Supreme Court Ruling on Specific Performance and Damages: Implications for Family Law Property Settlements
WHITE KNIGHT DEVELOPMENT, LLC v. DICK B. SIMMONS, SR., AND JULIE M. SIMMONS, 23-0868, June 13, 2025.
On appeal from Court of Appeals for the Tenth District of Texas
Synopsis
A trial court may, in a narrow set of circumstances, award specific performance of a real‑estate contract and also grant an equitable monetary award reimbursing reasonable, foreseeable expenses directly traceable to the delay in performance. The Supreme Court of Texas reversed the court of appeals in part because the appellate court eliminated the monetary award wholesale without distinguishing expenses sufficiently tethered to the property and delay from those that were not.
Relevance to Family Law
Although White Knight is a commercial real‑estate decision, it materially affects family‑law property litigation because divorces and post‑dissolution disputes frequently involve contracts for the sale or buy‑back of real property, partition agreements, and settlement provisions calling for specific performance. The opinion permits courts to restore parties to the position they would have occupied had performance been timely by awarding property‑related, delay‑caused expenses in addition to specific performance — but only where those expenses are reasonable, foreseeable, and directly traceable to the subject property and the delay. For family‑law practitioners this changes how you plead remedies, marshal documentary proof of expenses, and separate recoverable property‑related costs from generalized business or personal losses when enforcing property settlement agreements or mediated agreements involving real property.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
White Knight Development purchased subdivided land from the Simmonses in 2016 and negotiated a “buy‑back” option that allowed White Knight to require repurchase if neighborhood restrictions were reinstated. When residents extended those restrictions, White Knight exercised the buy‑back and the Simmonses failed to repurchase within the contractual 45‑day period. White Knight alleged breach and sought specific performance of the buy‑back provision plus damages for expenses incurred while the property remained in its possession and control during the multi‑year delay. The trial court ordered specific performance and awarded $308,136.14 for assorted expenses (property taxes, forbearance and refinancing fees, interest on multiple loans, certain operating interest, and credit‑card interest). The court of appeals deleted the monetary award in its entirety. The Supreme Court granted review to determine whether specific performance and monetary awards can coexist and, if so, the permissible scope of such monetary relief.
Issues Decided
The court decided (1) whether a party may receive both specific performance and a monetary award for a breach of a contract for the sale of real property, and (2) what categories of monetary relief, if any, may be recovered together with specific performance—specifically whether foreseeable expenses directly arising from the delay in performance are recoverable and how to distinguish recoverable property‑tethered expenses from unrecoverable losses.
Rules Applied
The Court reaffirmed the black‑letter equitable principle that specific performance is ordinarily an alternative to legal damages but clarified a narrow exception: where a breach of a real‑property sale contract causes a foreseeable, property‑related expense during the delay between breach and judgment, a court may award specific performance and an equitable monetary award limited to reasonable expenses directly traceable to the delay and the subject property. The monetary award is equitable in nature, intended to restore the aggrieved party to the position it would have been in had timely performance occurred. The Court faulted the court of appeals for failing to apply a tethering/causation analysis to the trial court’s itemized findings.
Application
Justice Huddle explained that equity permits a monetary supplement to specific performance only when the expense reimbursed is property‑related, foreseeable at the time of contracting or breach, and proximately caused by the delay between breach and judgment. The Court reviewed White Knight’s itemized findings and concluded the trial court had made factual determinations about particular expense categories (taxes, forbearance/refinancing fees, loan interest, and credit‑card interest) that might satisfy the narrow rule, but the court of appeals erroneously eliminated the entire monetary judgment without parsing which expense items were sufficiently tethered to the property and the delay. The Supreme Court therefore approved the legal rule permitting limited monetary relief but remanded so the court of appeals could review each category against the principles announced—reasonable, foreseeable, and directly traceable to the property/delay.
Holding
The Supreme Court held that a court may, in a narrow class of cases, award both specific performance and a monetary award for reasonable, foreseeable expenses directly traceable to the delay in performance of a real‑property contract. The monetary award must be equitable in nature and aimed at restoring the party seeking specific performance to the position it would have occupied had performance been timely. The Court reversed the court of appeals in part because that court improperly deleted the entire monetary judgment without distinguishing which items were recoverable under the tethering/causation standard and remanded for reconsideration consistent with those principles.
Practical Application
For family‑law practitioners, White Knight requires a more nuanced approach when enforcing settlement agreements or contract provisions involving real property. When seeking specific performance of a sale, buy‑back, partition, or similar clause in a decree or mediated settlement, counsel should simultaneously plead for equitable monetary reimbursement for property‑related costs incurred due to a party’s delay or breach, but must be prepared to prove those costs were foreseeable, reasonable, and directly caused by the delay. Conversely, when defending against such claims, litigators should isolate and challenge any damages not clearly tethered to the subject property or the period of delay (for example, generalized business losses, speculative lost profits, or non‑property personal expenses), and press for detailed findings linking each expense category to the property and the delay. In discovery and at trial, emphasize documentary proof (loan instruments, forbearance agreements, tax bills, ledger entries) and witness testimony that explains causation, foreseeability at contracting, and reasonableness of amounts sought.
Checklists
Gather Your Pleadings
- Plead specific performance and expressly plead an equitable monetary claim limited to reasonable, foreseeable expenses arising from the delay; include alternative pleadings for damages if necessary.
- Request specific findings of fact and conclusions of law that itemize each category of claimed expense, explain causation, and show the court’s determinations on foreseeability and reasonableness.
Gather Your Evidence
- Produce loan agreements, forbearance letters, extension fee invoices, refinancing documents, and payment records showing which loans were tied to the subject property.
- Produce property tax bills, tax payment receipts, and any penalties directly attributable to the subject property during the delay.
- Prepare ledger entries, credit‑card statements, and accounting that separate expenses attributable to the subject property from those for other properties or general business operations.
- Secure witness testimony (accountant, loan officer, corporate custodian of records) linking each expense to the delay and to the subject property.
Drafting Settlement Provisions
- When drafting buy‑back, sale, or partition provisions in marital settlement agreements, include explicit allocation of risk for delay, agreed remedies, and caps or categories of reimbursable expenses to avoid later disputes.
- Build in notice, cure, and accounting procedures to document any delay‑related expenses contemporaneously.
Trial Presentation
- Seek detailed findings that tie each monetary item to the property and to the delay period between breach and judgment; present trial court with a clear, itemized damages chart and a demonstrative timeline.
- Avoid conflating business or consequential losses not directly attributable to the property; treat those as alternative claims but distinguish them at trial.
Appellate Preservation
- Preserve objections to any award that lacks tethering to the property or that includes speculative items; if the trial court awards a lump sum, move for specific, itemized findings to facilitate appellate review.
- If the appellate court eliminates a monetary award wholesale, move to remand for factual separation consistent with White Knight principles.
Citation
White Knight Development, LLC v. Dick B. Simmons, Sr. & Julie M. Simmons, No. 23‑0868, Slip Op. (Tex. June 13, 2025).
Full Opinion
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