Alice M. Jones v. Antonio Murillo Individually and D/B/A Tiger Construction and the National Association of Minority Contractors of Texas ( 2015 )


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  • Motion for Rehearing Denied, Affirmed and Substitute Memorandum
    Opinion filed May 21, 2015.
    In The
    Fourteenth Court of Appeals
    NO. 14-13-00928-CV
    ALICE M. JONES, Appellant
    V.
    ANTONIO MURILLO INDIVIDUALLY AND D/B/A TIGER
    CONSTRUCTION AND THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MINORITY
    CONTRACTORS OF TEXAS, Appellees
    On Appeal from the 295th District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    Trial Court Cause No. 2006-76136
    1
    SUBSTITUTE MEMORANDUM OPINION
    This appeal arises from a dispute over roof-repair work performed through
    the City of Houston’s emergency home-repair program. An organization working
    1
    We withdraw our previous memorandum opinion of March 31, 2015, and
    issue this substitute memorandum opinion.
    through this program contracted with a roofer to repair a homeowner’s roof. The
    homeowner was unhappy with the work and sued the contracting organization
    asserting claims for breach of contract and negligence. The trial court signed a
    default judgment awarding damages against the organization and the roofer. The
    trial court later vacated the default judgment and, after a bench trial, signed a take-
    nothing judgment in favor of the roofer and a default judgment for damages against
    the organization. The trial court refused the homeowner’s request to modify the
    judgment against the contracting organization to include the similarly named
    national and local organizations as “fraudulent continuations” of the contracting
    organization.      On appeal, the homeowner challenges the legal and factual
    sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court’s take-nothing judgment and
    the trial court’s withdrawal of the prior default judgment against the contracting
    organization and refusal to modify the judgment to include the “fraudulent
    continuations” of the contracting organization. We affirm.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Appellant/plaintiff Alice M. Jones brought suit against Antonio Murillo
    individually and d/b/a Tiger Construction (“Murillo”) and the National Association
    of Minority Contractors of Texas (“NAMC of Texas”) asserting claims for breach
    of contract and negligence arising from repair work done to the roof of her home.2
    Jones and Murillo appeared, represented by counsel, for a bench trial. NAMC of
    Texas did not answer or appear for trial.
    2
    Jones included the City of Houston in her petition; the City filed a plea to the jurisdiction,
    which the trial court granted. The trial court also granted the City’s motion to sever shortly
    thereafter. The trial court initially entered a default judgment against Murillo and NAMC of
    Texas. The trial court signed an order vacating the default judgment, however. Finally, the trial
    court denied a summary-judgment motion filed by Murillo.
    2
    Murillo testified that he had contracted with the National Association of
    Minority Contractors (“NAMC”) to make repairs on the roof of Jones’s home.
    According to Murillo, he completed the work before the end of 2002 and was paid
    for his work in March 2003. Murillo explained that he knew he had completed the
    work satisfactorily because NAMC paid him for the job.
    Jones testified that she entered into the City of Houston’s emergency home-
    repair program. NAMC contracted with Murillo to fix Jones’s roof. Murillo began
    work in October of 2002. Problems followed. According to Jones, she repeatedly
    complained to NAMC about Murillo’s work. Jones testified that she met with
    Edna Goodie of NAMC in December of 2002, and, after this meeting, she expected
    that more work would be done on her roof. Jones stated that in January of 2003,
    Murillo came back to her home to finish up the work. Jones testified that she
    believed the work on her roof was completed in 2004, although she thought she
    would receive a “final statement” from “someone” saying her roof was completed.
    She did not receive a final statement or any other communication stating that the
    work was complete.
    According to Jones, in 2005, she began smelling an odor “[l]ike a mildew or
    mold or something.” Jones reported the odor to the City of Houston, and a few
    months later, on December 21, 2005, the City sent a company (Arrow-Tech) to her
    home to check on the odor. In February 2005, Jones received an inspection report
    indicating the work on her roof had not been completed.3
    3
    A “City of Houston Code Enforcement” sticker dated February 1, 2005, was admitted into
    evidence. This sticker states “DO NOT REMOVE,” but Jones testified that the sticker was
    handed to her. The sticker states, “Inspection reveals that the following items DO NOT comply
    with the City of Houston Building Code.” The following items are hand-written on this sticker:
          Roof jacks not properly nailed through out roof
          All jacks have exposed nails
          Chimney flashing not properly done, nails in flashing exposed
    3
    Jones testified that she had been experiencing “a lot of sinus draining,”
    which she thought was “just a regular cold.” After the inspection, Jones went to
    the doctor and discovered she “had been exposed to the mold.” She left her home
    in March 2006, because she was having medical problems. Jones moved in with
    her daughter and was still residing there at the time of the trial.
    Jones testified that her children paid to have her roof repaired in 2010, but
    she was unable to repair any of the mold damage because she could not afford it.
    The trial court sustained an objection to Jones’s testimony regarding a 2008
    estimate she received to repair and remediate her home. Jones testified that she has
    been paying “4 to $500 a month for a home since 2006” that she could not occupy.
    She also testified that she owed $1,700 to her doctor for her medical treatment.
    The trial court also sustained Murillo’s objections to Jones’s testimony regarding
    the current cost to remediate the damage to her home.
    According to Jones, she discovered through documentation she obtained
    “mostly from the City” that the City’s emergency home-repair program “was pretty
    terrible, that a lot of people’s homes weren’t fixed right.” Jones provided copies of
    several documents detailing some of the problems with the City’s program and
    NAMC, but these documents were admitted only against NAMC of Texas.
    Jones acknowledged that she had roof repairs done on her home in 1999
    through a program administered by the City. She further stated that the 2002
    problems were a continuation of the roof problems she had experienced in 1999.
    She testified that “the roof wasn’t fixed right.” Jones also acknowledged that a tree
    fell into the storage shed on her property during Hurricane Ike in September 2008,
          Shingle overhang incorrect east & west
          Caulking is not properly applied
          Exposed nails in top roof row
          Flashing at dormers
    4
    and that a “little piece” of a limb from the tree fell on her home and was cut off by
    a “tree person.” No roofer examined her roof for damage. Jones agreed that the
    final inspection of her roof, showing that it had not been properly completed, was
    not done until two years after Murillo had completed the work on the roof.
    Before closing arguments, Jones’s attorney offered depositions of Darryl
    Samuels, Esther Francis, and Antonio Murillo against NAMC of Texas only. The
    trial court admitted these depositions against NAMC of Texas.
    As noted above, the trial court requested and received trial briefs from the
    parties before the trial court signed the judgment. Murillo asserted in his trial brief
    that Jones had failed to file suit within the two-year statute of limitations for her
    negligence claim and she had failed to plead the discovery rule. Murillo further
    asserted that Jones failed to submit any admissible evidence of damages against
    him.
    The trial court signed a judgment in favor of Jones, awarding her $14,000
    against NAMC of Texas, and ordering that Jones take nothing from Murillo. Jones
    sought and received findings of fact and conclusions of law. Jones filed a motion
    to modify or correct the judgment, asserting that she had “proved that NAMC-
    Greater Houston Chapter and NAMC, Inc. were a fraudulent continuation of
    NAMC-Texas” and thus the judgment should be modified or corrected to permit
    her to recover against NAMC of Texas and “its fraudulent continuations . . .
    NAMC, Inc. – Greater Houston Chapter, and NAMC, Inc.” Our record contains
    no ruling on this motion.
    II. SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
    On appeal, Jones presents four issues, asserting the trial court erred in
    concluding there was insufficient evidence of damages. In Jones’s first issue, she
    5
    asserts the trial court erred in holding there was no evidence to support any
    damages to Jones as a third-party beneficiary of Murillo’s contract with NAMC.
    In her second issue, she argues the trial court erred in holding there was no
    evidence of any damages as to her breach-of-contract claim against Murillo.
    Similarly, in her third issue, Jones contends the evidence establishes as a matter of
    law all vital facts to support a finding of damages against Murillo. Finally, in her
    fourth issue, Jones asserts the trial court erred because the finding of no damages
    against Murillo is against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence.
    In an appeal from a judgment rendered after a nonjury trial, we review the
    trial court’s findings using the same standards of review applicable to a jury’s
    verdict. MBM Fin. Corp. v. Woodlands Operating Co., 
    292 S.W.3d 660
    , 663 n.3
    (Tex. 2009). When reviewing the legal sufficiency of the evidence, we consider
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the challenged finding and indulge
    every reasonable inference that would support it. City of Keller v. Wilson, 
    168 S.W.3d 802
    , 823 (Tex. 2005). We must credit favorable evidence if a reasonable
    factfinder could and disregard contrary evidence unless a reasonable factfinder
    could not. See 
    id. at 827.
    We must determine whether the evidence at trial would
    enable reasonable and fair-minded people to find the facts at issue. See 
    id. The factfinder
    is the only judge of witness credibility and the weight to give to
    testimony. See 
    id. at 819.
    When a party attacks the legal sufficiency of an adverse
    finding on an issue on which he bears the burden of proof, he must demonstrate on
    appeal that the evidence establishes, as a matter of law, all vital facts in support of
    the issue; the evidence is legally insufficient only if the contrary proposition is
    conclusively established.     Dow Chem. Co. v. Francis, 
    46 S.W.3d 237
    , 241
    (Tex.2001) (per curiam).
    6
    When reviewing a challenge to the factual sufficiency of the evidence, we
    examine the entire record, considering both the evidence in favor of, and contrary
    to, the challenged finding. Maritime Overseas Corp. v. Ellis, 
    971 S.W.2d 402
    ,
    406–07 (Tex. 1998). After considering and weighing all the evidence, we set aside
    the fact finding only if it is so contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence
    as to be clearly wrong and unjust. 
    Id. The trier
    of fact is the sole judge of the
    credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given to their testimony. GTE
    Mobilnet of S. Tex. v. Pascouet, 
    61 S.W.3d 599
    , 615–16 (Tex. App.—Houston
    [14th Dist.] 2001, pet. denied). We may not substitute our own judgment for that
    of the trier of fact, even if we would reach a different answer on the evidence.
    Maritime Overseas 
    Corp., 971 S.W.2d at 407
    . The amount of evidence necessary
    to affirm a judgment is far less than that necessary to reverse a judgment.
    
    Pascouet, 61 S.W.3d at 616
    . With these principles in mind, we turn to Jones’s
    issues.
    The trial court found that Jones was a third-party beneficiary under the
    contract between NAMC and Murillo.                  At trial, Jones testified that she had
    received bids for around $14,000 to repair her home in 2008.4 Murillo objected to
    this testimony on the basis that Jones lacked personal knowledge; the trial court
    sustained Murillo’s objection, and Jones does not complain about the trial court’s
    ruling on this objection. Jones additionally points to her testimony that the cost to
    repair her house at the time of trial was “around” $20,000.                  Again, Murillo
    objected to Jones’s testimony regarding the amount, and the trial court sustained
    this objection “as to the amount.” Jones has not challenged these rulings on
    appeal. Jones further alleges damages of $4,000 in repairs to the roof of her home
    paid for by her children. Our review of the record, however, does not reveal any
    4
    The trial court awarded damages in the amount of $14,000 to Jones against NAMC of Texas.
    7
    evidence to support this allegation; Jones testified that her children paid to have her
    roof repaired, but she never specified how much her children paid for this repair.
    Finally, Jones relies on her testimony that she’s been paying $400 to $500
    per month to maintain her mortgage as additional evidence of damages. She
    asserts that she suffered damages of $40,000 for loss of the use of her home for
    seven years. But, under the Residential Construction Liability Act (“Act”),5 Jones
    may recover only the following economic damages:
    (1) the reasonable cost of repairs necessary to cure any
    construction defect;
    (2) the reasonable and necessary cost for the replacement or
    repair of any damaged goods in the residence;
    (3) reasonable and necessary engineering and consulting fees;
    (4) the reasonable expenses of temporary housing reasonably
    necessary during the repair period;
    (5) the reduction in current market value, if any, after the
    construction defect is repaired if the construction defect is a
    structural failure; and
    (6) reasonable and necessary attorney’s fees.
    Tex. Prop. Code Ann. § 27.004(g) (West, Westlaw through 2013 3d C.S.).
    Because damages for loss of use of her home are not permitted by the Act,6 this
    testimony is not evidence of damages that Jones may recover.7 See 
    id. 5 See
    Tex. Prop. Code Ann. §§ 27.001–.007 (West, Westlaw through 2013 3d C.S.). The Act
    applies to Jones’s claims. See 
    id. §§ 27.001,
    27.002.
    6
    To the extent Jones’s monthly mortgage payments could be construed as evidence of the
    reasonable expenses of temporary housing, Jones testified that she had been living with her
    daughter since Jones moved out of her own home. There is no evidence that Jones had been
    paying her daughter to stay in her daughter’s home, nor is there any evidence regarding what the
    reasonable expenses of temporary housing would have been. In other words, there is no
    evidence to support reasonable temporary-housing expenses under the Act. See Tex. Prop. Code
    Ann. §27.004(g)(4).
    8
    Under the applicable standards of review, we conclude that the evidence is
    both legally and factually sufficient to support the trial court’s conclusion that
    there was no evidence of damages. The trial court did not err in rendering a take-
    nothing judgment in Murillo’s favor. We thus overrule Jones’s first four issues.
    III. PROPRIETY OF VACATING DEFAULT JUDGMENT
    The record reflects that, in December 2008, the trial court rendered a final
    no-answer default judgment against Murillo and NAMC of Texas, and that in
    January 2012, the trial court vacated that judgment after granting Murillo’s bill of
    review.8 In Jones’s fifth issue, she contends the trial court erred in vacating the
    earlier default judgment against NAMC of Texas. The only argument in Jones’s
    brief that arguably concerns the trial court’s order vacating the default judgment is
    contained in the following excerpt:
    The trial court heard the evidence and awarded exemplary damages
    against Defendant the NAMC of Texas in 2008. While the default
    judgment was overturned, it could only be overturned by the
    appealing defendant, Murillo, and the proof and award should be left
    to stand against the defaulting defendant and its fraudulent
    continuation who never have appeared to this day. The judgment
    should be reformed accordingly.9
    Jones provides no legal authority or analysis to support her statement that this
    default judgment “could only be overturned by the appealing defendant, Murillo.”
    Just before opening statements during the bench trial in this case, counsel for
    Jones noted in open court that the trial court’s prior default judgment had been
    7
    On appeal, Jones has not briefed any argument regarding the Act. See Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(f),
    (i); see Home Loan Corp. v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., 
    312 S.W.3d 199
    , 205–06 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2010, no pet.).
    8
    Our record does not contain Murillo’s bill of review, any response thereto, or any
    reporter’s record from any hearing on the bill of review.
    9
    (citation to the record omitted).
    9
    vacated in a bill-of-review proceeding. Counsel also noted that NAMC of Texas
    had not appeared for the bench trial. Counsel then made the following statement:
    We have — subsequently there has been substantial evidence that
    was received in the form of postjudgment discovery; and I have that
    evidence in the form of depositions to submit to the court, along with
    proposed findings and conclusions in accordance with Castleberry vs.
    Branscum.
    I don’t need to argue it in front of Mr. Murillo and his lawyers
    now, but I want the court to know that all of that is being submitted.
    And we ask that that default judgment be reinstated nunc pro tunc
    with the damages we prove up in this proceeding and also ask the
    court of equity to enter findings under Castleberry vs. Branscum in
    accordance with the evidence that will be before the court.
    In the prior default judgment that had been vacated, the trial court had awarded
    $35,530 in actual damages and $50,000 in punitive damages. It is not clear what
    Jones’s counsel was requesting when he asked the trial court to reinstate the default
    judgment nunc pro tunc. Counsel may have been asking the trial court to reinstate
    the December 2008 judgment as if it had never been vacated in the bill-of-review
    proceeding; but, if the trial court reinstated the default judgment, then there would
    be no need to hear evidence regarding damages at the bench trial, because the
    default judgment already contains damage awards. On the other hand, Jones’s
    counsel may have been asking the trial court to render a post-answer default
    judgment against NAMC of Texas based on its failure to appear at the bench trial,
    without reinstating the prior default judgment. It would be appropriate to base
    such a post-answer default judgment on, among other things, evidence of damages
    presented at the bench trial. In the following colloquy, the trial court sought to
    clarify the relief Jones’s counsel was requesting:
    [trial court]:       So I understand, [name of Jonses’s counsel], on
    behalf of the plaintiff you are asking to enter a
    final default judgment at trial against National
    10
    Minority Contractors and you will be submitting
    evidence on that default to the court in the form of
    deposition testimony and other exhibits?
    [Jones’s counsel]: Yes, Your Honor.
    [trial court]:       And you will be asking the court to enter a ruling
    on that, along with findings of fact and conclusions
    of law?
    [Jones’s counsel]: Thank you, Your Honor. That is correct.
    Just after this colloquy, counsel for Jones began his opening statement for the
    bench trial, during which he stated to the trial court that he had “no quarrel with
    this court throwing out that default judgment. . . .”
    Any complaint by Jones that the trial court erred in vacating the no-answer
    default judgment as to NAMC of Texas or that the trial court erred in failing to
    reinstate the no-answer default judgment as to NAMC of Texas does not fall within
    the narrow scope of the fundamental-error doctrine recognized by the Supreme
    Court of Texas. See In re B.L.D., 
    113 S.W.3d 340
    , 350–52 (Tex. 2003). Jones was
    required to preserve error in the trial court to be heard on any such complaint on
    appeal. On the record before this court, we conclude that Jones failed to preserve
    error as to any such complaint by presenting this complaint in the trial court and
    obtaining an adverse ruling. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a); Kupersmith v. Weitz, No.
    14–05–00167–CV, 
    2006 WL 3407832
    , at *3 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    Nov. 28, 2006, no pet.) (mem. op.). Accordingly, we overrule Jones’s fifth issue.
    IV. REFUSAL TO MODIFY JUDGMENT
    Jones asserts in her sixth and final issue that the trial court erred in failing to
    render judgment against the “fraudulent continuation” of NAMC of Texas. She
    asserts that NAMC, Inc. – Greater Houston Chapter and NAMC, Inc. have “used
    the corporate form to deceive claimants such as [Jones].”
    11
    The defendants named in Jones’s live pleading and remaining in the case at
    the time of trial were Murillo and NAMC of Texas, yet the alleged “fraudulent
    continuations” to which Jones refers in her sixth issue are separate legal entities:
    NAMC, Inc. – Greater Houston Chapter and NAMC, Inc. It appears that Jones is
    alleging that NAMC of Texas is the alter ego of these entities or some other theory
    for piercing the corporate veil of these entities. Neither of these entities has ever
    been named as a defendant in this case and Jones has not pleaded in her petition
    any theory for piercing the corporate veil. Jones does not assert, and she has not
    shown, that the trial evidence proved as a matter of law a theory for piercing the
    corporate veil of either of these two entities. Jones has not shown that the trial
    court erred in failing to render judgment against NAMC, Inc. – Greater Houston
    Chapter or against NAMC, Inc. We overrule Jones’s sixth issue.
    V. CONCLUSION
    The evidence is both legally and factually sufficient to support the trial
    court’s conclusion that there was no evidence of damages. The trial court did not
    err in rendering a take-nothing judgment in Murillo’s favor. Likewise, Jones’s
    complaints regarding NAMC of Texas are without merit.
    The trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
    /s/             Kem Thompson Frost
    Chief Justice
    Panel consists of Chief Justice Frost and Justices Boyce and McCally.
    12