction order granted relief that DDI and CHC did not request and that
the order alters, rather than preserves, the status quo. Accordingly, we dissolve the
temporary injunction order and remand this matter to the trial court for further
proceedings. Because our holdings on POA’s first two issues are dispositive of this
appeal, we decline to address its remaining issues. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.1 (“The
court of appeals must hand down a written opinion that is as brief as practicable but
that addresses every issue raised and necessary to final disposition of the appeal.”).
                                             Discussion
        I. The trial court abused its discretion by signing a temporary
        injunction order that granted greater relief than the applicants
        requested and that altered, rather than preserved, the status quo.
                A. Standard of Review
        “In suits for temporary injunctions, the trial judge is endowed with broad
discretion to grant or deny the injunction.” Janus Films, Inc. v. City of Fort Worth,
358 S.W.2d 589 (Tex. 1962). Our review is limited to “whether the action of the
trial judge in granting or denying the temporary injunction constitutes a clear abuse

        2
          In their brief, POA also avers that, since entry of the temporary injunction, DDI and CHC “are
using the order to assert that they now control the Board of Directors, including the right to direct this
litigation.”
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of discretion.” Id. A trial court abuses its discretion when it acts “without reference
to guiding rules and principles such that the ruling is arbitrary or unreasonable.”
Brewer v. Lennox Hearth Prods., LLC, 601 S.W.3d 704, 717 (Tex. 2020).
      “A temporary injunction is an extraordinary remedy that does not issue as a
matter of right.” Butnaru v. Ford Motor Co., 84 S.W.3d 198, 204 (Tex. 2002). Its
“purpose is to preserve the status quo of the litagation’s subject matter pending a
trial on the merits.” Id. The status quo is simply “the last, actual, peaceable, non-
contested status which preceded the pending controversy.” Tex. Ass’n of Bus. v. City
of Austin, 565 S.W.3d 425, 437 (Tex. App.—Austin 2018, pet. denied).
             B. Status Quo
      The ultimate issue to be decided at trial is whether the Villas is within POA’s
jurisdiction and, hence, whether CHC’s 997 Villas votes are entitled to be certified
in the 2021 election. DDI and CHC sued for a declaratory judgment that the Villas
is within POA’s jurisdiction, and POA counterclaimed for declaratory judgment that
it is not. The controversy in this case—for purposes of identifying the last, actual,
peaceable, non-contested status which preceded it—is the 2021 election for
members of the board of directors of POA. See id.
      During the last actual, peaceable, and non-contested state of affairs—i.e., prior
to the contested 2021 election—POA was still under the direction of its incumbent
board of directors. Indeed, a dispute over the results of the 2021 election is precisely
what precipitated the underlying lawsuit and this appeal. To preserve the status quo,
then, is to preserve the state of affairs that existed before the contested 2021 election.
In other words, to preserve the status quo would have been to keep POA’s board of
directors as it was before the 2021 election until the dispute over that election had
been finally decided at trial. To the contrary, the temporary injunction signed by the
trial court orders POA to certify the contested Villas votes and seat a new board of
directors.
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      Because the issue of whether the Villas is within POA’s jurisdiction, and hence
whether to certify the Villas votes in the 2021 election, is the very thing being
contested in the parties’ dueling actions for declaratory judgment, the trial court’s
temporary injunction order alters—rather than preserves—the status quo. The Texas
Supreme Court’s position is clear. The central question of the suit “‘should be
determined with a full trial on the merits’ and injunctive relief can be used only to
preserve ‘the last peaceable uncontested status between the[] parties.’” Clint Indep.
School Dist. v. Marquez, 487 S.W.3d 538, 555–56 (Tex. 2016) (alteration in original)
(emphasis added) (quoting In re Newton, 146 S.W.3d 648, 651–52 (Tex. 2004)).
Accordingly, we agree with POA that the trial court abused its discretion in signing
the temporary injunction order.
      C. Excessive Relief
      An application for temporary injunction must be verified. TEX. R. CIV. P. 682.
In their first amended petition and verified application for temporary injunction, DDI
and CHC represented to the trial court, in relevant part, as follows:
            DDI and CHC . . . are entitled to: (a) vote one vote for each lot
      and/or timeshare estate they own; (b) not have their voting rights
      diminished by an unlawful amendment . . . ; and (c) have their votes
      counted in the election of the board of directors for [POA].
             ....
             Without entry of a temporary injunction: (a) requiring [POA] to
      announce the official results of the Annual Election . . . [and]
      (b) enjoining the Old Board from taking action outside normal day-to-
      day operations . . . until the Court confirms the tabulation and final
      results of the Annual Election, . . . DDI and CHC’s voting rights will be
      severely diminished for which DDI and CHC do not have an adequate
      remedy at law and DDI and CHC will be irreparably harmed.
However, in signing the proposed order designed by DDI and CHC, the trial court
ordered and enjoined POA to do a great deal more than merely refrain from taking

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any action outside of POA’s day-to-day operations. Specifically, the trial court
ordered and enjoined POA to:

           a.     . . . [C]ount the Villas Votes as certified votes in the 2021
      Annual Election;
            b.    . . . [S]eat the board of directors in the 2021 Annual
      Election as determined by adding the certified Villas Votes to the
      Election Results . . . [and]
             c.     . . . [Refrain] from consulting, encouraging, or engaging
      or participating in another’s undertaking of an action prohibited by this
      Order.
The relief granted was not requested in DDI and CHC’s verified application for
temporary injunction.    Therefore, the trial court, by signing DDI and CHC’s
proposed order, granted greater relief than was prayed for in their verified pleadings.
      The Texas Supreme Court has held that “a permanent injunction ‘must not
grant relief which is not prayed for nor be more comprehensive or restrictive than
justified by the pleadings, the evidence, and the usages of equity.’” Holubec v.
Brandenberger, 111 S.W.3d 32, 39 (Tex. 2003) (quoting 6 L. HAMILTON LOWE,
TEXAS PRACTICE: REMEDIES § 244 at 237 (2d ed. 1973)). The same is applicable in
the context of a temporary injunction. Fairfield v. Stonehenge Ass’n Co., 678 S.W.2d
608, 611 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1984, no writ) (stating that “the applicant
must specify the precise relief sought” and that “a court is without jurisdiction to
grant relief beyond and in addition to that particularly specified”); see also TEX. R.
CIV. P. 682, 683. Thus, in addition to altering the status quo, we agree that the trial
court abused its discretion by signing an order granting relief not prayed for by DDI
and CHC or supported in their verified application for temporary injunction.

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                                   This Court’s Ruling
      We dissolve the temporary injunction issued by the trial court on May 23,
2022, and we remand this cause to the trial court for further proceedings consistent
with this opinion.

                                               W. BRUCE WILLIAMS
                                               JUSTICE

September 8, 2022
Panel consists of: Bailey, C.J.,
Trotter, J., and Williams, J.

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