Eric C. Hixon and Beverly Hixon v. Pedigo Services and K2 Inc. D/B/A Simplex Products and Tyco International D/B/A Simplex Products

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 21, 2011
Docket01-08-00550-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Eric C. Hixon and Beverly Hixon v. Pedigo Services and K2 Inc. D/B/A Simplex Products and Tyco International D/B/A Simplex Products (Eric C. Hixon and Beverly Hixon v. Pedigo Services and K2 Inc. D/B/A Simplex Products and Tyco International D/B/A Simplex Products) 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
Eric C. Hixon and Beverly Hixon v. Pedigo Services and K2 Inc. D/B/A Simplex Products and Tyco International D/B/A Simplex Products, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 21, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

NO. 01-08-00550-CV

Eric and Beverly Hixon, Appellants

V.

Tyco International, Ltd. d/b/a Simplex Products, K2, Inc. d/b/a Simplex Products, and Pedigo Services, Inc., Appellees

On Appeal from the 152nd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 2001-62472

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is the second appeal arising from this residential construction-defect dispute.  This Court previously affirmed summary judgment as to several of the plaintiffs’ claims as limitations barred.  Hixon v. Tyco Int’l, Ltd, No. 01-04-01109-CV, 2006 WL 3095326, at *10 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Oct. 31, 2006, no pet.).  We reversed and remanded, however, the portion of the trial court’s summary judgment resolving claims that were not addressed in the defendants’ motions for summary judgment.  Id. at *13.  The trial court then granted summary judgment as to both the remanded claims and some additional claims brought by the plaintiffs following remand.  The plaintiffs again appealed.  Because the trial court’s summary judgments did not address all pending claims against all remaining defendants, the Court abated this appeal to allow the trial court to consider the plaintiffs’ motion to sever claims against certain defendants.  The trial court has now granted that motion to sever, rendering the summary judgment judgments that are the subject of this appeal final and appealable.

We affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment on the Hixons’ breach-of-contract and fraud-by-nondisclosure claims against defendants Pedigo Services, Inc., Tyco International Ltd. d/b/a Simplex Products, and K2, Inc. d/b/a Simplex Products.  We reverse and remand the trial court’s summary judgment on the Hixons’ (1) breach-of-warranty and negligent undertaking claims against Pedigo, Tyco and K2, and (2) strict tort product liability, negligent product design and negligent distribution claims against Tyco and K2.  We also remand to the trial court the Hixons’ claim that their suit against K2 relates back to the filing of their suit against Tyco under misnomer and misidentification theories for consideration by that court in the first instance, if necessary, on a more developed record.     

Background

In 1994, plaintiffs Eric and Beverly Hixon hired Ausmus Homes, Inc. to build a house.  The house was designed to have exterior walls covered in artificial stucco, referred to as “EIFS cladding” or “Finestone,” that was manufactured by defendant K2, Inc.[1]  Ausmus hired defendant Arturo Perez to install the EIFS cladding and hired defendant Pedigo Services, Inc. to install the roof.     

Leaks attributable to either the roof or the EIFS cladding caused water to seep into the house beginning in 1995.  The leaks dramatically worsened in mid-1997, resulting in separation of the EIFS cladding from the house on the East side, as well as rotted studs and plywood sheathing on that same side.  Pedigo and either K2 or Tyco repaired these problems in 1998 and 1999.  Pedigo also contracted for defendant Martin Spears d/b/a MLS Services to perform demolition and repair of the EIFS system on the Hixons’ home in 1999. 

According to the Hixons, at that time a K2 representative told them that there were no additional problems.  In February and March 2000, new leaks occurred in areas of the house that had not previously leaked.  Pedigo attempted several repairs, unsuccessfully, and then refused to perform any additional repairs. 

A.   Prior Proceedings

A 2001 engineering report commissioned by the Hixons identified several defects related to the installation of the roof and the EIFS cladding.  The Hixons sued Tyco, Pedigo, Perez, and Martin Spears on December 1, 2001, and added claims against Tyco on June 28, 2002.  The Hixons contended that all the defendants were negligent in several respects.  Theories of liability against Pedigo included negligent performance of an undertaking, breach of common law express and implied warranties under the Deceptive Trade Practices-Consumer Protection Act (DTPA), fraudulent concealment of defects under the DTPA, and violations of the Residential Construction Liability Act.  Theories against Tyco and K2 included product liability, strict tort liability, negligent product design, negligent product distribution, breach of implied and express warranties, common law misrepresentation, and misrepresentation and fraud under the DTPA.   

Pedigo, Tyco and K2 filed motions for summary judgment in 2002 and 2004, which were granted by the trial court in 2004.  The trial court severed the claims against those three defendants, rendering the summary judgments final.  The Hixons appealed, challenging the trial court’s determination that their claims were time barred. 

On appeal, this Court held the “summary judgment evidence compels the following conclusions: (1) the Hixons knew, that is, discovered, in mid-1997, that there were significant water-leakage problems with the house; and (2) the knowledge they acquired was sufficient, as a matter of law, to end the application of the discovery rule and to constitute knowledge of potential claims.  2006 WL 3095326, at *7.  Accordingly, we concluded that “application of the discovery rule ended for the Hixons in mid-1997, thus triggering all applicable statutes of limitations,” such that “the two-year statute of limitations expired in mid-1999 and the four-year statute of limitations expired in mid-2001.”  2006 WL 3095326, at *10. 

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Eric C. Hixon and Beverly Hixon v. Pedigo Services and K2 Inc. D/B/A Simplex Products and Tyco International D/B/A Simplex Products, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eric-c-hixon-and-beverly-hixon-v-pedigo-services-a-texapp-2011.