Daniel R. Roubein and Wife, Toiee Roubein v. Marino Home Builders, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 1, 2002
Docket13-01-00711-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Daniel R. Roubein and Wife, Toiee Roubein v. Marino Home Builders, Inc. (Daniel R. Roubein and Wife, Toiee Roubein v. Marino Home Builders, 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
Daniel R. Roubein and Wife, Toiee Roubein v. Marino Home Builders, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

                                   NUMBER 13-01-711-CV

                             COURT OF APPEALS

                   THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                CORPUS CHRISTI

___________________________________________________________________

DANIEL R. ROUBEIN AND WIFE, TOIEE ROUBEIN,                   Appellants,

                                                   v.

MARINO HOME BUILDERS, INC.,                                             Appellee.

___________________________________________________________________

                        On appeal from the 136th District Court

                                of Jefferson County, Texas.

__________________________________________________________________

                                   O P I N I O N

                      Before Justices Dorsey, Yañez, and Wittig[1]

                                   Opinion by Justice Wittig


Daniel R. Roubein and wife, Topee Roubein, appellants, were dissatisfied first, with their homebuilder over construction defects, and now with the trial judge=s rulings.  The trial court received the case on written submission, pursuant to a partial mediated settlement.  In the mediated settlement, the damages were agreed as well as the method of trial disposition of the claims.  The mediated settlement agreement was also made a Rule 11 agreement, enforceable by the parties and the court.  All parties agreed to certain liquidated amounts of damages in the event the Roubeins prevailed.  The parties disagreed about the applicability of statutes of limitations and other issues under the DTPA, warranty, and Residential Construction Liability Act. The parties presented their Rule 11 stipulations and other disputed matters to the trial court for its determination.  The court awarded $22,500.00, but denied the Roubeins= more substantial claims.

Appellants= bring four issues.  1.  The Roubeins= claims should be governed by the discovery rule, not the applicable statutes of limitations.  2.  The trial court erred by not allowing a trial amendment after the case was submitted to the court.  3.  Statements made by appellee=s president, Victor Marino, constituted an express warranty.  And, 4. appellants refusal to accept  Marino=s settlement offer to rebuild the garage without paying appellants an additional $110,000 or $125,000, was not unreasonable.  We will affirm.

     Background


Appellants bought a house from appellee Marino Home Builders, Inc.[2] in June of 1994.  Within a year, appellants experienced problems with their new home=s air conditioning and roof.  In April 1996, a pool  contractor told Dr. Roubein the wall of the garage was bowing.  Sometime before October 30, 1996, Dr. Roubein notified Marino Home Builders, Inc. about the garage problem.  The original framer was dispatched to stabilize the garage framing with a steel beam.  Victor Marino told Dr. Roubein he believed the garage problem was fixed.  The garage bowed again in September 1999.  And it was (again) determined the bowing of the garage walls was caused by improper framing.  Suit was filed March 21, 2000.

The parties had settlement discussions to solve the problem. Appellants first demanded appellee replace the second story of the garage and pay them $110,000.  Marino Home Builders agreed to replace the second story but would not pay the additional sum for alleged diminished resale value.  Appellants then demanded the entire garage be replaced plus $125,000 for diminished value.  Marino Home Builders agreed to rebuild the garage but refused the additional cash demand.  When the initial negotiations failed, suit was then filed and eventually the case went to mediation, resulting in a partial settlement of some of the issues, plus the agreement to waive a jury, and present the matter to the trial court for trial by written submission.

The trial court initially ruled appellants damage claims to the garage were barred by the two year statute of limitations but also requested additional briefing.  Appellants then requested a trial amendment to add new specific claims for implied warranties.  This request was denied by the trial court.


The trial court, at the request of appellants, made findings of fact and conclusions of law.   The pertinent findings included: 1.  The garage was defectively constructed, but appellants did not file suit within two years of the accrual of that cause of action;  2.  The defects were not inherently undiscoverable; 3. Victor Marino advised appellants he believed he fixed the garage problems; 4.  Marino=s statement was not an express warranty; 5.   Appellants plead no viable implied warranty theory; 6. 

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Daniel R. Roubein and Wife, Toiee Roubein v. Marino Home Builders, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-r-roubein-and-wife-toiee-roubein-v-marino-h-texapp-2002.