Barry v. Jackson

309 S.W.3d 135, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 1958, 2010 WL 985202
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 19, 2010
Docket03-08-00549-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 309 S.W.3d 135 (Barry v. Jackson) 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
Barry v. Jackson, 309 S.W.3d 135, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 1958, 2010 WL 985202 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinions

ON MOTION FOR REHEARING

DAVID PURYEAR, Justice.

Our opinion, concurring and dissenting opinion, and judgment dated January 15, 2010, are withdrawn, and this opinion, concurring and dissenting opinion and judg[137]*137ment are substituted in their place. We overrule the appellees’ motion for rehearing.

In mid-July 2002, appellant Michael P. Barry entered into a contract with appel-lees Donald and Karen Jackson under which he agreed to buy their home for $370,000. The Jacksons then signed a contract to buy another house. Shortly after the Jacksons’ option period on their new house expired, Barry informed the Jack-sons that he would not be going through with the purchase. The Jacksons lost the earnest money they had deposited in conjunction with the contract for their new house, as well as an option-period fee and a fee to have the new house inspected. The Jacksons re-listed their house after doing a number of repairs, eventually selling it in late October 2003 for $339,000. The Jacksons sued Barry for breach of contract. Following a bench trial, the trial court entered judgment in favor of the Jacksons, awarding them breach-of-contract damages in the amount of $46,965, $3,889 for “out of pocket” damages, and $23,165 in attorney’s fees. Barry appeals, complaining that the trial court erred because (1) the Jacksons sought to be awarded Barry’s earnest money, thus electing a contractual remedy that bars them from receiving damages; (2) there was insufficient evidence of the property’s market value to support the trial court’s award of damages; and (3) because the damages were improper, the attorney’s fees award should be reversed. We will reverse the trial court’s judgment, render judgment awarding the Jacksons $3,889 in damages, and remand the cause to the trial court for reconsideration of the issue of attorney’s fees.

Summary of the testimony

In July 2002, Barry, acting through his realtor,1 approached the Jacksons about buying their home, which at the time was not listed for sale. On July 13, after some negotiations, the parties signed a contract under which Barry would buy the Jack-sons’ house for $370,000. The contract provided that Barry could cancel within seven days after receiving a seller’s disclosure notice from the Jacksons; the disclosure was provided on July 15, 2002, giving Barry until July 22 to terminate the contract. Barry placed $3,000 in escrow on July 16. After signing the contract with Barry, the Jacksons started looking for a new house, and on July 17, they signed a contract to buy a house on Pebble Garden Court, placing $3,000 in escrow, paying the sellers $500 for the unrestricted right to cancel the contract within seven days, and paying $389 for an inspection.

On July 23, Barry had the Jacksons’ property inspected. The inspector found about twenty issues, including wood rot in a door frame, a rotten wiring conduit under the deck, a broken handle on the built-in microwave, a leak in the kitchen faucet, and some problems with the pool. Mr. Jackson testified that he and his wife had only known that the microwave needed a new handle. That night, Barry met with the Jacksons to discuss the inspection report. Mr. Jackson testified that during the meeting, Barry said he thought the agreed price was too high and that the Jacksons would be “making too much profit.” The next day, however, the parties’ realtor called to say Barry “was going to proceed to buy [their] house,” so the Jack-sons let the option period run on the Pebble Garden house, intending to close that contract the same day they closed with Barry on their house. On July 25, one day [138]*138after the Jacksons’ option period expired, Barry called to tell the Jacksons that he was not going to buy the house. The Jacksons were forced to cancel their contract on the Pebble Garden house, losing their escrow money, option-period fee, and inspection fee.

After Barry backed out of the contract, the Jacksons put their house back on the market, listing it for sale by owner for $869,900 until mid-November 2002, at which time they discovered their dishwasher was leaking. They took the house off the market, replaced the dishwasher, and removed the hardwood flooring in the kitchen, replacing it with tile. They put the house back on the market in late May 2003, first listing it for sale by owner, and then contracting with a different realtor to list the house in July 2003. In late September 2003, they contracted to sell the house for $339,000; the contract closed in late October 2003.2 The Jacksons’ realtor at the time of the sale testified that $339,000 was “probably pretty close” to the property’s fair market value at the time the sale closed. The Jacksons sued Barry, seeking to recover damages for his breach.3 In their amended petition, the Jacksons sought the following damages that they alleged were the result of Barry’s breach: lost earnest money, option money, and inspection fees on the Pebble Garden house; $31,000 for the difference in the contract prices; and various consequential damages as a result of Barry not closing his contract as agreed. The Jack-sons did not seek Barry’s $3,000 in earnest money as an alternative remedy.

In a letter to the parties after the bench trial, the trial court stated that it was ruling in favor of the Jacksons, acknowledging that the proper measure of damages was the difference between the contract price and the market value of the property on the date of the breach.4 The court also observed that “the market value is fixed by the actual resale price if it is a fair resale (open market) within a reasonable time after the breach.” The court concluded that because the house was listed for a number of months at the original $370,000 contract price but that no offers were made until the final sale for $339,000, “the best evidence of the market value on the date of the breach is the resale price.” The court stated, “The difference between the contract price and the resale price is $46,965. This is a windfall profit for the Jacksons, but, under the law, it is the benefit of their bargain with Mr. Barry,” concluding that the Jacksons should recover $46,965,5 plus $3,889 for out-of-pocket [139]*139damages and $24,590 in attorney’s fees. The court later entered findings of fact and conclusions of law finding that the parties contracted for Barry to buy the Jacksons’ house for $370,000; that the Jacksons paid $3,500 in earnest money and $389 in inspection fees for the Pebble Garden house and then lost the earnest money when they were forced to default on the contract; that the Jacksons eventually sold their house for $339,000 and that the contract required them to pay $15,965 more than did their contract with Barry. The court concluded that the Jacksons had incurred $46,965 in actual damages, $3,889 in additional out-of-pocket damages, and $23,165 in reasonable and necessary attorney’s fees.

Discussion

On appeal, Barry contends that (1) the Jacksons elected a contractual remedy that bars them from receiving damages, (2) there was insufficient evidence of the property’s market value to support the trial court’s damages award, and (3) because the damages award was improper, the award of attorney’s fees should be reversed. Because we agree that the evidence is legally insufficient to establish the market value of the Jacksons’ property at the time of Barry’s breach, we hold that the Jacksons failed to prove that they were entitled to the $46,965 awarded by the trial court.6

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Barry v. Jackson
309 S.W.3d 135 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
309 S.W.3d 135, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 1958, 2010 WL 985202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barry-v-jackson-texapp-2010.