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CROSSOVER: Forged Transfer of Community Homestead Is Void; Family-Law Litigators Can Defeat Buyer ‘Agency’ Theories Without Spousal Joinder or Authority

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

Aliza Groups, Inc. v. Roshan K. Noorani, 02-25-00410-CV, April 30, 2026.

On appeal from Probate Court No. 1, Denton County, Texas

Synopsis

The Fort Worth Court of Appeals held that a deed transferring a community homestead was void as a matter of law where the named grantor did not sign it and the summary-judgment record established that the son who signed in the father’s name lacked authority to do so. For family-law litigators, the key takeaway is that “agency” rhetoric does not create a triable issue when the record contains direct evidence of no authority, particularly in litigation involving homestead rights, title claims, and post-death or post-separation disputes over community real property.

Relevance to Family Law

This is a title case with obvious family-law consequences. In divorce, partition, enforcement, probate-overlap, and SAPCR-adjacent property fights, litigators routinely encounter claims that an adult child, spouse, paramour, manager, or “family representative” had authority to sign transfer papers affecting marital real estate. Noorani is useful because it confirms two points Texas family lawyers can use immediately: first, a forged deed is void, not merely voidable; and second, conclusory agency theories will not save a transfer of a community homestead where the summary-judgment evidence affirmatively negates authority. In practical terms, this gives trial counsel a strong framework to defeat post hoc attempts to validate unauthorized transfers of homestead property during marriage, during incapacity, during separation, or after death.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

Roshan and Karim Noorani were married for decades and acquired the Carrollton property during marriage. Although only Karim was named on the acquisition deed, the property was community property, and the opinion notes that it was used exclusively as the couple’s marital homestead from purchase until Karim’s death. Roshan then continued living there.

In 2017, a warranty deed purported to transfer the property to Aliza Groups, Inc. But Karim did not sign that deed. Instead, the couple’s son, Rahim, signed Karim’s name. Rahim later stated that he believed he was signing a lien document connected to a $200,000 business loan, not a deed conveying title. More importantly for the court’s analysis, Rahim swore that neither parent had discussed selling the property, neither parent had agreed to transfer it, and he had never been authorized by either Karim or Roshan to sign a deed or lien affecting the property.

After Karim’s death in 2020, the probate proceeding treated the property as a community asset. Roshan then sued Aliza Groups in a title action, asserting trespass-to-try-title and quiet-title claims. She moved for partial summary judgment, contending the deed was forged and therefore void. Aliza Groups did not meaningfully dispute that Karim had not personally signed the deed; instead, it tried to avoid summary judgment through equitable and agency-based theories, including an assertion that Rahim had actual or apparent authority to act.

The probate court granted Roshan’s motion, declared the deed void for forgery, and quieted title. After severance, the order became final and appealable.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court applied familiar but powerful Texas title rules.

Although the opinion was framed as a forgery case, it is especially significant for family lawyers because it functionally rejects the idea that generic assertions of family-member agency can validate a conveyance of homestead property absent competent evidence of actual authority.

Application

The court’s analysis was straightforward and devastating to the buyer’s position. Roshan’s summary-judgment proof did exactly what title counsel and family-law trial lawyers should aim to do in these cases: it established, through direct testimony from the person who actually signed the instrument, that Karim did not sign the deed and that Rahim lacked authority from either parent to execute any deed or lien on the property. That proof facially established forgery under Texas law because the instrument purported to be Karim’s act without Karim’s authorization.

Once Roshan made that showing, the burden shifted. At that point, Aliza Groups needed competent summary-judgment evidence raising a real fact issue on authority. But its response largely took a different tack. Rather than squarely producing evidence that Karim authorized Rahim to sign Karim’s name, Aliza Groups argued around the forgery problem. It acknowledged the forgery, complained that the family should not benefit from it, invoked detrimental reliance and specific performance concepts, and suggested Rahim had authority to act for Roshan. That was a mismatch. The operative question was whether the deed was Karim’s authorized act. On that record, it plainly was not.

The court also found a preservation failure. On appeal, Aliza Groups tried to sharpen its position into an argument that Rahim may have had authority to sign for Karim. But the court held that this appellate framing did not comport with the arguments made in the summary-judgment response, which had focused instead on Rahim’s alleged authority as Roshan’s agent. That distinction mattered. A party opposing summary judgment must clearly present the theory it wants the trial court to consider; it cannot pivot on appeal to a different authority theory.

Even apart from preservation, the opinion indicates the buyer still lacked evidence sufficient to create a fact issue. Roshan’s evidence was direct, positive, and unequivocal: Karim did not sign; Rahim did; and Rahim had no authority. In a family-property case, that kind of record is especially hard to overcome when the property at issue is the marital homestead and no spouse joined in the transfer.

Holding

The court held that the probate court properly granted partial summary judgment declaring the deed to Aliza Groups void for forgery. Because Karim did not sign the deed and the summary-judgment record showed Rahim lacked authority to sign on Karim’s behalf, the instrument conveyed no title.

The court also held that Aliza Groups failed to raise a genuine issue of material fact on authority. Its appellate argument did not match the argument preserved in the trial court, and in any event the record did not supply competent evidence sufficient to counter the direct testimony negating authorization.

Finally, the court affirmed the order quieting title in Roshan’s favor. For purposes of the severed title dispute, the forged deed was a nullity, and the buyer’s attempt to rely on agency-inflected theories did not save the transfer.

Practical Application

For Texas family-law litigators, Noorani should immediately go into the toolkit for cases involving unauthorized deeds, refinance documents, lien instruments, powers of attorney, partition agreements, and “asset-protection” transfers executed by one spouse, an adult child, or a business insider. The opinion is particularly useful where one side tries to muddy a clean forgery record by recasting the dispute as one about informal family authority. If your opposing party cannot produce competent proof that the actual owner authorized the signature, you should frame the case as a void-instrument dispute, not merely an equity dispute.

In divorce cases, this matters when one spouse claims that title was transferred before separation by a child or relative “for the family,” or when a spouse attempts to validate a deed signed outside the presence or knowledge of the titled spouse. In probate-linked family litigation, it matters when heirs or third parties try to lock in title transfers made during periods of illness, dependency, or financial distress. And in enforcement or receivership settings, it gives counsel a concise answer to the recurring argument that someone with apparent family involvement must have had authority to bind the owners.

Strategically, the case also reinforces the importance of precise preservation in summary-judgment practice. If the opponent’s theory shifts from actual authority to apparent authority, from one principal to another, or from title validity to equity, press the mismatch. Noorani demonstrates that courts will hold parties to the theory they actually presented below.

For homestead litigation specifically, family-law counsel should treat this opinion as a reminder that title and occupancy narratives are not enough for the transferee. Unauthorized signatures do not become legally effective merely because the transferee advanced money, believed the signer had family standing, or can spin a fairness story. If the deed is forged, title never moved.

Checklists

Build the Forgery Record Early

Defeat “Agency” Theories at Summary Judgment

Use the Case in Divorce and Property Division Litigation

Protect Your Client from the Non-Prevailing Party’s Mistakes

Homestead-Focused Intake for Family Lawyers

Citation

Aliza Groups, Inc. v. Roshan K. Noorani, No. 02-25-00410-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Apr. 30, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This ruling can be weaponized effectively in both divorce and custody-adjacent litigation, especially where control of the homestead affects possession, leverage, support, or settlement posture. In a divorce, if the other side claims that a disputed transfer of the marital residence was authorized through a child, relative, or family business representative, Noorani supports an aggressive summary-judgment push: if the owner did not sign and did not authorize the signature, the deed is void and title never left the community estate. That can collapse reimbursement claims, standing arguments, and third-party interventions built on the supposed transfer.

In custody-related cases, the crossover is more tactical but still significant. Possession of the child often turns practically on possession of the residence. If one party attempts to use a questionable deed, lien, or transfer to force displacement from the home, Noorani gives family counsel a title-based countermeasure. Establish the home’s homestead and community-property character, prove the absence of authorization, and argue that the adverse claimant’s “agency” story does not create a fact issue. The result can stabilize occupancy, preserve the status quo for the child, and deprive the opposing party of a leverage point built on an invalid instrument.

More broadly, the opinion is a reminder that family-law cases often turn on disciplined civil-litigation instincts. When the facts support forgery and no competent authorization evidence exists, do not let the case drift into moral blame or equitable fog. Force the court to decide the legal status of the instrument. Under Noorani, that approach can end the dispute quickly and decisively.

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