Guillermo Garza D/B/A Wilhome Builders & Construction v. Jesse Cantu , 431 S.W.3d 96 ( 2013 )


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  • Reversed and Remanded and Substitute Opinion filed August 27, 2013.
    In The
    Fourteenth Court of Appeals
    NO. 14-11-00724-CV
    GUILLERMO GARZA D/B/A WILHOME BUILDERS &
    CONSTRUCTION, Appellant
    V.
    JESSE CANTU, Appellee
    On Appeal from the 164th District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    Trial Court Cause No. 2007-36738
    SUBSTITUTE OPINION
    We issued an opinion in this case on May 11, 2013, reversing the trial
    court’s judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) and remanding for a new
    trial. Appellee subsequently filed a motion for rehearing. Without changing the
    disposition of the case, we deny the motion for rehearing, withdraw our previous
    opinion, and issue this substitute opinion in its place.
    Guillermo Garza, doing business as Wilhome Builders and Construction,
    (“the builder”) sued Jesse Cantu (“the buyer”) for breach of a construction
    contract. After the jury returned a verdict for the builder, the buyer moved for
    JNOV, arguing that the jury’s damages calculations lacked evidentiary support.
    The trial court granted the motion.        We conclude that although the damage
    amounts found by the jury are not supported by legally sufficient evidence, the
    builder nonetheless introduced evidence of some amount of damages as defined in
    the charge. We therefore reverse the trial court’s JNOV and remand for a new
    trial.
    BACKGROUND
    The events giving rise to this case are not complicated. The parties agreed in
    writing that the builder would construct a duplex home for the buyer. When the
    project was nearly finished, the builder informed the buyer of cost overruns that
    significantly exceeded the project’s estimated price. The buyer refused to pay for
    these overages or to authorize a final payment of the outstanding portion of the
    estimated price. The builder sued the buyer, and the jury rendered a verdict in
    favor of the builder.
    The issues before us relate primarily to the jury’s findings of damages, so we
    explain the terms of the parties’ written contract and the figures at issue in some
    detail. The parties agreed that the home’s price would be “based on cost plus” a
    15% “Builder[’]s Consulting Fee.” In so-called cost-plus contracts like this one,
    “the contractor is to be reimbursed for costs of materials and labor by the owner
    and is to receive a stated percentage of such costs as his profit.” Burditt v. Sisk,
    
    710 S.W.2d 114
    , 118 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1986, no writ) (internal
    2
    quotation marks omitted). Here, the contract’s relevant language is as follows:1
    Total price of house, including current changes and additions, is as
    follows
    ....
    BASED ON COST PLUS
    Builders Consulting Fee 15%                     $31,877.82
    Builders Sale Price                             $244,396.65
    Sale Price Per Square Foot                      $61
    Estimates for this job cost are based on and not limited to what the
    Buyer may choose for his or her customization on this project.
    The buyer obtained a loan for the $244,396.65 sale price, which represented
    a total estimated construction cost of $212,518.83, plus a 15% builder’s fee of
    $31,877.82. As the builder completed certain portions of the work on the project,
    he requested payment from the buyer’s lender. The lender would inspect the
    completed work and release a portion of the authorized funds commensurate with
    the work accomplished. In this way, the builder received $219,945.75 of the
    $244,396.65 estimated sale price. Only $24,450.90 of the sale price remained to
    be paid.
    As the time for this remaining payment approached, the builder informed the
    buyer that the project was $55,713.40 over budget. The builder would later testify
    that these overages resulted from the buyer’s selection of materials and from
    delays early in construction.         The overages made the project’s total cost
    $268,232.23 instead of the $212,518.83 estimate; this change increased the
    builder’s 15% fee by $8,357.01.
    The buyer balked at paying the overages, so the builder stopped work and
    filed a mechanic’s lien. Although the home passed the lender’s final inspection,
    1
    Before beginning construction, the parties reduced the estimated price with an
    addendum that was to be read with the contract “as if contained therein.” The quoted language
    therefore incorporates the amended price into the initial contract’s language.
    3
    the buyer refused to release the final payment of the estimated sale price to the
    builder. The builder sued the buyer for $88,521.31: the total cost of construction
    (including overages) plus his 15% fee less the amount already paid.
    At trial, the parties contested the amount of work remaining when the
    builder left the project. The buyer argued that considerable work remained and
    that the builder breached the contract by leaving this work unfinished. The builder
    testified that “[a] couple punch-out items” remained.
    The jury found that the buyer breached the contract and that the builder did
    not. The jury was also asked to find two “elements” of the builder’s damages,
    which we discuss in detail in our analysis below. Each element was submitted to
    the jury without objection, and each required the jury to determine (among other
    things) the cost to complete the remaining work.
    For the first damages element, called “Loss of Contractual profit,” the jury
    awarded $24,450.90—the unpaid portion of the estimated sale price. For the
    second element, called “Loss of Contractual Profit Plus Expenses Incurred Before
    Breach,” the jury awarded $55,713.40—the amount that the project went over
    budget. The jury did not award the builder his 15% fee for the overages, so the
    total jury award was $8,357.01 less than the builder sought.
    The buyer moved for JNOV, arguing in part that the jury’s damages findings
    were unsupported by the record. The buyer contended, among other things, that
    the record contained no evidence of the cost to complete the remaining work.
    Because the jury was told to use this cost in calculating each element of damages,
    the buyer argued that the jury’s findings lacked evidentiary support. The trial court
    granted the buyer’s JNOV motion and rendered a take-nothing judgment. The
    builder appealed.
    4
    ANALYSIS
    I.     Standard of review
    We review a JNOV under a no-evidence standard, meaning we credit
    evidence favoring the jury verdict if reasonable jurors could and disregard contrary
    evidence unless reasonable jurors could not. Tanner v. Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins.
    Co., 
    289 S.W.3d 828
    , 830 (Tex. 2009). We will uphold the jury’s finding if more
    than a scintilla of competent evidence supports it. 
    Id. Because there
    was no
    objection to the charge submitted, we measure the evidence by the charge as given.
    See Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, L.L.P. v. Nat’l Dev. & Research Corp.,
    
    299 S.W.3d 106
    , 112 (Tex. 2009); Osterberg v. Peca, 
    12 S.W.3d 31
    , 54–55 (Tex.
    2000).
    The builder argues that the JNOV must be reversed because the jury’s
    findings are supported by legally sufficient evidence. The buyer, for his part,
    raises two bases for affirming the JNOV. First, the buyer contends that we must
    affirm because the builder’s brief failed to address all points raised in the JNOV
    motion below. Second, the buyer re-urges his argument that the jury’s damages
    findings are not supported by legally sufficient evidence.                 We address these
    arguments in turn.2
    II.    The builder’s appellate brief addressed every basis for JNOV raised in
    the buyer’s motion below.
    Generally, when an appellant fails to attack all independent grounds that
    support an adverse ruling, we must affirm. See Britton v. Texas Dept. of Criminal
    Justice, 
    95 S.W.3d 676
    , 681 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2002, no pet.). This
    2
    The builder has also argued that the jury’s award of $0 in attorney’s fees is against the
    great weight and preponderance of the evidence. Because we remand for a new trial, we do not
    address this argument.
    5
    general rule applies in the JNOV context: when a trial court grants a motion for
    JNOV presenting multiple grounds but does not state the ground relied upon, the
    appellant has the burden of showing that the judgment cannot be sustained on any
    of the grounds stated in the motion. Fort Bend Cnty. Drainage Dist. v. Sbrusch,
    
    818 S.W.2d 392
    , 394 (Tex. 1991).
    Relying upon these rules, the buyer argues that we must affirm the JNOV in
    his favor because the builder’s appellate brief neglected to attack one of the bases
    for JNOV that the buyer presented to the trial court. Specifically, the buyer
    contends that the builder failed to address the JNOV ground of “legally insufficient
    evidence to support the jury’s finding that damages resulted from [the buyer’s]
    failure to comply [with the contract].” On appeal, the buyer characterizes the
    “resulted from” language in this ground as attacking the builder’s failure to prove
    “causation.” The buyer argues that the builder’s brief overlooked this causation
    basis for granting JNOV. We disagree.
    Assuming for argument’s sake that causation was a separate JNOV ground
    that the builder had to address in his brief, we conclude that the builder’s
    discussion of damages attacked this ground. The “resulted from” language upon
    which the buyer focuses appeared in a question that submitted both causation and
    damages to the jury.     The builder addressed the sufficiency of the evidence
    supporting the jury’s answers to this question in a section of his brief captioned
    “[The Builder] Presented Sufficient Evidence to Sustain The Jury’s Findings That
    Damages Resulted From [the Buyer’s] Breach.” The section argues that “[h]ad
    [the buyer] not breached the contract, [the builder] was ready and able to carry out
    the contract and complete the duplex construction.” It also argues that the damage
    elements accurately reflect the damages caused by the buyer’s noncompliance and
    were therefore properly submitted. We understand these arguments to address not
    6
    only damages, but also causation.
    In any event, the builder’s combined analysis of causation and damages is
    consistent with the way the parties have treated those two issues throughout the
    proceedings; we see no reason to change the rules now. The parties submitted both
    issues to the jury in a single question, and the buyer requested JNOV based on both
    issues in a single sentence. Only now, when the builder addresses the evidence
    supporting the jury’s finding on that question in a single section of his brief, does
    the buyer contend that the causation issue has not been adequately addressed. Yet
    the buyer has not explained what separate causation argument the builder failed to
    address.3 Accordingly, we hold that the builder addressed all grounds for JNOV
    presented to the trial court, and we proceed to the appeal’s merits.
    III.   Because no evidence supports the amounts of damages found by the
    jury, a new trial is required.
    The parties dispute whether legally sufficient evidence supports the jury’s
    awards of damages. We note at the outset that the source of this disagreement is
    the poor fit between the elements of damages submitted to the jury and the facts of
    this case. The two submitted elements of damages precisely track two of the
    sample elements of contract damages in the Pattern Jury Charges (PJC), and
    3
    Not even the buyer’s appellate brief argues that causation presents a basis for JNOV
    that is distinct from the damages issues. While arguing that the builder failed to brief the
    causation issue, the buyer himself declines to press a lack of causation evidence as a separate
    basis for upholding the JNOV on appeal. Nevertheless, to the extent there is a separate causation
    ground that presents a live issue, we conclude that the evidence discussed in this opinion
    supports the jury’s finding that the builder’s damages resulted from the buyer’s failure to comply
    with the contract.
    The buyer also argued for JNOV below on the ground that there is legally insufficient
    evidence of breach. The builder attacked this ground in his appellate brief, and the buyer did not
    respond. To the extent the breach ground presents a live issue, we conclude that the evidence
    discussed in this opinion and in the builder’s brief supports the jury’s finding that the buyer
    breached the parties’ contract.
    7
    neither the parties nor the trial court attempted to tailor those elements to the
    evidence presented.4
    The damages question asked the jury, “What sum of money, if any, if paid
    now in cash would fairly and reasonably compensate [the builder] for his damages,
    if any, that resulted from [the buyer’s] failure to comply?” The jury was instructed
    to consider only two elements of damages. The first element was
    Loss of Contractual Profit: The difference between the agreed price
    and the cost [the builder] would have incurred in the construction of
    [the] residential duplex . . . .
    The jury found this amount to be $24,450.90, which is the amount of the final
    payment that the buyer never authorized. In other words, this figure reflected the
    unpaid portion of the estimated sale price to which the builder claimed he was
    4
    The comment to the PJC’s contract damages instructions explains that “[b]ecause
    damages instructions in contract suits are necessarily fact-specific, no true ‘pattern’ instructions
    are given.” STATE BAR OF TEXAS, PATTERN JURY CHARGES: BUSINESS, CONSUMER, INSURANCE
    & EMPLOYMENT, PJC 115.4 cmt. at 291 (2012). The drafters of the pattern charges intended
    these instructions to be “illustrative only” and noted that the instructions “must be rewritten to fit
    the particular damages raised by the pleadings and proof.” 
    Id. Such attention
    to the evidence was especially important here because this litigation
    involved a cost-plus contract. In these contracts, “[t]he builder’s profit . . . is . . . a contractually
    defined percentage of costs . . . ; it is not the difference between costs and a contractually fixed
    price.” Sage St. Assocs. v. Northdale Constr. Co., 
    863 S.W.2d 438
    , 442 (Tex. 1993). Thus,
    when the contract is cost-plus, a jury’s calculation of the difference between the estimated price
    and the costs incurred is unlikely to reflect the actual damages suffered. On appeal, the buyer’s
    brief observes that the evidence would have supported the jury’s awards if different instructions
    had been used for the damages elements, such as: “[the] amount [necessary to compensate the
    builder] for work [he] . . . completed, but for which no payment had been made”; and “[the]
    amount [necessary to compensate the builder] for overages representing expenses [he] incurred
    in addition to the agreed-upon price in the contract.”
    We express no opinion regarding the adequacy of these instructions. In addition, because
    no party objected to the damages elements submitted to the jury, we do not reverse based on any
    defect in the charge. Rather, as explained below, we reverse the buyer’s JNOV because there is
    evidence of some damages as measured by the elements submitted. This holding requires a
    remand for a new trial. When preparing the contract damages questions for the next trial, we
    suggest that the parties and the trial court undertake the fact-specific evaluation of the evidence
    that the PJC drafters recommend.
    8
    entitled.
    The second damages element was
    Loss of Contractual Profit Plus Expenses Incurred Before Breach: The
    amount [the buyer] agreed to pay [the builder] less the expenses [the
    builder] saved by not completing the construction of [the] residential
    duplex . . . .
    The jury determined that this amount was $55,713.40, which is the difference
    between the estimated cost of construction and the actual costs the builder
    allegedly incurred. In other words, this answer corresponds to the cost overruns
    that the builder allegedly paid for during construction and sought to recover from
    the buyer.
    Neither party objected that these elements of damages were improper, so the
    builder can recover them if the amounts awarded by the jury are supported by
    legally sufficient evidence. Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & 
    Feld, 299 S.W.3d at 112
    ; Cosgrove v. Grimes, 
    774 S.W.2d 662
    , 666 (Tex. 1989). We use the charge as
    given to determine whether the evidence supports the jury’s award for each
    element of damages. 
    Osterberg, 12 S.W.3d at 54
    –55.
    A.    Although the builder presented some evidence of damages, no
    evidence supports the jury’s finding that the “difference between
    the agreed price and the cost [the builder] would have incurred”
    was $24,450.90.
    The first damages element required the jury to determine the difference
    between (1) the “agreed price” and (2) the “cost [the builder] would have incurred
    in the construction of [the] . . . duplex.”   The jury was not asked about each
    component individually, but found the difference between the two components to
    be $24,450.90. The builder’s arguments regarding the sufficiency of the evidence
    focus primarily on the price component, while the buyer’s arguments focus on the
    cost component.
    9
    As we explain below, the jury could have found the price component to be
    $24,450.90, the unpaid portion of the estimated “Builder[’]s Sale Price” to which
    the parties agreed in their contract. The buyer does not dispute that there is legally
    sufficient evidence of the price component, but he offers two other arguments in
    defense of the JNOV. First, he attacks the cost component, arguing that there is no
    evidence of any cost the builder would have incurred in constructing the duplex
    because he had already finished construction. We disagree because both parties
    offered evidence of work that remained to be completed and presented different
    figures for the cost of that work. None of those figures was zero, however. Thus,
    we agree with the buyer’s second argument that no evidence supports the jury’s
    finding that $24,450.90 is the difference between the price and cost components.
    Nevertheless, because there was some evidence of damages, we reverse the JNOV
    and remand for a new trial.
    1.    The jury could have found that the agreed price was
    $24,450.90.
    The builder argues that the trial court erred in granting JNOV because there
    is legally sufficient evidence to support the jury’s award of $24,450.90 for the first
    element of damages—loss of contractual profit.           Specifically, he points to
    undisputed evidence showing that this amount was the unpaid portion of the agreed
    sale price, which he did not receive because the buyer refused to sign off on the
    final draw.
    In response, the buyer does not contend that there is legally insufficient
    evidence of the “agreed price” component of this damages element. Instead, he
    argues that the price component had to be $244,396.65 because the undisputed
    evidence showed that this was the sale price stated in the parties’ contract.
    We conclude that the jury could reasonably have interpreted the price
    10
    component to include only the unpaid portion of the agreed price—$24,450.90—
    because that reading is consistent with the damages question as a whole. The
    question asked the jury to determine what damages “resulted from” the buyer’s
    noncompliance with the contract. If the term “agreed price” referred to the entire
    $244,396.65 builder’s sale price, as the buyer contends, the first damages element
    would not account for the payments the buyer already made. The builder would be
    awarded damages for payments he had already received—damages that
    undisputedly did not “result from” the buyer’s noncompliance.
    We must read jury instructions like jurors do—with common sense. Nip v.
    Checkpoint Sys., Inc., 
    154 S.W.3d 767
    , 772 n.3 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    2004, no pet.). Interpreting the first damages element to require an award of
    amounts already paid does not make sense and would ignore the charge’s “resulted
    from” language. Instead, viewing the charge as a whole, the jury could reasonably
    have understood the “agreed price” component to mean “the unpaid portion of the
    agreed price,” which was $24,450.90.              Cf. Chubb Lloyds Ins. Co. of Tex. v.
    Andrew’s Restoration, Inc., 
    323 S.W.3d 564
    , 580 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2010)
    (construing the phrase “[t]he value, if any, of the work performed by [plaintiff]” to
    mean “the value of the work that [plaintiff] was not paid for” in order to interpret
    instruction consistently with verdict), aff’d in part, rev’d in part on other grounds,
    
    364 S.W.3d 817
    (Tex. 2012).5
    5
    We note that even if the buyer were correct that the price component had to be
    $244,396.65, that would not change the outcome of this case. As discussed below, the parties
    offered a range of evidence regarding the cost component. Yet none of the cost figures within
    that range, if subtracted from a price of $244,396.65, would equal $24,450.90—the amount
    awarded by the jury. Because there was evidence of some amount of damages, however, a new
    trial is required as explained below.
    11
    2.    There is no evidence that the builder would have incurred
    zero cost in completing the project.
    The buyer offers two principal arguments in defense of the JNOV. First, he
    focuses on the cost component of the first damages element, contending that there
    is no evidence of any “cost [the builder] would have incurred in the construction of
    [the] . . . duplex.” Indeed, he says, the evidence conclusively shows the absence of
    any such cost because the builder had completed the project. We disagree.
    Although the builder did testify that he had “finished everything [he] had to
    finish,” he also said that some work remained. The builder explained that, when he
    walked away from the project, an inspection report by the buyer’s lender showed
    the house was 99.1% complete. For example, the builder testified that some
    housecleaning, touch-up painting, and work related to the lights remained. The
    builder also said that there remained “[a] couple [of] punch-out items,” described
    as “[s]ome last-minute repairs and installation of . . . very small things.” In total,
    according to the lender’s report, 0.9% of the project—which equaled $1,872.62 of
    the budgeted cost—remained to be completed.
    There was also considerable testimony from the buyer about work that he
    contended the builder had left unfinished, including testimony about the cost
    incurred to complete that work. For example, the buyer testified that the building’s
    “electrical, plumbing, and HVAC” were not up to code and that the building was
    ineligible for an occupancy certificate. He testified that “there were still wires
    hanging out of all the things in the wall, and all that had to be finished.” The buyer
    described one unit of the duplex as “90 percent complete” and the other as “70 to
    75 percent complete.”
    The buyer also said that he employed replacement contractors “every day for
    a couple of months” to complete the home at a cost of “around 15,000” dollars.
    12
    The replacement contractor in charge testified that he worked on the house for a
    total of “24 to 36 hours, but [he] would only come in the afternoons . . . . So [the
    work] probably drug out for about two months.”          He testified that he billed
    approximately $6,600.
    Thus, contrary to the buyer’s contention, the jury heard considerable
    evidence of remaining work and of costs that the builder “would have incurred”
    had he stayed on the project. Based upon this evidence, the jury could have found,
    for example, that the builder would have incurred an additional $6,600 in costs: the
    cost of the replacement contractor. The jury could have found that the builder
    would have incurred $1,872.62: the costs of completing the budgeted items
    according to the lender’s report. The jury also could have found that the builder
    would have incurred $15,000: the amount the buyer said he spent to complete the
    project.    Subtracting these amounts from an agreed price of $24,450.90, the
    evidence would have supported answers to the first damages element as low as
    $9,450.90 or as high as $22,578.28. Accordingly, we reject the buyer’s argument
    that there was no evidence of any costs the builder would have incurred.
    The buyer’s second argument is that no evidence supports the jury’s finding
    that $24,450.90 is the difference between the price and cost components. We
    agree.     Because the jury apparently concluded that the price component was
    $24,450.90, it necessarily found that “the cost the builder would have incurred”
    was $0. Although some evidence supports the price figure, all parties’ evidence at
    trial was contrary to a $0 cost figure. Whatever cost the builder would have
    incurred in completing the construction, it would have been more than $0. Thus,
    the difference between the cost the builder would have incurred and the $24,450.90
    unpaid price had to be some amount less than that price. As a result, we hold that
    the jury’s award of $24,450.90 for the first element of damages is not supported by
    13
    legally sufficient evidence. See Wagner & Brown, Ltd. v. Sheppard, 
    282 S.W.3d 419
    , 425 (Tex. 2008) (where evidence established that at least some charges were
    reasonable and necessary, no evidence supported decision to award no charges).
    B.     No evidence supports the jury’s finding that the difference
    between the “amount [the buyer] agreed to pay” and “the
    expenses [the builder] saved” was $55,713.40.
    The second element of damages also required the jury to determine the
    difference between two components: (1) “[t]he amount [the buyer] agreed to pay
    [the builder],” less (2) “the expenses [the builder] saved by not completing the
    construction.” The jury found this difference to be $55,713.40. For reasons
    similar to those just explained regarding the first element, we agree with the buyer
    that the jury’s award of damages for the second element is not supported by legally
    sufficient evidence. While the jury’s apparent conclusion that the buyer agreed to
    pay the builder $55,713.40 has support in the record, its conclusion that the builder
    saved no expenses by leaving the project unfinished does not.
    The jury’s award of $55,713.40 for the second element matches the amount
    by which the builder testified the project went over budget—overages that,
    according to the builder, the buyer “agreed to pay.” Specifically, the builder points
    to the parties’ contract, which states the “[t]otal price” is “BASED ON COST
    PLUS,” and that “[e]stimates for this job cost are based on and not limited to what
    the Buyer may choose for his or her customization on this project.” The builder
    also offered evidence that the buyer’s customization choices and delays early in
    construction resulted in additional costs of $55,713.40. For example, the builder
    testified that initial permitting delays put the project over budget before it even
    began. He also explained that the buyer selected medium- to high-priced “fit and
    finish” items, such as cabinets, flooring and light fixtures. Some of these items
    cost more than the builder had budgeted. Given this evidence, the jury could
    14
    reasonably find that the agreed payment component of this damages element was
    $55,713.40.6
    By way of a conditional cross-issue,7 the buyer responds that this evidence
    cannot be considered in computing contract damages because any agreement
    regarding the overages was oral, but the charge defined a “contract” as “a promise
    or set of promises, in writing.” According to the buyer, there is no evidence that
    any overage damages resulted from a breach of the parties’ written contract. We
    disagree.
    Although the parties never agreed to the amount of the overages in writing,
    the evidence summarized above permitted the jury to conclude that the buyer
    agreed in the written contract to pay for overages. As noted, the contract stated
    that the “[t]otal price” is “BASED ON COST PLUS.”                        While the contract
    contained figures for the total sale price and the builder’s consulting fee, it
    explained that these “[e]stimates” were “based on and not limited to what the
    Buyer may choose for his . . . customization.” Given this evidence, the jury could
    reasonably have found that the parties’ written contract included an agreement that
    6
    Of course, it would also have been reasonable for the jury to find that the amount the
    buyer agreed to pay was $244,396.65—the sale price stated in the contract. That finding would
    not change the outcome of this case, however. As discussed below, the parties offered a range of
    evidence regarding the expenses saved component. Yet none of the cost figures within that
    range, if subtracted from a price of $244,396.65, would equal $55,713.40—the amount awarded
    by the jury. Because there was evidence of some amount of damages, however, a new trial is
    required as explained below.
    7
    The parties do not address whether the elements of damages here are “separable without
    unfairness to the parties,” allowing us to affirm the JNOV on the second element—as the buyer’s
    cross-issue requests—while remanding the first element for a new trial. Tex. R. App. P. 44.1(b);
    cf. Cheek v. Humphreys, 
    800 S.W.2d 596
    , 600 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1990, writ
    denied) (remanding for new trial on one element of damages). For reasons apart from the cross-
    issue, however, we conclude below that both elements must be remanded. Thus, regardless of
    whether a cross-issue is proper here, the issue the buyer identifies is likely to arise again on
    retrial, and we address it in the interest of judicial economy. See English v. English, 
    44 S.W.3d 102
    , 104 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2001, no pet.).
    15
    the buyer would pay for the total cost of construction even if that cost exceeded the
    estimated price stated in the contract.
    The buyer next attacks the second component of this damages element,
    arguing that there is no evidence of an amount the builder saved by not completing
    construction. We disagree. As explained above, the evidence showed that the
    builder would have incurred costs of at least $1,872.62 and perhaps as much as
    $15,000 in completing construction. By not completing construction, the builder
    saved these expenses. Subtracting these expenses from an agreed payment of
    $55,713.40, the evidence would have supported answers to the second damages
    element as low as $40,713.40 or as high as $53,840.78. Accordingly, we reject the
    buyer’s argument that there was no evidence of any expenses the builder saved by
    not completing construction.
    Finally, the buyer argues that no evidence supports the jury’s finding that
    $55,713.40 is the difference between the agreed payment and the expenses saved.
    We agree. Although there was evidence that the agreed payment component was
    $55,713.40, there was no evidence that the expenses saved component was $0.
    Because all parties agreed that some expenses were saved by not completing
    construction, the difference between those expenses and the agreed payment had to
    be some amount less than $55,713.40. As a result, we hold that the jury’s award of
    $55,713.40 for the second element of damages is not supported by legally
    sufficient evidence. See Wagner & Brown, 
    Ltd., 282 S.W.3d at 425
    .
    C.     Because the builder offered evidence of damages, but the evidence
    does not support the amounts of damages awarded by the jury,
    the buyer is entitled to a remand for a new trial.
    Because no evidence supports the amounts of damages that the jury awarded
    the builder, the buyer argues that we must affirm the trial court’s JNOV that the
    16
    builder takes nothing. We disagree.
    When there is evidence to support some—but not all—of the damages
    awarded, it is not appropriate to render JNOV. Guevara v. Ferrer, 
    247 S.W.3d 662
    , 670 (Tex. 2007).      As explained above, that is the situation here.        The
    conflicting evidence regarding costs and expenses saved supported a wide range of
    answers to both elements of damages submitted to the jury. In such cases, the
    plaintiff has proved damages; his entitlement to recover them survives a fact
    finder’s error in awarding too much. See ERI Consulting Eng’rs, Inc. v. Swinnea,
    
    318 S.W.3d 867
    , 878–79 (Tex. 2010).           Accordingly, the trial court erred in
    rendering a take-nothing JNOV.
    Nonetheless, the plaintiff is not entitled to any portion of the award that the
    evidence does not support. In this situation, we may either suggest a remittitur or
    remand for a new trial. See 
    Guevara, 247 S.W.3d at 670
    . We cannot suggest a
    remittitur here because, as discussed above, the evidence allowed the jury to award
    as little as $9,450.90 or as much as $22,578.28 for the first damages element
    submitted, and as little as $40,713.40 or as much as $53,840.78 for the second
    element submitted.     The record thus contains insufficient evidence for us to
    calculate a remittitur accurately. We therefore remand for a new trial. See Ford
    Motor Co. v. Garcia, 
    363 S.W.3d 573
    , 582 (Tex. 2012); 
    Guevara, 247 S.W.3d at 670
    . Because the parties contested liability in the initial trial, a new trial on both
    liability and damages is necessary. See Tex. R. App. P. 44.1(b).
    On rehearing, the buyer argues that the builder’s brief requested only
    rendition and did not include a request for remand or a general prayer, so we are
    powerless to remand and must affirm the erroneous JNOV. Though the builder
    referred to rendition in the body of his brief, in his prayer, the builder requested
    reversal without specifying the appropriate disposition.
    17
    In any event, whether the builder failed to request a remand or instead failed
    to request any disposition is beside the point. For the reasons given above, the
    builder is entitled to the reversal he prayed for, and we look to the appellate rules
    for the appropriate disposition. “[I]t is [the relevant appellate rule], and not the
    prayer for relief, that determines the disposition of the case.” Kaspar v. Thorne,
    
    755 S.W.2d 151
    , 157 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1988, no writ).8 Thus, as we held in
    Olin Corp. v. Dyson, “the failure of a prayer for relief to request [a particular
    disposition] does not prevent an appellate court from granting such relief on a
    meritorious . . . point of error which is clearly presented in an appellant’s brief.”
    
    678 S.W.2d 650
    , 657 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1984), rev’d on other
    grounds, 
    692 S.W.2d 456
    (Tex. 1985).
    Under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 43.3, “[w]hen reversing a trial
    court’s judgment, [we] must render the judgment that the trial court should have
    rendered” (emphasis added). Exceptions to this general rule allow a remand when,
    for example, further proceedings are necessary—as they are here because the trial
    court should have granted a new trial. See Tex. R. App. P. 43.3(a). In this way,
    Rule 43.3 “sets out two possible dispositions when [the appellate] court chooses to
    reverse a lower court’s judgment: rendition and remand.” 
    Kaspar, 755 S.W.2d at 157
    . But nowhere does the rule suggest that when a trial court’s judgment should
    be reversed, we must instead affirm it if the appellant fails to request the correct
    post-reversal disposition. And Rule 44.3 casts doubt on the practice of relying on
    formal defects or irregularities to transform a reversal into an affirmance. See Tex.
    R. App. P. 44.3 (court cannot “affirm or reverse a judgment . . . for formal defects
    8
    See also Majeed v. Hussain, No. 03-08-00679-CV, 
    2010 WL 4137472
    , at *8–*9 (Tex.
    App.—Austin Oct. 22, 2010, no pet.); Ibrahim v. Young, 
    253 S.W.3d 790
    , 807 (Tex. App.—
    Eastland 2008, pet. denied); Nat’l Cafe Servs., Ltd. v. Podaras, 
    148 S.W.3d 194
    , 200–01 (Tex.
    App.—Waco 2004, pet. denied).
    18
    or irregularities in appellate procedure without allowing a reasonable time to
    correct or amend the defects or irregularities”); 
    Kaspar, 755 S.W.2d at 157
    .
    The cases the buyer cites in support of its argument emerge from two Texas
    Supreme Court cases, but neither case undermines our holding that the builder is
    entitled to a remand under the rules. In Stevens v. National Education Centers,
    Inc., the supreme court denied a petition for review because remand was the proper
    remedy and the petitioner “specifically requested that th[e] Court not remand for a
    new trial.” 
    11 S.W.3d 185
    (Tex. 2000) (per curiam). Courts have relied on
    Stevens to uphold erroneous rulings when the appellant expressly rejects the only
    available relief. Here, however, the builder did not adopt a “rendition-or-bust”
    strategy. Though he failed to request a remand, he did not reject that relief. Thus,
    Stevens does not apply here.
    In Horrocks v. Texas Department of Transportation, the supreme court held
    that a party who preserved a legal sufficiency point in the trial court by filing a
    motion for new trial was not entitled to the greater relief of rendition on appeal.
    
    852 S.W.2d 498
    , 499–500 (Tex. 1993) (per curiam). Instead, the rules required the
    appellate court to render the judgment the trial court should have rendered. 
    Id. at 500.
    For a new trial motion, the appropriate relief was a new trial, not rendition of
    judgment.
    Horrocks is inapposite here because the builder preserved its entitlement to a
    new trial in the trial court by filing a post-JNOV new trial motion. Indeed, the
    buyer also specifically requested a new trial in his JNOV motion.9 Given the
    9
    On appeal, the buyer also preserved the option of a remand for a new trial, including a
    general prayer in his brief for “such further relief to which he may be entitled.” See Ward v.
    Dallas Tex. Nat’l Title Co., 
    735 S.W.2d 919
    , 922 n.11 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1987, writ ref’d n.r.e.)
    (holding a “general prayer is sufficient for a remand for further proceedings”). Although we
    need not rely on the buyer’s prayer to support a remand in this case, we note the supreme court
    has suggested that such reliance is proper in some circumstances. See Tex. Prudential Ins. Co. v.
    19
    evidence, the trial court simply erred in awarding the buyer more relief than he was
    entitled to receive on that motion.10
    In sum, we agree with the builder’s issue that the trial court erred in
    rendering JNOV.          Under Olin Corp., therefore, we award the builder the
    disposition authorized by the rules, which is a remand for a new trial as explained
    above.
    CONCLUSION
    Because the builder offered some evidence of damages, we sustain the
    builder’s principal issue in part and reverse the trial court’s JNOV. The evidence
    does not support the full amounts of the jury’s awards, however, so we remand for
    a new trial.
    /s/    J. Brett Busby
    Justice
    Panel consists of Chief Justice Hedges and Justices Brown and Busby.
    Dillard, 
    307 S.W.2d 242
    , 252 (Tex. 1957) (looking to respondent’s brief to determine whether
    she requested a remand in the event the court agreed with petitioner’s issue).
    10
    The buyer argues on rehearing that our decision conflicts with Lentino v. Cullen Center
    Bank & Trust, which contains a statement that “[w]e cannot grant relief appellants do not
    request.” No. 14-00-00692-CV, 
    2002 WL 220421
    , at *11 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Feb.
    14, 2002, pet. denied) (mem. op., not designated for publication). But Lentino has no
    precedential value. See Tex. R. App. P. 47.7(b). In any event, even if Lentino had precedential
    value, we would not be bound by this part of the Lentino opinion to the extent it is contrary to the
    prior panel opinion of this Court in Olin Corp. Compare Lentino, 
    2002 WL 220421
    , at *11, with
    Olin 
    Corp., 678 S.W.2d at 657
    . See Burnett v. Sharp, 
    328 S.W.3d 594
    , 597–98 (Tex. App.—
    Houston [14th Dist.] 2010, no pet.) (concluding that, if a panel of this Court does not distinguish
    or purport to apply a prior panel holding that is on point, a third panel of this Court is bound by
    the holding of the first panel rather than the second panel).
    20