the Abney Group, Inc. v. Robert W. Robson and Master Graphics Finishing Co., Inc.
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Opinion
After a judge-only trial, the trial court rendered judgment that Abney Group, Inc., take nothing by its suit against its landlords, Robert W. Robson and Master Graphics Finishing Co. (collectively "Robson"), and that they recover damages and attorney's fees from Abney. We will affirm the judgment that Abney take nothing by its suit against Robson and Master Graphics. We will reverse the judgment against Abney and render judgment that Robson and Master Graphics take nothing by their counterclaim against Abney.
Abney was a month-to-month tenant in possession of certain space in a warehouse, having
succeeded a previous tenant to whom Robson leased the space under an agreement that the tenant pay
monthly $880 in rent and one-third of the utility expenses. (1)
Abney paid Robson monthly on the same basis
after entering into possession; Robson accepted the payments for a time while negotiating with Abney for
a greater sum as a monthly rental and for payment of half the utility expenses. The negotiations failed.
Robson demanded Abney leave the premises by August 1, 1995. Before that day, Robson changed the
locks on the drive-through gate in a fence surrounding the warehouse. He locked the gates on the nights
of July 25 and 26, 1995. Abney left the premises by the required date. He sued Robson for money
damages in the statutory cause of action authorized by section 93.002(g) of the Property Code, a statute
we will discuss below. See Tex. Prop. Code Ann. § 93.002(g) (West 1995). Robson counterclaimed
against Abney, alleging alternative causes of action: (1) a cause of action for breach of an alleged oral
contract in which Abney agreed to pay Robson monthly a rental of $1,100 and half the utility expenses;
and (2) an action on an implied contract or in quantum meruit in which Robson claimed $1,800 per month
and half the utility expenses as the reasonable value of the space and utilities furnished Abney. The judgment below finds and orders as follows: (1) Robson did not exclude Abney from
the premises within the meaning of section 93.002(g) of the Property Code and Abney therefore takes
nothing by its claim against Robson; (2) Robson takes nothing by his counterclaim for rent because the
court "finds that credible evidence supports monthly rent of" $880; (3) Robson recovers on his counterclaim
against Abney for "one third of the utilities owed from January 1995 to and including July 1995 in the
amount of $803.41;" and (4) Robson recovers from Abney "attorney's fees in the amount of $6,375.00." The judgment is not altogether clear as to the basis for the relief it awards Robson. Robson
did not allege a cause of action to recover one-third of the utility expenses from January 1995 to and
including July 1995; each of his actions claimed damages equal to one-half of the utility expenses for the
period. The award equal to one-third of the utility expenses ($803.41) is consistent only with the
undisputed evidence that Abney paid and Robson accepted for a time one-third of the utilities expenses
as a month-to-month tenant, which was the percentage paid by Abney's predecessor. We interpret the judgment to mean the court adjudged that Abney's entire time in
possession was governed by an oral agreement under which Abney paid and Robson accepted $880 as
a monthly rental and various sums in payment of one-third of the monthly utility expense, but that Abney
failed to pay some part of the agreed one-third of the utility expenses for the period "January 1995 to and
including July 1995 in the amount of $803.41." This appears to be the only reasonable construction of the
judgment in light of the record. We will proceed accordingly. In Abney's first point of error, it complains the trial court erred in failing to find the elements
of its statutory cause of action under section 93.002(c) of the Property Code. We construe the point of
error and argument thereunder as a contention that Abney proved conclusively the elements of the statutory
cause of action and resulting damages. (2) Section 93.002(c)(3) provides as follows: (c) A landlord may not intentionally prevent a tenant from entering the leased premises
except by judicial process unless the exclusion results from: (1) bona fide repairs, construction or an emergency; (2) removing the contents of premises abandoned by a tenant; or (3) changing the door locks of a tenant who is delinquent in paying at
least part of the rent. Tex. Prop. Code Ann. § 93.002(c) (West 1995) The pertinent evidence is essentially undisputed. Robson admitted he put new locks on the
drive-through gate, but testified without contradiction that he never changed the locks to the office, through
which one could enter the warehouse. Paul Abney, an officer of the Abney corporation, admitted his
employee Chris Belcher had a key to the office at all times. Robson testified as well that he slept in the
office building on the premises during the two nights in question and no one came to the office to request
that he open the gate; and, he would have done so had such a request been made by an Abney
representative. Depending on what the contract actually provided, changing the locks on the gates may
have given rise to a contract dispute over the restriction of Abney's contractual right of access to the
warehouse. The evidence does not conclusively show, however, an "actual physical denial of a tenant's
right of entry" as contemplated by section 93.002(c)(3) of the Property Code. See Michaux v. Koebig,
555 S.W.2d 171, 176 (Tex. Civ. App.--Austin 1977, no writ) (emphasis added) (construing pre-code
statute Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. art. 6236(c)). We hold accordingly and overrule Abney's first point of error. In Abney's second point of error, it complains there is no evidence to support the trial-court
judgment awarding Robson recovery of $803.41 as damages for Abney's failure to pay one-third of the
utility expenses for the period specified in the judgment. We will summarize the evidence pertaining to utility expenses.
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