OPINION
This is аn appeal following a bench trial in which the trial court entered a judgment cancelling a deed. Under the deed, dated March 8, 2006, the grantor conveyed two lots and the improvements located thereon to the grantee in return for “Ten and No/100 Dollars ($10.00), and other gоod and valuable consideration.” The judgment declared the deed to be void and set it aside for all purposes.
Melvin L. Kaufman, the grantor, sued Peggy Ballard Williams, the grantee, and alleged she fraudulently procured the deed by falsely promising that she would take care оf him for the rest of his life. According to Kaufman, Williams knowingly made this promise with no intent to perform it. Although the deed also stated that the property was sold for the addi
The trial court fоund in Kaufman’s favor, but did not enter findings of fact or conclusions of law. In three issues, Williams challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the trial court’s decision to cancel the deed, argues that she cannot properly appeal because of the trial court’s failure to file findings of fact and conclusions of law, and asserts that tape recordings offered during a hearing on her motion for new trial established that Kaufman had not been candid with the court when he testified. We overrule Williams’s issues and affirm the judgment.
Issue One
In her first issue, Williams аrgues that Kaufman’s testimony that she promised to “take care of [him] the rest of [his] life” is not credible. Of the seven testifying witnesses, only Williams and Kaufman testified about the alleged promise.
At the time Kaufman signed the deed, he was eighty-seven years of age. The evidence showed thаt Kaufman and his wife had resided in a house located on the property for nearly forty years prior to his wife’s death in May 2005. Kaufman’s wife, “Aunt Elsie,” was Williams’s great aunt. Williams assisted Kaufman in caring for Aunt Elsie several years before her death. According to Kaufman, the deed’s “other сonsideration” was Williams’s promise that she would take care of him for the rest of his life and that she would not put him in a nursing home if he signed the deed.
Kaufman testified that after he signed the deed, Williams did not take care of him. Upon his return from a trip to see his brother in Indiana — taken shortly after signing the deed — Williams had changed the locks on the house and on the detached garage apartment. Kaufman further testified that Williams had also locked him out of a shed containing his tools and cut off the water supply to the detached garage apartment whеre he lived after his wife’s death. Kaufman further explained that Williams never paid any other consideration in return for his agreement to deed the property to her.
Williams disputed Kaufman’s testimony concerning her alleged promise to care for Kaufman. According to Williams, Kaufman placed the property on the market after Aunt Elsie’s death but could not sell it. Kaufman then decided to move' to Indiana and told her he was giving her the house. On March 8, 2006, the two of them went to an attorney’s office where Kaufman signed the deed. Nine days later, оn March 17, 2006, Kaufman executed a durable power of attorney that appointed Williams as his attorney-in-fact. According to Williams, Kaufman told her that he was moving to Indiana and never coming back. However, seven or eight days later, Kaufman returned. It was at that point, Williаms testified, “when he started all this.” Williams specifically stated that she never promised to care for Kaufman in return for the deed. She also testified that she did not pay Kaufman anything for the property; instead, she paid the attorney’s charges for drawing up the deed and pоwer of attorney.
None of the other witnesses that testified at trial claimed to have any personal knowledge about Williams’s alleged promise to care for Kaufman in exchange for the deed. Specifically, the attorney who prepared the deed and power-of-attorney had no recollection of whether Williams promised that she would take care of Kaufman in the future but the attorney did recall that Williams had been taking care of Kaufman.
The district court did not issue any findings of fact or conclusions of law regarding its judgment; thus, we must imply all necessary facts to support the trial court’s ruling if the evidence supports the implied facts.
See BMC Software Belgium, N.V. v. Marchand,
In its judgment, the trial court found that “Melvin L. Kaufman is entitled to recover from Peggy Ballard Williams according to allegations contained in and set forth in Plaintiffs Original Petition to Cancel Deed.” Kaufman’s petition alleges that “Williams committed fraud when she made such promises.” Fraud requires proof of: (1) a material misrepresentation; (2) that was false; (3) made by the speaker as a positive assertion, with knowledge that it was false or recklessly made without any knowledge of the truth; (4) made by the speaker with the intent that the other party act upon it; (5) the party acted in reliance on the representation; and (6) the party thereby suffered injury.
In re FirstMerit Bank, N.A.,
In this case, Kaufman was the solе witness who testified about Williams’s alleged promise to care for him in the future. Even though we, as an appellate court, might not have reached the same conclusion as that reached by the trial court, the trial court, acting as the factfinder, believed Kaufman’s tеstimony about Williams’s alleged promise to care for him and rejected Williams’s testimony to the contrary.
Southern States Transp., Inc. v. State,
Based on the tеstimony before it, the trial court’s conclusion finds support in the evidence. Williams had apparently assisted Kaufman with several
Williams also acknowledged that she never paid the ten dollars consideration recited in the deed. The intent not to perform a promise at the time it is made may be shown by circumstantial evidence including a party’s subsequent conduct with respect to refusing to carry out the alleged promise.
Spoljaric v. Percival Tours, Inc.,
Cancellation of a deed is a proper remedy when promises are fraudulently made with no intention of carrying them out at the time of the deed’s execution.
Anderson v. Anderson,
Issue Two
In issue two, Williams complains that the trial court erred in failing tо enter findings of fact and conclusions of law. The Texas Rules of Civil Procedure outline the process that a party must follow in order to obtain findings of fact and conclusions of law from the trial court. Rule 296 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure states:
In any case tried in the district or county court without a jury, any party may request the court to state in writing its findings of fact and conclusions of law. Such request shall be entitled “Request for Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law” and shall be filed within twenty days after judgment is signed with the clerk of the court, who shall immediately call such request to the attention of the judge who tried the case....
This rule clearly states that a request for findings of fact and conclusions of law must be filed with the clerk of the court within twenty days after judgment is signed. Rule 297 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure states that “[t]he court shall file its findings of fact аnd conclusions of law within twenty days after a timely request is filed....”
The trial court signed its final judgment on August 1, 2007, and the district clerk filed it on the same date. The request for findings of fact and conclusions of law was not filed until August 30, 2007. For Williams’s original request to have been timely, the Texas Rules of Procedure required it to be filed on or before August 21, 2007. Tex.R. Civ. P. 296. Because Williams made her request for findings nine days after the deadline, the trial court was not required to comply with Williams’s request to file findings of fact and conclusions of law.
Beck v. Walker,
Issue Three
In issue three, Williams argues that evidence presented during her motion for new trial shows that Kaufman’s trial testimony was not credible. At the hearing, Williams sought to have the trial court consider nine tapes of recorded conversations that involved Kaufman and Williams. Williams testified that she did not reveal the existence of these tapes at trial because she did not think she would need them. During the hearing, the trial court sustained an objеction to testimony about the tapes because their existence was not newly discovered.
“Generally speaking, a party may not present any additional evidence upon a motion for new trial, where that evidence is not newly discovered.”
Risner v. McDonald’s Corp.,
The hearing on the motion for new trial reflects that Williams was aware of the existence of the tape recordings prior to the trial, and that she did not testify about them at the trial because she “really didn’t think that [she] would need them.” Moreover, the record of the heаring reflects that the trial court did not consider the tapes as newly discovered evidence. We find no error in the trial court’s ruling to exclude the tapes as evidence at the hearing on the motion for new trial. Therefore, we overrule Williams’s third issue.
AFFIRMED.
