Yost, Kay v. Jered Custom Homes, Childress Engineering

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 19, 2013
Docket05-11-01589-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Yost, Kay v. Jered Custom Homes, Childress Engineering (Yost, Kay v. Jered Custom Homes, Childress Engineering) 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.

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Yost, Kay v. Jered Custom Homes, Childress Engineering, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Reverse and Remand in part; Affirm in part; Opinion Filed March 19, 2013.

In The Innrt tif peati FiftIi EIhtrirt uf xa at 1alla No. 05-11-01589-CV

KAY YOST, Appellant V. JERED CUSTOM HOMES, Appellee

On Appeal from the 382nd Judicial District Court Rockwall County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 1-08-1007

OPINION Before Justices Lang-Miers, Myers and Lewis Opinion by Justice Myers Kay Yost appeals the take-nothing summary judgment against her and in favor of Jered

Custom Homes. Appellant brings two issues on appeal contending (1) the trial court erred by

granting appellee’s motion for summary judgment, and (2) the trial court erred by considering

appellee’s summary judgment evidence. We affirm the trial court’s judgment in part and reverse

and remand in part.

BACKGROUND

This is a construction liability case concerning a house in Royse City, Texas. In 2004,

Brad and Lea Byers hired appellee to construct the home. The Byerses had other professionals

design the home, and the foundation was designed by Brad Byers’s employer, Childress

Engineering Services, Inc. Appellee constructed the foundation and most of the house pursuant to a contract with the Byerses. The contract included an express warranty and a disclaimer of the

implied warranty of good and workmanlike construction, The contract also provided that

because the Byerses had hired their own design professionals to design the house, the parties

agreed that those design professionals, and not appellee, would be responsible for the adequacy

of the design and the sufficiency of the contract documents prepared by those professionals. The

contract also provided that the Byerses would be responsible for obtaining any necessary soil and

subsoil tests “and any other tests which may affect the structural integrity of the Improvements.”

In 2006, appellant and her daughter, Tracy Yost, purchased the house from the Byerses.

When appellant moved into the house, the locks she had previously installed no longer fit the

doors. Appellant contacted Childress Engineering, which sent an engineer to her home.

Childress Engineering purportedly inspected the foundation and reported that “the foundation is

in a general satisfactory condition.”

Appellant filed a complaint with the Texas Residential Construction Commission

(TRCC) alleging numerous problems with the house. The TRCC appointed an independent

inspector, Robert Pierry, to investigate the claims of structural defects. Pierry reported that the

soil under the house was causing upheaval of the foundation on the left, right, and rear sides of

the house, which “appeared to be the result of an increase of moisture in the soil beneath the

affected portions of the foundation. The poor drainage conditions that exist around the perimeter

of the house have likely caused or contributed to cause [t]his increase in soil moisture.” Pierry

concluded the foundation was within acceptable tolerances. Pierry recommended appellee repair

a crack in the garage’s foundation by injecting it with epoxy. Pierry also recommended appellee

repair some misaligned doors and windows, and that it repair a floor made uneven by improper framing or carpet pad installation, Pierry concluded that the uneven upstairs hail floor and the

failure of a bedroom door to latch were net structural defects.

Appellant appealed Pierry’s report. The appeals panel for the TRCC concluded the

builder should repair the uneven upstairs hall floor and bedroom door because, even though they

were not structural defects, they were workmanship and materials defects and should be repaired

under the implied warranty. Appellant also appealed Pierry’s failure to address appellant’s

complaint that the house was lower in the center and was 2.6 inches out of tolerance. The

appeals panel concluded this item was in compliance with the usual and customary residential

construction practices.

Appellee made an offer to appellant to make the repairs recommended by Pierry and the

appeals panel or to pay appellant $4000 for the contractor of appellant’s choice to make the

repairs. Appellant never replied to this offer.

Appellant then had the house inspected by professional engineer Michael Porter. Porter

concluded that negligent pier design resulted in distress cracking caused by foundation

differential movement. The foundation’s differential movement, Porter stated, was “the result of

negligent pier design without the benefit of a site specific geotechnical investigation and the

absence of provisions to protect against heaving resulting from upward soil moisture migration.”

He concluded it was not practical to make the corrections to return the home to like-new

condition.

Appellant also had the house inspected by David Gregg, a licensed insurance adjuster and

construction consultant. Gregg stated in his affidavit that appellee should have obtained a

site-specific geotechnical report before building the home. He also stated that appellee was

negligent in relying on Childress Engineering’s foundation design. “Had [appellee] obtained a

-3- site specific geotechnical survey prior to construction it could have taken steps to build the home

so that it would not have been so subject to soil upheaval.” Gregg estimated the cost to repair the

foundation and damage at $524,563.

On October 16, 2008, appellant and Tracy Yost sued appellee and other defendants for

damages associated with the house. They sued appellee for negligence for failing “to obtain a

site specific geotechnical report or ensure that such a report was obtained prior to relying upon

the foundation apparently designed by” Childress Engineering. The Yosts alleged this

negligence resulted in the home being built without adequate provisions to protect against

heaving from upward soil movement. The Yosts also alleged appellee was negligent because it

“simply abdicated its responsibility to ensure that every aspect of the construction of Plaintiff’s

home was done in a good and workmanlike manner consistent with the standards in the

industry.” The Yosts also alleged appellee breached the implied warranties of habitability and of

good and workmanlike construction when it “either built or designed the foundation improperly

without obtaining a site specific geotechnical report or relied on others to do so for it.”

Appellee moved for summary judgment. Each side objected to the other’s summary

judgment evidence. The trial court granted appellee’s motion and ordered that the Yosts take

nothing on their claims against appellee, However, the trial court did not rule on the objections

to the summary judgment evidence. Appellant brings this appeal of the summary judgment.’

JURISDICTION

Appellee has informed the Court that in 2011, before the summary judgment became a

final judgment, appellant’s lender foreclosed on the property and the house was sold at public

auction to a third party. Appellee filed “Suggestion Re: Standing and Mootness,” asserting that

Tracy Yost did not appeal.

-4- because appellant no longer owns the house, her claims for negligence and breach of implied

warranty from the home’s construction are moot because she no longer has standing to assert

them. Appellant did not respond to appellee’s “Suggestion”

Standing is a component of sub jectmatter jurisdiction and may be raised for the first time

on appeal. See Waco Jndep. Sch. Dist. v.

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