Court Opinion

ID: 4022091
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-08-05 02:19:43.613846+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:35:19.949032
License: Public Domain

COURT OF APPEALS
                                EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
                                     EL PASO, TEXAS

                                                 §
JOSEPH VINCENT,                                                     No. 08-16-00012-CV
                                                 §
                               Appellant,                             Appeal from the
                                                 §
V.                                                               County Court at Law No. 4
                                                 §
JUST RIGHT PROPERTY                                            of Williamson County, Texas
SOLUTIONS, LLC,                                  §
                                                                    (TC# 15-1477-CC4)
                                Appellee.        §

                                 MEMORANDUM OPINION

        Just Right Property Solutions, LLC, Appellee, has filed a motion to dismiss the appeal as

moot because Appellant, Joseph Vincent, failed to make the payment required to supersede the

judgment and the trial court issued a writ of possession. We have reviewed Vincent’s response

to the motion as well as the briefs submitted by the parties on the merits of the appeal. We grant

the motion and dismiss the appeal as moot.

        JRPS purchased the subject property previously owned by Vincent at a foreclosure

auction on August 4, 2015. The foreclosure sale was conducted pursuant to the power of sale

provision set forth in paragraph 22 of the Deed of Trust. Paragraph 22 provides, in relevant part,

that:

        If the Property is sold pursuant to this Section 22, Borrower or any person holding
        possession of the Property through Borrower shall immediately surrender
        possession of the Property to the purchaser at that sale. If possession is not
        surrendered, Borrower or such person shall be a tenant at sufferance and may be
        removed by writ of possession or other court proceeding.

On August 8, 2015, JRPS hand-delivered and mailed a notice to vacate the property. Vincent

refused to vacate and JRPS filed a forcible detainer suit in the Williamson County Justice of the

Peace Count (Precinct 4). The JP Court entered an agreed judgment that Vincent would vacate

the premises, and Vincent appealed to the County Court at Law No. 4 of Williamson County.

The trial court entered a final judgment granting JRPS immediate possession of the property.

        The judgment provided that Appellant could supersede the judgment pending appeal by

depositing $3,100 into the court’s registry and by depositing $1,550 no later than the first day of

each month beginning on December 1, 2015. Appellant timely made the first deposit of $3,100

but he failed to pay $1,550 by December 1, 2015.1 The trial court entered a writ of possession on

December 4, 2015, and it was executed on December 14, 2015. Appellant filed his notice of

appeal on December 14, 2015. It is well settled that issues of title are not adjudicated in a

forcible-detainer suit and the only issue to be decided is the right to immediate possession of the

property. Marshall v. Housing Authority of the City of San Antonio, 198 S.W.3d 782, 785 (Tex.

2006); Rice v. Pinney, 51 S.W.3d 705, 709 (Tex.App.--Dallas 2001, no pet.). While failure to

supersede a forcible-detainer judgment does not divest an appellant of the right to appeal, an

appeal from a forcible-detainer action becomes moot if the appellant is no longer in possession

of the property, unless the appellant holds and asserts a potentially meritorious claim of right to

current, actual possession of the property. Marshall, 198 S.W.3d at 786-87; see Wilhelm v.

Federal National Mortgage Association, 349 S.W.3d 766, 768 (Tex.App.--Houston [14th Dist.]

2011, no pet.).

1
 Vincent asserts in his response to the motion to dismiss that he attempted to make the $1,550 deposit on
December 8, 2015, but the County Clerk refused to accept it.

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       It is undisputed that Vincent is no longer in possession of the property and there is no

evidence of a lease between the parties. Vincent does not argue in his response to the motion to

dismiss or his briefs on the merits that he has a potentially meritorious claim of right to current,

actual possession of the property. He instead maintains that JRPS was not “a person entitled to

possession of the property” when it gave him notice to vacate on August 8, 2015 because the

Substitute Trustee’s Deed was not actually executed until August 10, 2015.

       Section 24.002 provides:

       (a) A person who refuses to surrender possession of real property on demand
           commits a forcible detainer if the person:

       (1) is a tenant or a subtenant wilfully and without force holding over after the
           termination of the tenant’s right of possession;

       (2) is a tenant at will or by sufferance, including an occupant at the time of
           foreclosure of a lien superior to the tenant’s lease; or

       (3) is a tenant of a person who acquired possession by forcible entry.

       (b) The demand for possession must be made in writing by a person entitled to
           possession of the property and must comply with the requirements for notice
           to vacate under Section 24.005.

Tex.Prop.Code Ann. § 24.002 (West 2014).

       The argument made by Vincent addresses whether JRPS was “a person entitled to

possession of the property” at the time it served the demand for possession. The critical question

for us to decide is not whether JRPS had a right to possession when it served the demand for

possession under Section 24.002, but whether Vincent has asserted a potentially meritorious

claim of right to current, actual possession of the property. Under paragraph 22 of the Deed of

Trust, Vincent was required to immediately surrender possession of the property to JRPS at the

foreclosure sale, and upon his refusal to do so, he became a tenant at sufferance. A tenant at

sufferance is one who wrongfully continues in possession of property after his right to possession

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has ceased and does not assert a claim to superior title. ICM Mortgage Corporation v. Jacob,

902 S.W.2d 527, 530 (Tex.App.--El Paso 1994, writ denied); see Coinmach Corporation v.

Aspenwood Apartment Corporation, 417 S.W.3d 909, 915 (Tex. 2013). Because Vincent has not

asserted a potentially meritorious claim of right to current, actual possession of the property, we

conclude that his appeal is moot because he is no longer in possession of the property. We grant

JRPS’s motion and dismiss the appeal as moot.

August 3, 2016
                                             YVONNE T. RODRIGUEZ, Justice

Before McClure, C.J., Rodriguez, and Hughes, JJ.

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