Darling Homes of Texas, LLC v. Wade H. Khoury

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 13, 2021
Docket01-20-00395-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Darling Homes of Texas, LLC v. Wade H. Khoury (Darling Homes of Texas, LLC v. Wade H. Khoury) 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
Darling Homes of Texas, LLC v. Wade H. Khoury, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 13, 2021

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-20-00395-CV ——————————— DARLING HOMES OF TEXAS, LLC, Appellant V. WADE & ALMA KHOURY; EARL & ROSE MCDONALD; MATTHEW & SANDRA NOVAK; JOHN & PENELOPE TIBBS; J. TIBBS FAMILY TRUST; KENNETH & KAREN BECK; ROY & PEGGY SLAY; DAVID & KATHLEEN ODORIZZI; BERNARD & JEANNIE OTTEN; CESAR GOMEZ & MARIA FLOTA; DEAN & KAREN CORBETT; JERE & TAMARA BRUBAKER; DARLENE DYMOND; JOHN & ELIZABETH WADELLA; MICHAEL & TAMI GIOVINAZZO; SALLY GRIFFIN, EDWARD WOLF & JENNIFER LAHTI; PAUL & DENICE MARSTON; TOMMY & REBECCA DRAKE; WALTER & EILEEN FENTON; KENT & JENNIFER TAROU; PENNY PRATER; THOMAS & LISA WOJAHN; JERRY WEBB; DEBRA WHITLA; JOAN FLOWERS; DAVID WILIAMS; LENWOOD & DONNA BORDELON; CHRIS & ELISABETH STAVINOHA; THOMAS & PAULETTE BARLOW; PATRICK & KAY HOLUB; EDWARD & DIANE STOWE; DAVID JUPP; JAMES & LAUREN SEAMANS; HAYWARD & NANCY KELLEY; TIMOTHY & IKYE SERRANO; RANDY & MICHELLE MOORMAN; TIMOTHY & MARY VAN OOST; LUIS & LILIANA CORDOBA; JEFF & MARGARET MOSS; DEAN & BRIDGET FANGUY; MARTIN & GEORGETTE BENSON; JOSEPH MCGAUGH; CHERYL HARLAND; TORSTEN & JANA SCHMIDT; MORRIS & BARBARA REINISCH; FRANK & VALERIE GORE; DONALD & ELIZABETH HICKEY; THOMAS & JETTE BOEHME; JAMES & GAYLE SOEDER; KENWORTHY PAUL & LISA BOMGAARS; KEITH & SANDRA WINTERS; DREW & DONNA GOODBREAD; STEVE & DIANE CALKINS; JIMMY & DEBRA CRANE; STEPHEN & FRANCES CAPPS; GREG & BETH FOLKS; WENDELL & PHYLLIS CLEAVER; CHARLES & BONNIE MART; ROBERT CAPPADONA; ROBERT & MARCELLA MCCARTHY, MICHAEL & JESSICA RICHEY; JOE & DOROTHY MCADAMS; ALEX & JANETTE IRVINE; JAMES & MAUREEN DIEMER; DAVID & BRENDA KANDT; STEVEN RESNICK & JENNIFER MCCREADY-RESNICK; GLENN & MARGARET MCMILLEN; JOSEPH & SANDRA LOCKE; LAWRENCE & SUSAN DIO; MICHAEL & DONNA JONES; RICHARD & NANCY ROACH; LARRY & CAROLYN WARD; DEEPESH & NANDINI KAUSHISH; TIMOTHY & SUSAN DIXON; DEBRA KING; HECTOR GUIZAR-BLANCO & CARMEN MUNOZ-DIEGO; PAUL PEDLAR & SUZANNE HART; DAVID MA & VI NGUYEN; RAUL & ANNA GIORGI; ARCHIE GREGORY; SAUL SELLINGER; AND DENISE SELLINGER, Appellees

On Appeal from the 152nd District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2019-57183

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Darling Homes of Texas, LLC appeals from the trial court’s interlocutory

order denying its motion to compel arbitration. The appellees, owners of homes built

by Darling Homes, contend that the houses had construction defects that they

discovered after flooding from Hurricane Harvey. They opposed the motion to

compel arbitration based on procedural and substantive unconscionability.

2 We reverse the trial court’s order denying the motion to compel arbitration

and remand to the trial court.

BACKGROUND

The appellees (the “homeowners”) all own houses built by Darling Homes in

The Woodlands Creekside West community in Harris County, Texas. All of the

houses were built pursuant to one of two types of purchase agreements, both of

which include an arbitration clause, referred to as the “Type 1” arbitration agreement

and the “Type 2” arbitration agreement. The language of the arbitration agreements

is similar but not identical.

All homeowners have alleged that that they were informed that their houses

were not in a 100-year floodplain and flood insurance was not required. In addition,

all homeowners have alleged that, when purchasing their houses, they relied on

Darling Homes’s representations that each house would be built at an elevation that

would minimize the risk of flooding. All of the homeowners’ houses flooded in

response to Hurricane Harvey, and the homeowners discovered that their houses had

not been built to the proper minimum slab elevation that would minimize the risk of

flooding.

The homeowners made demand on Darling Homes for claims arising from the

flooding and informed Darling Homes of their intent to file suit. Believing that the

homeowners intended to violate the arbitration agreements incorporated into their

3 contracts, Darling Homes filed an application to compel arbitration under the Texas

General Arbitration Act (“TAA”). See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE §§ 171.001–

.098. After the homeowners filed suit, the trial court consolidated Darling Homes’s

application to compel arbitration with their lawsuit.

The homeowners objected to Darling Homes’s application for arbitration.

First, they argued that the contracts that Darling Homes attached to its application

for arbitration were not properly authenticated. Second, they argued that the

arbitration agreements were procedurally unconscionable because Darling Homes

fraudulently induced them to enter into the purchase agreements in which the

arbitration agreements were embedded. Third, they argued that the arbitration

agreements were substantively unconscionable because most of the arbitration

agreements required arbitration pursuant to construction industry rules and

procedures of the American Arbitration Association (“AAA”). The homeowners

maintained that under those rules they would owe an initial filing fee of $7,000,

which is excessive compared to the filing fee for a lawsuit. They also asserted that

the disparity in the parties’ ability to pay arbitration fees was unfair to them and they

could not “afford to pursue their claims through AAA arbitration.”

Darling Homes responded by refiling all of the contracts that included the

arbitration provision along with a business records affidavit. Darling Homes argued

that the homeowners failed to support their unconscionability defenses with

4 evidence, including evidence that arbitration was unfairly expensive. In addition, it

argued that allegations of fraudulent inducement to enter the purchase agreements

would not render the embedded arbitration agreements unenforceable.

Before the trial court ruled on Darling Homes’s application for arbitration, the

homeowners filed supplemental objections. They argued that the Type 1 arbitration

agreement is substantively unconscionable because it provides for arbitration to be

conducted pursuant to the AAA Construction Industry Arbitration Rules, which the

homeowners contend are unfairly biased in favor of Darling Homes. The

homeowners further argued that the Type 1 arbitration agreement is unconscionable

because it did not expressly inform them that they were waiving their rights to

litigate disputes in court. The homeowners attached as evidence: (1) their original

petition; (2) the Construction Industry Arbitration Rules; (3) the AAA administrative

fee schedules; and (4) examples of the Type 1 and Type 2 purchase agreements. In

addition, and without argument or explanation, the homeowners mentioned that the

“Type 2” arbitration agreement gave Darling Homes sole discretion to determine

whether to proceed pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”) or the TAA.

Darling Homes urged the trial court to disregard the homeowners’

supplemental objections and to order the parties to arbitrate for the reasons it had

previously argued. The trial court denied the application for arbitration, and Darling

Homes filed this interlocutory appeal.

5 ANALYSIS

Darling Homes raises a single issue on appeal, arguing that the trial court erred

by denying its application for arbitration. Included in this single issue, Darling

Homes argues that it proved that the homeowners’ claims arise from the purchase

contracts and are within the scope of the arbitration agreements embedded in those

contracts.

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