OPINION
In five issues, appellant Mary Ann Parker challenges the trial court’s order imposing sanctions against her for recording a lis pendens on property awarded to ap-pellee Sheryl King Walton in a divorce proceeding. We reverse the trial court’s sanctions order and render judgment that Walton take nothing.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
On July 1, 2003, Walton filed for divorce from her husband, Ronnie Joe Walton (“Ronnie Joe”). Ronnie Joe’s mother, Mary Ann Parker, was subsequently joined in the divorce proceeding to litigate claims by Walton regarding two properties at issue in the divorce, including property in Walton’s name located at 84 Harbor Lane in Kemah, Texas. 1 Parker counterclaimed based upon her alleged ownership interest in the Harbor Lane property and attempted to impose a constructive trust. During the course of the litigation, Walton sought to refinance the mortgage on the Harbor Lane property to obtain a lower interest rate. Walton sought authorization from the trial court to refinance the property, and, at a hearing on July 27, 2005, the court orally granted her such authorization. The following week, on August 3, Parker’s attorneys recorded a lis pendens on the Harbor Lane property, which Walton claims precluded her from refinancing. At the ensuing divorce trial on December 6-9, the trial court awarded Walton the Harbor Lane property as her separate property. The court did not submit Parker’s constructive trust claim to the jury.
Thereafter, on December 15, Walton filed a motion for sanctions against Parker, Parker’s attorneys, Ronnie Joe, and Ronnie Joe’s attorneys under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 13, generally alleging that they filed groundless claims in bad faith and/or to harass her.
2
On December 19,
At the close of the hearing, the trial court stated, “All right. I’m going to grant your motion, and I’m going to award the sanctions at ... $3,500 in the attorney’s fees, and I’m going to award 6,750 in the difference in the interest rates.... ” After the court’s pronouncement, Walton’s attorney stated that he would prepare a “separate order on that and submit it to opposing counsel.”
3
The docket sheet entry from the day of the hearing accordingly reads, “Mot for sanctions granted per order to be filed by Petitioner on or before 1/6/06.” However, Walton’s attorney did not file, and the court did not sign and enter, a written judgment signifying the sanctions order on or before January 6, 2006. According to Walton, this was an “inadvertent mistake,” and, on June 22, 2006, Walton’s attorney filed a motion to enter judgment nunc pro tunc on the sanctions order. Parker opposed the motion, arguing that a judgment nunc pro tunc operates only to correct a clerical error in a written judgment, and, because no written order existed, a judgment nunc pro tunc was improper. The trial court granted Walton’s motion and entered the judgment nunc pro tunc on the sanctions order on July 13, 2006, awarding sanctions
Parker now appeals, claiming the trial court abused its discretion in imposing sanctions against her for recording the lis pendens against the Harbor Lane property.
II. Standard of Review
We review the trial court’s imposition of Rule 13 sanctions for an abuse of discretion.
See Low v. Henry,
III. Analysis
We first address the second sub-point under Parker’s fifth issue, in which she contends that Walton failed to overcome the presumption that Parker recorded the lis pendens on the Harbor Lane property in good faith to put third parties on notice of the pending litigation concerning the property. Walton counters that the trial court sanctioned Parker not only for recording a lis pendens but also for filing the groundless constructive trust claim against the property — which Walton characterizes as her “homestead” — that formed the basis of the lis pendens. Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 13 authorizes imposition of sanctions against an attorney, a represented party, or both, who file pleadings that are (1) groundless and brought in bad faith or (2) groundless and brought to harass.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 13;
City of Houston v. Chambers,
Walton maintains that Parker’s constructive trust claim was groundless and brought in bad faith and to harass because the trial court refused submission of this claim to the jury at trial, which signaled that the court found no evidence to support it. She further asserts that Parker recorded the lis pendens in bad faith and to harass because she did so only a few days after the court authorized refinancing of the property over Ronnie Joe’s objection, and the lis pendens effectively prevented her from refinancing. Walton notes that, on the day of the sanctions hearing, the trial court “had the entire record of the case before [it],” which shows that both the constructive trust claim and lis pendens were “clearly malicious.” Walton adds that Parker’s failure to request findings of fact and conclusions of law constitutes an additional basis for affirming the court’s sanctions order.
We agree with Parker that Walton failed to overcome the presumption that Parker filed her constructive trust claim regarding the Harbor Lane property — and, by extension, the lis pendens — in good faith.
5
At the sanctions hearing, Walton focused exclusively on Parker’s recording of the lis pendens and failed to adduce any evidence showing Parker’s claim, on which the lis pendens was based, was groundless and brought in bad faith or to harass. As to groundlessness, the only statement from the hearing that we construe as relevant to this issue is Walton’s attorney’s statement to the trial court, “It’s difficult for me to understand why they took an interest in [the Harbor Lane property because it] is owned by my clients.” The record is otherwise devoid of evidence showing that Parker’s underlying claim lacked a basis in law or fact and was not warranted by a good faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law. The record does not contain the pleadings filed in the divorce proceeding or a transcript of the trial record. Further, although the final divorce decree indicates the Harbor Lane property was in Walton’s name and that the constructive trust claim was not in fact submitted to the jury, the decree does not specify that Parker’s claim was groundless. Nor did the court or the parties so specify during the
Similarly, Walton failed to adduce any evidence at the hearing indicating Parker filed the constructive trust claim in bad faith or to harass. The testimony at the hearing focused largely on Parker’s attorneys’ purpose for recording the lis pendens and whether they had notice of the trial court’s order authorizing financing. Such evidence does not adequately explain the facts and circumstances existing at the time Parker filed the constructive trust or the motives, intent, and credibility of Parker or her attorneys in so filing.
See Karlock v. Schattman,
894 5.W.2d 517, 523 (Tex.App.-Fort Worth 1995, no writ) (noting that without hearing evidence on circumstances surrounding filing of pleading signer’s credibility and motives, trial court has no evidence to determine that pleading was filed in bad faith or to harass). Again, Walton simply points to the timing of the lis pendens as directly subsequent to the trial court’s order authorizing refinancing and the court’s refusal to submit the constructive trust claim to the jury as conclusive evidence that Parker filed the claim in bad faith and to harass. Therefore, even absent findings of fact and conclusions of law, we conclude Walton failed to overcome the presumption that Parker’s constructive trust claim on the Harbor Lane property was filed in good faith by failing to present any evidence that the claim was groundless and filed in bad faith or to harass.
See, e.g., PR Invs.,
We sustain issue five, and, because we find this issue dispositive, we need not address Parker’s additional issues. We thus reverse the trial court’s award of sanctions and render judgment that Walton take nothing.
Notes
. Although Parker maintains that Walton joined her in the divorce proceeding, we cannot verify the accuracy of this assertion because the record fails to contain the pleadings filed in the proceeding. However, because Walton does not challenge this factual assertion, we will accept it as true.
See
Tex.R.App. P. 38.1(f);
Choice v. Gibbs,
. Parker contends that Walton did not in fact file a new motion for sanctions after trial on December 15 but simply set a hearing on a motion for sanctions Walton previously filed on December 5 that the trial court struck as
. The trial court also granted Walton's requests to enter the final judgment and decree of divorce and to release the lis pendens.
. In issue one, Parker claims the trial court’s July 13 order of sanctions was void and requests us to reverse and render a judgment denying Walton sanctions on this ground. Specifically, Parker claims the trial court’s oral pronouncement at the hearing was insufficient to render an order granting sanctions because it contemplated a future reduction of the order to writing by January 6, which did not occur. Thus, Parker concludes, the trial court’s entry of the July 13 written order after the court’s plenary power had expired was void. Upon our review of the trial court’s oral pronouncement and the surrounding context, we conclude the court in fact orally rendered an order granting Walton’s prejudgment motion for sanctions, and, thus, the trial court properly entered such order subsequently via nunc pro tunc. See
generally Hannon v. Henson,
. Because we find that Walton failed to meet her burden to justify sanctions with respect to the constructive trust claim that gave rise to the lis pendens, we need not determine whether the lis pendens was by itself sanc-tionable under Rule 13 or otherwise.
See generally Sharif
—Munir—Davidson
Dev. Corp. v. Bell,
. We note that our record contains only an excerpt of the transcript from the charge conference.
. Parker also complains that the judgment nunc pro tunc imposing sanctions fails to comply with Rule 13.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 13 ("No sanctions under this rule may be imposed except for good cause, the particulars of which must be stated in the sanction order.”);
PR Invs.,
