U. S. Builders, Inc. v. Atlantic Louetta, L.P., R.L. Wade, Richard L. Wade And Wade Construction Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 2002
Docket11-02-00035-CV
StatusPublished

This text of U. S. Builders, Inc. v. Atlantic Louetta, L.P., R.L. Wade, Richard L. Wade And Wade Construction Company (U. S. Builders, Inc. v. Atlantic Louetta, L.P., R.L. Wade, Richard L. Wade And Wade Construction Company) 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
U. S. Builders, Inc. v. Atlantic Louetta, L.P., R.L. Wade, Richard L. Wade And Wade Construction Company, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

                                                             11th Court of Appeals

                                                                  Eastland, Texas

                                                                        Opinion

U.S. Builders, Inc.

Appellant

Vs.                   No. 11-02-00035-CV B  Appeal from Harris County

Atlantic Louetta, L.P.; R. L. Wade; Richard L.

Wade; and Wade Construction Company 

Appellees

U.S. Builders, Inc. (USBI) asserts that the trial court did not enter a final judgment in this severed action.[1]  On March 9, 2001, the trial court entered a judgment and order for deposit of funds (judgment).  On August 24, 2001, the trial court entered an order granting defendant=s motion for summary judgment (summary judgment order).  On that same day, the trial court entered its severance order.  Because the trial court=s judgment and summary judgment order did not dispose of all of the parties and issues, there is no final judgment in this severed action.  Therefore, we dismiss this appeal for want of jurisdiction.  

                                                                        The Suit


USBI and Atlantic Louetta, L.P. (Atlantic Louetta) entered into a construction contract. USBI, as the general contractor, agreed to construct a building and certain improvements, including a parking lot, for Atlantic Louetta, the owner of the property, for the contract price of $1,073,000.00.  USBI filed this action against Atlantic Louetta, Wade Construction Company, R. L. Wade, Chicago Title Company, and Continental Casualty Company, alleging that, although it had substantially completed the work required under the contract, the defendants owed USBI $232,285.82, plus interest and attorney=s fees.  USBI asserted breach of contract claims against Atlantic Louetta and Wade Construction Company, the construction manager for the project.  USBI alleged that R. L. Wade was the alter ego of Atlantic Louetta and was individually liable for the alleged damages.  USBI sought to recover on a bond that Continental Casualty Company issued to secure payment by Atlantic Louetta.  USBI also sought to recover funds that Chicago Title Company was holding in an escrow account relating to possible repairs to the parking lot.  Atlantic Louetta filed a counterclaim alleging that USBI had breached the contract by failing to complete the work required under the contract; Atlantic Louetta sought to recover damages for USBI=s alleged breach of contract.  Chicago Title Company interpled the amount held in escrow, a total of $106,687.76, into the registry of the court.

                                               USBI=s and Atlantic Louetta=s Arbitration

USBI and Atlantic Louetta entered into a binding arbitration agreement and submitted the claims between them to arbitration.  In the award of arbitration, the arbitrator concluded that A[t]he net result of this Award is that Atlantic Louetta, L.P. shall pay to U.S. Builders, Inc. the sum of $123,795.02.@  Atlantic Louetta filed a motion to enter judgment for it to pay USBI $123,795.02 based on the arbitrator=s award.  Atlantic Louetta asserted that the escrow funds in the registry of the court should be used as partial satisfaction of the judgment.  USBI claimed that it was entitled to recover more than $123,795.02 under the arbitrator=s award.

                                                                    The Judgment       

On March 9, 2001, the trial court awarded judgment to USBI against Atlantic Louetta for $123,795.02 based on the arbitration award.  The trial court found that Atlantic Louetta had tendered this amount, including the deposited escrow funds, to the registry of the court.  The trial court ordered that Aall obligations incurred by Atlantic Louetta, L.P. with regard to the judgment which is the subject of this case shall be deemed to have concluded.@  The trial court further ordered that Chicago Title Company, the interpleader, Ashall receive judgment in its favor with regard to the interpleader and shall be released from any further obligation regarding this matter.@  The trial court did not mention Wade Construction Company or R. L. Wade or address USBI=s claims against them in the judgment.  The trial court did not include a AMother Hubbard@ clause in the judgment or any other language demonstrating an intent to dispose of all of the parties and claims.  See Ritzell v. Espeche, 87 S.W.3d 536, 537-38 (Tex.2002).


                                        The Subcontractors= Post-Arbitration Interventions

Shockley Electric Corporation and Frontier Materials, Inc., two subcontractors on the construction project, intervened in the suit.  They alleged that USBI owed them money for work performed on the construction project.  USBI answered the subcontractors= interventions and filed a cross-claim against Atlantic Louetta and Wade Construction Company for contribution and indemnity for the subcontractors= claims.  In their answer to the cross-claim, Atlantic Louetta and Wade Construction Company asserted that USBI could not recover contribution and indemnity from them because USBI had litigated all potential claims against them in the arbitration proceeding.  They alleged that, as a result of the arbitration proceeding, Aall claims and requests for relief were resolved between Atlantic Louetta, Wade Construction Company and U.S. Builders, Inc.@  Atlantic Louetta and Wade Construction Company also filed a counterclaim against USBI for attorney=s fees relating to the defense of USBI=

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Bluebook (online)
U. S. Builders, Inc. v. Atlantic Louetta, L.P., R.L. Wade, Richard L. Wade And Wade Construction Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/u-s-builders-inc-v-atlantic-louetta-lp-rl-wade-ric-texapp-2002.