Rasa Floors, LP v. Spring Village Partners, Ltd.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 2010
Docket01-08-00918-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Rasa Floors, LP v. Spring Village Partners, Ltd. (Rasa Floors, LP v. Spring Village Partners, Ltd.) 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
Rasa Floors, LP v. Spring Village Partners, Ltd., (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued November 18, 2010.

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-08-00918-CV

———————————

Rasa Floors, L.P., Appellant

V.

Spring Village Partners, Ltd., Appellee

On Appeal from the County Civil Court at Law No. 1

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 908373

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          As part of a renovation project, an apartment complex owner hired a contractor to install new wood and tile floors in apartment units.  When the owner failed to pay the contractor’s invoices for the floor installations, the contractor sued on a sworn account, and alternatively for breach of contract or recovery in quantum meruit.  The apartment owner countersued for breach of contract, breach of warranty, and fraud. 

          A jury found neither party liable under a contract.  It awarded no damages under the owner’s fraud claim.  But it awarded $5,000 in damages to the apartment owner for breach of warranty and $29,000 to the contractor under its quantum meruit claim.  The trial court disregarded the jury’s quantum meruit finding, and refused to offset it against the warranty damages, which would have resulted in a judgment for the contractor.  The trial court entered judgment on the verdict to the apartment owner for the $5,000 for breach of warranty, but refused to award it attorney’s fees. 

          The contractor appeals, claiming that it should have judgment on its pleading for a sworn account, and that the breach of warranty finding is not supported by legally sufficient evidence.  Alternatively, it claims that it should recover its quantum meruit damages, offset by the jury’s breach of warranty damage finding should we find it legally sufficient, plus its attorney’s fees.  The apartment owner also appeals, requesting that it be awarded its attorney’s fees on its breach of warranty claim.

          We conclude that the contractor is not entitled to judgment on its sworn account pleadings and that legally sufficient evidence supports the jury’s finding for breach of warranty.  We further conclude that the trial court erred in disregarding the jury’s finding in quantum meruit, and that the contractor was entitled to judgment on that finding, offset by the warranty damages.  We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand the case to the trial court for entry of a new judgment and for reconsideration of attorney’s fees in light of our rulings.

BACKGROUND

Spring Village Partners, Ltd. owns an apartment complex on Chimney Rock in the southwest area of Houston.  The complex had fallen into disrepair, and Spring Village hired Rasa Floors, L.P. to assist in apartment renovations by replacing the existing flooring in some of the apartments with vinyl plank flooring.  Rasa installs flooring exclusively in apartment complexes, has operations throughout the state, and installs flooring in about three to five thousand apartment units each month.  Joe Slaughter, Rasa’s principal, bid $1.50 per square foot to install the flooring. 

Upon completion of the work, Rasa presented invoices to Cecilia Lascu, a principal of Spring Village.   She reviewed the invoices and found them to be excessive in light of the size of the job.   For example, Rasa charged $1900 for a 500-square-foot apartment, $400 more than the bid price.  Concerned about the bills, she asked a maintenance worker to measure the apartment square footage.  His measurements confirmed to her that the invoices averaged about 30% more than the $1.50 per square foot that Slaughter bid for the project.  She testified that a similar issue arose from Rasa’s installation of carpet at the apartments, but when she pointed out the discrepancy, Rasa issued new invoices for the correct amount.  Spring Village’s apartment manager at the time also testified that she signed work orders for particular apartments, but those orders never included a bid price.  She also attended the meeting during which Slaughter and Lascu agreed on a price and remembered it to be $1.50 per square foot, installed.

          In contrast, Rasa argued at trial that it faxed a written bid to the property before it installed the flooring that reflected the invoiced prices.  It pointed out that it charges additional fees often associated with a flooring project, for services like removing old flooring, cutting around bath fixtures, preparing the floor, and moving appliances.  Michael Rasa, the president and chief executive of Rasa, testified that these fees are in addition to the square footage installation price, and that no flooring company could make a profit based on a quote of $1.50 per square foot if the quote included these other services at no charge.  In addition, each job results in a certain percentage of “waste plank” that factors into the square footage calculation.  It is customary in the industry to include the waste plank in the square footage numbers. 

          Joe Slaughter, the Rasa sales representative that sold the flooring to Spring Village testified that he never offered to sell the planking for $1.50 per square foot, installed.  Instead, he offered to measure the units and submit a written formal bid proposal.  He also took issue with the measurements provided by Lascu for the apartments in question, pointing out errors in calculating square footage, or areas that should have been included in the Spring Village version of the measurements but were not.

Lascu believed the written bids were in error and introduced cell phone records that demonstrated her efforts to contact Rasa in an attempt to rectify the error.  Rasa proceeded with the installation without a signed authorization on the written bid. 

         

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