SCS Builders, Inc. and Sonny Calvin Spoon v. Sherri Searcy

390 S.W.3d 534, 2012 WL 4951188, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 8698
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 18, 2012
Docket11-11-00033-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 390 S.W.3d 534 (SCS Builders, Inc. and Sonny Calvin Spoon v. Sherri Searcy) 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
SCS Builders, Inc. and Sonny Calvin Spoon v. Sherri Searcy, 390 S.W.3d 534, 2012 WL 4951188, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 8698 (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

JIM R. WRIGHT, Chief Justice.

Sherri Searcy sued SCS Builders, Inc. and Sonny Calvin Spoon in connection with the construction of a home that they agreed to build for her. SCS and Spoon filed a counterclaim against Searcy for defamation related to certain internet and other comments allegedly made about them, and they sought damages of $1,000,000. The trial court granted judgment for “actual and/or economic damages” as well as additional damages to Searcy on various violations of the Deceptive Trade Practices-Consumer Protection Act. 1 In the alternative, the trial court awarded Searcy damages in connection with the judgment on her common-law fraud claims. The trial court awarded trial court attorney’s fees to Searcy in the amount of $20,000 and additional attorney’s fees in the event of an appeal to the court of appeals and to the Texas Supreme Court. The trial court entered a take-nothing judgment on SCS and Spoon’s defamation counterclaim. We affirm.

This case finds its genesis at a time when Searcy decided to have a home built for her son and his family. She wanted to locate it at the rear of property already owned by her and upon which her own home sat. In the course of selecting a builder to construct the new home, Searcy saw SCS’s sign at a property upon which SCS was working. Searcy contacted Spoon, SCS’s owner, about her own project. Spoon showed Searcy, her son, and her daughter-in-law some of the work that he and SCS had performed. Searcy also saw some of SCS and Spoon’s advertising. Spoon told Searcy that she was in good hands with SCS and Spoon and that she could trust them.

Searcy and Spoon discussed the fact that it was important that they finish the home by December 2007 so that Searcy’s son and his family could move into it then. Searcy’s son, daughter-in-law, and their two-year-old daughter lived in a one-bedroom apartment, and the lease on that apartment was set to expire around that time. Additionally, Searcy’s son and his wife were expecting a new baby in December. The evidence shows that Spoon understood the importance of the completion date and that he represented many times that they would finish the home by then.

Ultimately, Searcy entered into an agreement with SCS and Spoon whereby they agreed to build the home for her for $68,300. The parties signed an agreement on September 25, 2007. By October 25, 2007, within a month after the contract was signed, Searcy had paid SCS and Spoon $61,470; the total balance remaining on that date was $6,830.

The desired December completion date was not made a part of the agreement that the parties signed. According to Spoon, SCS and Spoon “badly missed that deadline.” Searcy fired SCS and Spoon in *538 January 2008. For five consecutive weeks during the period between the date that the parties signed the agreement and the date Searcy fired SCS and Spoon, no one showed up to work on the project. Spoon acknowledged that they messed up on Se-arcy’s work, but he said that it “wasn’t from a premeditated stance.” Spoon testified that, at the time they were doing Searcy’s project, “we had about 30 jobs in progress and we had already completed about a hundred.” He was also remodeling his own house.

The record shows that, when SCS and Spoon did not finish the home by the time Spoon said they would, Searcy and her husband — a victim of a type of Parkinson’s disease — and their daughter had to make room in their own home for Searcy’s son, his wife, their two-year-old daughter, as well as their newborn baby. Searcy’s son and his family lived in Searcy’s den for approximately twenty months while the new home was being completed by the Searcys and other contractors that they had hired. Searcy testified that SCS and Spoon’s failure to have the home ready caused her anguish. Searcy suffered many sleepless nights and shed many tears. The living situation was a strain on everyone and resulted in family fights. She testified that, as far as physical symptoms were concerned, “I don’t know how to go about putting it in words.” The trial court found that Searcy suffered great hardship when the home was not completed on time. In his testimony, Spoon agreed that Searcy suffered “extreme hardship.”

As far as the quality of the work performed by SCS and Spoon, it is undisputed that SCS and Spoon’s work was substandard. The trial court found many areas in which SCS and Spoon’s work was faulty. SCS and Spoon built the house so that it was “improperly oriented”: the front faced north rather than west as it should have faced. The front door was located where the back door should have been. There were problems with the foundation, the doors, the windows, the plumbing, and many other things. Searcy spent approximately $76,016 — in addition to the $61,470 she had already paid to SCS and Spoon— to “remediate” the work that SCS and Spoon did not perform correctly. That amount included various inspection and attorney’s fees — the amounts of which are not reflected in the record. The trial court found that, although SCS and Spoon had “completed some work, it was ‘not good work’ ” and that Searcy had gotten “little or no value for the money she paid” to SCS and Spoon.

Searcy sued SCS and Spoon for alleged violations of the DTPA in that they used or employed false, misleading, or deceptive acts or practices listed in Section 17.46(b) of the DTPA when they: (1) represented that goods or services had sponsorship, approval, characteristics, ingredients, uses, benefits, or quantities that they did not have or that SCS and Spoon had sponsorship, approval, status, affiliation, or connections that they did not have and (2) represented that goods or services were of a particular standard, quality, or grade when they were of another. Searcy also pleaded that SCS and Spoon breached the implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose and the implied warranty of good and workmanlike performance and sought recovery under Section 17.50(a)(2) of the DTPA. Searcy alleged that she relied upon each of those false, misleading, or deceptive acts or practices. Searcy further alleged that SCS and Spoon engaged in an unconscionable action or course of action when they took advantage of her lack of knowledge, ability, experience, or capacity to an unfair degree in violation of Section 17.50(a)(3) of the DTPA. In addition to her DTPA claims, Searcy also *539 pleaded causes of action for common-law fraud, negligent performance of the duty to construct the house in accordance with specifications, and breach of contract.

After Searcy filed this lawsuit, the parties entered into a settlement agreement. Spoon testified that he paid Searcy $12,000 toward that settlement, but later refused to pay any more. Spoon admitted that Searcy had a legitimate complaint about the work they did, that she had every right to be unhappy with the work, and that he did not blame Searcy for firing SCS and him. Spoon testified that his work was “piss poor work.” From its findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is apparent that the trial court was of the opinion that the evidence supported Spoon’s assessment of the quality of the work. However, the trial court did not found its judgment on a breach-of-contract theory. Rather, the trial court based its judgment upon the violation of duties outside the contract that are imposed statutorily under the DTPA and upon remedies that are provided for in the DTPA.

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Bluebook (online)
390 S.W.3d 534, 2012 WL 4951188, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 8698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scs-builders-inc-and-sonny-calvin-spoon-v-sherri-searcy-texapp-2012.