After signing an amended final judgment and ordering the partition by sale of the real property at issue, the trial court signed two additional orders which are the subject of this appeal by appellants Estate Land Company, Aaron Wiese, and Kamal Banani (Bannan). We dismiss this appeal as moot.
I. Background
In 1999, Aaron Wiese ("Aaron") and his brother, Anthony ("Tony") Wiese, jointly purchased three properties in Houston, Texas: 812 Main Street; 110-114 Main Street; and I-10 McKee-Chapman ("McKee-Chapman"). In 2001, along with Kamal Bannan, they purchased a fourth property, 3302 Polk Street. The parties secured financing, and the record reflects that both Aaron and Tony were equally responsible for the entire amounts of the loans. After disagreements between the brothers arose, Tony sued appellants in 2009, seeking partition of the properties and reimbursement for contributions he had made to the properties. He also sought injunctive relief regarding a lease on the property at 812 Main Street ("Pearl Lease").
In February 2013, the case proceeded to a bench trial. Thereafter, in May 2013, the trial court signed a first amended final judgment and order of sale. Because the trial court found the properties were incapable of partition in kind, the trial court appointed a receiver, Donald Worley, and ordered partition by sale of the properties pursuant to Rule 770 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure.
*324Aaron did not agree with the judgment of the trial court partitioning two of the properties (812 Main and 110-114 Main) and appealed the final judgment. This Court affirmed the final judgment and issued a Memorandum Opinion dated March 10, 2015. The Texas Supreme Court denied review in July 2016.
In connection with the sale of one property,
Decree Confirming Sale
After the judgment was final, the court-appointed receiver, Worley, began marketing the properties for sale. In August 2015, Worley obtained two earnest money contracts for the sale of the 110-114 Main property and presented to the trial court a contract from Zimmerman Interests, Inc. On August 31, 2015, the trial court approved the contract from Zimmerman Interests, Inc., and authorized Worley to "take all reasonable step[s] to finalize the sale of the 110-114 Main property...."
In December 2015, Worley finalized the terms of the sale to Zimmerman Interests, Inc., and filed a report of sale with the trial court. On December 18, 2015, the trial court signed the First Amended Decree Confirming Sale of 110-114 Main Street, ordering the fees for the receiver and broker be calculated from the reduced sales price, approving and confirming the sale to Zimmerman Interests, Inc., and ordering that "the net sales proceeds, after payments of all fees of indebtedness, including payment to extinguish all valid mortgages, liens, other valid encumbrances, and reasonable and necessary receiver, legal and brokerage fees, if any, shall be distributed" among Tony, Aaron, and Kamal.
Turnover Order
To close the sale and insure title to 110-114 Main, Stewart Title requested a court order directing it to release the net sales proceeds from the sale to the receiver, Worley, who then would make the distributions in accordance with the final judgment. On December 23, 2015, the trial court issued the Turnover Order, wherein it ordered Stewart Title to turn over the net sales proceeds of 110-114 Main to Worley. The trial court further ordered Worley to deposit the net sales proceeds in an interest on lawyers trust account and then make the distributions in accordance with the trial court's final judgment. The sale of the property proceeded. It is undisputed that 110-114 Main was sold on December 30, 2015. Appellants filed this appeal on January 18, 2016.
*325II. Issues on Appeal
On appeal, appellants' complain in several issues about two of the trial court's post-judgment orders related to the property at 110-114 Main Street: the trial court's First Amended Decree Confirming Sale of 110-114 Main Street and the trial court's Turnover Order. Appellants essentially argue that the trial court's judgment, which included language ordering net proceeds from the sale to be paid to the parties after payment of certain matters, including payment of all "indebtedness" as well as "mortgages, liens, [and] other valid encumbrances," did not allow as part of the sale transaction for Worley and/or Stewart Title to distribute funds to a bank in order to pay Aaron's promissory note obligation in full. Appellants argue that there are no specific findings in the amended final judgment determining or addressing encumbrances on the property. Thus, appellants maintain the post-judgment orders materially and substantially modified the final judgment, depriving the court of jurisdiction. Appellants argue the post-judgment orders are an "impermissible attempt to enforce the final judgment," and appellants request that this court reverse or set aside the post-judgment orders, and remand the matter to the trial court.
Appellee contends that appellants' issues appeal are moot because appeal was not made before the property was sold. Thus, appellee urges this court to dismiss the appeal. Alternatively, appellee argues that the trial court did not commit reversible error by issuing the post-judgment orders.
III. Analysis
As a threshold matter we address whether we have jurisdiction to review the trial court's receiver-related orders or whether appellants' issues are moot.
Unlike other proceedings, a partition case has two final judgments and both are appealable as a final judgment. Griffin v. Wolfe ,
In the second step of a partition suit, the court issues an order either approving the receiver's report and giving the parties their share or rejecting the report and appointing other commissioners to partition the land. Ellis ,
In their original appeal appellants challenged the trial court's first-step order (i.e. , the trial court's amended final judgment). In this appeal appellants purport to challenge the second-step post-judgment orders; however, the substance of appellants' complaints is about whether the trial court's final judgment could order payment of Aaron's indebtedness from the net proceeds. Matters related to the final judgment (including the portion ordering net proceeds from the sale of the property follow the payment of indebtedness, including the payment to extinguish all valid mortgages, liens, and other valid encumbrances) have been fully litigated and cannot be reviewed in this appeal purportedly involving second-step orders.
Further, it is undisputed that the property at issue, 110-114 Main, was sold on December 30, 2015. "A case becomes moot if a controversy ceases to exist at any stage of the proceedings, including the appeal." In re Kellogg Brown & Root, Inc. ,
IV. Conclusion
Because our decision cannot have a practical effect on an existing controversy, the case is moot. Accordingly, without reference to the merits, we overrule appellants' issues and dismiss the appeal as moot. See Jones ,
( Frost, C.J., dissenting).
DISSENTING OPINION
Kem Thompson Frost, Chief Justice, dissenting.
The appellants challenge two post-judgment orders, asserting that (1) the trial court erroneously ordered the net proceeds from the sale of the property at 110-114 Main Street to be turned over to the receiver rather than to the trial court and (2) the trial court erroneously approved the deduction of certain items from the gross sale proceeds. The majority concludes that these complaints are moot because the sale of the property already has occurred, and therefore, the majority reasons, this court's judgment on appeal can have no practical effect on any existing controversy. An actual controversy between the parties as to the appellants' complaints continues to exist, and the sale of the property does not prevent this court from rendering a judgment that would have a practical effect on this controversy. So, the appellants' claims are not moot, and this court should not dismiss them on mootness grounds.
Law on Mootness
Appellate courts are not to decide moot controversies,
The Existence of an Actual Controversy
Appellants Estate Land Company, Aaron Wiese, and Kamal Bannan (a/k/a Kamal Banani) (collectively the "Estate Land Parties") challenge the trial court's order confirming the sale of the property at 110-114 Main Street (the "Confirmation Order") and its order requiring the title company from the sale to turn over net sale proceeds to the receiver (the "Turnover Order"). The Estate Land Parties assert that the trial court erred in issuing these orders and that these orders conflict with and materially change a part of the trial court's prior final judgment because (1) the trial court ordered the receiver's distribution *328of the sale proceeds without any requirement that the proceeds be "returned into court" for distribution by the trial court, as allegedly required by the trial court's final judgment; (2) the trial court approved certain deductions from the gross proceeds of the sale without determining whether each amount deducted was a payment to extinguish a valid mortgage, a valid lien, or another valid encumbrance, or a reasonable and necessary receiver, legal, or brokerage fee, as allegedly required by the trial court's final judgment; (3) in the Turnover Order, the trial court asserted personal jurisdiction over the title company from the sale even though the title company has not been served with process, waived service of process, or voluntarily appeared; and (4) in the Turnover Order, the trial court ordered the title company from the sale to turn over net sale proceeds to the receiver rather than ordering that the proceeds be "returned into court," as allegedly required by the trial court's final judgment. Though appellee Anthony Wiese asserts that the sale of the property moots the Estate Land Parties' appellate complaints, to the extent these issues are not moot, Anthony asserts that the Confirmation Order and the Turnover Order do not conflict with or materially change any part of the trial court's final judgment and that the trial court did not err as the Estate Land Parties allege. An actual controversy still exists between the Estate Land Parties and Anthony as to the Estate Land Parties' appellate complaints.
Satisfaction of the Practical Effect Requirement
The majority concludes that, because the property at 110-114 Main Street has been sold to a third-party who is not a party to this litigation, this court cannot render an appellate judgment that would have a practical effect.
To the extent that one of the post-judgment orders materially changed the relief awarded in the prior final judgment, the trial court lacked jurisdiction to make the change, and this part of the order is void.
If this court has appellate jurisdiction over the two orders and if this court were to find that the Estate Land Parties' appellate complaints have merit, this court could conclude that the challenged parts of the orders are void, and this court could remand to the trial court for further proceedings. Though the sale has occurred, the receiver is still operating, and the Estate Land Parties and Anthony are still parties to this case.
The Majority's Description of the Estate Land Parties' Complaints
According to the majority, though the Estate Land Parties purport to challenge the two post-judgment orders, the substance of their appellate complaints is a challenge to the prior final judgment in which they assert that the trial court should not have ordered payment of Aaron's indebtedness from the net sale proceeds.
The Majority's Addressing of the Merits in Determining Jurisdiction
Even presuming for the sake of argument that the Estate Land Parties are challenging matters determined by the trial court's prior final judgment, those challenges would be barred by law of the case, claim preclusion, or issue preclusion. None of these doctrines (or facts supporting them) would deprive this court of jurisdiction or make any appellate complaint moot.
For the foregoing reasons, the Estate Land Parties' complaints are not moot.
If property is determined to be incapable of partition in kind, then the trial court must order partition by sale and determine the respective interests or shares of the persons entitled thereto. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 770.
With respect to the three other properties, Tony and Aaron have either agreed to a sale or the properties have not yet been sold.
On May 23, 2016, the trial court signed an Order Denying Defendant's Amended Motion to Compel Post-Judgment Deposition of Receiver. That order is the subject of a separate appeal in this Court under appellate cause number 14-16-00496-CV.
In their original appeal appellants contested the judgment of the trial court partitioning two properties located on Main Street in Houston (812 Main and 110-114 Main). This court affirmed the final judgment and the Texas Supreme Court denied review. See Estate Land Co. v. Wiese , No. 14-13-00524-CV,
Additionally, on June 22, 2016, appellants filed another appeal from a post-judgment order in which the trial court denied Aaron's motion to take the deposition of the court-appointed receiver, Worley. This appeal remains pending before this court. See Estate Land Co. v. Wiese , appellate cause number 14-16-00496-CV.
Nat'l Collegiate Athletic Ass'n v. Jones ,
See
Jones ,
Thompson v. Ricardo ,
See Jones ,
See In re C.C.E. ,
See ante at 326-27.
See Lee v. Lee ,
See Partners In Bldg. v. Eure , No. 14-12-00123-CV,
See Lee ,
See Lee ,
See ante at 325-26.
Seesupra at 324.
See ante at 325-26.
See Philips v. McNease ,
See Philips ,
See Schwartzott v. Etheridge Prop. Mgmt. ,
See Schwartzott ,
See In re C.C.E. ,
