James K. Hancock v. Calvin Genzer and Sandi Genzer, Individually and D/B/A Trinity Home Improvement

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 15, 2006
Docket01-04-00711-CV
StatusPublished

This text of James K. Hancock v. Calvin Genzer and Sandi Genzer, Individually and D/B/A Trinity Home Improvement (James K. Hancock v. Calvin Genzer and Sandi Genzer, Individually and D/B/A Trinity Home Improvement) 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
James K. Hancock v. Calvin Genzer and Sandi Genzer, Individually and D/B/A Trinity Home Improvement, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion issued on June 15, 2006





In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-04-00711-CV





JAMES K. HANCOCK, Appellant


V.


CALVIN GENZER AND SANDI GENZER, INDIVIDUALLY AND D/B/A TRINITY HOME IMPROVEMENT, Appellees





On Appeal from the 125th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2003-18930





MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellant, James K. Hancock, appeals the trial court’s take-nothing judgment in favor of appellees, Calvin Genzer and Sandi Genzer, individually and d/b/a Trinity Home Improvement (collectively “Genzer”), on Hancock’s Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act (“DTPA”), fraud, and breach of contract claims. In eight points of error, Hancock asserts that the trial court erred in granting judgment for Genzer because the trial court’s findings of fact are against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. We affirm.

Background

            Hancock’s house sustained roof damage in 2001 during Tropical Storm Allison. After noticing that the roof was leaking and water was seeping into the house, Hancock called his insurance company, Farmer’s Insurance, to assess the damage. Due to the amount of damage that Tropical Storm Allison caused, the insurance adjuster was not able to come to Hancock’s house immediately. The rain continued to come into the house until an adjuster arrived. Once there, the adjuster noticed that there was too much water in the house and that the insurance company needed to send in a mold adjuster within 24 hours.

           Farmer’s Insurance sent mold adjuster, Nina Henry, to the Hancock house and assess the mold damage. Nina brought her husband, Bill Henry, to serve as her estimator. Later, Hancock met with Mr. Henry and Calvin Genzer, owner of Trinity Home Improvement (“Trinity”), to discuss hiring the company to perform the mold remediation at the house. Hancock testified that Genzer used Mr. Henry as his estimator and paid him 10% of the cost of the mold remediation job. He further testified that, after a walk through the house with Genzer and Mr. Henry, Hancock hired them to do the work on his house. Hancock said that Genzer and Mr. Henry told him that they had insurance coverage for anything that went wrong on the job and that their company was bonded. Hancock stated that he hired Genzer to perform the remediation because Genzer was supposed to have been certified as a mold remediator and; therefore, he knew the proper procedures for abating mold without spreading it or destroying the property. Later, Hancock discovered that this was Genzer’s first job.

          Hancock testified that he paid Genzer $20,000 on June 21, 2002 for work performed at the residence. A second check for $20,000 was written on July 31, 2002 as an advance payment for additional work that needed to be done on the house, but that Hancock claimed was never performed. He testified that, when Genzer did not return to complete the work on the house, Hancock found the house in what he called “shambles, totally destroyed.” He testified that the walls, ceilings, and floors were destroyed and that there was wiring hanging down, debris all over, and door casings missing. A few months later, Hancock sent a letter advising Genzer that he no longer wished to retain Genzer and Trinity for the remediation or build-back of his house. The letter also informed Genzer that he was no longer authorized to enter the property.

          On cross-examination, Hancock testified that he originally hired Cotton Remediation Company to do tear-out work on his house. He fired Cotton from further work on the house after it removed kitchen cabinets at the ceiling level when the mold was at the base boards. Hancock also testified that, after firing Genzer, he hired other people to do repairs on his house. He also hired laborers to clean the house and remove debris, as well as, a company to repair structural damage he alleged Genzer caused when removing insulation from the ceilings.

          Louis Battaglia, a microbiologist who consulted for companies investigating mold infestation, testified for Hancock. Although he was not qualified as an expert witness in mold remediation, Battaglia testified that he taught the microbiology section of mold remediation qualification course attended by Genzer and Mr. Henry. He said that Mr. Henry contacted him to request a referral for a company that does mold investigations. Battaglia recommended Reliant Environmental, who later did an investigation on Hancock’s house. Battaglia also testified that he performed an investigation of the house at the request of Mr. Henry in 2002 and then again later at the request of Hancock. In the later report requested by Hancock, Battaglia concluded that “it was obvious that the removal of the ceilings and HVAC ducts were probably not necessary.” Further, he testified that, in his opinion, the Hancock house was “unlivable.”

          Melissa Bohannon testified that she was employed as an insurance agent and licensed insurance adjuster who had experience working on mold claims. Bohannon testified that, when she visited Hancock’s house, she found it “basically stripped to the studs” and uninhabitable.

          Calvin Genzer testified in defense of the claims against him. When asked why he and his company failed to repair and remediate Hancock’s house as Hancock alleged, Genzer stated that there was never a contract to repair and remediate. He testified that, although Hancock’s house was his first mold remediation job, he had been certified by Enviro Test and sought the assistance of someone with two years of professional remediation experience, Sam Trujillo. Trujillo was recommended by the Enviro Test instructors as someone who was experienced and could put together a professional team to perform the remediation. Genzer testified that Trujillo served as the foreman for the remediation job on Hancock’s house.

          Genzer further testified that he had a chance to view the Hancock house and the photographs of the house previously admitted as evidence. Viewing the pictures, he stated that the walls that were torn out in the back of the house and the loose wires on the floor were not his practice and not his work. Genzer testified that, when he left the job site, Hancock’s house was spotless. He said that he vacuumed the entire job with HEPA vacs and that there was not a “tiny piece of little wood, or a screw, a nail, nothing.

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James K. Hancock v. Calvin Genzer and Sandi Genzer, Individually and D/B/A Trinity Home Improvement, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-k-hancock-v-calvin-genzer-and-sandi-genzer-i-texapp-2006.