Pleasant Grove Independent School District v. FieldTurf USA Inc. and Altech, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 2020
Docket06-19-00022-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Pleasant Grove Independent School District v. FieldTurf USA Inc. and Altech, Inc. (Pleasant Grove Independent School District v. FieldTurf USA Inc. and Altech, 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
Pleasant Grove Independent School District v. FieldTurf USA Inc. and Altech, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

No. 06-19-00022-CV

PLEASANT GROVE INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT, Appellant

V.

FIELDTURF USA, INC. AND ALTECH, INC., Appellees

On Appeal from the 102nd District Court Bowie County, Texas Trial Court No. 15C1318-102

Before Morriss, C.J., Burgess and Stevens, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Morriss MEMORANDUM OPINION To build a new football stadium, Pleasant Grove Independent School District contracted

with prime contractor Altech, Inc., which in turn contracted with subcontractor Sports

Constructors, which contracted, finally, with FieldTurf USA for the manufacture and provision of

an artificial-turf field bearing the product name Prestige XM-60 with Duraspine fibers. Though

the field’s life was purported to be ten to twelve years and was warranted for eight years, the field

started degrading within five years. This turf struggle resulted, producing various claims among

Pleasant Grove, Altech, and FieldTurf. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of

Altech and partial summary judgment in favor of FieldTurf as to Pleasant Grove’s fraud claims.

Pleasant Grove’s remaining claim against FieldTurf proceeded to trial, where the jury, based on

its finding that FieldTurf breached its warranty, awarded Pleasant Grove $175,000.00 in actual

damages. Both Pleasant Grove and FieldTurf appealed.

Pleasant Grove argues that the trial court erred in (a) granting summary judgment for

Altech because Altech’s motion was defective and there were material issues of fact in dispute,

(b) granting summary judgment for FieldTurf on Pleasant Grove’s fraud and fraud in the

inducement claims, (c) improperly instructing the jury as to the measure of damages, and (d) not

granting a partial new trial as to attorney fees.

In its cross appeal, FieldTurf contends that the trial court erred by not granting judgment

notwithstanding the verdict because (a) Pleasant Grove failed to present evidence that the warranty

was breached, (b) Pleasant Grove’s exclusive remedy under the warranty was repair or

replacement, (c) Pleasant Grove failed to plead or prove that the warranty failed of its essential

2 purpose, (d) there was legally insufficient evidence of notice and opportunity to cure, and (e) there

was no evidence of damages.

In Part A of this opinion, we explain why we reverse Altech’s summary judgment against

Pleasant Grove as to the G-Max warranty claim only, because a fact issue exists by virtue of the

summary-judgment evidence regarding whether Altech breached its warranty that the field would

meet G-Max testing specifications. That reversal results from the following two conclusions:

although (1) Altech’s motions for summary judgment were not facially defective, (2) the G-Max

report raises an issue of material fact.

In Part B of this opinion, we explain why we affirm FieldTurf’s partial summary judgment

against Pleasant Grove, based on the following three conclusions: although (B1) FieldTurf has

failed to negate Pleasant Grove’s reliance and therefore cannot claim entitlement to summary

judgment on that basis, (B2) there is no summary-judgment evidence of an affirmative material

misrepresentation to Pleasant Grove, and (B3) there is no summary-judgment evidence that creates

any duty of FieldTurf to disclose.

In the final paragraph of this opinion, we conclude that a remand for new trial is the

necessary result, restoring the parties to the status quo at the time of the summary judgment rulings

and having the trial court proceed from that point forward in light of this opinion.

Factual and Procedural Background

Pleasant Grove contracted with Altech to be the general contractor for the construction of

its new high school football stadium and the installation of a synthetic turf field. Afterward,

Pleasant Grove considered several different turf manufacturers and several different turf products.

3 According to a written declaration and deposition testimony, which ultimately were excluded by

the trial court, James Kevin Davis, then Pleasant Grove’s Athletic Director and head football

coach, had several meetings and telephone conversations with FieldTurf representatives in late

2008 or early 2009, who told him that the Duraspine fiber comprising FieldTurf’s Prestige XM-

60 synthetic turf was available in the school’s required colors of green, white, gold, and black; that

it was more durable; that it would stay erect longer than its competitors’ products; that it had better

aesthetics than its competitors’ products; and that the FieldTurf field would last ten to twelve years.

Relying on those representations, Davis recommended the Prestige XM-60 field containing

Duraspine fiber FieldTurf product to the Pleasant Grove Board, which, in the spring of 2009,

almost a year after contracting with Altech, selected the Prestige XM-60 with Duraspine as their

new synthetic-turf field. Altech had previously subcontracted the field’s installation to Sports

Constructors, Inc., which, after Pleasant Grove chose the Prestige field, obtained the turf materials

and/or labor from FieldTurf to construct and install the field.

The field was installed between August and October 2009. FieldTurf provided an eight-

year limited warranty on the artificial-turf field. FieldTurf’s Manufacturer’s Limited Warranty for

the field provided:

FIELDTURF warrants that if Prestige XM-60 for football, soccer, synthetic turf proves to be defective in material or workmanship, resulting in a loss of pile height greater than 50%, during normal and ordinary use of the Product for the sporting activities set out below or for any other uses for which FieldTurf gives its written authorization, within 8 years from the date of completion of installation, FieldTurf will, at FieldTurf’s option, either repair or replace the affected area without charge

The warranty period officially began on or about April 14, 2010.

4 Around June 2014, Pleasant Grove personnel first notified FieldTurf that the field was

significantly degrading and its fibers were becoming brittle, causing color loss and loss of traction.

In July, a FieldTurf representative, Ross Wittig, personally walked the field and took photos.

Afterward, in an “off the record” conversation with Josh Gibson, who had, in 2014, replaced Davis

as coach and Athletic Director, and Steve Shatto, Pleasant Grove’s maintenance director, Wittig

said that the field was “in bad condition” and that:

FieldTurf has multiple fields that are failing. They’re failing at -- at a large rate all over the United States. There are some schools that are getting these fields replaced; that they’ve just started turning down, you know, people. And so his advice to us was that the squeakiest wheel -- those were his words: the squeakiest wheel is going to get attention, and -- and, you know, we needed to raise a fuss about our product.

In Wittig’s email to FieldTurf, he confirmed that “[t]here [were] some safety concerns,” that the

gold-colored fibers in the end zones “ha[d] about disappeared,” that “[m]any inlays [were]

separating,” and that the field’s white lines were beginning to disappear.

After continued complaints about the field, FieldTurf’s designated Duraspine field

evaluator, Todd Bresee, inspected the field in September 2014, and in his report, 1 he concluded

that the field was “showing signs of accelerated wear in all the fiber colors” between the football

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