OPINION
I. Introduction
In three issues, Appellant Cindy Pena appeals the trial court’s orders summarily enforcing a disputed mediated settlement agreement between her and Appellee Michael A. Smith. We will reverse and remand.
II. Background
On or about August 14, 2008, Smith and Pena entered into an “Unimproved Property Contract” in which Pena agreed to sell to Smith a three-acre tract of land near Boyd. According to Smith, he signed closing documents and delivered checks to the title company for earnest money and for the balance due under the property contract, but Pena refused to sign the deed and the closing documents because the deed did not contain a reservation of mineral rights in her favor. 1
*757 Smith sued Pena for breach of the property contract. The trial court ordered Smith and Pena to attend mediation, where they executed an “Agreed Mediated Settlement Agreement.” Pursuant to the settlement agreement, Smith and Pena agreed, among other things, that Smith “will get the surface rights to land and all other rights, if any” and that Pena “will be allowed to retain her mineral interests in the property” and “will & must execute all closing documents w/ Western Title Company on or before June, 1, 2009.” Pena also agreed to “appoint[ ] Hunter Magee [Pena’s attorney] limited power of attorney to execute all documents necessary to close the sale of the property as of June 2, 2009, if for any reason [Pena] cannot or will not execute some or all documents needed to close the sale of the property.”
In June 2009, Smith filed a “Motion to Sign Final Order.” He contended therein that he and Pena had attended mediation, which resulted in the settlement agreement, but that Pena had not executed any documents necessary to facilitate the sale and closing of the three-acre tract of land and, indeed, had taken efforts to revoke Magee’s limited power of attorney to execute the necessary documents. Smith prayed that the trial court enter the proposed final order that he attached to the motion.
After Smith filed his motion asking the trial court to sign a final order enforcing the settlement agreement, Pena filed a “Defendant’s Motion to Abate and/or to Set Aside Settlement Agreement,” requesting, among other things, that the trial court set aside the settlement agreement. One day later, Smith filed a “Supplemental Motion to Sign Final Order and Motion for Enforcement.” Smith argued that “[p]ursuant to CPRC 154.071 a written settlement agreement is enforceable and the court may incorporate the terms of the agreement in the court’s final decree disposing of the case.” Smith also described Pena’s actions in attempting to set aside the settlement agreement as a “unilateral revocation” and prayed that the trial court sign the proposed order previously provided to it.
After a hearing, the trial court signed a final order that adopted the settlement agreement “as the Order of [the] Court” and ordered Magee “to immediately execute any and all documents in the name of Cindy Pena as her agent to facilitate the close of the sale of the property that remain un-exeeuted.” 2 Thereafter, Pena timely filed a motion for new trial, which was overruled by operation of law, and the trial court modified its final order, incorporating the mediated settlement agreement into the order and ordering that Pena and Brandy Tanner Watson, Pena’s daughter, be divested of any and all ownership in the three-acre tract and that all right, title, and interest in the tract be held in fee simple by Smith. Pena filed her notice of this appeal.
III. Motion To Dismiss
Smith filed a motion to dismiss Pena’s appeal, arguing that Pena filed her notice of appeal untimely because she lacked capacity to file her motion for new trial. Smith failed to file a verified pleading in the trial court challenging Pena’s capacity. Accordingly, we deny Smith’s motion to dismiss Pena’s appeal.
See Austin Nursing Ctr., Inc. v. Lovato,
IV. Pleadings And Proof
In her first and third issues, Pena argues that the trial court erred by rendering a judgment that summarily enforced the disputed settlement agreement. She contends that the judgment is supported by neither proper pleadings nor legally sufficient evidence that she breached the settlement agreement.
A trial court cannot render an agreed judgment after a party has withdrawn its consent to a settlement agreement.
Padilla v. LaFrance,
907 S,W.2d 454, 461 (Tex.1995);
Quintero v. Jim Walter Homes, Inc.,
Assuming without deciding that the allegations and arguments contained in Smith’s “Motion to Sign Final Order” and “Supplemental Motion to Sign Final Order and Motion for Enforcement” were sufficient to give Pena fair notice of his contract claim and, thus, satisfied pleading requirements, 3 Smith failed to support his action to enforce the settlement agreement with legally sufficient evidence.
We may sustain a legal sufficiency challenge only when (1) the record discloses a complete absence of evidence of a vital fact; (2) the court is barred by rules of law or of evidence 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.
Uniroyal Goodrich Tire Co. v. Martinez,
To prevail on a breach of contract claim, the plaintiff must plead and prove (1) a contract existed between the parties; (2) the contract created duties; (3) the defendant breached a material duty under the contract; and (4) the plaintiff sustained damages.
Cadle Co.,
At the hearing on his motions, Smith did not present any evidence in support of his claim for breach of the settlement agreement. He merely presented argument asking the trial court to sign the final order enforcing the settlement agreement.
Smith argues that the trial court did not err by executing the final order because Pena presented no evidence that the proposed order did not comply with the terms of the settlement agreement and no evidence that she had rescinded the settlement agreement. But Smith, not Pena, had the burden of proof in support of the contract claim, and Pena sought to set aside the settlement agreement.
Because Smith failed to offer any evidence, we hold that the evidence is legally insufficient to support the trial court’s judgment.
See Bayway Servs.,
Having prevailed on a no-evidence issue, Pena would ordinarily be entitled to the rendition of judgment in her favor.
See Nat’l Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Blagg,
Having sustained Pena’s dispositive first issue, we need not address her second issue complaining about the settlement agreement’s failure to include a legal description of the property. See Tex.R.App. P. 47.1.
V. Conclusion
We deny Smith’s motion to dismiss, reverse the trial court’s judgment, and re *760 mand the cause to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. In an affidavit attached to her response to Smith’s motion for summary judgment, Pena stated,
A woman at the title company gave me the contract for the sale of the three acre tract and after I signed it, the same woman then gave me a separate document which indicated that I was also selling to Mr. Smith the mineral rights/interests in the three acre tract. This was the first time I had ever seen this document concerning the sale of my mineral rights/interests and I refused to sign it and told the title company woman that it was never my intention to sell the mineral rights/interest to Mr. Smith and that I would not do so.
. No findings of fact and conclusions of law were filed.
.
See Cadle Co.,
