DTPA
- The act EXCLUDES professional services & transactions over $500,000 from its regulation(won’t apply)
DPs way to avoid an alleged DTPA violation
include contract language :
“The Parties agree that all of the DPs services provided pursuant to this Agreement are professional services, which consist solely of the rendering of advice, judgment, opinion, or similar professional skill.”
Certificate of Merit
*Typical DP defense –> any failure to file this along with the complaint can lead to dismissal of the complaint that may be with prejudice
Breach of Contract
contract law
The 5 Elements definition she wants is:
Failure to perform a condition of a contract which causes the other contracting party to suffer damages
Negligence
tort
The 5 Elements definition she wants is:
Failure to act as a reasonable person which causes another person to suffer damages
Engineering Malpractice
Failure to act as a competent engineer practicing in the same area of engineering and in the same location which causes another person to suffer damages
Fraud
A material misrepresentation
with knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth and an intent that it be acted on
** fraud is an exception to the economic loss rule; can sue for punitive damages
Gross Negligence
an act or omission that amounts to more horrific negligence
Economic Loss Rule
The plaintiff must satisfy four requirements to maintain an action for negligence per se
A violation of a statute or regulation
The plaintiff was in the class of persons intended to be protected by the statute or regulation
The plaintiff’s injury is of the nature that the statute or regulation is designed to prevent
The violation of the statute or regulation must be the proximate cause of the injury
Limitation of Liability clause
Note: limited liability is liability restricted by law or contract
This clause can be used in a contract to establish a maximum sum of damages or risk the design professional will accept for rendering his/her services. HOWEVER, this clause will be invalid if sued for tort.
Texas Statute of Limitations
4 years for breach of contract & breach of warranty claims
2 years for negligence
Statute of Repose
bars all claims in TX relating to any cause of action against a A/E if it isn’t within 10 years of the time the project was completed
Discovery Rule
this little guy goes with the statute of limitation rule and can delay when the time began to run for the statute of limitations if the knowledge was not discoverable/concealed from the plaintiff in any way
What can OWNER sue DP for?
“time is of the essence”
Mustang Pipeline Co., Inc. v. Driver Pipeline Co., Inc. (Tex. 2004)
the court held that a contractor’s failure to meet a deadline in violation of an expressed time-is-of-the-essence clause was a material breach as a matter of law
Third-Party Beneficiary
Note: in order for a 3rd party beneficiary clause to be enforceable it has to be irreversible
Elements of Negligence (per PWPT)
Duty of care Standard of care Proof of standard of care Negligence per se Indemnity Economic loss
Texas defines negligence in architect malpractice cases as
The failure to use ordinary care; that is, failure to do that which an architect of ordinary prudence would have done under the same or similar circumstances or doing that which an architect of ordinary prudence would not have done under the same or similar circumstances
Negligence per se (PWPT slides; owner vs DP)
The plaintiff must satisfy four requirements to maintain an action for negligence per se:
Breach of Warranty
DP should make sure to NOT guarantee the results of the contractor’s work to the owner under a breach of contract theory
The exemption for professionals contained in the DTPA will not be applicable to:
What can CONTRACTOR sue DP for?
Breach of Contract Third-Party Beneficiaries Negligence Fraud Negligent Misrepresentation Breach of Warranty