Occidental Chemical Corporation v. Jason Jenkins

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 12, 2015
Docket13-0961
StatusPublished

This text of Occidental Chemical Corporation v. Jason Jenkins (Occidental Chemical Corporation v. Jason Jenkins) 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
Occidental Chemical Corporation v. Jason Jenkins, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

FILED 13-0961 2/12/2015 11:50:09 AM TEXAS CIVIL JUSTICE LEAGUE tex-4124973 SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS 400 West Fifteenth Street, Suite 1400 BLAKE A. HAWTHORNE, CLERK Austin, Texas 78701-1648 512.320.0474 (T) www.tcjl.com

February 12, 2015

Supreme Court of Texas P.O. Box 12248 Austin, Texas 78711

Re: No. 13-0961; Occidental Chemical Corporation v. Jason Jenkins.

To the Honorable Members of the Texas Supreme Court:

Pursuant to Rule 11, Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure, amicus

curiae Texas Civil Justice League files this amicus letter in the above-

referenced cause.

Statement of Interest

The Texas Civil Justice League (“TCJL”) is a non-profit association

of Texas businesses, health care providers, professional and trade

associations, and individuals dedicated to maintaining a fair and balanced

civil justice system. Since its inception in 1986, TCJL has consistently

striven, through legislative advocacy and participation in important matters

before the Court, to achieve a fair and balanced tort liability system that

provides access to judicial remedies for legitimate claims, while encouraging

capital investment and job creation in this state. TCJL’s membership

includes numerous manufacturers and other businesses that own and make TCJL Page 2

improvements to real property, either directly or with the assistance of

contractors, and that frequently sell such property to another manufacturer or

business. Its membership also includes engineers and contractors that design

and construct improvements to real property and that do business with the

reasonable expectation that statutes of repose will operate effectively in our

state. The outcome of this case is of critical importance to these businesses

and to their employees. It is equally important to the jurisprudence of this

state. This letter has been prepared in the ordinary course of TCJL’s

operations.

Summary of Argument

The First District Court of Appeals erred in reversing the trial court’s

determination that the Respondent’s claim was barred by Texas’s ten-year

statute of repose for a person who constructs or repairs an improvement to

real property. If the Court of Appeals’ decision is permitted to stand, it will

effectively nullify the statute in cases in which any part of the construction

or repair of an improvement to real property is performed by a third-party

contractor hired by the property owner. Such a construction of the statute

would radically and adversely alter ordinary industry practices in Texas and

potentially threaten the viability of major construction projects in the state. TCJL Page 3

Argument

The First Court of Appeals’ refusal to apply §16.009, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, in this case is grossly erroneous and poses a serious threat to Texas’s manufacturing economy.

By virtually every measure, the Texas economy in recent years has

surged well ahead of the national economy on the strength of its diverse

manufacturing, technology, and energy sectors. Many national observers

attribute this vitality in part to the public policy decisions made by the Texas

Legislature and faithfully enforced by this Court. Indeed, in the last decade

this Court has frequently been called upon to decide on the construction of

legislative enactments designed to make the Texas economic climate

attractive to investment and job creation, as well as to restore fairness to the

adjudication of legal disputes in Texas courts. The present case is no

exception.

Like most states, the Texas Legislature has enacted a ten-year statute

of repose that applies to claims against persons that construct or repair

improvements to real property. TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 16.009. The

public policy rationale for statues of repose is straightforward: to protect the

state’s primary economic engine—construction—from uncertain and

incalculable liabilities that may occur far into the future. Without such

certainty, construction projects could not be effectively or affordably TCJL Page 4

insured. Without effective and affordable insurance, construction grinds to a

halt. One might reasonably ask whether the Petitioner in this case—or any

property owner—would have made a substantial investment in plant

improvements (including safety improvements) if it thought the Texas

statute of repose did not apply. And until now, no case of which we are

aware has ever suggested that it does not.

In its present form, §16.009 was adopted in 1985 as part of the Texas

Legislative Council’s nonsubstantive code revision project.1 This legislation,

which stretched to more than 900 pages, codified the Texas Civil Practice

and Remedies Code as it appears today. The legislation was passed in both

houses without opposition and on non-record votes.2 As the Court of

Appeals points out in its opinion, when §16.009 was codified, the language

of the statute was slightly changed.3 The Court of Appeals seems to attach

some importance to this alteration, which it emphasizes in its attempt to

distinguish this case from the Dallas Court of Appeals’ decision in

McCulloch v. Fox & Jacobs, Inc., 696 S.W.2d 918 (Tex.App.—Dallas,

1985, writ ref’d n.r.e.). Ultimately, the Court of Appeals appears to decide

that Petitioner could not be a “constructor” of an improvement to real 1 See S.B. 797, Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 959, Sec. 1, eff. Sept. 1, 1985. 2 See S.B. 797, Enrolled Version, 69th Leg., R.S., 1985. 3 See Jenkins v. Occidental Chemical Corporation, 415 S.W.3d 14, 27 (Tex.App— Houston [1st Dist.]), footnote 10. The Court notices that the term “furnish” was moved from the body to the title of the statute, hardly a substantive change. TCJL Page 5

property because some of the work was “furnished” by an independent

contractor.4 If this reading of the statute were correct, it would mean that

every owner of real property in this state, from a residential home to a multi-

billion dollar manufacturing facility, is indefinitely liable for defects in

construction or repairs the owner initiates, while the contractors who

actually “hammered the nails and turned the screws” are not. This reading

defies common sense: the 1985 nonsubstantive codification of 16.009 makes

it clear that no such distinction between an owner and a “constructor” exists.

In its initial November 17, 2011 opinion in the case, the Court of

Appeals makes a curious assertion that §16.009(e)(2) categorically excludes

owners of real property from the statute.5 Citing a single prior opinion (also

by the First Court of Appeals), the Court states that a statute of repose is not

intended “to protect owners because they have control over the realty.”6 But

the statute merely says that it “does not bar an action” against a person in

actual possession or control of the real property when the injury occurred—

i.e. the current owner or lessee. The statute, however, can apply to a former

owner of the property, one who is no longer “in possession or control” of the

property when the injury occurs. As a former owner of the real property on 4 From a purely factual standpoint, the Court of Appeals seems to ignore that the Petitioner itself “furnished” the construction of the piping for the pH-balancing system.

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Related

McCulloch v. Fox & Jacobs, Inc.
696 S.W.2d 918 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1985)
Jason Jenkins v. Occidental Chemical Corporation
415 S.W.3d 14 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2013)

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