Galle, Inc. v. Pool

262 S.W.3d 564, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 7490, 2008 WL 3984370
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 29, 2008
Docket03-07-00619-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 262 S.W.3d 564 (Galle, Inc. v. Pool) 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
Galle, Inc. v. Pool, 262 S.W.3d 564, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 7490, 2008 WL 3984370 (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

BOB PEMBERTON, Justice.

Galle, Inc., appeals from a judgment awarding Joe and Leslie Pool the sum of $214,400.58, plus prejudgment interest and costs. The judgment was based on jury-findings that Galle made a negligent misrepresentation on which the Pools justifiably relied, proximately causing them a total of $214,400.58 in actual damages. Galle brings a single issue, contending that the district court erred in refusing to apply a $532,000.00 dollar-for-dollar credit reflecting the amount of the Pools’ settlement with a co-defendant, Allstate Texas Lloyds Company, and render judgment that the Pools take nothing on their claims against Galle. On this record, we conclude that the district court was required to apply the settlement credit. Consequently, we will reverse the district court’s judgment and render judgment that the Pools take nothing on their claims against Galle.

The underlying action is a mold suit. The Pools were the named insureds on a homeowners policy with Allstate Texas Lloyds Company covering their Dripping Springs house and its contents. At trial, Joe Pool, an attorney, testified that while wife Leslie was overseeing the remodeling of a bathroom on the lowest level of the house, mold was discovered “between the lavatory and the wall.” Leslie, “who knew there was a problem, called it in to our carrier,” Allstate. The Pools alleged they filed this claim on or about June 30, 2002. In response to their claim, the Pools alleged that, on or about August 6, Allstate “selected and employed Hometest, Inc. to assist them in their investigation” of the Pools’ claim. Hometest proceeded to test the house for mold. The Pools pled that, “A tester for Hometest, however, left an air plug on the attic HVAC condensation drainage line unplugged when he finished testing the inside of the drainage line. This resulted in substantial water intrusion to the ceiling and floor of the third floor of the Residence.”

Joe Pool recounted that “we got a phone call September 5” from an Allstate representative informing them that “test results came back and ... it’s really bad, and you’ve got to leave the house and ... don’t take anything with you.” The Pools grabbed a few possessions and moved first to the Four Seasons in Austin, then to the Driskill. They remained at the Driskill until late December 2002, when they moved to a rental house in the Westlake area of Austin. The Pools remained at this location until approximately July 2003, thereafter moving to two other rental homes, a Home Suites, and finally a trailer on their property before work was finally completed on their house.

Joe Pool explained that, “I was told that I had to hire and contract with a remediation company ... to fix the mold problem and ... get the house right,” as well as a contractor to rebuild damaged portions of the house thereafter. It so happened that a Driskill employee whom Joe Pool had befriended was engaged to Danny Galle, who at the time was involved in the mold remediation business. Galle’s fianceé arranged a meeting, and the Pools, with Allstate approval and funding, eventually executed a contract with Galle, Inc., dated October 22, 2002. The contract specified that Galle would remove, remediate, and store the contents of the house; and remediate the house. The contract contemplated that after Galle had finished remediating the house, an “independent testing company selected by Allstate” *567 would perform “visual and air test clearance.” Once the house passed the clearance testing, it was contemplated that rebuilding on the house could begin. Upon completion of the rebuild, the contract provided that Galle would return the contents to the house.

Galle proceeded to perform work on the house. The work included such tasks as constructing plastic barriers to contain mold in areas where it had been found, cleaning personal possessions by vacuuming or wiping them with chemical agents before storing them, removing the house’s air conditioning units, and removing portions of the structure found to have been infested with mold. In December 2002, an independent testing laboratory retained by Allstate, Test Force, performed “clearance testing” on the house. The house failed this first round of testing. Galle performed additional work specified by Test Force. Test Force conducted another round of tests in early January 2003. The Pools were present for the second tests, along with a contractor, Steve Harris, with whom the Pools had been negotiating regarding the planned rebuild. Test Force concluded that the house passed the tests. However, claiming that he saw black or dark red “splotches” on surfaces in the house that he feared were mold, Joe Pool insisted that those surfaces be tested for mold. According to Joe, Galle, Test Force, and Allstate refused to have additional testing conducted, even when Joe offered to pay for it.

For several months thereafter, the Pools were embroiled in disputes with Allstate regarding whether the house was free of mold and ready for the rebuild to begin and the scope of the rebuild that Allstate would pay for. The Pools eventually obtained counsel and found another firm to test for mold in the house. This re-testing was not performed until mid-August 2003. By this time, the house had sat largely empty for several months, with air conditioning units removed. There was evidence that the absence of air conditioning or humidity controls during that period created conditions conducive to mold growth. The testing company found that mold had spread beyond the areas where it had been identified in the Hometest testing months earlier. The Pools hired a second remediation company, which re-remediated the house between October 2003 and January 2004.

In the meantime, in August 2003, the Pools filed their lawsuit. They named as defendants Allstate, Allstate adjusters Ted Mitchell and Clarence Driver, Hometest, and Galle. 1 The Pools complained of numerous actions by Allstate, its employees and agents, during the claims process. “During the claims process, Plaintiffs have been met with incompetence, delay, attrition and indifference all of which has resulted in additional damage to their residence and to them.” This included not only disputes “concerning the scope of the remediation and build back covered by the insurance policy,” but negligence and gross negligence in failing to timely and properly detect and repair the leaks and resultant water damage and remove the molds in Plaintiffs’ home; in “failing to properly remove the molds, which mold contamination has now overtaken the home; and in failing to make the necessary arrangements to assure that such proper repairs were promptly undertaken and completed.” The Pools also complained that during this process, they “have been forced to vacate their Residence and live in rented quarters rather than their home.”

*568 The Pools pled that “[t]he Residence has been further damaged by the remediation and decontamination services of Galle” and that “Galle has failed to account for items of personal property and failed to comply with its contract for services.” This noncompliance allegedly included failing to follow the “ ‘Guidelines on Assessment And Remediation Of Fungi In Indoor Environments,’ as published by the New York City, Department of Health.” Thereafter, the Pools allege, Allstate retained “[a]n independent laboratory, Test Force ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 S.W.3d 564, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 7490, 2008 WL 3984370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galle-inc-v-pool-texapp-2008.