Rohrmoos Venture, Eric Langford, Dan Basso and Tobin Grove v. UTSW DVA Healthcare, LLP

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 3, 2015
Docket05-14-00774-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Rohrmoos Venture, Eric Langford, Dan Basso and Tobin Grove v. UTSW DVA Healthcare, LLP (Rohrmoos Venture, Eric Langford, Dan Basso and Tobin Grove v. UTSW DVA Healthcare, LLP) 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
Rohrmoos Venture, Eric Langford, Dan Basso and Tobin Grove v. UTSW DVA Healthcare, LLP, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion Filed August 3, 2015

Court of Appeals S In The

Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-14-00774-CV

ROHRMOOS VENTURE, ERIC LANGFORD, DAN BASSO AND TOBIN GROVE, Appellants V. UTSW DVA HEALTHCARE, LLP, Appellee

On Appeal from the 192nd Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-10-15959

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Francis, Lang-Miers, and Whitehill Opinion by Justice Whitehill This case involves claims for breach of the implied warranty of suitability and breach of

contract arising out of a commercial lease. The jury found that both parties breached the lease,

but the landlord breached first, and that the landlord breached the implied warranty of suitability.

The trial court entered judgment for the tenant, UTSW DVA Healthcare, LLP (“UT”), against

the landlord (Rohrmoos Venture), Eric Langford, Dan Basso, and Tobin Grove (collectively

“Rohrmoos”). Rohrmoos appealed.

Rohrmoos’s appellate brief presents these eight issues:1

1 The two lists of issues in Rohrmoos’s brief are numbered differently and do not correspond to the arguments in the text. For example, the list of “issues presented for review” includes an additional issue (numbered four) that asserts the trial court erred by giving an incorrect instruction on the implied warranty of suitability. There is no separate section of the brief that argues this issue; the only reference is within the body of the seventh issue complaining about the jury’s answers to the charge. Therefore, we address the complaint about the instruction in conjunction with the seventh issue. We number the issues in the order in which they appear in the Table of Contents section of the brief and address the points raised in the body that reference these numbers. (1) The parties contracted for an exclusive remedy that superseded the implied warranty

of suitability.

(2) – (3) The trial court erred in admitting certain expert testimony and documents,

without which there is no evidence or insufficient evidence that Rohrmoos breached the implied

warranty of suitability.

(4) There is no evidence or insufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding that

Rohrmoos breached the implied warranty of suitability because there must be evidence of (a)

defect at the lease’s inception; (b) the defect must be latent and vital; and (c) the defect must

exist at the lease termination.

(5) UT waived any breach of the implied warranty by remaining on the property for three

years after discovering the alleged breach.2

(6) The trial court erred in awarding UT attorney’s fees because (a) the lease allegedly

does not provide for attorneys’ fees to UT; (b) UT cannot recover its attorneys’ fees under the

declaratory judgment statute because UT allegedly abandoned its declaratory judgment claim;

and (c) there is no evidence supporting the fee amounts the jury found.

(7) The trial court erroneously refused to disregard the jury’s answers to questions 1– 6 in

the charge because those answers are either unsupported by the evidence, or they are matters of

law which the court is solely responsible for determining; and

(8) The trial court should have entered judgment against UT because there is evidence

that UT breached the lease and Rohrmoos’s damages evidence was uncontroverted.

For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

2 Although the Table of Contents appears to state this issue more broadly, the text of Rohrmoos’s brief casts this argument solely in terms of the implied warranty of suitability.

–2– I. Background

The facts are detailed, and the record is extensive. But we discuss the facts generally

because we decide this case on settled legal principles that do not need a detailed factual

discussion.

Water Problems

This case revolved around water problems in a commercial building UT leased from

Rohrmoos to operate as a dialysis clinic. There were extensive efforts to determine what was

causing those problems. When Rohrmoos did not solve the problem, UT moved out before the

lease term expired.

The Trial

After moving out, UT sued Rohrmoos and Langford for breach of the implied warranty

of suitability and breach of contract.3 UT also requested a declaratory judgment that: (i) a

casualty occurred as defined in the lease, (ii) Rohrmoos failed to remedy the casualty and (iii)

UT had the right to terminate the lease.

Rohrmoos answered the lawsuit and counterclaimed for negligence and breach of

contract. Rohrmoos also asserted several affirmative defenses, including waiver and prior

material breach.

UT asserted the following affirmative defenses in response to Rohrmoos’s counterclaim:

(i) contributory negligence, (ii) failure to mitigate damages, (iii) termination of the contract was

justified due to health and safety concerns; (iv) “waiver or estoppel,” and (v) statute of

limitations.

3 The live pleading at trial also includes claims against Rohrmoos general partners Dan Basso and Tobin Grove.

–3– Before trial, Rohrmoos moved to exclude the testimony from an engineer UT retained,

Mike Stenstrom, and letters he wrote regarding the property. After two hearings, the trial court

allowed some of Stenstrom’s testimony and all but one section of one of his letters.

Other UT witnesses included the property engineer Boyce Farrar, the property

administrator, a state inspector, the facility maintenance man, and other UT personnel involved

in operating the facility. UT’s witnesses testified about the water and flooring problems and the

unsuccessful efforts to resolve these problems. Because the issues were not resolved, and UT

was concerned about patient health and safety, it terminated the lease and moved the facility to

another location.

Rohrmoos’s witnesses included engineer Tom Witherspoon, a plumber, an architect, two

architectural engineers, two real estate service professionals, two ceramic tile experts, two of the

facility’s medical directors, and others. In short, Rohrmoos elicited testimony that (i) the floor

tile buckled because it was installed incorrectly and (ii) the water issues were not caused by a

structural defect and did not render the facility unsuitable for a dialysis clinic.

The case was submitted to the jury after nine trial days and with over nine hundred

exhibits. UT did not seek to recover damages on its breach of implied warranty or breach of

contract claims. Instead, in questions 1–3, the jury was asked whether Rohrmoos failed to

comply with the lease (and whether UT waived such breach), whether UT failed to comply with

the lease, and if appropriate, which party failed to comply first. Question 4 asked whether

Rohrmoos breached the implied warranty of suitability and whether UT waived any such breach.

The charge also asked questions concerning attorney’s fees for both parties that were not

predicated on any affirmative liability findings.

Responding to the charge’s questions, the jury found that UT and Rohrmoos both failed

to comply with the lease, that Rohrmoos failed to comply first, and that Rohrmoos breached the

–4– implied warranty of suitability. The jury found attorney’s fees for both UT and Rohrmoos of

$800,000 for trial court representation, $150,000 for representation at the Court of Appeals, and

$75,000 for representation at the Texas Supreme Court.

Based on the jury’s answers, the trial court entered final judgment against Rohrmoos for

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Rohrmoos Venture, Eric Langford, Dan Basso and Tobin Grove v. UTSW DVA Healthcare, LLP, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rohrmoos-venture-eric-langford-dan-basso-and-tobin-grove-v-utsw-dva-texapp-2015.