German Chavira and Alejandro Fabela, Both Individually and Both D/B/A El Paso Pavement Specialist and El Paso Pavement Specialist, LLC v. Quarry Hills Management, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 1, 2014
Docket08-12-00169-CV
StatusPublished

This text of German Chavira and Alejandro Fabela, Both Individually and Both D/B/A El Paso Pavement Specialist and El Paso Pavement Specialist, LLC v. Quarry Hills Management, LLC (German Chavira and Alejandro Fabela, Both Individually and Both D/B/A El Paso Pavement Specialist and El Paso Pavement Specialist, LLC v. Quarry Hills Management, 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.

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German Chavira and Alejandro Fabela, Both Individually and Both D/B/A El Paso Pavement Specialist and El Paso Pavement Specialist, LLC v. Quarry Hills Management, LLC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ GERMAN CHAVIRA AND ALEJANDRO FABELA, BOTH § No. 08-12-00169-CV INDIVIDUALLY AND BOTH D/B/A EL PASO PAVEMENT SPECIALIST § Appeal from AND EL PASO PAVEMENT SPECIALIST, LLC, § County Court at Law No. 5

Appellants, § of El Paso County, Texas

v. § (TC # 2011-397)

QUARRY HILLS MANAGEMENT, § LLC, §

Appellee. §

OPINION

In this appeal we are asked to review a trial court’s final judgment and two contempt

orders which were entered following two show cause hearings. The contempt proceedings

resulted from the Appellants’ alleged refusal to comply with an agreed temporary injunction.

For the reasons that follow, we lack jurisdiction to review the contempt rulings and the judgment

which is based on the contempt findings on direct appeal.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

Quarry Hills Management, LLC (Quarry Hills) filed suit against German Chavira and

Alejandro Fabela, individually and doing business as El Paso Pavement Specialist and El Paso Pavement Specialist, LLC (collectively referred to as EPPS) on February 1, 2011. The suit

alleged that Quarry Hills had retained EPPS as a subcontractor on three federal construction

projects. The suit raised a number of claims, including business disparagement, breach of

contract, tortious interference with contractual relationships, fraud, and conversion.

In particular, Quarry Hills complained that EPPS had not turned over “certified payroll”

forms for several projects. On federal construction projects, certified payroll forms are one of

the items that a contractor must submit to the owner to obtain final payment due under the job.

40 U.S.C. § 3145(a) (2014). The original petition sought a temporary restraining order and

temporary injunction requiring EPPS to turn over certified payroll forms for three projects

identified as “IBCT2-POV (Contract #W912HY-09-D-0004), BCT-3-CAB-POV (Contract No

W912HY-09-000-0003) and/or BCT-3-POV (Contract No W912HY-09-D-0009,0002).” Upon

the filing of the suit the trial court issued a temporary restraining order, conditioned on the

posting of a $500 bond, which required that the certified payroll forms for the three specified

contracts be turned over to Quarry Hills immediately. The temporary restraining order was

extended by a second ex parte order of the trial court which recited that the bond had been

posted. The trial court extended the restraining order three additional times by agreed orders

approved by Quarry Hills and counsel for at least one of the Appellants.1 The agreed extensions

continued the temporary restraining order in force through a temporary injunction hearing set for

June 6, 2011. Quarry Hills and EPPS mediated their disputes and reached a partial settlement

which included an agreement by EPPS to prepare and file by May 20, 2011 certain certified

payroll records, identified in a letter which is not of record. The mediation agreement

contemplated that the parties would continue the June 7, 2011 temporary injunction hearing.

1 None of the Appellants had filed an answer or formal appearance during this time period. An attorney identified in the extension orders as “counsel for Defendant” approved each of the extension orders as to form.

2 That hearing was reset to August 30, 2011 and the parties mutually agreed to extend the

temporary restraining order until the date of that hearing. EPPS’s initial counsel of record

withdrew on August 5, 2011 and new counsel appeared on August 26, 2011.

At the temporary injunction hearing on August 30, the parties through counsel announced

an agreement on the issuance of a temporary injunction. The agreement which was reduced to a

written order recited that Quarry Hills would suffer irreparable injury unless the relief sought

was granted and that the bond had already been posted. The agreed temporary injunction

required that certified payroll records from two contracts be delivered by September 19, 2011.2

At the August 30 hearing, the trial judge instructed EPPS’ counsel to inform Appellant German

Chavira that it is “very, very important -- and I’m going to hold his feet to the fire -- that he

produce those records on September 19th.” EPPS counsel agreed to do so.

Quarry Hills filed a first “Plaintiff’s Motion for Contempt and for Sanctions” on

September 23, 2011. The motion contended that the payroll records had not been produced by

the September 19 deadline in the temporary injunction. The motion was supported by the

affidavit of David Venegas who swore that the United States Army Corp of Engineers was still

demanding the certified payroll records; that failure to provide the forms was preventing the

project from being closed out; and the situation was jeopardizing Quarry Hills’ ability to contract

for future federal projects. A show cause hearing was set for October 3, 2011.

German Chavira appeared at the October 3 hearing and testified as a partner of El Paso

Pavement Specialist, LLC. It would have been evident to the trial court that there was some

confusion amongst the parties as to the correct descriptive terms used to identify the different

2 The projects were identified in this Order as: “BCT-3-CAB-POV (Contract No W91211Y-09-000-0003) and/or BCT-3-POV (Contract No W91211Y-09-D-0009,0002).” The temporary injunction thus differs from the temporary restraining order in that one project was deleted and in the other two, an “H” in the contract number was replaced with “11.”

3 projects at issue. The agreed temporary injunction required EPPS to produce certified time

records for project “BCT-3-CAB-POV (Contract No W91211Y-09-000-003) and/or BCT-3-POV

(Contract No W91211Y-09-D-0009,0002).” German Chavira testified to performing work on

project “BCT-POV.” He brought some records to the hearing, prepared by a third party

identified as “TNT,” which combined projects “BCT-3-POV and “CAB.” Quarry Hills’ counsel

contended that it really needed the certified payroll records for projects “BCT-POV” and “BCT-

CAB-POV” and contended there was a third project called “BCT-3” which was done for another

entity but for which payroll data had been intermingled.

Partly to resolve any confusion over the project descriptors, the trial court ordered the

parties to meet the next day at a time and place certain. A third party auditor who had come to

the hearing with Venegas was ordered to attend as well. German Chavira was ordered to bring

all of his back up paperwork on the jobs, including time cards and all notes reflecting who was

working on the two projects that he did for Quarry Hill. Chavira indicated that his secretary had

provided the original time sheets to TNT for it to prepare what reports it did. The show cause

hearing was reset for two days later on October 5.

When the parties reconvened the show cause hearing on October 5, EPPS’ counsel

informed the trial court that the meeting the day before had lasted about ten minutes. EPPS’

counsel determined that the meeting would be fruitless without TNT’s participation. None of the

back-up records, such as time cards, were brought to the meeting. Instead, EPPS’ counsel

indicated that he had just recently made contact with TNT and was intending to have it assist in

preparing the certified payroll records. The trial court recessed the hearing to permit EPPS’

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