Troy Hunt and Troy Hunt Homes, Inc. v. Billy Stephens and Wife, Kendra Stephens

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 12, 2002
Docket11-00-00222-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Troy Hunt and Troy Hunt Homes, Inc. v. Billy Stephens and Wife, Kendra Stephens (Troy Hunt and Troy Hunt Homes, Inc. v. Billy Stephens and Wife, Kendra Stephens) 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
Troy Hunt and Troy Hunt Homes, Inc. v. Billy Stephens and Wife, Kendra Stephens, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

                                                             11th Court of Appeals

                                                                  Eastland, Texas

                                                                        Opinion

Troy Hunt and Troy Hunt Homes, Inc.

Appellants

Vs.                   No. 11-00-00222-CV B Appeal from Scurry County

Billy Stephens and wife, Kendra Stephens

Appellees

The trial court, in a nonjury case, found that appellants, Troy Hunt and Troy Hunt Homes, Inc., constructed a defective residential dwelling for appellees, Billy Stephens and wife, Kendra Stephens.  The court found that appellees sustained economic damages of $93,975 and mental anguish damages of $5,000.  In its findings of facts and conclusions of law, the court found that appellants knowingly and intentionally breached an express warranty to provide appellees a 1 year builder=s warranty.  The court trebled the economic damages; concluded that Troy Hunt Homes, Inc. was the alter ego of Troy Hunt, individually; and entered judgment against appellants, jointly and severally, for $286,975.  Appellants appeal.  We reverse the award of treble damages, affirm the award of mental anguish damages, and suggest a remittitur because we find that the evidence is factually insufficient to support the trial court=s finding that appellees sustained economic damages of $93,975.

Appellees and Troy Hunt Homes, Inc. entered into a written contract which provided that Troy Hunt Homes, Inc. would build a residential dwelling on a lot owned by appellees.  The agreed cost for building the house was $146,702.  Troy Hunt signed the contract as president of Troy Hunt Homes, Inc.  Within 6 months afer appellees moved into the house, they began to notice cracks around the doors and cracks through the sheet rock.  The tile floor and tile around the fireplace began to crack.  Bricks were cracking in the back patio.  None of the doors would fit properly.  Appellees observed a 2-inch gap where the baseboards met the floor.  One day, appellees discovered that a snake had gotten into the kitchen.


All of the parties agree that the substantial damages to the house were caused by the settling of the concrete slab foundation.  Appellees contend that the settling was caused by appellants= defective construction.  Appellants contend that the slab foundation failed because of subsurface conditions in the soil on the lot owned by appellees.

                                                          Appellees= Expert Witness

Jerry Lee Hargrave testified that he had been in the construction business, either full time or part time, for 35 years.  He was presently in the foundation repair business and had personally participated in over 3,000 foundation repair jobs in the last 15 years.  Hargrave stated that, in 35 years, he had seen may different causes for foundation problems.  Hargrave inspected appellees= house and found extreme foundation settlement.  Hargrave testified that approximately 75 percent of the foundation was affected.

Appellants argue on appeal that the trial court abused its discretion in allowing Hargrave to give his opinion as to what caused the foundation to fail.  Appellants timely urged a Daubert[1] challenge and objected to any testimony from Hargrave on the issue of causation because Hargrave did not have the technical training and background to give such an opinion.  The Texas Supreme Court in Gammill v. Jack Williams Chevrolet, Inc., 972 S.W.2d 713, 726-27 (Tex.1998), stated:

We agree with the Fifth, Sixth, Ninth, and Eleventh Circuits that [TEX.R.EVID.] 702's fundamental requirements of reliability and relevance are applicable to all expert testimony offered under that rule.  Nothing in the language of the rule suggests that opinions based on scientific knowledge should be treated any differently than opinions based on technical or other specialized knowledge.  It would be an odd rule of evidence that insisted that some expert opinions be reliable but not others.  All expert testimony should be shown to be reliable before it is admitted.


That said, it is equally clear that the considerations listed in Daubert and in Robinson for assessing the reliability of scientific evidence cannot always be used with other kinds of expert testimony.  To borrow the [Berry v. City of Detroit, 25 F.3d 1342 (6th Cir. 1994)] court=s analogy, a beekeeper need not have published his findings that bees take off into the wind in a journal for peer review, or made an elaborate test of his hypotheses.  Observations of enough bees in various circumstances to show a pattern would be enough to support his opinion.  But there must be some basis for the opinion offered to show its reliability.  Experience alone may provide a sufficient basis for an expert=s testimony in some cases, but it cannot do so in every case.  A more experienced expert may offer unreliable opinions, and a lesser experienced expert=s opinions may have solid footing.  The court in discharging its duty as gatekeeper must determine how the reliability of particular testimony is to be assessed.

The court added:

Although it appears that the United States Supreme Court will address the issue in Carmichael, at this point the clear weight of federal case law supports applying the relevance and reliability requirements of Rule 702 to all expert evidence offered under that rule, even though the criteria for assessing relevance and reliability must vary, depending on the nature of the evidence.  Because we are persuaded that this construction of federal Rule 702 is correct, because our rule is identical but for one comma, and because there is much to be said for maintaining as much uniformity 

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