Los Compadres Pescadores, L.L.C. v. Juan G. Valdez and Alfredo Teran

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 2021
Docket19-0643
StatusPublished

This text of Los Compadres Pescadores, L.L.C. v. Juan G. Valdez and Alfredo Teran (Los Compadres Pescadores, L.L.C. v. Juan G. Valdez and Alfredo Teran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Los Compadres Pescadores, L.L.C. v. Juan G. Valdez and Alfredo Teran, (Tex. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS ══════════ No. 19-0643 ══════════

LOS COMPADRES PESCADORES, L.L.C., PETITIONER,

v.

JUAN G. VALDEZ AND ALFREDO TERAN, RESPONDENTS

══════════════════════════════════════════ ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS ══════════════════════════════════════════

Argued October 29, 2020

JUSTICE BOYD delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case involves a property owner’s liability for injuries its contractor’s employees

sustained while working on the property. A jury found the property owner liable under both

ordinary-negligence and premises-liability theories. The trial court entered judgment for the

employees based on those findings, and the court of appeals affirmed. The property owner

challenges the judgment on the grounds that the employees failed to submit legally sufficient

evidence and failed to obtain jury findings necessary to establish liability, particularly as required

under chapter 95 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. In response, the employees

contend that chapter 95 does not apply, the property owner waived some of its arguments, and the

evidence sufficiently supports the jury’s verdict. We hold that chapter 95 applies, but we agree

with the employees that they nevertheless established their claim, and we therefore affirm the court

of appeals’ judgment. I. Background

Juan Valdez and Alfredo Teran were injured while working on the construction of a four-

unit condominium building on South Padre Island. Los Compadres Pescadores, 1 L.L.C., owned

the property and intended to lease the condos as residential apartments. Instead of hiring a general

contractor, Los Compadres hired Luis Martin Torres to manage and supervise the project.

The sandy nature of the island’s soil required that the building’s foundation be constructed

on concrete pilings buried deep into the ground below. Based on a bid Torres obtained, Los

Compadres contracted Luis Paredes, Jr., d/b/a Paredes Power Drilling, to construct the pilings.

Valdez and Teran were working for Paredes when they were injured.

The process Paredes used to install the concrete pilings required that he (1) level and

compact fill dirt that had been brought onto the property, (2) drill a hole twenty-five feet deep for

each of the more than twenty required pilings, (3) fill each hole with concrete, and (4) insert long

metal reinforcement rods, commonly known as rebar, into each hole before the concrete dried.

Before Paredes began his work, Los Compadres hired another subcontractor to build a retaining

wall along the back of the property line so that the fill dirt could be added. After leveling and

compacting the fill dirt for the Los Compadres project, Paredes used a crane with a fifty-foot-high

boom and a special drill bit that simultaneously pulled the dirt out and poured the concrete in as

he was drilling, combining the second and third steps into one. After drilling and filling one hole,

he and his crew would insert the rebar into the wet concrete before moving on to the next.

1 “The Fishing Buddies.” 2 AEP Texas Central Company owned a high-voltage power line that hung about twenty-

two to twenty-four feet above and along Los Compadres’s back property line. Although one of the

poles supporting the power line leaned eight or nine degrees toward the Los Compadres property,

the line remained within AEP’s eight-foot utility easement and met the applicable code

requirements governing its height and location. However, because of the retaining wall along the

back property line and the added fill dirt, the ground level was closer to the power line when

Paredes started drilling than it had been before construction began.

Paredes knew about the power line, and he told Torres when he bid on the project that

Torres needed to “do something about” it because it was “too close” to the worksite. Torres replied

that he would talk to AEP and “take care of it.” When the time came for Paredes to begin his work,

however, the line remained in place. When Paredes asked Torres about it, Torres told him to “go

ahead” with his work but to start drilling at the front of the property because “it wasn’t clear to see

what was going to be done with that [power] line.” Paredes began the job as Torres instructed, but

warned his crew to stay at least twenty feet away from the line.

On most similar jobs, Paredes would start drilling holes and pouring pilings at the back of

the property and move toward the front, to limit the number of times he would have to move the

large crane across the compacted fill dirt. At Torres’s instruction, however, he began drilling at

the front of the Los Compadres property and completed about five pilings the first day. On the

second day, Torres told him the power line was still energized and he needed to work around it, so

he completed additional pilings toward the front and sides of the property. On the third day, Torres

told Paredes that the power line would not be de-energized but Paredes needed to continue drilling

because the work had to be done.

3 After drilling about three holes that day, Paredes drilled another hole about ten to twelve

feet from the back property line. Paredes drilled and filled that hole at a slight angle to keep the

crane’s boom as far away from the power line as possible, and then got down from the crane to

help his crew insert the rebar. Each piece of rebar was over twenty feet long and weighed over one

hundred pounds, requiring the men to work together to lift and lower it into the concrete. No one

knows exactly what happened to cause the accident, but as Valdez, Teran, Paredes, and another

crew member were lifting the rebar and placing one end into the concrete, the other end contacted

the power line.

The electricity shot down the rebar, threw the men off their feet, briefly knocked them

unconscious, and caused burns to their hands and feet. The power line snapped, and the rebar was

left leaning on a telecommunications line strung below the power line. Although the power line

carried over seven thousand volts, the lower end of the rebar was already in contact with the

concrete before the higher end contacted the power line, grounding the circuit and likely saving

the men’s lives. After taking a day off, Paredes returned and finished the job. Los Compadres later

paid him to bury conduit along the back property line so that AEP could move the power line

underground.

Valdez and Teran sued AEP and Paredes for negligence. 2 Paredes filed a cross-claim

against AEP for negligence as well. AEP then joined Los Compadres as a third-party defendant,

arguing that chapter 752 of the Health and Safety Code required Los Compadres to indemnify AEP

2 Valdez and Teran also sued Luis Paredes, Sr., d/b/a Paredes Construction Company, who had constructed the property’s retaining wall before the younger Paredes began compacting the fill dirt. The trial court granted the elder Paredes and his company summary judgment, and Valdez and Teran do not challenge that decision. 4 because Los Compadres had violated the Code’s provisions.3 Valdez and Teran then added

ordinary-negligence and premises-liability claims against Los Compadres. 4

AEP settled with Valdez and Teran before trial but continued to pursue its statutory-

indemnity claim against Los Compadres. The jury found that Los Compadres, Paredes, and AEP

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wilz v. Flournoy
228 S.W.3d 674 (Texas Supreme Court, 2007)
City of Corsicana v. Stewart
249 S.W.3d 412 (Texas Supreme Court, 2008)
University of Texas-Pan American v. Aguilar
251 S.W.3d 511 (Texas Supreme Court, 2008)
General Electric Co. v. Moritz
257 S.W.3d 211 (Texas Supreme Court, 2008)
Del Lago Partners, Inc. v. Smith
307 S.W.3d 762 (Texas Supreme Court, 2010)
The University of Texas at Austin v. Hayes
327 S.W.3d 113 (Texas Supreme Court, 2010)
Jezek v. City of Midland
605 S.W.2d 544 (Texas Supreme Court, 1980)
Schley v. Structural Metals, Inc.
595 S.W.2d 572 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1979)
Corpus v. K-J Oil Co.
720 S.W.2d 672 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1986)
Baptist Memorial Hospital System v. Sampson
969 S.W.2d 945 (Texas Supreme Court, 1998)
Sun Oil Co. v. Massey
594 S.W.2d 125 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1979)
Limestone Products Distribution, Inc. v. McNamara
71 S.W.3d 308 (Texas Supreme Court, 2002)
Caterpillar, Inc. v. Shears
911 S.W.2d 379 (Texas Supreme Court, 1995)
Boyles v. Kerr
855 S.W.2d 593 (Texas Supreme Court, 1993)
Biggs v. United States Fire Insurance Co.
611 S.W.2d 624 (Texas Supreme Court, 1981)
Ames v. Great Southern Bank
672 S.W.2d 447 (Texas Supreme Court, 1984)
Adam Dante Corporation v. Sharpe
483 S.W.2d 452 (Texas Supreme Court, 1972)
Nobility Homes of Texas, Inc. v. Shivers
557 S.W.2d 77 (Texas Supreme Court, 1977)
County of Cameron v. Brown
80 S.W.3d 549 (Texas Supreme Court, 2002)
Nixon v. Mr. Property Management Co.
690 S.W.2d 546 (Texas Supreme Court, 1985)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Los Compadres Pescadores, L.L.C. v. Juan G. Valdez and Alfredo Teran, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/los-compadres-pescadores-llc-v-juan-g-valdez-and-alfredo-teran-tex-2021.