Hubco, Inc. v. Young Brothers, Inc., Contractors

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 31, 1996
Docket03-95-00156-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Hubco, Inc. v. Young Brothers, Inc., Contractors (Hubco, Inc. v. Young Brothers, Inc., Contractors) 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
Hubco, Inc. v. Young Brothers, Inc., Contractors, (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

cv5-156.dd.hubco

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-95-00156-CV



Hubco, Inc., Appellant



v.



Young Brothers, Inc., Contractors, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY, 169TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 142,674-C, HONORABLE STANTON B. PEMBERTON, JUDGE PRESIDING



PER CURIAM



Hubco, Inc. appeals the trial-court's judgment that it owes $16,400 plus interest and $1,500 in attorney's fees to Young Brothers, Inc., Contractors on a road-construction contract. After a bench trial, the court rejected Hubco's contention that it actually overpaid the contract price by almost $20,000. Hubco contends by seven points of error that the pleadings and evidence do not support the judgment for Young Brothers. We will affirm the judgment.



BACKGROUND (1)

This suit arises from Hubco's refusal to pay all amounts demanded by Young Brothers. Hubco outbid Young Brothers for a contract with the State to perform roadwork in Temple. Young Brothers then subcontracted to apply microsealant to the road surface. The Hubco-Young Brothers contract ("the contract") had a chart like the following:



Item Description Appx. Qty. Unit Unit Price Total



3694 001 Slurry Seal GR2 2567 ton $32 $82144.00



(The "Total" equals the approximate quantity multiplied by the unit price.) The contract stated that Young Brothers would supply labor and equipment. Young Brothers agreed to set traffic cones if necessary, furnish and install abbreviated pavement markings, and reimburse Hubco for all costs incurred by Young Brothers' delay. Hubco was to pay for all materials and traffic control as well as reimburse Young Brothers for materials it purchased. Hubco was required to furnish a changeable message board and interior barricades needed for lane closures. The Young Brothers-Hubco contract did not specify when work would begin or must end; Young Brothers' president testified that he knew from the bidding process for the State contract that Hubco had contracted with the State to finish the job in thirty working days.

Young Brothers did not start work when it planned because Hubco's microsealant failed its initial highway-department inspection. Young Brothers had assumed the microsealant was approved and moved its equipment onto the Bell County site in late July or early August. After idling a few days, Young Brothers took its equipment briefly to a job in nearby Waco, then returned to Bell County. A few days later, upon learning that the Waco district office planned to retest the sample (which would take more than a week), Young Brothers moved its equipment to Abilene to do a six-week job. Two days after the move, the Waco district office adopted the Austin district's laboratory's approval of the microsealant sample.

Young Brothers returned to Bell County in early October, after the end of the traditional paving season. It finished applying microsealant in December and finished cleanup operations in January. Young Brothers sent invoices to Hubco for $121,491.10.

Hubco paid more than $102,000. Its payments equalled the billed amount less back charges totalling $18,400; these back charges included $13,200 for message-board and barricade costs for four months, $2,000 in liquidated damages assessed by the State for four days' lateness, and $3,200 for extended supervision of the project.

Young Brothers sued for the back-charged $18,400. The relevant paragraphs of Young Brothers' petition provided as follows:



2.01 Plaintiff and defendant entered into an express agreement on June 12, 1991 whereby parties agreed that plaintiff would provide labor and equipment to slurry seal the north and south bound lanes . . . . All other expenses, except traffic cones were to be paid by [Hubco] or reimbursed to [Young Brothers].



2.02 The goods or services furnished to [Hubco] were of a type and quality as required by [Hubco] for the agreed price of $82,144.



2.03 A true and correct copy of the written agreement is attached as Exhibit "A" and incorporated by reference to this petition as if fully recited at length.



. . .



3.01 Plaintiff has fully performed his obligations to the defendant.





4.01 Pursuant to the express agreement of the parties, [Hubco] was obligated to pay to [Young Brothers] as follows: $82,144.00 per estimates delivered each month as work progressed until paid in full. [Hubco] has breached the agreement by failing to pay the above stated monies to [Young Brothers].



4.02 The unpaid balance and monies owed by [Hubco] to [Young Brothers] which are past due are: $18,400.00.





5.01 [Young Brothers] has made repeated demands for payment from [Hubco] as follows: Monthly billings to [Hubco] for each month (sic) May 1992.



Hubco did not specially except to this pleading but contended that it had overpaid the $82,144 contract price by more than $20,000.

At trial, Young Brothers introduced invoices showing that it had incurred several thousand dollars of extra charges for traffic controls (barricades, pavement marks, and message boards) and additional materials (cement, additives, and 486.79 tons more microsealant than estimated in the contract). Young Brothers argued that the charges were not its fault and that Hubco could have avoided the sign costs by returning them to the sign company. Hubco contended that it incurred the charges because Young Brothers left the site and finished later than contemplated in the State-Hubco contract. Hubco contended that, had it returned the signs, it might not have been able to retrieve them when Young Brothers showed up; Hubco officials said they feared that Young Brothers again would move to another job if the signs were absent. Young Brothers' failure to give Hubco any idea when it would return heightened the risk.

The court awarded Young Brothers $16,400 and, upon request, made findings of fact and conclusions of law. The court found the contract existed, that it called for a per-unit payment with an approximate quantity stated, that the units of work exceeded the estimates, that Young Brothers worked four days too long, that Young Brothers billed Hubco for work and materials, and that Hubco paid all billed amounts except the $18,400 back-charged in the letter. The court also found that the contract required Hubco to pay for barricades and message boards. The court found that the contract's only time restriction was the understanding that Young Brothers would bear any liquidated damages imposed by the State against Hubco for lateness caused by Young Brothers in performance of the State-Hubco contract. The court found that Young Brothers satisfactorily completed the project four days late.

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