Pacesetter Pools, Inc./Pierce Homes, Inc. v. Pierce Homes, Inc./Pacesetter Pools, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 17, 2002
Docket03-01-00561-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Pacesetter Pools, Inc./Pierce Homes, Inc. v. Pierce Homes, Inc./Pacesetter Pools, Inc. (Pacesetter Pools, Inc./Pierce Homes, Inc. v. Pierce Homes, Inc./Pacesetter Pools, 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
Pacesetter Pools, Inc./Pierce Homes, Inc. v. Pierce Homes, Inc./Pacesetter Pools, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-01-00561-CV

Pacesetter Pools, Inc./Pierce Homes, Inc., Appellants

v.

Pierce Homes, Inc./Pacesetter Pools, Inc., Appellees

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY, 393RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 98-30481-393, HONORABLE SAM HOUSTON, JUDGE PRESIDING

Pacesetter Pools, Inc. (APacesetter@) and Pierce Homes, Inc. (APierce Homes@) were joint

tortfeasors in an underlying cause of action for damage to the foundation of a home. The plaintiff prevailed

in arbitration against Pierce Homes. Pierce Homes paid the arbitrator=s1 award and sought contribution

from Pacesetter. A jury found that the plaintiff=s damages were caused by the negligence of Pacesetter and

Pierce Homes and attributed the negligence ninety percent to Pacesetter and ten percent to Pierce Homes.

The district court rendered judgment for Pierce Homes and against Pacesetter for $193,986.80Cninety

percent of the arbitrator=s awardCplus interest and court costs. The court did not award attorney=s fees.

1 Texas law uses the terms Aarbiter@ and Aarbitrator@ interchangeably. Compare, e.g., J.J. Gregory Gourmet Servs., Inc. v. Antone=s Imp. Co., 927 S.W.2d 31, 33 (Tex. App.CHouston [1st Dist.] 1995, no writ) (using Aarbiter@), with the Uniform Arbitration Act, Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. '' 171.001-.098 (West Supp. 2002) (using Aarbitrator@). We will employ the statutory term. Pacesetter appeals the award of damages, and Pierce Homes appeals the court=s denial of attorney=s fees.

We will affirm the district-court judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Julie Allcox2 sued Pacesetter and Pierce Homes for damages to a home she purchased from

Pierce Homes in Flower Mound. Allcox alleged that Pacesetter and Pierce Homes had negligently designed

and built the home=s foundation and swimming pool and, as a result of such negligence, she sustained

damages.3 Pierce Homes cross-claimed against Pacesetter, asserting that any construction defects were the

fault of Pacesetter and that APacesetter is liable to Pierce Homes for indemnity, contribution, and for any

amounts Pierce Homes may be compelled to pay to [Allcox] as a result of the occurrences made the basis

of [Allcox=s] Lawsuit.@

2 The suit was originally filed in the name of ARobert and Julie Stevens.@ However, during the pendency of the suit and before arbitration, the Stevenses divorced, and Julie Stevens changed her name to AJulie Allcox.@ Robert Stevens quitclaimed his interest in the home to Allcox, and she was the sole claimant in the arbitration. The district court dismissed Robert Stevens=s claims, and he is not a party to this appeal. For convenience, we will refer solely to Allcox as the plaintiff in the underlying suit. 3 Allcox also sued Larry F. Smith, who she alleged Aparticipated in the design of the foundation and/or the construction of the foundation of the home.@ The district court rendered summary judgment for Smith, and he is not a party to this appeal.

2 Allcox filed a motion to compel arbitration and plea in abatement, asserting that she was

entitled to have her claims against Pierce Homes arbitrated pursuant to an arbitration clause contained in a

homeowner=s warranty that Pierce Homes had provided Allcox. Over Pacesetter=s objection, the district

court granted the motion and abated the action pending arbitration. Pacesetter was not a party to the

warranty and refused to participate in the arbitration. The arbitrator awarded Allcox $215,541, including

attorney=s and expert=s fees.4

Pierce Homes moved to confirm the arbitrator=s award. The district court rendered an

interlocutory judgment granting Pierce Homes= motion, converting the arbitrator=s award Ainto a partial

judgment that is final as to [Allcox=s] claims against Pierce Homes,@ and granting Allcox judgment against

Pierce Homes for the damages, fees, and expenses awarded by the arbitrator. The interlocutory judgment

recited that Pierce Homes had made payments to Allcox satisfying its liability under the arbitrator=s award

before the judgment=s rendition.5

Asserting that the arbitration award had resolved any liability they may have had to Allcox,

both Pacesetter and Pierce Homes filed motions for summary judgment, asking the district court to dismiss

4 The arbitrator also ordered that Pierce Homes pay $8441 for American Arbitration Association administrative fees and expenses, including $980 that had been paid by Allcox, and arbitrator=s fees of $19,832.42, including $5900 that had been paid by Allcox. 5 The interlocutory judgment was signed by Judge Vicki Isaacks.

3 Allcox=s action against them. The court granted the motions and realigned the parties, leaving only Pierce

Homes= claims against Pacesetter to be adjudicated.

Pierce Homes and Pacesetter stipulated that the arbitrator=s award of $215,541 constituted

the total amount of Allcox=s damages.

At trial, Pierce Homes presented three expert witnesses who testified that improper

construction by Pacesetter of the swimming pool and related decking had caused water to saturate the soils

under the Allcox home. Pacesetter offered no expert testimony in opposition. The jury returned a verdict

that both Pacesetter and Pierce Homes were negligent and caused the damage to the home. The jury

apportioned the negligence ninety percent to Pacesetter and ten percent to Pierce Homes and found

$81,000 to be a reasonable attorney=s fee Afor the necessary services of Pierce Homes= attorneys in

representing Pierce Homes in the arbitration action brought by [Allcox].@

Pacesetter filed a motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, asserting that there was no

legal theory under which it could be held liable to Pierce Homes and, in any event, Pierce Homes was not

entitled to recover attorney=s fees. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 301. The district court rendered final judgment in

favor of Pierce Homes in the amount of $193,986.90Cninety percent of the stipulated damagesCbut did

not award attorney=s fees.6

In three issues on appeal, Pacesetter contends that: (1) Pierce Homes was not entitled to

contribution after paying the arbitration award in full satisfaction of Allcox=s damages; (2) Pierce Homes did

not have a right of subrogation under the warranty and, if it did, such right was barred by Pierce Homes=

6 The final judgment was signed by Judge Sam Houston.

4 voluntarily paying the arbitration award; and (3) Pierce Homes did not have standing to assert a cause of

action for negligence and, if it did, Pierce Homes waived its cause of action by not requesting that it be

submitted to the jury. Pierce Homes also appeals, contending that the district court erred in refusing to

award it the attorney=s fees it incurred in defending Allcox=s claims.

DISCUSSION

Standard of Review

Whether Pierce Homes was entitled to either contribution or subrogation and whether it had

standing to assert a cause of action for negligence are questions of law. AWhen an issue turns on a pure

question of law, we do not give any particular deference to legal conclusions of the trial court and apply a de

novo standard of review.@ Trinity Indus., Inc. v. Ashland, Inc., 53 S.W.3d 852, 868 (Tex. App.CAustin

2001, pet. denied) (citing Tenet Health Ltd. v. Zamora,

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