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CROSSOVER: Houston 1st COA: JNOV Proper When Jury Answers Don’t Resolve the Only Live Issue—Who Owns the House

New Texas Court of Appeals Opinion - Analyzed for Family Law Attorneys

Bouknight v. Llanelly Enterprises, 01-22-00863-CV, March 31, 2026.

On appeal from 295th District Court, Harris County, Texas

Synopsis

A JNOV is proper when the jury’s answers do not resolve the only live, controlling issue pleaded for adjudication. Here, Bouknight’s live pleadings put ownership of the house (legal or beneficial) at issue, but the jury question asked only whether the deed was “ineffective.” Because no jury finding established who owned the property, the verdict could not support judgment, and the trial court correctly rendered JNOV.

Relevance to Family Law

Texas family-law trials routinely turn on controlling, dispositive issues—characterization (community vs. separate), reimbursement, fraud on the community, alter ego, or ownership of a particular asset held in a third party’s name. Bouknight is a clean appellate reminder that if the charge does not secure findings on the actual controlling issue (e.g., “Who owns the asset?” or “Is it community property?”), even a factually persuasive trial record can collapse at judgment stage via JNOV. For divorce litigators, this is particularly acute in cases involving nominee title, entity-held property, or “friendly third-party” ownership structures designed to defeat division, enforcement, or support.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

Bouknight held a substantial judgment against Wilmot and pursued turnover relief, contending Wilmot actually owned a Houston residence (the “Property”) even though title was placed in the name of Llanelly Enterprises, an entity associated with Wilmot’s friend/business partner, Afolabi. The timeline mattered: Wilmot initially contracted to buy the Property, paid earnest money through his wholly owned company, and engaged in upgrade selections—then the contract was amended to name Llanelly as buyer, wiring instructions were altered to remove Wilmot’s name, and the deed ultimately conveyed the Property to Llanelly. Afolabi wired the purchase funds; the title ledger reflected “Tunde Afolabi/Llanelly Enterprises”; the title policy named Llanelly; and thereafter Llanelly purported to lease the Property to Wilmot, who allegedly defaulted and was later evicted.

Bouknight filed a declaratory-judgment action against Llanelly (not Wilmot) seeking declarations regarding Wilmot’s and Llanelly’s ownership interests to support turnover-style relief against Wilmot. Although Bouknight also alleged fraud and conspiracy tied to concealment of Wilmot’s ownership, the jury charge submitted only one question: whether the deed was ineffective to convey the Property to Llanelly. The jury answered “yes.” Llanelly sought JNOV, including on the ground that Bouknight had not obtained any jury finding on the pleaded, controlling issue—who owned the Property. The trial court granted JNOV and rendered a take-nothing judgment.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Application

The First Court of Appeals framed the appeal around charge architecture and the live pleadings, not around the factual theater of nominee ownership. Bouknight’s live pleading sought a declaration establishing ownership interests in the Property (to enable turnover-related relief). Yet the charge did not ask the jury to decide legal title, equitable title, beneficial ownership, resulting trust, nominee status, or any other formulation that would answer the only question that mattered for judgment: who owned the house.

Instead, the only submitted liability question asked whether the deed was “ineffective” to convey the Property to Llanelly. Even if the jury’s “yes” answer could be read as a negative assessment of the transaction, it did not supply the missing predicate finding that Wilmot owned the Property (or that Llanelly did not). In other words, the verdict did not resolve the dispositive ultimate issue presented for declaratory relief. Without a jury finding on that controlling issue, the trial court had no verdict upon which to render judgment for Bouknight—and JNOV was therefore appropriate.

Procedurally, the court treated Llanelly’s appellate argument (raised in response) as a valid cross-point because it would vitiate the verdict and independently support affirmance of the JNOV under Dudley Construction. The cross-point carried the day: no controlling ownership finding, no judgment on the verdict.

Holding

The court affirmed the JNOV because none of the jury questions and answers resolved legal or beneficial ownership of the Property—the sole issue presented by Bouknight’s live pleading for declaratory/turnover-related relief. Without a jury finding on that controlling issue, the verdict could not support judgment, and the trial court properly rendered JNOV.

The court further recognized the appellee’s argument as an affirming cross-point (even though not explicitly labeled), because acceptance of that argument would vitiate the jury’s verdict and supply an independent basis to affirm.

Practical Application

For family-law litigators, Bouknight is a charge-construction and judgment-proofing case more than a property-title case. It teaches that the “theme” of the case—concealment, nominee title, fraudulent structuring—does not substitute for a jury finding on the ultimate issue the judgment must declare.

Common family-law pressure points where this shows up:

Checklists

Charge-Planning for “Who Owns the Asset?” Cases

JNOV-Proofing the Verdict (Trial-to-Judgment Alignment)

Third-Party / Nominee Title Strategies in Divorce

Citation

Bouknight v. Llanelly Enters., No. 01-22-00863-CV (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Mar. 31, 2026).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

In a Texas divorce, this opinion is weaponizable as a charge-failure and judgment-stage kill shot: if your opponent tries to prove a spouse hid a house through a parent, paramour, or LLC, but only submits “paper” questions (invalid deed, ineffective transfer, sham lease) and never secures a finding that the spouse has an ownership interest (legal or equitable) or that the asset is community, you can move for JNOV on the ground the verdict does not resolve the only controlling issue necessary to render judgment. Conversely, if you are the proponent trying to pull an entity-titled house into the community estate, Bouknight is the caution sign: win the narrative at trial, but lose the case at judgment, if you do not submit—and obtain—findings that actually answer “Who owns the house?” in the form required to support the decree’s property division or post-judgment enforcement.

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