G. R. Auto Care, Radita Gheorghe, and Laurentio Gheorghe v. .Proem Design-Build, Inc., Jake Emery, and Keith Messick

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 28, 2018
Docket01-17-00243-CV
StatusPublished

This text of G. R. Auto Care, Radita Gheorghe, and Laurentio Gheorghe v. .Proem Design-Build, Inc., Jake Emery, and Keith Messick (G. R. Auto Care, Radita Gheorghe, and Laurentio Gheorghe v. .Proem Design-Build, Inc., Jake Emery, and Keith Messick) 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.

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G. R. Auto Care, Radita Gheorghe, and Laurentio Gheorghe v. .Proem Design-Build, Inc., Jake Emery, and Keith Messick, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 28, 2018

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-17-00068-CV ——————————— G.R. AUTO CARE, RADITA GHEORGHE, AND LAURENTIO GHEORGHE, Appellants V. NCI GROUP, INC. D/B/A MID-WEST STEEL BUILDING CO., Appellee

On Appeal from the 190th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2015-35904A

and ———————————— NO. 01-17-00243-CV ——————————— G.R. AUTO CARE, RADITA GHEORGHE, AND LAURENTIO GHEORGHE, Appellants V. PROEM DESIGN-BUILD, INC., JAKE EMERY, AND KEITH MESSICK, Appellees

On Appeal from the 190th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2015-35904C

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This construction dispute arose after the architect and subcontractors who

built a commercial building made design modifications during construction in early

2011, due to improperly sized steel components. The building’s owners expressed

dissatisfaction with the modifications when they were made. In the summer of 2012,

the building sustained water and rust damage from leaks.

Attempts to repair the building were unsuccessful. In June 2015, G.R. Auto

Care and its owners, Radita and Laurentio (Larry) Gheorghe, sued the steel

component provider, NCI Group, Inc. d/b/a Mid-West Steel Building Co. (“Mid-

West”), and other subcontractors, together with the architect, Proem Design-Build,

and its owners, Jake Emery and Keith Messick. After the discovery period ended,

2 Mid-West and the Proem parties moved for summary judgment based on the

applicable statute of limitations and on no-evidence grounds. The trial court granted

the motions and severed the proceedings from the main case involving other

defendants.

G.R. Auto challenges the summary judgments granted on its claims against

Mid-West and the Proem parties. G.R. Auto contends that the trial court erred in

granting summary judgment in favor of Mid-West based on the applicable statutes

of limitations. If further contends that it erred in severing the summary judgment in

favor of Mid-West because it was not a final judgment on its claims against Mid-

West.

G.R. Auto challenges the summary judgment granted in favor of the Proem

parties, contending that: (1) the trial court heard the no-evidence motion earlier than

permitted under the court’s docket-control order and before an adequate time for

discovery had passed; (2) the trial court refused to consider G.R. Auto’s summary-

judgment evidence; and (3) the Proem parties’ did not demonstrate that they were

entitled to summary judgment. Finding no error in either judgment, we affirm.

3 BACKGROUND

Building design and construction

In October 2010, G.R. Auto contracted with Proem to design and construct an

automotive repair facility on a site in northeast Houston. Proem contracted with

Mid-West to supply metal building components, which were delivered to the

construction site in January 2011.

Proem designed a two-story facility: the ground floor was planned to be a

carport and automotive repair shop. The second floor was to house the business

offices. The second floor featured an observation deck with a large window looking

over the shop area.

Among other components, Mid-West supplied metal beams. After Mid-West

delivered the beams, Larry Gheorghe discovered that the beams differed in size from

those specified in Proem’s design. Through discussions with Proem about the

discrepancy, G.R. Auto became aware that using the beams as delivered would affect

other aspects of the building’s design: the second-floor ceiling would be higher, and

the first-floor ceiling would be lower. The modifications made to use the

noncompliant beams included relocation of the heating, ventilation, and air

conditioning; a smaller second-floor observation window; and no decorative stone

cladding on the first-floor carport beams.

4 On February 7, 2011, G.R. Auto wrote to Proem, expressing its dissatisfaction

with the “deficiencies of the ceiling height/carport shortage.” Later that month,

Larry Gheorghe also met with a Mid-West representative about the problem.

In his summary judgment affidavit, Larry Gheorghe averred that, in July 2012,

“massive amounts of water” entered through a grout line on the western wall of the

second-floor office. Larry Gheorghe examined the air-conditioning unit’s drainage

lines on the roof. He noticed rust on the metal roofing panels below the drainage

lines. He reported the water intrusion problem to Jake Emery at Proem on July 24,

2012. Proem’s attempts to resolve the problem were unsuccessful, and G.R. Auto

sued Proem, its owners, and its subcontractors, including Mid-West, in June 2015.

Trial court proceedings

After the discovery period ended, Mid-West moved for summary judgment

on G.R. Auto’s claims against them based on the applicable statute of limitations.

The trial court granted Mid-West’s motion in October 2016. G.R. Auto moved for

rehearing and reconsideration of that ruling, and it sought leave to file new evidence.

After the trial court denied G.R. Auto’s motions, Mid-West asked the trial court to

sever the case against it from the main case and enter a final judgment. The trial

court granted the severance.

The Proem parties moved for summary judgment on traditional and no-

evidence grounds. G.R. Auto conferred with Proem to seek postponement of the

5 motion’s hearing date, particularly on the no-evidence grounds. Proem agreed. It

reset the hearing on the traditional summary-judgment grounds and notified the trial

court that it would set the no-evidence grounds for hearing on a later date. The trial

court heard the motion in late October 2016.

G.R. Auto’s response to Proem’s summary-judgment motion relied on an

omnibus filing that included affidavits, unsigned statements, and copies of email

correspondence, photographs, repair estimates, and cancelled checks. The response

recites “[a]ll of these exhibits are in plaintiffs’ shared index of authorities, they are

identified by (name / filing date / file # [sic]), they are now incorporated into this

response by reference.”

The trial court notified G.R. Auto that its exhibits “were filed in a confusing

and disorganized manner,” and warned that “[t]he Court is not obligated to read

through pages of disorganized documents or documents unrelated to the issues in

search of evidence which may support a pleading.” It ordered G.R. Auto to

supplement its response with an exhibit list. The order specified that the list be

identified as corresponding to a pleading and that the exhibits be attached and labeled

or identified in a reasonable manner to correlate to the list. The order expressly

prohibited G.R. Auto from filing any new exhibits and declared, “No new exhibits

will be considered.”

6 G.R. Auto responded by filing an exhibit list with the exhibits stamped as a

single set of consecutively-numbered pages. The list identified the exhibits by

author, subject matter, and page number, but the filing did not identify whether the

pages responded to a particular motion or pleading. The filing included materials

that were not previously before the court and were not referenced in G.R. Auto’s

response.

Before the summary-judgment hearing, Proem interposed objections to G.R.

Auto’s exhibits, including objections to:

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G. R. Auto Care, Radita Gheorghe, and Laurentio Gheorghe v. .Proem Design-Build, Inc., Jake Emery, and Keith Messick, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-r-auto-care-radita-gheorghe-and-laurentio-gheorghe-v-proem-texapp-2018.