G. J. Palmer, Jr., Individually and as Managing Partner on Behalf of Queen Isabella Development Joint Venture and Queen Isabella Development Joint Venture and 1629 Service Corporation v. Espey Huston & Associates, Inc., Max Burkhart, Mba Architecture Group, Michael J. Blum, and Valcon, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 1, 2002
Docket13-98-00562-CV
StatusPublished

This text of G. J. Palmer, Jr., Individually and as Managing Partner on Behalf of Queen Isabella Development Joint Venture and Queen Isabella Development Joint Venture and 1629 Service Corporation v. Espey Huston & Associates, Inc., Max Burkhart, Mba Architecture Group, Michael J. Blum, and Valcon, Inc. (G. J. Palmer, Jr., Individually and as Managing Partner on Behalf of Queen Isabella Development Joint Venture and Queen Isabella Development Joint Venture and 1629 Service Corporation v. Espey Huston & Associates, Inc., Max Burkhart, Mba Architecture Group, Michael J. Blum, and Valcon, 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
G. J. Palmer, Jr., Individually and as Managing Partner on Behalf of Queen Isabella Development Joint Venture and Queen Isabella Development Joint Venture and 1629 Service Corporation v. Espey Huston & Associates, Inc., Max Burkhart, Mba Architecture Group, Michael J. Blum, and Valcon, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

                                   NUMBER 13-98-562-CV

                             COURT OF APPEALS

                   THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                CORPUS CHRISTI

___________________________________________________________________

G. J. PALMER, JR., INDIVIDUALLY AND AS

MANAGING PARTNER ON BEHALF OF QUEEN

ISABELLA DEVELOPMENT JOINT VENTURE

AND QUEEN ISABELLA DEVELOPMENT JOINT

VENTURE AND 1629 SERVICE CORPORATION,                      Appellants,

                                                   v.

ESPEY HUSTON & ASSOCIATES, INC.,

MAX BURKHART, MBA ARCHITECTURE GROUP,

MICHAEL J. BLUM, AND VALCON, INC.,                                Appellees.

___________________________________________________________________

                         On appeal from the 92nd District Court

                                  of Hidalgo County, Texas.

__________________________________________________________________

                                   O P I N I O N

                    Before Justices Dorsey, Yañez, and Rodriguez

                                Opinion by Justice Rodriguez


Appellants, G.J. Palmer, Jr., individually and as managing partner on behalf of Queen Isabella Development Joint Venture and Queen Isabella Development Joint Venture and 1629 Service Corp., appeal from directed verdicts granting take nothing judgments in favor of appellees, Max Burkhart, MBA Architecture Group (MBA),[1] Michael J. Blum, Valcon, Inc.,[2] and Espey Huston & Associates, Inc.  By six points of error, appellants complain that (1) the record is neither complete nor proper for this appeal, and (2) the trial court erred in granting appellees= motions for directed verdict, and in excluding evidence.  We affirm.

                                                    I.  Background

This case involves the development of a marina in the Laguna Madre at Port Isabel, Texas.  Queen Isabella Development Joint Venture (QID) hired MBA, an architectural, engineering and planning firm, to assist with the development of the marina.  MBA worked on the planning and design phase of the project, including the design of a breakwater to create an artificial harbor by forming a barrier between waters outside the harbor and the interior of the marina. 


MBA hired Espey Huston, an engineering firm, to (1) assist in handling permit applications with the Army Corps of Engineers; (2) conduct a bathymetric study;[3] (3) conduct a wave-attenuation or Awave-climate@ study;[4] and (4) later, perform a written analysis of four different types of generic breakwaters, and how they typically would react to the wave-climate/attenuation study.  Espey Huston=s final report was completed in February 1985. 

Because MBA did not provide in-house structural engineering services, it sub-contracted this work to Donald Dragutsky,[5] a licensed civil engineer.  Prior to the completion of the breakwater design, MBA withdrew from the project.  Thereafter, Dragutsky contracted with appellants, and modified the design prepared by Espey Huston.  Dragutsky=s design was a variation on a timber-wall breakwater depicted in Espey Huston=s February 1985 report.  Bellingham Marine constructed the breakwater.  After construction was complete, a series of storms with prevailing northerly winds generated waves which overtopped or went under the breakwater and caused damage to the docks and boats inside the marina.


In 1988, appellants sued appellees for breach of contract, negligence, breach of warranty, strict liability, and violations of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Act (DTPA).[6]  Nine years later, in October 1997, the case went to trial.  After appellants= case-in-chief, the trial court found Athere [was] no evidence of probative force to support a recovery for Plaintiffs or to submit the case to a jury,@ and granted all appellees= motions for directed verdict.

II.

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G. J. Palmer, Jr., Individually and as Managing Partner on Behalf of Queen Isabella Development Joint Venture and Queen Isabella Development Joint Venture and 1629 Service Corporation v. Espey Huston & Associates, Inc., Max Burkhart, Mba Architecture Group, Michael J. Blum, and Valcon, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-j-palmer-jr-individually-and-as-managing-partner-on-behalf-of-queen-texapp-2002.