F.T. James Construction, Inc. v. Hotel Sancho Panza, LLC and Jordan Foster Construction, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 28, 2022
Docket08-20-00096-CV
StatusPublished

This text of F.T. James Construction, Inc. v. Hotel Sancho Panza, LLC and Jordan Foster Construction, LLC (F.T. James Construction, Inc. v. Hotel Sancho Panza, LLC and Jordan Foster Construction, LLC) 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
F.T. James Construction, Inc. v. Hotel Sancho Panza, LLC and Jordan Foster Construction, LLC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

F.T. JAMES CONSTRUCTION, INC., § No. 08-20-00096-CV Appellant, § Appeal from the v. § 210th District Court HOTEL SANCHO PANZA, LLC, and § JORDAN FOSTER CONSTRUCTION, of El Paso County, Texas LLC., § (TC# 2019-DCV-0505) Appellees. §

OPINION

Appellee Hotel Sancho Panza, LLC (the Hotel) filed suit against F.T. James Construction,

Inc. (FTJC) over delays in the construction of the Courtyard Marriott Downtown/Convention

Center hotel and meeting space in downtown El Paso. FTJC answered the lawsuit, made

counterclaims against the Hotel, and initiated a third-party claim against one of its subcontractors,

Jordan Foster Construction Inc. (Jordan Foster). In turn, Jordan Foster filed a counterclaim against

FTJC, and subsequently, a third-party petition against the Hotel.

Just shy of one year after the Hotel initiated this lawsuit, FTJC moved to compel arbitration

and abate the case, pursuant to what it views as a valid and enforceable arbitration clause in the

contract between it and the Hotel. The trial court denied FTJC’s motion to compel arbitration and this interlocutory appeal followed. FTJC asks this Court to reverse the trial court’s denial of its

motion. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

The Project

The Hotel hired FTJC to construct a Courtyard Marriott hotel and meeting space in

downtown El Paso (the Project). The contract between the parties was entered on May 21, 2016.

Among its terms, the contract provided for substantial completion of the Project within 420 days

after commencement, and 30 days more for final completion. That timeline meant expected

completion was by August 2017. The Project, however, was not completed within the time period

called for in the contract. In the underlying suit, the parties dispute the cause of the delay. FTJC

claims the delay resulted from multiple change orders submitted by the Hotel. Countering that

argument, the Hotel claims delays resulted from “FTJC’s failure to timely order materials, failure

to properly process and approve change orders, and failure to schedule roof work.” Provisions of

the contract for the Project are relevant to this dispute.

The Contract

The agreement between the parties was titled “Cost of the Work Plus a Fee with a

Negotiated Guaranteed Maximum Price Construction Agreement between Owner and Builder.”

The architect on the Project was identified on the first page of the agreement as being Mitchell

Carlson Stone, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as MCS or the Architect). The second page of that

agreement listed eight documents that, together with the agreement itself, constituted the “Contract

Documents.” The first document listed was titled, “AIA Document A201-1997 edition of the

General Conditions of the Contract for Construction,” published by the American Institute of

Architects.

2 Several of the provisions in Document A201-1997 describe a multi-step dispute resolution

process included within the parties’ agreement. The first of these provisions defined the term

“claim” as “a demand or assertion by one of the parties seeking, as a matter of right, adjustment

or interpretation of Contract terms, payment of money, extension of time or other relief with

respect to the terms of the Contract.” Also included in the definition of the term “claim” is “other

disputes and matters in question between the Owner and Contractor arising out of or relating to

the Contract.” Claims, as that term is defined, were to be initiated by written notice to the Architect

and the other party. Also, it must have been “initiated within 21 days after occurrence of the event

giving rise to such Claim or within 21 days after the claimant first recognizes the condition giving

rise to the Claim, whichever is later.

Claims were to be referred initially to the Architect for decision. After the Architect’s initial

decision, or thirty days after the submission of the claim to the Architect if no decision was made,

claims were then subject to mediation as a condition precedent to arbitration or the initiation of

legal or equitable proceedings. Claims not resolved by mediation were then subject to arbitration.

A demand for arbitration was to be made within a reasonable time after any claim had arisen.

Claims by the Hotel, FTJC, and Jordan Foster

On February 6, 2019, the Hotel initiated litigation by filing its original petition against

FTJC. The Hotel’s petition alleged that the Project was not completed on time due to a number of

failures by FTJC. It also alleged that the Project suffered serious concrete defects, among other

deficiencies claimed. On March 11, 2019, FTJC filed its original answer and a counterclaim

against the Hotel, along with a third-party claim for breach of contract against Jordan Foster, a

concrete subcontractor on the Project. Against the Hotel, FTJC asserted a claim of breach of

3 contract, seeking to foreclose on a mechanic’s lien in the amount of $1,900,000.1 As for the third-

party claim against Jordan Foster, FTJC also asserted a breach of contract claim against it, and

sought indemnification in the event the Hotel established there were concrete deficiencies on the

Project. With its answer to FTJC’s third-party claim, Jordan Foster, in turn, filed a counterclaim

against FTJC for breach of contract and quantum meruit. Months later, Jordan Foster filed a third-

party petition against the Hotel also seeking to foreclose on a mechanic’s lien. The Hotel answered

Jordan Foster’s claim and filed its own counterclaim against Jordan Foster, alleging the

subcontractor’s lien claim against the Hotel was improper. Responding to the initial discovery

requested by FTJC, Jordan Foster served 53,390 pages of documents on all parties to the lawsuit.

The trial court signed the original scheduling order on May 8, 2019, initially setting the case for

trial on June 5, 2020. On August 1, 2019, the Hotel served its first set of requests for admissions

to FTJC.

Jordan Foster and FTJC’s Arbitration Demands

FTJC first demanded arbitration in a letter to counsel for the Hotel, dated September 23,

2019. The letter said, “F.T. James Construction, Inc. hereby demands arbitration pursuant to the

Arbitration Clause contained in the General Conditions.” On September 25, 2019, the Hotel

conducted two depositions solely on the issue of arbitration. The first deposition was of Francisco

Licon, a project manager for third-party defendant Jordan Foster. The second deposition was of

Frank James, the owner of FTJC. During Frank James’ deposition, he testified that he did not know

whether FTJC was making a demand for arbitration; that he did not know if there was a right to

arbitration in the contract between FTJC and the Hotel; that he did not know if FTJC had a

1 FTJC’s counterclaim lists the amount of the mechanic’s lien as “no less than $1,900,000.00.” In their brief before this Court, it identifies the exact amount of $1,963,584.45.

4 preference that the dispute be resolved in the court system or in arbitration; and that he did not

know of any concern about litigating the dispute in the court system.

On November 11, 2019, Jordan Foster filed an amended motion to compel arbitration.2

The motion included a standard subcontract form agreement, entered June 10, 2016, between

Jordan Foster and FTJC. Jordan Foster’s motion to compel arbitration sought to send the entire

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F.T. James Construction, Inc. v. Hotel Sancho Panza, LLC and Jordan Foster Construction, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ft-james-construction-inc-v-hotel-sancho-panza-llc-and-jordan-foster-texapp-2022.