Sheldon L. Pollack Corp. v. Falcon Industries, Inc.

794 S.W.2d 380 | Texas Court of Appeals, 13th District | 1990

enforcedCited 48 timesBATTLE_TESTEDTexas
View on Court Website

Holding Summary

A subcontractor who substantially performs a construction contract is entitled to recover the full contract price less remedial costs, and payment conditions in subcontracts are covenants modifying time of payment, not conditions precedent to liability.

A party that has substantially performed a building contract is entitled to recover the full contract price less the cost of remedying those defects.

Texas Court of Appeals, 13th District, 1990

Related Cases

Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission v. IT-Davy

2002voided

Sovereign immunity bars a contractor's breach-of-contract suit against a state agency absent express legislative consent; neither the agency's conduct, contract terms, nor general statutes waive immunity from suit.

Martin K. Eby Construction Company, Inc. v. Dallas Area Rapid Transit

2004enforced

A contractor must exhaust administrative remedies established by a regional transportation authority before pursuing breach of contract claims in court, even when the authority lacks governmental immunity from suit.

Edwin P. Harrison, and United States of America, Party in Interest v. Westinghouse Savannah River Company

1999reversed

The Fourth Circuit reversed the district court's dismissal, holding that the False Claims Act broadly reaches false statements made to obtain government contract approval, not just false payment claims themselves.

Green International, Inc. v. Solis

1997modified

No-damages-for-delay clauses in construction contracts need not meet the conspicuousness requirement established in Dresser for exculpatory negligence clauses, and such clauses are enforceable to bar delay damages absent specific exceptions.

Heldenfels Bros. v. City of Corpus Christi

1992enforced

A municipality owes no duty to a subcontractor to ensure a general contractor provides valid payment bonds, and a subcontractor cannot recover from the municipality under quantum meruit, unjust enrichment, or negligence theories when the general contractor abandons the project.

Flameout Design & Fabrication, Inc. v. Pennzoil Caspian Corp.

1999enforced

Summary judgment for defendants was properly granted because Flameout failed to satisfy the statute of frauds for an alleged three-year contract, as the three documents cited did not constitute a signed, enforceable written agreement for the sale of goods.