1.9 Little York, Ltd. v. Allice Trading Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 15, 2012
Docket01-11-00390-CV
StatusPublished

This text of 1.9 Little York, Ltd. v. Allice Trading Inc. (1.9 Little York, Ltd. v. Allice Trading Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
1.9 Little York, Ltd. v. Allice Trading Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 15, 2012.

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-11-00390-CV

———————————

1.9 Little York, LTD., Appellant

V.

allice trading inc., Appellee

On Appeal from the County Civil Court at Law No. 1

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 956852

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellant, 1.9 Little York, Ltd. (“Little York”), challenges the trial court’s judgment, entered after a jury trial, in favor of appellee, Allice Trading Inc. (“Allice Trading”), in Allice Trading’s suit for breach of contract and quantum meruit.  In its first two issues, Little York contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support Allice Trading’s recovery on its breach-of-contract claim and the jury’s damage award.   In its third issue, Little York contends that that the trial court erred in denying Little York additional time to present rebuttal witnesses.

          We affirm.

Background

           In its second amended petition, Allice Trading alleged that Little York, the owner and general contractor of a warehouse construction project, had hired Allice Trading to provide “site preparation, utilities installation, and concrete work” for the project.  Pursuant to their contract, Little York was to pay Allice Trading $315,292.10 for its services.  Allice Trading sought damages in the amount of $28,529.21 for breach of contract and quantum meruit. 

          In its counterclaim, Little York alleged that Allice Trading “abruptly stopped” working on the project and left “the job incomplete and wholly unacceptable.”  Little York specifically claimed that Allice Trading had failed to complete a detention pond, which was required for Little York to obtain a water detention permit from Harris County.  Little York asserted that any alteration to the “scope” of the work required by the contract was done “unilaterally and without agreement” by Allice Trading.  As a result, the construction site had deteriorated to the point that Little York needed to undertake “a total renovation of the project.”  Little York alleged, thus, that Allice Trading breached the contract by leaving the project, and it sought actual and consequential damages to salvage the project.

          At trial, Allice Trading owner Dan Allice testified that he had previously worked with Little York’s owner, Moe Nasr, on two prior projects.  In his original estimate, Allice Trading was to provide 200 loads of dirt for the project, but Nasr contacted him and explained that “the dirt portion was a bit over his budget.”  Nasr suggested that he could supply the dirt at a less expensive price than Allice Trading, so the two agreed that Nasr would supply the dirt for the project and Allice “deduct[ed] the dirt cost” from his estimate. 

          While on site, Allice took direction from Mario Lanza, the engineer and project manager for the Little York project.  Lanza was at the site every day and, to Allice’s knowledge, served as Nasr’s representative.  Although the original agreement called for Allice Trading to remove the driveway used for construction vehicles, Lanza instructed Allice that the removal was not needed.  Lanza also instructed Allice to perform at the construction site several other jobs that were not included in the original contract, but were added to the final estimate.   

          At one point, Allice Trading had “completely finished” the detention pond and was preparing to add a pilot channel to connect the ingoing and outgoing pipes in the pond.  Before Allice Trading could begin pouring the concrete for the pilot channel, Lanza informed it that Little York had “ran out of dirt for the foundation” of the warehouse.  Lanza then instructed Allice Trading to “pull the dirt” that Little York needed “from the pond” and the adjacent “green space.”  As a result, although the foundation was finished, the “green space” and the detention pond needed more dirt.  Allice then “continually” asked Lanza for the dirt required to fill the “green space” and the detention pond, but Lanza only brought in enough to fill the “green space.”  When Allice Trading had “maybe four more days” left on the project, Lanza “stopped bringing dirt in.”  Without enough dirt in the detention pond, Allice Trading could not construct the pilot channel.  Allice “called [Lanza] for the next eight months . . . every couple of weeks . . . asking for dirt,” but each time Lanza assured Allice that he would bring it in “later.”  After eight months of Allice Trading asking Lanza for dirt, Lanza informed Allice

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