Safeco Surety and C.A. Walker, Inc. v. J.P. Southwest Concrete, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 2, 2009
Docket01-07-00904-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Safeco Surety and C.A. Walker, Inc. v. J.P. Southwest Concrete, Inc. (Safeco Surety and C.A. Walker, Inc. v. J.P. Southwest Concrete, 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
Safeco Surety and C.A. Walker, Inc. v. J.P. Southwest Concrete, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 2, 2009





In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas



NO. 01-07-00904-CV



C.A. WALKER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY AND SAFECO SURETY, Appellants



V.



J.P. SOUTHWEST CONCRETE, INC., Appellee



On Appeal from the 189th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2005-70198



MEMORANDUM OPINION



Appellants, C.A. Walker Construction Company and Safeco Surety (collectively "Walker"), appeal from the trial court's judgment awarding appellee, J.P. Southwest Concrete, Inc. ("J.P."), $47,000 in actual damages, as well as attorney's fees and pre- and post-judgment interest. In its first three issues, Walker contends the trial court erred in the amount of damages awarded to J.P. because (1) the damages award is not supported by the evidence, (2) the language of the contract between Walker and J.P. precludes at least some of the consequential damages sought by Walker, and (3) J.P. did not plead for the damages the trial court awarded. In its fourth issue, Walker contends the trial court improperly rendered judgment against Walker on its counterclaim. We conclude that Walker waived its challenge to the counterclaim due to inadequate briefing, and the trial court erred in its determination of the amount of the damages award. We therefore affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

Background Walker was the general contractor on a construction project for the Spring Branch Independent School District. J.P. was a subcontractor on the project and contracted to perform concrete work, including drilling pier holes and pouring concrete piers. Among other requirements, the contract provided that extra work performed by J.P. outside the scope of the contract must have Walker's approval and signature in a written change order. The contract provided for Walker to pay $243,000 in exchange for J.P.'s performance of "all concrete work" for the project, including "concrete slabs, walks and paving" and "providing and placing all concrete related: concrete, rebar, vapor barrier, form boards, expansion materials, and tie-wires." The contract did not mention site work or removal of existing obstructions. According to Jeff Pantle, J.P.'s president, J.P. was not responsible for site clearing, demolition, and subsoil debris removal, and those jobs should have been done by the time J.P. was to do the concrete work.

In September 2004, when J.P. began its work for Walker, it encountered severe subsoil obstructions while attempting to drill pier holes. Pantle and Donnelly, J.P.'s superintendent, both described numerous obstructions J.P. encountered while attempting to drill pier holes. Walker instructed J.P. to prepare and submit written change orders to cover the removal of the obstructions. J.P. did submit a number of written change orders for work outside the scope of the contract. However, Walker only approved some of these orders.

As work progressed, J.P. submitted applications for payment along with supporting documentation. As of December 2004, J.P. had been paid $57,349.25. J.P. submitted another application for payment seeking $79,796 for January. Later, J.P. sought a payment of $17,099 for work done in February. Walker did not pay J.P. until March 16, 2005, when it paid $84,756.35. In exchange for the March 16, 2005 payment, Pantle, on behalf of J.P., executed a "Subcontractor Affidavit of Payment and Partial Release of Lien."

After the March 16, 2005 payment, the amount remaining to be performed under the contract was $132,043.40 and J.P. continued to work for Walker. Walker told J.P. that subsoil debris and obstructions had been removed and requested it continue drilling pier holes. J.P. went to the site, bringing with it another subcontractor that had drilling equipment, but was unable to perform work due to subsoil debris and obstructions. Walker acknowledged that it owed J.P. money as payment for this work that was done March 22, 2005, but only for the amount of $2,848.

For several months, J.P. attempted to get paid for the work it had done. J.P. sent a demand letter stating Walker owed J.P. $77,501, which was for $19,501 for completed, unpaid work and $58,000 in lost profits. When Walker did not pay the amount requested, J.P. filed suit for that same amount. Walker requested a disclosure under rule 194.2(d) of "the amount and any method of calculating economic damages." (1) J.P. replied,

Damages: $19,501.00 for billed unpaid work,

$58,000.00 lost profit,

Total: $77,501.00



At the bench trial, Pantle testified J.P. was seeking $19,501 for unpaid work and $58,000 for lost profits.

Several weeks after the trial concluded, J.P. filed a motion for entry of judgment. Within this motion, J.P. asserted total damages in the amount of $74,059.52 for the following:

$17,099.00 for unpaid contract work in February 2005[;]

$21,748.52 for unpaid contract work in March 2005[;]

$8,389.00 for funds retained by Walker from previous payments[; and]

$26,823.00 for extra work completed for unsigned change orders.



J.P. requested that the $74,059.52 be reduced to $69,099.17 to allow for a credit for the amount by which the March 16, 2005 payment exceeded the requested payment for the January work. J.P. then requested that the $69,099.17 be increased to $72,699.17 to compensate for $3,600 for Transit Mix's attorney's fees paid by J.P. In addition, instead of the $58,000 originally sought for lost profits, J.P. reduced its lost profits claim to $26,499.05. The proposed judgment submitted by J.P. stated the actual damages as the sum of the unpaid work and Transit Mix attorney's fees only; it did not include the reduced lost profits. The trial court rendered judgment in favor of J.P., awarding $47,000 in actual damages. The trial court did not explain how it reached the $47,000 figure, nor did it make findings of fact and conclusions of law. The Amount of Damages

Walker challenges the $47,000 amount for damages by claiming any damages incurred prior to March 16, 2005 are disclaimed by J.P. in a release; the evidence does not support the lost profits claim; J.P. cannot recover damages from Walker for Transit Mix's lawsuit against J.P.; and J.P. cannot recover damages never disclosed to Walker until after trial. We agree with Walker that it would have been improper for the trial court to render its damages award by taking any of these damages into account in its award to J.P.

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Bluebook (online)
Safeco Surety and C.A. Walker, Inc. v. J.P. Southwest Concrete, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safeco-surety-and-ca-walker-inc-v-jp-southwest-con-texapp-2009.