Fact Issue on Whether Bradley J. Holdings Purchased 0 Banks Drive | Weger v. Bradley (2026)
Weger v. Bradley, 06-25-00108-CV, May 22, 2026.
On appeal from 43rd District Court, Parker County, Texas
Synopsis
A defendant is not entitled to traditional summary judgment on title-based claims when the summary-judgment record contains conflicting evidence on whether the disputed tract was ever actually sold. In Weger v. Bradley, the Texarkana Court of Appeals held that evidence showing the closing documents, consideration, and title file described only the 0.59-acre tract at 202 Banks Drive raised a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Bradley J. Holdings purchased the separate 0.49-acre tract at 0 Banks Drive, requiring reversal and remand.
Relevance to Family Law
This case matters to Texas family lawyers because it sits at the intersection of divorce enforcement, receivership sales, and post-decree property litigation. When a decree contemplates sale of real property to satisfy an equalization payment, and a receiver later conveys property under an enforcement order, the operative question may not be limited to whether the receiver had abstract authority to sell; it may also be whether the disputed parcel was actually included in the transaction that closed. For family-law litigators handling enforcement proceedings, turnover-type relief, receiver appointments, or post-divorce title disputes, Weger is a reminder that imprecise legal descriptions, missing exhibits, correction deeds, and inconsistent closing files can convert what appears to be a purely legal issue into a fact issue that defeats traditional summary judgment.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
The divorce decree awarded John Weger certain real property on Banks Drive as his sole and separate property, including a 0.49-acre tract identified in the opinion as 0 Banks Drive and a nearby 0.59-acre tract. The decree also required Weger to pay his former wife $350,000 within sixty days and provided that if the properties were not sold to satisfy that debt within 180 days of listing, either party could seek appointment of a receiver to sell the properties.
After Weger failed to make the required payment, the divorce court granted an enforcement request and appointed Rees Atkins as receiver. But the enforcement order created a problem: it directed the receiver to take charge of several properties, expressly referenced “202 Banks Drive,” and stated that the legal descriptions were set out on “Exhibit A,” yet no Exhibit A was attached. That omission became central because the original sale documentation from the December 2021 transaction reflected a sale of the 0.59-acre tract to Bradley J. Holdings, LLC, but did not describe the separate 0.49-acre tract.
According to the opinion, the deed and closing materials did not mention 0 Banks Drive. Weger responded with evidence that the title documentation reflected a $360,000 purchase price for the 0.59-acre tract only, and that the escrow officer for the title company confirmed the contract and legal description used at closing covered 202 Banks Drive—not 0 Banks Drive. Weger also produced evidence that he had continued to use the 0.49-acre tract and stored heavy equipment and other personal property there after the divorce.
Only later, after Bradley J. Holdings notified the receiver that its deed omitted the 0.49-acre tract, did Atkins file a correction deed stating that Bradley J. Holdings had acquired that property as well. In the meantime, the divorce court entered a nunc pro tunc enforcement order attaching Exhibit A, which included legal descriptions for both Banks Drive tracts. Appellees relied heavily on that nunc pro tunc order to argue the receiver had authority to sell both parcels and that summary judgment was proper. The court of appeals disagreed that this resolved the case as a matter of law.
Issues Decided
- Whether appellees moving for traditional summary judgment conclusively established that Weger’s title-related claims failed as a matter of law.
- Whether conflicting evidence concerning the deed, consideration, title file, and closing documents raised a genuine issue of material fact on whether Bradley J. Holdings actually purchased the 0.49-acre tract at 0 Banks Drive.
- Whether summary judgment could stand when the summary-judgment evidence would allow reasonable factfinders to conclude that only the 0.59-acre tract at 202 Banks Drive was included in the sale.
Rules Applied
The court applied the ordinary traditional-summary-judgment framework under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 166a(c). A movant must establish that no genuine issue of material fact exists and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. In reviewing the ruling, the appellate court took as true evidence favorable to the nonmovant, indulged every reasonable inference in the nonmovant’s favor, and resolved doubts against the movant.
The court cited and relied on familiar Texas Supreme Court summary-judgment authorities, including:
- Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 166a(b) and 166a(c), governing traditional summary judgment.
- Mann Frankfort Stein & Lipp Advisors, Inc. v. Fielding, 289 S.W.3d 844 (Tex. 2009), for de novo review and the movant’s burden.
- 20801, Inc. v. Parker, 249 S.W.3d 392 (Tex. 2008), for the principle that courts take favorable evidence as true and indulge reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmovant.
- Travelers Ins. Co. v. Joachim, 315 S.W.3d 860 (Tex. 2010), confirming de novo review.
- Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Spates, 186 S.W.3d 566 (Tex. 2006) (per curiam), and City of Keller v. Wilson, 168 S.W.3d 802 (Tex. 2005), for the reasonable-factfinder standard.
Importantly, the court did not decide the validity of the nunc pro tunc order. Instead, it assumed for purposes of analysis that the receiver had authority to sell the tract and still held summary judgment improper because the record raised a separate fact issue: whether the tract was actually included in the sale that closed.
Application
The court framed the dispute more narrowly than the appellees did. Appellees sought to win on the theory that the divorce court, especially through the nunc pro tunc enforcement order, authorized the receiver to sell the 0.49-acre tract. But the appellate court focused on a distinct question embedded in Weger’s claims: Even if authority existed, was the tract ever sold for consideration as part of the transaction with Bradley J. Holdings?
That distinction drove the outcome. The summary-judgment evidence was not one-directional. On one side, appellees had a correction deed, the nunc pro tunc enforcement order, and evidence suggesting both tracts were intended to be sold together. On the other, Weger produced evidence that the original deed, the contract, the title documents, and the closing file described only the 0.59-acre tract at 202 Banks Drive; that the purchase price reflected only that tract; and that the title company’s escrow officer confirmed as much. If believed, that evidence would support a finding that the 0.49-acre tract was not part of the original bargain and was added only later through corrective paperwork.
Under Rule 166a(c), the court could not weigh those competing versions of events. Because reasonable factfinders could differ on whether Bradley J. Holdings actually purchased 0 Banks Drive, appellees failed to conclusively negate Weger’s claims. The presence of a later correction deed did not eliminate the underlying factual dispute created by the original transaction documents. As a result, the trial court erred in granting summary judgment.
Holding
The court held that traditional summary judgment was improper because the record raised a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Bradley J. Holdings purchased the 0.49-acre tract at 0 Banks Drive. Evidence that the sale documents, purchase price, and title-company closing file referred only to the 0.59-acre tract at 202 Banks Drive prevented appellees from establishing entitlement to judgment as a matter of law.
The court further held that this fact issue required reversal and remand, without reaching Weger’s argument that the divorce court’s nunc pro tunc enforcement order was void. In other words, even assuming the receiver had authority to sell the disputed tract, appellees still did not conclusively prove that the tract was actually conveyed in the transaction at issue.
Practical Application
For family-law litigators, Weger is a strong reminder that post-decree real-property disputes should be analyzed on at least three different levels: authority to sell, property actually described in the operative order, and property actually included in the closed transaction. A movant who proves only the first point may still lose summary judgment if the deed package, title commitment, settlement statement, escrow communications, or consideration evidence create a fact issue on the latter two.
In divorce enforcement cases, this matters most where decrees divide multiple contiguous or related tracts, especially when one street address informally refers to more than one legal parcel. Practitioners should expect appellate scrutiny when a receiver’s order references an omitted exhibit, shorthand address, or incomplete legal description and a later nunc pro tunc or correction instrument attempts to harmonize the file. Those curative documents may be helpful, but they do not necessarily erase a fact dispute created by the original closing documents.
The case also has implications for possession and personal-property issues. Weger presented evidence that he continued using the disputed tract and stored heavy machinery there. That kind of evidence can matter strategically because it reinforces the argument that the parcel was treated on the ground as separate from the property formally sold. In family cases involving farms, business yards, equipment storage, or adjacent lots awarded in the decree, counsel should build a record not only from county records and orders, but also from actual possession, use, tax records, appraisals, and closing instructions.
From a dispositive-motion standpoint, Weger teaches that the movant must align every document in the chain: decree, enforcement order, receiver appointment, exhibit attachments, contract, title commitment, deed, closing disclosure, escrow file, and any correction instruments. If those papers do not tell the same story, Rule 166a(c) becomes difficult to satisfy.
Checklists
Pre-Sale Drafting in Divorce Enforcement Cases
- Match every tract in the decree to a full legal description, not merely a street address.
- Confirm whether adjacent parcels have separate tax IDs, separate legal descriptions, or different situs addresses.
- Attach all referenced exhibits to enforcement orders and receiver orders before entry.
- Ensure the order appointing a receiver expressly identifies each parcel to be sold.
- If the decree contemplates sale of multiple tracts, state whether they are to be sold together or separately.
- Circulate a parcel-by-parcel inventory to the receiver, title company, and closing counsel.
Summary-Judgment Record Development for the Movant
- Put the decree, enforcement order, receiver order, and all attached exhibits into the record in final form.
- Include the purchase contract, title commitment, closing statement, deed, and any escrow instructions.
- Trace the consideration paid and tie it to each tract claimed to have been sold.
- Provide competent affidavit testimony from the title company or closing agent explaining exactly what property was included.
- Address discrepancies head-on, including omitted exhibits, conflicting addresses, and later correction deeds.
- Do not assume a correction deed alone conclusively resolves whether the property was part of the original sale.
Summary-Judgment Response for the Nonmovant
- Compare the legal descriptions in the decree, enforcement order, contract, deed, and title file line by line.
- Highlight any mismatch between situs address and legal description.
- Obtain affidavits or admissions from the escrow officer, title company, or closing lawyer about what tract closed.
- Show whether the purchase price corresponds to only one tract rather than all tracts claimed.
- Develop evidence of continued possession, use, maintenance, storage, fencing, or improvements on the disputed parcel.
- Argue the distinction between authority to sell and proof that the disputed parcel was actually sold.
Receivership and Nunc Pro Tunc Risk Management
- Review the original order immediately for omitted exhibits or incomplete legal descriptions.
- If nunc pro tunc relief is sought, evaluate whether the proposed correction is clerical or substantive.
- Preserve objections to nunc pro tunc orders that materially enlarge the property affected.
- Do not rely exclusively on a later nunc pro tunc order to cure defects in the original closing record.
- If a correction deed is contemplated, document the factual and legal basis for the correction.
- Anticipate appellate arguments that a later correction instrument cannot rewrite the economic terms of the original sale.
Protecting Against Post-Decree Title Litigation
- Conduct a parcel-specific title review before filing a motion to enforce or to appoint a receiver.
- Verify that tax records, appraisal records, and title documents identify the same land.
- Confirm whether personal property located on the tract creates additional conversion or possession claims.
- Inspect the property or obtain photographs and maps showing the actual tracts in use.
- Preserve email traffic and closing communications that reveal the parties’ understanding of what was being sold.
- If multiple parcels were intended, ensure the settlement file reflects that intent unambiguously.
Citation
Weger v. Bradley, No. 06-25-00108-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Texarkana May 22, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).
Full Opinion
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