Morrell Masonry Supply, Inc. v. Scott Griffin & Associates, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 2011
Docket01-09-01147-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Morrell Masonry Supply, Inc. v. Scott Griffin & Associates, Inc. (Morrell Masonry Supply, Inc. v. Scott Griffin & Associates, Inc.) 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
Morrell Masonry Supply, Inc. v. Scott Griffin & Associates, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 19, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

NO. 01-09-01147-CV

Morrell Masonry Supply, Inc., Appellant

V.

Scott Griffin & Associates, Inc., Appellee

On Appeal from the County Court at Law Number 4

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 926,298

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is an appeal following a bench trial involving a dispute over a residential construction materials lien.  We affirm.     

BACKGROUND

Plaintiff/Appellant Morrell Masonry sells building supplies, such as stucco.    Defendant/Appellee Scott Griffin & Associates (SGA) is a general contracting firm that builds houses on property it owns.  Felix Ruiz d/b/a Ruiz Construction (“Ruiz”), a stucco, stone, and masonry work contractor, was hired by SGA to do stucco work on two houses SGA was building, one at 10 Oak Cove Lane and the other at 30 Oak Cove Lane.  During the time Ruiz was working on these two SGA houses, it was doing work at three other projects on Oak Cove Lane for AGM Homes, and at least one other job in the Huffman area. 

An issue arose with Ruiz not paying Morrell for stucco he used at 30 Oak Cove.  This resulted in Morrell placing a materialman’s lien against the house at 30 Oak Cove.  On June 6, 2008, SGA paid Morrell $12,331.05 to obtain a release of that lien.  Because SGA had already paid Ruiz for the material that was the subject of the lien on 30 Oak Cove, SGA and Ruiz entered an agreement with regard to 10 Oak Cove under which Ruiz was paid for labor only, and SGA would only pay him a portion of the cost of his labor until the $12,331.05 was recouped by SGA.

As a result of the problems related to 30 Oak Cove, Scott Griffin, the president of SGA, verbally requested that Morrell contact him for approval before it gave Ruiz material on credit that Ruiz claimed were for SGA jobsites.  Griffin testified that Morrell called him “[t]hree times maybe, less than five times,” about Ruiz purchasing materials for his jobsites, and then he stopped receiving calls for the remainder of the time Ruiz continued doing work for SGA.  SGA later discovered a problem had arisen again when Morrell again contacted Griffin about materials for which Ruiz was not paying (about which Morrell had not notified Griffin) and notified him that Morrell was going to place a lien on 10 Oak Cove.  On May 1, 2008, SGA sent a letter to Morrell claiming there was no proof that the materials made the subject of Morrell’s claims were used at SGA job sites and stating that SGA would not take responsibility for any charges related to its projects unless Morrell obtained written authorization from SGA in advance. 

Between April 2008 and June 2008, SGA paid Ruiz a total of $7,500 for labor only.  SGA terminated Ruiz’s services completely in June 2008, and hired another contractor, J.J. Plaster, to complete the stucco work at 10 Oak Cove.  Ruiz had done some work preparing the site, but the bulk of the stucco and labor to install it was provided by J.J. Plaster. 

On August 12, 2008, Morrell’s attorney sent SGA a letter notifying it that Ruiz had unpaid invoices for stucco at SGA’s jobsite at 10 Oak Cove.  That notice requested payment of $15,451.17 for Ruiz’s unpaid invoices and $350.00 for its Notice of Intent to file a lien on 10 Oak Cove Lane.  On September 4, 2008, Morrell filed its lien on 10 Oak Cove. 

When SGA failed to pay these invoices on Ruiz’s behalf, Morrell sued SGA seeing to foreclose its lien on 10 Oak Cove or to recover for unpaid invoices through various theories, including quantum meruit.  SGA filed an answer asserting that SGA’s lien was filed untimely and pleading, as affirmative defenses, accord and satisfaction, estoppel, fraud, failure to mitigate, and denial of conditions precedent.  SGA also counterclaimed for breach of contract and attorney’s fees, citing Morrell’s agreement to not sell product to Ruiz for SGA’s jobs without prior authorization.

1.     Trial 

The case was tried to the bench.  Morrell introduced into evidence numerous invoices Ruiz had not paid, along with the corresponding delivery tickets, which each listed “10 Oak Cove Lane” and “GC: Scott Griffin”[1] in the “ship to” field.    Most of them, however, also designated the shipping method as “will call.”    Morrell’s office manager, Sonia Barboza, testified that Ruiz would designate “10 Oak Cove Lane” as the “ship to” address when placing the order, and that most times someone would then come to Morrell’s place of business to pick up the order, but other times Morrell would deliver the order to the jobsite.  She further testified that it was the practice of Morrell’s customer service representatives to call the general contractor “every single” time a subcontractor placed an order to confirm that the materials were for that particular job.  Later, she testified that “wouldn’t be probably [sic] every single” time, but the “majority” of times.  Some of the delivery tickets were signed by the person picking up or receiving the order; while Ruiz did not sign for materials, Morrell assumed that whoever signed for the materials was one of Ruiz’s agents or workers.  None of the tickets were signed by Griffin or any other SGA employee.

Griffin testified that, given the amount of stucco that J.J. Plasterthe company that replaced Ruizinstalled at 10 Oak Cove, it would not have been possible for all of the unpaid stucco that Ruiz bought from Morrell to go into that project.  He further testified that no stucco was delivered to 10 Cove Oak while Ruiz was employed on May 1, 2008 to perform labor only.  Finally, SGA introduced evidence that its last payment to Ruiz was on June 20.

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Morrell Masonry Supply, Inc. v. Scott Griffin & Associates, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrell-masonry-supply-inc-v-scott-griffin-associa-texapp-2011.