Bannum, Inc. and Christopher Tovar D/B/A Tovar Construction Company v. Eugene Mees D/B/A Encore House

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 2014
Docket07-12-00458-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Bannum, Inc. and Christopher Tovar D/B/A Tovar Construction Company v. Eugene Mees D/B/A Encore House (Bannum, Inc. and Christopher Tovar D/B/A Tovar Construction Company v. Eugene Mees D/B/A Encore House) 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
Bannum, Inc. and Christopher Tovar D/B/A Tovar Construction Company v. Eugene Mees D/B/A Encore House, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo ________________________

No. 07-12-00458-CV ________________________

BANNUM, INC. AND CHRISTOPHER TOVAR D/B/A TOVAR CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, APPELLANTS

V.

EUGENE MEES D/B/A ENCORE HOUSE, APPELLEE

On Appeal from the 419th District Court Travis County, Texas Trial Court No. D-1-GN-07-002493, Honorable Lora J. Livingston, Presiding

June 24, 2014

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before QUINN, C.J., and CAMPBELL and HANCOCK, JJ.

This case is all about betting on the come and the pitfalls inherent in doing that.

Bannum, Inc. contracted with Eugene Mees to buy the latter’s building. The contract

was contingent upon Bannum 1) winning a bid with the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) to

provide a half-way house for convicted individuals and 2) beginning the performance of those services; that is, if either contingency failed to occur “for any reason, then [the]

contract [was rendered] null and void” by its very terms.

Mees’ building was intended to be used for that purpose if the BOP accepted

Bannum’s bid. Because the facility needed renovations, though, Bannum retained

Tovar Construction Company, and others, to make them. Construction of those

improvements (and the incurrence of debt related thereto) began before the BOP

accepted Bannum’s bid. And, though it was originally accepted, the BOP ultimately

terminated the agreement for various reasons. From that event arose this dispute.

Tovar wanted to get paid, even though the city “red tagged” or stopped him from

working due to the lack of a permit. Then Bannum and Mees sued each other for

breach of contract and other causes of action. Some were disposed of via summary

judgment. Others were tried. And, both Mees and Bannum felt aggrieved in some way

by what occurred while litigating below.

The issues before us are several. We address each in turn on our way to

reversing a summary judgment, in part, and affirming the remainder of the trial court’s

judgment.

Bannum’s Issues

a. Breach of Contract

Bannum’s first issue (with its three subparts) concerns the trial court’s decision to

grant Mees’ summary judgment upon Bannum’s breach of contract claim. Purportedly,

it erred. We overrule the issue and subparts.

2 Bannum informs us that the BOP’s decision to cancel or terminate its contract

with Bannum rendered the contract between Bannun and Mees “null and void.” 1

Indeed, the contract provision itself states that “[i]n the event Bannum is not awarded a

Government contract for Community Sanction Center services to be located at this

property (or) Bannum cannot begin performance of a contract, if awarded, for any

reason, then this contract is null and void.” (Emphasis added). And, therein lies the

resolution to the issue before us.

Before one can sue another for breach of contract, there must first be a contract

susceptible to breach. An agreement rendered “null and void” is not such a contract

because a void contract never came into existence. See Elijah Ragira/Vip Lodging

Group, Inc. v. Vip Lodging Group, Inc., 301 S.W.3d 747, 754 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2009,

pet. denied) (stating that “to be entitled to specific enforcement of a contract, a party

must show that the contract in question is valid and enforceable” and “[b]ecause we find

that Ragira's failure to pay the review-period fees rendered the contracts null and void,

no contracts existed, and therefore, Ragira was not entitled to specific performance”).

In legal parlance, something that is void is something that never occurred. See Oles v.

Curl, 65 S.W.3d 129, 133 n.2 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 2001, no pet.). Furthermore, no one

disputes that Bannum could not begin performance of its agreement with the BOP

because the latter terminated it.

So, as both Bannum and Mees argued below and here when beneficial to them,

the contract was “null and void.” And, there never arose an agreement susceptible to 1 Examples of that appear in various passages within Bannum’s brief when arguing that “Bannum and Tovar were in the process of obtaining building permits in order to complete the repairs . . . at the time the BOP terminated Bannum’s contract for default, which rendered the contract null and void,” “[b]ecause the contract was rendered null and void, Bannum could no longer enter the property and finish the improvements and renovations,” and an “additional $40,794.57 had not been invoiced at the time the contract was rendered null and void.” (Emphasis added).

3 breach. Simply put, one cannot legally enforce rights under an agreement that never

was.

b. Negligent Misrepresentation or Concealment and Deceptive Trade Practice

Claims

Next, Bannum contends that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment

against his claims for negligent misrepresentation or concealment and deceptive trade

practice. We agree.

According to Bannum’s live pleading, Mees represented that the facility being

acquired was zoned to house an “unlimited” number of transitional or half-way house

residents when in fact it was not. Because of that misrepresentation, the BOP

ultimately cancelled its contract with Bannum. Mees sought to defeat the claims by

moving for summary judgment. Therein, he simply argued that “if [he] did not cause

Bannum damages, [he was] entitled to Summary Judgment as a matter of law.” He

then alleged that he did not not cause such damages because 1) Bannum failed to

purchase the facility on the closing date of June 4, 2006, 2) “the Contract and

Addendum I did not have any terms which extended any provision of the Contract past

its termination,” 3) in failing to purchase the property by June 4th, Bannum “completely

lost its ability to fulfill its contract with the BOP,” 4) “[a]t that point . . . it did not matter

whether Mees had misrepresented the zoning” since Bannum “could not fulfill the BOP

contract because it could not purchase the property,” 5) “[h]ad Bannum followed through

with the purchase prior to June 4, 2006, it might have suffered damages that could be

attributed to Mees,” and 6) Bannum “did not make the purchase which was the sole

cause of its damages.” Thereafter, the motion for summary judgment was granted.

4 Yet, upon review of the record before us, we discover some evidence of record

indicating that through renegotiation or otherwise, Bannum retained a contractual right

to buy the property after June 4, 2006. Indeed, Mees acknowledged as much in its

motion for summary judgment when asserting that 1) after failing “to close on the

original contract . . . [Bannum] had to re-negotiate with Mees to re-obtain the right to

purchase” and 2) in “December, 2006, Bannum and Mees signed a document called a

second addendum to the Contract” which addendum “was to ‘re-state‘ the original

Contract and Addendum I and completion of the sale of the property.”

Consequently, we have evidence of record creating a material issue of fact upon

the very ground (i.e. causation) proffered by Mees as warranting summary judgment.

And, if there is some evidence illustrating that Bannum had a right to buy the facility

after June 4, 2006, then Mees failed to prove, as a matter of law, that 1) the right to buy

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Bannum, Inc. and Christopher Tovar D/B/A Tovar Construction Company v. Eugene Mees D/B/A Encore House, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bannum-inc-and-christopher-tovar-dba-tovar-constru-texapp-2014.