Thompson Hancock Witte & Associates, Inc. v. Brazos Presbyterian Homes, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 5, 2022
Docket14-20-00827-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Thompson Hancock Witte & Associates, Inc. v. Brazos Presbyterian Homes, Inc. (Thompson Hancock Witte & Associates, Inc. v. Brazos Presbyterian Homes, 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
Thompson Hancock Witte & Associates, Inc. v. Brazos Presbyterian Homes, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed April 5, 2022.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-20-00827-CV

THOMPSON HANCOCK WITTE & ASSOCIATES, INC., Appellant

V. BRAZOS PRESBYTERIAN HOMES, INC., Appellee

On Appeal from the 55th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2016-81155

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Thompson Hancock Witte & Associates, Inc. (“Thompson Hancock”), is an architecture firm that performed design work on a multi-story building owned by appellee, Brazos Presbyterian Homes, Inc. (“Brazos”). After Hurricane Harvey caused flooding to Brazos’ building, Brazos added Thompson Hancock as an additional defendant in an existing lawsuit related to the construction of the same building. Brazos alleged Thompson Hancock defectively designed parts of the building which in turn caused the flooding. Thompson Hancock eventually filed a motion to dismiss Brazos’ lawsuit against it pursuant to Chapter 150 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 150.002 (authorizing dismissal of claim for damages arising out of the provision of professional architectural services if a claimant fails to file with the complaint a certificate of merit prepared by an architect holding the “same professional license or registration as the defendant”). Thompson Hancock argued Brazos’ lawsuit against it should be dismissed because the architect who prepared Brazos’ certificate of merit did not hold the same professional license as Thompson Hancock and was not engaged in the practice of architecture. The trial court denied Thompson Hancock’s motion and Thompson Hancock filed this interlocutory appeal.1 Because we conclude Brazos’ architect met the statutory license requirement, we overrule Thompson Hancock’s issue on appeal and affirm the trial court’s denial of Thompson Hancock’s motion to dismiss.

BACKGROUND

This appeal stems from a construction project. Brazos owns Bayou Manor, a senior living community in Houston. Brazos wanted to add a residential tower to Bayou Manor and it contracted with architectural firm Thompson Hancock to design the addition. Brazos contracted with another company, Lendlease (US) Construction, Inc., to serve as general contractor on the project. Issues arose and eventually Brazos filed suit against Lendlease alleging breach of contract and other 1 Thompson Hancock originally raised two issues in its appellant’s brief. Thompson Hancock’s second issue challenged the granting of the Chapter 150 motion seeking dismissal of Thompson Hancock’s claims against third-party defendant engineering firm Stanley Spurling & Hamilton, Inc. After the filing of this interlocutory appeal, the engineering firm moved to sever Thompson Hancock’s dismissed claims against it into a separate action. The trial court granted the severance thereby making the interlocutory dismissal order final and appealable. Thompson Hancock appealed the dismissal in a separate appeal, Cause Number 14-21-00091-CV. Thompson Hancock notified us that it was challenging the dismissal of its claims against the engineering firm in that appeal. We therefore need not address Thompson Hancock’s second issue in this appeal.

2 causes of action.

Not long after the lawsuit was filed, the Bayou Manor campus flooded during Hurricane Harvey and it allegedly sustained substantial damage. Brazos believed the flooding was caused, at least in part, by Thompson Hancock’s improper design of a retaining wall. Brazos then added Thompson Hancock as a defendant in its Second Amended Petition in the ongoing lawsuit against Lendlease. Brazos attached a certificate of merit prepared by Daniel Figert, a licensed architect emeritus in the State of Texas, to its petition. In addition to explaining his qualifications and experience as an architect, Figert opined that Thompson Hancock breached the pertinent standard of care through design defects and other errors and omissions.2

Thompson Hancock filed its original answer in December 2018. Thompson Hancock eventually filed a motion to dismiss Brazos’ claims against it due to an allegedly inadequate certificate of merit in August 2020.3 Thompson Hancock challenged only Figert’s qualifications to prepare the certificate of merit. In Thompson Hancock’s view, Figert is not qualified to prepare a certificate of merit in the present case because he holds an emeritus-architect license, which 2 Figert explained in the challenged certificate of merit that he obtained a Bachelor of Architecture degree from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1969 and that he holds a Texas architect’s license. Figert also explained that he had worked as an architect, design-build construction company manager, developer, and project manager in the profession since 1968 and he continued to work in that capacity at the time he prepared the challenged certificate of merit. 3 In the interval between these two events, Thompson Hancock actively participated in the ongoing litigation. This included participating in extensive written discovery, numerous depositions of fact and expert witnesses, and filing a third-party petition against the engineering contractor on the job alleging it was responsible for the flooding. It also agreed to a continuance of the trial date. Based on these and other litigation activities, Brazos also argued in response to Thompson Hancock’s motion to dismiss that Thompson Hancock had waived the right to a Chapter 150 motion to dismiss due to an inadequate certificate of merit. It makes the same argument in this appeal. Because we conclude Figert met the statutory requirements to prepare the challenged certificate of merit, we need not reach Brazos’ waiver defense.

3 Thompson Hancock argues is different from the license held by the architect of record on the project. Thompson Hancock also argued that Brazos’ certificate of merit failed to meet the requirements of Chapter 150 because Figert allegedly could not actively engage in the practice of architecture as a result his emeritus status.

Thompson Hancock relied on excerpts from a deposition Figert gave in a different lawsuit to support its contentions. According to Thompson Hancock, Figert agreed during his deposition that his emeritus-architect license was a different type of license than a non-emeritus license. Brazos later obtained a full copy of the deposition transcript at issue. According to Brazos, Figert did not testify as alleged by Thompson Hancock but instead testified that there are no “degrees” of architect licensing in Texas and that, as an emeritus-status architect, he held the same license as any non-emeritus, active-status architect.4 In addition, Brazos also pointed out that during his deposition Figert testified that emeritus status for an architect in Texas is a designation or an honor given to an architect with the required number of years of practice and who meets the qualifications.

After an oral hearing, the trial court denied Thompson Hancock’s motion to dismiss. This interlocutory appeal followed.

ANALYSIS

Thompson Hancock raises a single issue on appeal challenging the trial court’s denial of its motion to dismiss. Thompson Hancock argues that the trial court erred when it denied the motion because Figert did not meet the statutory qualifications to prepare a certificate of merit because he (1) did not hold the same

4 The Texas Occupations Code establishes an inactive status for architects who apply for that status. See Tex. Occ. Code § 1051.355. An inactive architect “may not perform any activity regulated under this [architecture] subtitle.” Id.

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Thompson Hancock Witte & Associates, Inc. v. Brazos Presbyterian Homes, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-hancock-witte-associates-inc-v-brazos-presbyterian-homes-texapp-2022.