George Anthony, Individually, and D/B/A a & a Construction Services v. Clarence Blevins

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 24, 2014
Docket07-13-00251-CV
StatusPublished

This text of George Anthony, Individually, and D/B/A a & a Construction Services v. Clarence Blevins (George Anthony, Individually, and D/B/A a & a Construction Services v. Clarence Blevins) 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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George Anthony, Individually, and D/B/A a & a Construction Services v. Clarence Blevins, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo

No. 07-13-00251-CV

A & A CONSTRUCTION SERVICES, LLC, A/K/A A & A CONSTRUCTION SERVICES AACS, LLC AND GEORGE ANTHONY, APPELLANTS

V.

CLARENCE BLEVINS, APPELLEE

On Appeal from the County Court at Law Moore County, Texas Trial Court No. CL22-13, Honorable Delwin T. McGee, Presiding

April 24, 2014

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before CAMPBELL and HANCOCK and PIRTLE, JJ.

Appellant, George Anthony, perfected his restricted appeal of the trial court’s

post-answer default judgment in favor of Clarence Blevins, awarding Blevins $20,508.00

on his claims asserted in the parties’ contract dispute. On appeal, Anthony complains

that the trial court failed to provide him proper notice of the trial setting and also

contends that the attempted notice failed to comply with the permissible methods of effecting service. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 21a, 245. We will reverse and remand the cause

to the trial court for further proceedings.

Factual and Procedural History

Anthony owns A & A Construction Services.1 In August 2012, Blevins contracted

with Anthony, agreeing that Anthony would perform siding work on Blevins’s home in

exchange for a total price of $9,389.00. Per the contract, Blevins paid to Anthony

$4,694.00 as a “material draw” to be used as a deposit for the purchase of the siding

and supplies for the project.

On August 27, 2012, Anthony sent to Blevins a letter explaining that there would

be a delay in starting the project because it was estimated that it would take two to three

weeks for some of the materials that had been ordered to be delivered. On October 1,

2012, Anthony sent another letter to Blevins, noting a further unexpected delay. In that

letter, Anthony explained that the siding had been delivered on September 20, but he

had not been notified due, somehow, to a delay in delivery of another set of supplies for

the project. Because other projects were in progress or already scheduled to begin

soon, Anthony provided a start date of October 16, 2012. Then, Anthony sent to

Blevins a letter dated October 17, alerting Blevins to another “delay in [their] schedule”

and postponing the work for an additional ten days.

1 There is some confusion as to the business name and the type of entity under which it operates. In the written agreement between the parties, the company is identified as simply “A & A Construction Services,” and that is the name to which Blevins made the deposit check payable. However, in the several letters alerting Blevins to the continued delays, Anthony’s correspondence bore a letterhead identifying the company as “A & A Construction Services, AACS, LLC.” In his answer, Anthony identifies his company as “A & A Construction Services, LLC.” Blevins’s attorney researched the business and was unable to find a limited liability company bearing the name “A & A Construction Services” registered with the Texas Secretary of State and qualified to do business under that name in Texas.

2 Finally, by letter dated October 29, 2012, Anthony explained additional delays

and offered to Blevins two alternatives at that point:

Dear, Mr. Blevins, I am still out of town on this big job trying to finish up. I know that this has been dragging on way to[o] long and I deeply apologize. What I am offering at this point is to have the material delivered in 10 to 14 days and have a rep from my company to foresee the job and have a sub-contractor take care of this for me. I really wanted to do this myself but I have held you up for way to[o] long. Or the second option is I can have the material delivered and you can cancel the contract. I deeply apologize. While I was waiting for your material to come in[,] I took this job not knowing that it was going to take up so much of my time. I am willing to do whatever you decide, but whatever decision you take please send me a letter stating your decision to the above address. Again[,] I am very sorry.

Blevins was not satisfied with either option offered by Anthony and, by letter dated

October 30, 2012, notified Anthony that he requested a refund of the $4,694.00 deposit:

I do not want a subcontractor to do the work and I do not want the material delivered and have to find someone to put it on. You[] are talking about another 2 or 3 week delay. There is a third option, and that is that you return the money that I gave you and I will find another company to put on siding. This is the option I wish to do. If I do not hear from you[,] I will turn it over to my attorney at your expense.

Having heard nothing from Anthony, Blevins did contact his attorney, who sent to

Anthony a notice of claim as required by the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act. In it,

Blevins made demand for a refund of his deposit and for attorney’s fees incurred up to

that point. By letter, Anthony refused to tender a refund of the deposit and insisted that

the materials be delivered per the contract terms and the remainder of the contract be

cancelled. As a final effort to avoid litigation, Blevins offered to honor the terms of the

contract in its entirety so long as Anthony began the work within fourteen days of the

December 3rd letter outlining said offer. By his silence in response, Anthony tacitly

refused that offer.

3 By petition filed January 31, 2013, Blevins sued A & A Construction Services,

LLC A/K/A A & A Construction Services, AACS, LLC, and George Anthony, individually

and D/B/A A & A Construction Services. Blevins alleged causes of action under the

Texas Deceptive Trade Practice Act, breach of contract, fraud, and conversion and

sought economic and punitive damages and attorney’s fees. Anthony filed a pro se

answer on March 8, 2013, requesting that the case be dismissed or that he be removed

from the suit in his individual capacity.2 Ostensibly, by letter dated March 18, 2013,

Blevins’s attorney sent to Anthony a notice that trial had been set for April 17, 2013.

Following the trial on April 17, at which Anthony did not appear but Blevins did,

the trial court signed its post-answer default judgment in favor of Blevins in the following

amounts: $4,694.00 in economic damages, $14,082.00 in treble and punitive damages,

$1,500.00 in attorney’s fees, and $232.00 in court costs. The judgment also provided

for conditional attorney’s fees in the event of an appeal. Anthony timely filed his notice

of restricted appeal.

Standard of Review and Applicable Law

A restricted appeal is considered a direct attack on a default judgment. Eguia v.

Eguia, 367 S.W.3d 455, 458 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 2012, no pet.). A party may

prevail in a restricted appeal only if the following conditions are satisfied: (1) it filed

notice of the restricted appeal within six months after the judgment was signed; (2) it

2 The trial court and the parties below treated this response, though arguably defective in some respects, as Anthony’s answer, said answer then entitling Anthony to proper notice of trial settings. We will do the same. See Smith v. Lippmann, 826 S.W.2d 137, 138 (Tex. 1992) (per curiam) (recognizing that defendant’s response, though not in standard form, provided the trial court with “a timely response acknowledging receipt and acceptance of [plaintiff]’s citation and petition” and, thus, entitled defendant to proper notice of hearing per Rule 245).

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