Joe Turner and Alliance Construction, Inc. v. Stewart Builders, Ltd., D/B/A Keystone Sitework and D/B/A/ Keystone

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 17, 2011
Docket01-09-00276-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Joe Turner and Alliance Construction, Inc. v. Stewart Builders, Ltd., D/B/A Keystone Sitework and D/B/A/ Keystone (Joe Turner and Alliance Construction, Inc. v. Stewart Builders, Ltd., D/B/A Keystone Sitework and D/B/A/ Keystone) 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
Joe Turner and Alliance Construction, Inc. v. Stewart Builders, Ltd., D/B/A Keystone Sitework and D/B/A/ Keystone, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 17, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-09-00276-CV

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St. Paul Mercury Insurance Company, Joe Turner, and Alliance Construction, Inc., Appellants

V.

Stewart Builders, ltd. d/b/a/ Keystone Sitework and d/b/a Keystone Concrete, Appellee

On Appeal from the 151st District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 2003-53202

          MEMORANDUM OPINION

          This appeal arises from a jury verdict in favor of a subcontractor in its   construction contract claims against the general contractor.  The general contractor, Alliance Construction, Inc., and its CEO, Joe Turner,[1] appeal a judgment in favor of the subcontractor, Stewart Builders, Ltd.  After a jury trial, the trial court rendered judgment for $737,315 for the unpaid portion of Stewart’s bills, $498,142.13 in statutory 18% post-judgment interest, pre-judgment interest, $350,000 in attorneys’ fees for trial, contingent attorneys’ fees for appeal, and costs. 

Turner and Alliance bring 16 issues attacking four aspects of the trial court’s judgment: the sufficiency of the evidence to support a claim that Turner misapplied funds paid by the owner and held in trust for Stewart’s benefit under the Texas Property Code; the submission of questions concerning, and the sufficiency of the evidence to support, Stewart’s claim that Alliance breached the construction contracts by withholding final payment; the submission of questions concerning, and the sufficiency of the evidence to support, Stewart’s claim that it substantially performed its contract obligations; and the award of interest and attorneys’ fees.  We conclude that the evidence is insufficient to support the claim for misapplication of trust funds, but sufficient to support the breach of contract claim.  Because of our resolution of these issues, we do not reach the issues concerning substantial performance.  We also conclude that the evidence is insufficient to support the award of 18% statutory post-judgment interest against Turner.  Finally, we conclude the issue of attorneys’ fees should be remanded.  We affirm in part, reverse and render in part, and remand for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.         

Background

          Alliance is a commercial construction company that has built a number of different types of buildings and facilities.  Alliance was hired by G.E. Packaged Power, L.P. (“GE”) to design and build its Jacintoport Facility Expansions, including parking lots.  Alliance as the general contractor entered into two separate contracts with Stewart as a subcontractor on September 12, 2002.   Stewart is a construction company that, among other things, performs concrete work and site work, such as constructing parking lots.  In the first contract, which the parties call the Concrete Subcontract, Alliance contracted with Stewart to complete all concrete work for the project.  Stewart completed this work in October 2002, without any problems or complaints.

In the second contract, Alliance hired Stewart to complete site work, including the construction of two parking lots.  The Site Work Subcontract was signed on behalf of Alliance by Turner in his capacity as CEO of Alliance.  This contract is the focus of the parties’ dispute.

          Alliance’s contract with GE included an incentive clause for early completion of the construction project.  Stewart performed its parking lot construction in two phases: phase one was the back parking lot and phase two was the front parking lot. Stewart began preliminary work on the back parking lot in late August 2002 before the final specifications were finished or the contract was signed.  Alliance’s engineer, the Murillo Company, received approval from Alliance and GE for the parking lot specifications on October 3, 2002.  The specifications called for 2 inches of asphalt atop 10 inches of crushed limestone base, over 8 inches of lime-stabilized subbase.  The parties refer to these specifications as the “2/10/8 specifications.”

Alliance, through Murillo, performed periodic testing of the compaction and density of the soil and the layers of the materials used in the construction of the parking lots.  Stewart’s manager of its site work division testified that its crews would not move forward to the next phase of construction until Murillo’s technician approved the density test results.

Stewart completed construction of the back lot on November 11, 2002.  On November 20, 2002, while Stewart was working on the front parking lot, the first problems were reported in the back lot.  Asphalt cracked and the lot developed numerous potholes.  According to Stewart’s manager, potholes were “popping up in a unique frequency.”  Stewart first patched a pothole in “mid to late November” and thereafter repeatedly returned to the back lot to repair or patch potholes as they appeared.

Stewart completed construction of the front lot on December 19, 2002.  The   front lot was first patched just two days later on December 21, 2002.  Stewart patched the two lots approximately 36 times in about six weeks.

          In early February 2003, Stewart and Alliance jointly engaged an independent third-party engineering company, Atser, to determine the cause of the continuing failures.  Atser determined that the immediate cause of the failures was water damage.  Stewart then hired Atser to determine the source of the water. 

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Joe Turner and Alliance Construction, Inc. v. Stewart Builders, Ltd., D/B/A Keystone Sitework and D/B/A/ Keystone, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joe-turner-and-alliance-construction-inc-v-stewart-texapp-2011.