CSL Property Management Co. and Greatland Investments, Inc. v. Thyssenkrupp Elevator

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 31, 2013
Docket01-11-00665-CV
StatusPublished

This text of CSL Property Management Co. and Greatland Investments, Inc. v. Thyssenkrupp Elevator (CSL Property Management Co. and Greatland Investments, Inc. v. Thyssenkrupp Elevator) 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
CSL Property Management Co. and Greatland Investments, Inc. v. Thyssenkrupp Elevator, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion issued January 31, 2013.

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-11-00665-CV ——————————— CSL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT CO. AND GREATLAND INVESTMENTS, INC., Appellants V. THYSSENKRUPP ELEVATOR COMPANY, Appellee

On Appeal from the 11th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2009-75846

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is a dispute between an elevator contractor and the manager and owner

of a building over the work performed and payments owed under the parties’

contracts. CSL Property Management Co. and Greatland Investments, Inc. appeal from the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of ThyssenKrupp Elevator

Company. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Background

Greatland owns the Sterling Center, a commercial building managed by

CSL. Hurricane Ike caused damage to the Sterling Center, including its elevator.

Greatland hired Emergency Services 24, Inc. to repair the building, and Emergency

Services subcontracted the elevator work to ThyssenKrupp. The subcontract

provided for upfront payment of 30% of the contract price ($31,393.50), with the

remainder of the contract price (originally $96,558) to be paid later. Emergency

Services paid ThyssenKrupp the $31,393.50 initial payment on a credit card in the

name of Micah Bass, Emergency Services’ owner. After receiving the initial

payment, ThyssenKrupp started work on the elevator. Emergency Services

subsequently had a dispute with Greatland and left the project in December 2008.

After Emergency Services left the project, CSL requested that

ThyssenKrupp remain on the job. CSL and ThyssenKrupp executed a change order

that adjusted ThyssenKrupp’s compensation under the elevator subcontract from

$96,558 to $92,269. At ThyssenKrupp’s request, CSL also sent ThyssenKrupp a

letter, signed by CSL’s president, in which CSL “hereby assum[ed] all terms,

conditions, and obligations of the elevator modernization contract previously held

2 by Emergency Services 24, Inc.” In the letter, CSL stated, “ThyssenKrupp will

retain the $31,393.50 as initial payment toward the contract price.”

In January 2009, Bass and Emergency Services disputed the $31,393.50

credit card payment to ThyssenKrupp.

In March, CSL and ThyssenKrupp executed an assumption agreement, under

which CSL assumed Emergency Services’ rights and obligations under the

subcontract. In the assumption agreement, CSL and ThyssenKrupp modified the

subcontract’s price provision to provide for compensation in the amount of

$60,875.50 (the modified contract price of $92,269 less the initial payment of

$31,293.50 from Emergency Services). The assumption agreement also contained

an indemnity provision:

3.4 Indemnification

In addition to the indemnification provision of the Subcontract CSL further agrees to defend, indemnify and hold harmless ThyssenKrupp, its parents, subsidiaries, affiliates, employees, subcontractors, insurers, attorneys, and agents, from any and all claims, demands, suits, and/or proceedings brought or made by [Emergency Services], or any of their parents, subsidiaries, affiliates, employees, subcontractors, insurers, attorneys, and agents arising out of or related to this Assumption Agreement, the Subcontract, ThyssenKrupp Elevator’s retention of the Initial Payment and ThyssenKrupp’s performance pursuant to the Subcontract from February 20, 2009 forward, excluding any claim(s) by [Emergency Services] for improper Elevator Work provided by ThyssenKrupp pursuant to the Subcontract, prior to February 20, 2009. . . .

3 An early draft of the agreement included an “additional compensation”

provision stating, “As consideration for entering into this Assumption Agreement

and in the event that ThyssenKrupp is required to return the $31,293.50 to

[Emergency Services], CSL shall compensate ThyssenKrupp for the full contract

value: $92,269.” This provision was rejected by CSL and not included in the final

written agreement. The parties assert that they were not aware that Bass had

disputed the $31,293.50 payment with his credit card company at the time they

executed the assumption agreement.

In June, Bass’s credit card company charged-back the $31,393.50 payment

to ThyssenKrupp. ThyssenKrupp appealed the chargeback with the credit card

company but lost due to a lack of documentation of the transaction.1 After the

chargeback became final, Greatland sued Bass and Emergency Services seeking to

recover the $31,393.50 payment. In the lawsuit, Greatland alleged that Bass and

Emergency Services “rushed to Houston” from Florida in the wake of Hurricane

Ike and “targeted Hurricane Ike victims who were property owners,” particularly

“business owners in Houston’s local Vietnamese community,” by “promising to

make emergency repairs at no cost” and by obtaining insurance proceeds for the

repairs, which Bass and Emergency Services never intended to complete. With

1 Both parties blame the other party for failing to adequately document Emergency Services’ role in the project.

4 respect to the subject matter of this lawsuit, Greatland alleged that Bass and

Emergency Services had obtained insurance proceeds from Greatland’s insurer to

cover the $31,393.50 payment to ThyssenKrupp and had retained the insurance

proceeds despite having secured a chargeback of the payment. The court ultimately

dismissed that suit by agreement of the parties to the suit.

In August, ThyssenKrupp demanded that CSL reimburse the $31,393.50

chargeback pursuant to the indemnity provision in the assumption agreement. CSL

disputed any indemnity obligation and also did not pay ThyssenKrupp the

$60,875.50 balance owed under the subcontract for ThyssenKrupp’s elevator work.

ThyssenKrupp initiated this suit in November 2009 to recover both

indemnification for the $31,393.50 initial payment and payment of the $60,875.50

for the elevator work performed. CSL and Greatland filed counterclaims and

“cross-claims” against ThyssenKrupp asserting that ThyssenKrupp had failed to

deliver functioning elevators. According to ThyssenKrupp, the elevators were

completed but not turned on due to CSL’s nonpayment. A few months after

ThyssenKrupp filed suit, CSL sent ThyssenKrupp a check for $60,875.50 but

labeled the check, “Final payment in complete satisfaction of assumption of the

subcontract agreement.” ThyssenKrupp returned the check to CSL’s attorneys.

5 Shortly before trial, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment.2

The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of ThyssenKrupp on all of its

claims, awarding ThyssenKrupp $92,269 on its claims against CSL, plus attorneys’

fees and interest, and entering a take-nothing judgment on CSL’s and Greatland’s

claims against ThyssenKrupp. This appeal followed.

ThyssenKrupp’s Claims

CSL’s and Greatland’s first three issues challenge the trial court’s judgment

in favor of ThyssenKrupp on its claims against CSL. ThyssenKrupp sought and

obtained summary judgment against CSL on its claims for breach of contract and

suit on verified account, each of which sought recovery of damages in the amount

of $92,269—the full contract price, including reimbursement for the initial

payment. The trial court granted ThyssenKrupp’s summary judgment motion and

awarded ThyssenKrupp $92,269 in damages.

A. Standard of review

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CSL Property Management Co. and Greatland Investments, Inc. v. Thyssenkrupp Elevator, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/csl-property-management-co-and-greatland-investmen-texapp-2013.