Gilbane Building Company v. Two Turner's Electric Co. Dba Turner Electric Co.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 2007
Docket14-05-00908-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Gilbane Building Company v. Two Turner's Electric Co. Dba Turner Electric Co. (Gilbane Building Company v. Two Turner's Electric Co. Dba Turner Electric Co.) 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
Gilbane Building Company v. Two Turner's Electric Co. Dba Turner Electric Co., (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed February 27, 2007

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed February 27, 2007.

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-05-00908-CV

GILBANE BUILDING COMPANY, Appellant

V.

TWO TURNERS ELECTRIC COMPANY D/B/A TURNER ELECTRIC COMPANY, Appellee

On Appeal from the 151st District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 00-63143

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

Appellant, Gilbane Building Company (AGilbane@), appeals a judgment rendered on a jury=s award of damages in favor of appellee, Two Turners Electric Company d/b/a Turner Electric Company (ATurner Electric@).  We affirm the trial court=s judgment.


Factual and Procedural Background

In December 1997 Clear Creek Independent School District (ACCISD@) prepared to build two schools: Space Center Intermediate and League City Intermediate.  With each covering almost 170,000 square feet, the schools were large, nearly identical, projects.   CCISD hired Gilbane as the general contractor in charge of the construction of both schools. While Gilbane was a national building company, it was new to Texas school construction, having previously completed only two or three school projects. For the construction of these schools, Gilbane served exclusively as the project supervisor, hiring subcontractors to handle all aspects of the actual construction.  CCISD imposed an absolute deadline of July 1, 1999 for the completion of both schools.  Based on that deadline, Gilbane, as the general contractor, established the schedule for performance which included no overtime or compressed time.  Gilbane then solicited bids from subcontractors based on these specifications of normal work weeks and approximately eighteen months to complete performance.

At the time of the events at issue in the trial, Daryl Turner served as the president of Turner Electric.  Mr. Turner is a master electrician who has been in business since 1968.  Mr. Turner has extensive experience building schools as he has previously bid on and built approximately twenty-five new school jobs as well as numerous smaller school projects.  As a result of this experience, CCISD certified Turner Electric as one of eleven electrical subcontractors pre-qualified to bid on CCISD construction projects.  Turner Electric submitted a bid for both schools.  Mr. Turner prepared these bids based on the knowledge and experience he gained as a master electrician working on similar projects, the schedule prepared by Gilbane for the construction, as well as Gilbane=s representations that normal construction practices would be employed, and the subcontractors would have approximately eighteen months to complete the construction of the schools.[1]


Gilbane awarded the electrical subcontracts for both schools to Turner Electric.  The two subcontracts contained nearly identical language and pursuant to their terms, Turner Electric contracted to perform all electrical work on both schools for a lump sum price.  Despite the fact both subcontracts called for Turner Electric to perform all electrical work for a lump sum price, both subcontracts, as well as the prime contract between CCISD and Gilbane,[2] envisioned there could be changes in the work and included provisions on how those changes would be compensated.  Section 8.4 of both subcontracts provides that if the parties cannot agree on a method to compensate a subcontractor for additional work, this section would apply.  Section 8.4 provided for compensation of the subcontractor=s costs plus a reasonable allowance for overhead and profit.  In addition, section 8.4 defined costs as the Acost of materials including sales tax and cost of delivery, cost of labor including social security, old age and unemployment insurance and fringe benefits required by [a]greement or custom; workers or workmen=s compensation insurance; bond premiums; rental value of equipment and machinery; and the additional costs of supervision and field office personnel directly attributable to the change.@  In addition, Section 8.6 allows a subcontractor a five percent markup for work performed by a sub-subcontractor.


Serious issues arose before and during the early stages of the projects that dramatically impacted the construction of both schools.  The most serious issue arose out of dimensional errors in the design drawings for the schools.  As a result of these dimensional errors, the initial production of structural steel was incorrectly fabricated.  The design errors resulted in the structural steel not matching up or coming together properly.  Correcting these design errors turned out to be a complicated and time consuming process.  The problem was so significant that, as early as May 6, 1998, barely a week after Turner Electric had executed the two subcontracts for the schools, Baker Concrete, the foundation subcontractor, wrote Gilbane Athe dimensional mistakes . . . have been known for well over three weeks.  To date, we still have no complete answers.  This was not intended to be a >Fast Track= project, but at this point it should be treated as such by the design team to maintain progress.@  Two days later, Gilbane wrote a letter to the architects on the project stating the dimension issue Aturned out to be complicated and unavoidably disruptive@ bringing about a Asignificant delay to the production and delivery of structural steel as a direct result of these dimensional problems.@  Gilbane went on to notify the architects it was completely suspending work in the affected areas of the projects and told the architects Awe are unable to continue and we are being constructively delayed in our efforts with resulting impacts to project time and costs.@

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