                                                                                                 ACCEPTED
                                                                                             02-14-00401-CV
                                                                                  SECOND COURT OF APPEALS
                                                                                        FORT WORTH, TEXAS
                                                                                          5/25/2018 11:58 AM
                                                                                              DEBRA SPISAK
                                                                                                      CLERK


                                 NO. 02-14-00401-CV
                                                  FILED IN
            IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE 2nd COURT OF APPEALS
      SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF TEXAS, FORTFORT WORTH, TEXAS
                                               WORTH
                                                                     05/25/2018 11:58:43 AM
                                                                           DEBRA SPISAK
                        CIMCO REFRIGERATION, INC.,                            Clerk
                                              Plaintiff—^Appellant
                                            V.


                 BARTUSH SCHNITZIUS FOOD COMPANY,
                                          Defendant—^Appellee

                      On Appeal from Civil Action No. 2011-11002-16
                in the 16*^^ Judicial District Court of Denton County, Texas
                         The Honorable Sherry Shipman, Presiding

                MOTION OF CIMCO REFRIGERATION, INC.
                  FOR EN BANC RECONSIDERATION
                                                 Patricia Hair
                                                 Texas Bar No. 08713500
                                                 PHELPS DUNBAR LLP
                                                 500 Dallas Street, Suite 1300
                                                 Houston, Texas 77002
                                                 (713) 626-1386 Telephone
                                                 (713) 626-1388 Fax
                                                 Patricia.hair@nhelps.com

                                                 Blake A. Bailey
                                                 Texas State Bar No. 01514700
                                                 Christopher R. Jones
                                                 Texas State Bar No. 24070018
                                                 PHELPS DUNBAR LLP
                                                 115 Grand Avenue, Suite 222
                                                 Southlake, Texas 76092
                                                 (817) 488-3134 Telephone
                                                 (817)488-3214 Fax
                                                 blake.bailev@,phelps.com
                                                 chris. i ones@phelps .com
                                                      ATTORNEYS FOR CIMCO
                                                          REFRIGERATION, INC.



PD.23767115.1
                MOTION FOR EN BANC RECONSIDERATION
         APPELLANT      CIMCO     REFRIGERATION,       INC.    (Cimco)

respectfully requests, pursuant to Rule 49.7 of the Texas Rules of

Appellate Procedure, that the Court en banc reconsider the attached

memorandum opinion on remand and judgment issued on April 26,

2018 (the Memorandum Opinion)(Attachment 1).

         The Memorandum Opinion largely eviscerates the parol evidence

rule and renders meaningless the merger clause included in a contract

by allowing one party to modify an unambiguous written contract by

the addition of oral terms that, in this instance, also contradict the

written terms. The Memorandum Opinion conflicts with established

precedent holding that a fully integrated and unambiguous written

agreement may not be added to, varied or contradicted by parol

evidence of prior negotiations or agreements. See, e.g., Section 202.2,

Tex. Bus. & Com Code Ann.; First Bank v. Brumitt, 519 S.W.Sd 95, 111

(Tex. 2017) (admission of evidence a previous oral agreement adding a

term to a subsequent written loan commitment letter violated the parol

evidence rule); Houston Expl. Co. v. Wellington Underwriting Agencies,

Ltd., 352 S.W.3d 462, 475 (Tex. 2011) (supplementing the interpretation




                                   - 1-
PD.23767I15.1
of an unambiguous written insurance policy with parol evidence of pre­

settlement negotiations is inappropriate); Quintanilla v. West, 534

S.W.3d 34, 48 (Tex. App.^—San Antonio 2017, pet. filed) (where

consideration in the form of debts to be discharged is specifically

enumerated, parol evidence of an alleged side agreement contradicting

the written terms is inadmissible); Baroid Equip., Inc. v. Odeco

Drilling, Inc., 184 S.W.3d 1, 13-166 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]

2005, pet. denied)(where written contract provides a specific, limited

warranty against defects in materials and workmanship, previous oral

agreements regarding other warranties are inadmissible).

         The Memorandum Opinion relies upon parol evidence of a pre­

contract discussion to create a performance requirement and a

warranty that contradicts the written contract. The written contract

required the sale of specific refrigeration equipment and excludes all

warranties other than an express warranty against defects in

manufacture or installation.   The Memorandum Opinion then utilizes

this parol evidence to impose a contractual term that the room would be

a certain temperature after installation of the equipment, thus

transforming the contract from the sale and installation of the specified



                                  -2-
PD.23767115.1
equipment, to a contract to provide environmental engineering,

potentially remodeling the manufacturing facility, and re-structuring

the operational aspects of the customer’s business.

         The Memorandum Opinion awards damages to a purchaser of

refrigeration equipment in order to purchase additional equipment, a

damage award that that the written contract expressly excludes

contract by limiting the seller’s liability to the cost of repair or

replacement of purchased equipment.

         The original memorandum opinion issued by the panel on

November 25, 2015, was correct insofar as it awarded damages only to

the unpaid seller, Cimco, and excluded an award of damages to the

purchaser, Bartush Schnitzius Food Company (Bartush).

         I.     Permitting parol evidence to add to the written
                contract a warranty or guaranty that the Bartush
                rooms would maintain a constant 35 degrees after
                installation conflicts with and contradicts the terms
                of the written contract and does not supplement it.

         The written contract (the Contract)) between Cimco and Bartush

(P.Ex. 7, P.Ex.l2 ) (Attachment 2) was complete in itself as it required

only that Cimco sell and install specific refrigeration equipment and

warrant that this equipment was free of manufacturing defects or



                                    -3-
PD.23767115.1
defects in installation.        The Contract contained no warranty or

guaranty that the Bartush refrigerated production rooms post­

installation would be or remain at any particular temperature.      The

Contract contained a merger clause stating

                THIS QUOTATION/CONTRACT CONTAINS
                THE COMPLETE AGREEMENT BETWEEN
                THE PURCHASER AND THE VENDOR, AND
                SUPERSEDES ALL PRIOR ORAL OR
                WRITTEN REPRESENTATIONS, PROMISES,
                AGREEMENTS OR UNDERSTANDINGS WITH
                RESPECT TO THE SUBJECT MATTER
                HEREOF.
         The Memorandum Opinion is in error by permitting, contrary to

the terms of the Contract and established legal precedent, a casual oral

statement made by the Bartush maintenance superintendent three

months before the Contract was executed to vary the written and

agreed terms of the Contract by adding a requirement/warranty that

the refrigerated rooms would maintain a 35F degree temperature post­

installation.      Specifically, the Memorandum Opinion is in error in

holding that a warranty concerning post installation temperatures was

created by the precontract statement of a Bartush representative:

                Cimco’s representative, Michael Winslow,
                testified that Bartush required the system to
                maintain a thirty-five degree temperature. This


                                      -4-
PD.23767115.1
                testimony was supported by Winslow’s notes from
                the initial walkthrough, which were admitted as
                a trial exhibit.
Memorandum Opinion on Remand at 9-10. An oral warranty regarding

a constant post installation temperature of the Bartush production

rooms is in direct conflict with the terms of the Contract, which

specifically limited in Paragraph 6 entitled WARRANTY the warranties

that Cimco would provide:

                UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED IN THIS
                QUOTATION/CONTRACT,    THE   VENDOR
                WARRANTS      THE     GOODS     AND
                INSTALLATION     SOLD    HEREUNDER
                AGAINST    ORIGINAL    DEFECTS    IN
                MANUFACTURE AND WORKMANSHIP FOR A
                PERIOD OF ONE YEAR FROM COMPLETION
                AS DEFINED IN SECTION 9 OF THESE
                TERMS AND CONDITIONS.           THIS
                WARRANTY IS IN LIEU OF ALL OTHER
                WARRANTIES, STATUTORY OR OTHERWISE,
                EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING FOR
                MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
                PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
This        unwritten   requirement    concerning   the   post-installation

temperature of the Bartush production rooms is the only breach of the

Contract that the Memorandum Opinion attributes to Cimco. Without

the addition of a post-installation warranty, the trial record contains no

evidence that Cimco breached the Contract.



                                      -5-
PD.23767115.1
         The reliance by the panel on the opinion in Morgan Bldgs. & Spas,

Inc.    V.   Humane Soc’y of Se. Tex., 249 S.W.Sd 480 (Tex. App.^—^Beaumont

2008, no pet.), to support the creation of an unwritten warranty is

misplaced. In Morgan Buildings, the court found from evidence of the

surrounding circumstances that “the written purchase agreement alone

was not intended to be a complete and exclusive statement of all terms

of the parties’ agreement” and was therefore only partially integrated.

Id. at 488. The Morgan court specifically noted that the parties had

signed written specifications and a drawing that supplemented the

written purchase agreement, demonstrating that the written purchase

agreement did not represent the complete and exclusive terms of the

agreement, thereby rendering the Morgan purchase agreement

“partially integrated.” Because the written purchase agreement was

only “partially integrated,” the Morgan court held that “evidence of

consistent additional terms to explain or supplement the terms of the

written agreement could be considered.” Id. (Emphasis supplied).

        The Memorandum Opinion does not cite nor does the trial record

contain any evidence of any circumstance indicating that the Contract

was not intended to be a complete and exclusive statement of the



                                      -6-
PD.23767115.1
parties’ agreement. Unlike in Morgan, there were no specifications to

which the written Cimco agreement referred and no ambiguous or

omitted terms that needed clarification in order for Cimco to supply the

refrigeration equipment Bartush ordered.         While the height of the

prefabricated building that Morgan Buildings constructed for the SPCA

was necessary in order to fabricate the building, the constancy of the

temperature of the Bartush rooms post-installation was not necessary

in order for Cimco to supply and install the specific refrigeration

equipment that was the subject of the Contract.

         Adding to the Contract the additional term mandated by the

Memorandum Opinion regarding post-installation room temperatures

altered the nature of the Contract from an agreement to supply and

install specific equipment to a contract requiring engineering and

physical analysis, redesign, and modification of the manufacturing

facility and an operational analysis of the facility.

         Morgan is wholly distinguishable from the instant case in another

very important aspect: the terms that were added by parol evidence to

the Morgan Buildings purchase order were not in conflict with the

terms of its written agreement. Here, the addition of a warranty as to



                                     -7-
PD.23767115.1
post-installation production room temperature is in direct conflict with

the written terms that limit Cimco’s warranty to repair or replacement

of manufacturing or installation defects.

         By holding that the addition by parol evidence of a post­

installation room warranty merely supplemented the terms of the

Contract, the Memorandum Opinion actually imposes on Cimco an

obligation that conflicts with and contradicts the terms of the Contract

         The trial testimony of Danny Rose, the Cimco district manager

who prepared the proposal, explained that the post installation

temperature of any room is not the responsibility of Cimco as it depends

on factors beyond Cimco’s control, such as the proper operation of the

refrigeration equipment by Bartush, the amount of equipment and the

number of people in the room, windows, doors, ventilation, as well as

the insulation of the room and whether the room is opened to outside

air, precluding it from agreeing to warrant or guarantee the post­

installation temperatures. (3 RR 31-32).

         The Contract required Cimco to provide specific refrigeration

equipment and nothing more. Cimco did not undertake in supplying

the equipment and in quoting the price of the equipment to guarantee



                                   -8-
PD.23767115.1
that the Bartush rooms would be any specific temperature. If that had

been a part of the agreement, Cimco would have been required to

conduct an engineering and operational analysis of the building and the

intended equipment and personnel to be present in the room and

required Bartush to reconstruct and insulate its production rooms and

operate the defrost system properly. The Contract does not call for

engineering or design services or operational requirements or for Cimco

to warrant conditions over which it had no control; the Contract calls

only for the sale and installation of the specified equipment. Adding

through parol evidence a requirement that a room maintain a certain

temperature during food processing operations completely changes the

nature of the Contract and imposes a warranty that conflicts with the

express terms of the Contract.

         II.    Awarding Bartush damages based upon the unwritten
                warranty contradicts the limitation of liability
                contained in the written contract.

         The Memorandum Opinion and Judgment is also in error in

awarding Bartush damages in the amount of the “additional costs

BARTUSH had to pay to add any necessary defrost system . . . . ” This

award conflicts with the limitation of liability in the Contract. Oral



                                  -9-
PD.23767115.1
representations or warranties made before a written agreement that

conflict with the a written limited warranty constitute inadmissible

parol evidence that cannot form the basis of a damage award. See, e.g.,

Baroid Equip., Inc. v. Odeco Drilling, Inc., 184 S.W.Sd 1.

         The only evidence of contract damages offered at trial by Bartush

was the cost of purchasing from others equipment not included in the

Contract that Bartush argued was necessary to maintain the 35F

degree temperature but which did not repair or replace the Cimco

equipment. (4 RR 107) The Bartush damages arose solely as a result of

the parol warranty regarding post-installation room temperatures and

conflicts with the limitation of liability provisions of the Contract:

                In respect of goods sold with installation, the
                Vendor’s sole liability shall be to repair or
                replace, at the Vendor’s option, any defective
                goods or parts thereof or any defective
                workmanship.


                THE FOREGOING     CONSTITUTES THE
                PURCHASER’S EXCLUSIVE REMEDY AND
                THE VENDOR’S SOLE LIABLITY ARISING
                OUT OF THE DESIGN, MANUFACTURE,
                SALE, INSTALLATION, OR USE OF THE
                GOODS.




                                     - 10-
PD.23767115.1
                The Vendor shall not be liable for any losses,
                injuries, expenses or damages, whether direct,
                indirect, special, incidental, consequential or
                punitive, arising out of the goods, or the
                installation, operation, or failure of operation of
                the goods or related systems even if caused by the
                Vendor’s negligence.
         The Morgan Buildings case illustrates how the damage award to

Bartush constitutes error. In spite of finding that the written purchase

agreement was only partially integrated making parol evidence

admissible, the appellate court in Morgan Buildngs held to be

enforceable the written limitation on damages that excluded incidental

and consequential damages. As with the Morgan Buildings purchase

agreement, the liability limitation in the Contract is in large

conspicuous type and clearly visible and excludes any damages other

than the cost to replace or repair the Cimco equipment.

         In the instant case, the trial court erred in submitting over

Cimco’s objection (5 RR 64-67) Question No. 6 that asked the jury to

consider as an element of contract damages “The additional costs

BARTUSH had to pay to add any necessary defrost system”, to which

the jury answered “$168,000”. The trial court refused to submit Cimco’s

tendered issue that named as a contract damage element “The cost to




                                      - 11 -
PD.237671I5.1
repair or replace any defective goods or parts thereof or any defective

workmanship.”         The Memorandum Opinion is in error not just in

allowing parol evidence to create a warranty regarding a post­

installation temperature, but also in utilizing the unwritten warranty

to award Bartush damages contrary to the Contract, which           limited


Cimco’s liability to repair or replacement of its equipment.           The

Memorandum Opinion awarded Bartush as contract damages the cost

of equipment not sold under the Contract, equipment that was not

necessary to repair or replace the Cimco equipment and equipment that

constituted consequential damages that were specifically excluded by

the Contract.



         III.   The record contains no evidence that Cimco ever
                agreed to a contract term whereby it warranted the
                post-installation temperature of the Bartush rooms.

         Even if the parol evidence rule and the contractual merger clause

are held inapplicable to the unilateral statement by the Bartush

maintenance         superintendent    concerning   the    post-installation

temperatures of the Bartush production rooms, that statement in and of

itself does not constitute an agreement between Bartush and Cimco.



                                     - 12 -
PD.23767115.1
The trial record contains no evidence the Cimco ever agreed to warrant

the post-installation temperature of the Bartush rooms.

         The Memorandum Opinion on page 9 cites only the October 22,

2010, notes of Michael Winslow, the Cimco account manager (PX 29), as

the evidence of an agreement. Those notes were made during the an

initial inspection of the Bartush facility in which Winslow merely

recorded the statement of the Bartush maintenance superintendent

that the Bartush packing room “needs to be 35F.” This is the only

mention of a 35 degree post-installation temperature before the written

contract was agreed upon three months later and the equipment was

completely installed.

         Winslow’s recording in his notes the statement of the Bartush

maintenance superintendent does not and cannot constitute evidence

that Cimco agreed to warrant the post installation temperature of the

Bartush rooms. Winslow admitted that he never conveyed this request

for a 35 degree post-installation temperature to Danny Rose, the Cimco

district manager who prepared the proposal. (4 RR 15). Rose testified

that he had never heard of the 35 degree requirement before the

installation was complete and never gave any warranty or guarantee to



                                  - 13 -
PD.23767115.1
Bartush that the rooms would be a consistent 35 degrees. (3 RR 65)

The evidence also demonstrated that Bartush’s Pearson subsequently

told the Cimco district manager that the rooms “needed to be 40-44°.” (2

RR 81; P.Ex.3)

         In order to prevent misunderstandings or assumptions that are

not confirmed in writing, the Contract contained a merger clause to

ensure that an oral statement during negotiations that is not included

in a contract does not later become the fundamental purpose of the

entire contract according to one party when the other party is not

relying on the unwritten requirement.

         Cimco was entitled to rely on this clause in order to know and

appropriately price what its responsibilities were under the Contract

and should not be bound by a pre-contract oral statement of which the

Cimco management had no knowledge.

         IV.    Admission of parol evidence of a 35 degree post­
                installation warranty was harmful error because
                without it there is no basis for finding that Cimco
                breached the Contract or that Bartush sustained any
                damage.

        The only evidence that the Memorandum Opinion identifies to

support the jury’s finding that Cimco breached the Contract is the oral



                                   - 14-
PD.23767115.1
statement made by the Bartush maintenance superintendent that the

rooms needed to be 35 degrees and

                apart from the thirty-five degree temperature,
                there was evidence that the Cimco system did not
                function property by failing to maintain a
                sufficient cool temperature because the testimony
                supported that temperatures rose to the 50’s and
                60s.
Memorandum Opinion on Remand at p. 9-10.             The record contains no

evidence that Cimco provided any defective goods or defect in

workmanship and no evidence concerning the cost to repair or replace

Cimco’s defective goods or workmanship, which are the only damages

permitted by the Contract.         To the contrary, even Bartush’s expert

testified that he found no evidence of a manufacturing or installation

defect and that the newly purchased Bartush equipment did not replace

but only supplemented the Cimco equipment. (4 RR 107)

         At trial, much of the evidence focused on whether the Bartush

rooms were or were not a constant 35 degree temperature and whether

the temperature of the rooms was the result of circumstances beyond

the control of Cimco, such as the improper operation of the equipment

or the lack of insulation in the Bartush production rooms. However, the

post-installation temperature of the Bartush rooms is not evidence of a


                                      - 15 -
PD.23767115.1
contract breach by Cimco because evidence violative of the parol

evidence rule has no legal effect and is merely proof of immaterial and

inoperative facts. DeClaire v. G & B Mcintosh Family Ltd. P'ship, 260

S.W.Sd 34, 46 (Tex. App.^—Houston [1st] 2008, no pet.); Baroid Equip.,

Inc.   V.   Odeco Drilling, Inc., 184 S.W.Sd at 13. Without permitting parol

evidence to add to the Contract an unwritten warranty concerning post­

installation      room    temperature,   evidence   of room    temperature

constitutes nothing more than immaterial and inoperative facts.

         In the absence of a post-installation temperature warranty, the

record contains no evidence that Cimco breached the Contract or that

Bartush suffered any damages resulting from a breach of the Contract.

The admission of parol evidence that varied the Contract is

unequivocally harmful as it forms the basis on which the Memorandum

Opinion and Judgment awarded Bartush damages of $168,000, plus

attorney’s fees.       Only by ignoring the limitations of liability and

damages contained in the Contract and by permitting parol evidence to

vary its terms can an award of damages to Bartush be sustained as the

judgment in this case is based solely on Bartush’s claim for breach of

contract.       Permitting the terms of the Contract to be varied by



                                      - 16-
PD.23767115,1
Bartush’s initial statement and to ignoring the damage limitations and

exclusions contained in the Contract based upon that variance is

contrary to all legal precedent.


         V.     Cimco’s objection to Question No. 2 and Question No.
                3 preserved error as to the conditioning instruction
                on Question No. 24

    If parol evidence is not permitted to vary the terms of the Contract

by creating a warranty concerning post-installation room temperatures,

the record contains no evidence that Cimco breached the Contract and

no evidence that Bartush sustained any of the damages permitted by

the Contract. At the close of the evidence, Cimco moved for a directed

verdict on the basis of no evidence of a contract breach and no evidence

of contract damages sustained by Bartush.          (5 RR 98-99)     Cimco

specifically objected (5 R.R. 61-62, 64-67) to the submission of Questions

No. 2, No. 3 and No. 6 and specifically cited to the court the testimony of

Bartush’s expert, Anthony Jacques, that all the equipment ordered was

installed (4 RR 100), that there were no manufacturing or installation

defects (4 RR 103), and that the Cimco equipment had sufficient

capacity to cool the Bartush rooms (4 RR 99). The trial court overruled

these objections.


                                   - 17-
PD.23767I15.1
          Nonetheless, they were sufficient to apprise the Court of Cimco’s

complaint that no evidence supported the submission of Bartush’s

defensive issues as all evidence demonstrated that Cimco had complied

with all requirements of the Contract.

                There should be but one test for determining if a
                party has preserved error in the jury charge, and
                that is whether the party made the trial court
                aware of the complaint, timely and plainly, and
                obtained a ruling.
Transcon. Ins. Co. v. Crump, 330 S.W.3d 211, 22Q-21 (Tex. 2010)

{quoting State Dept, of Highways v. Payne, 838 S.W.2d 235, 241 (Tex.

1992). Because Cimco’s objections to Question No. 2, No. 3, and No. 6

apprised the trial court that Bartush had provided no evidence of a

breach of the Contract by Cimco and no evidence of contract damages,

they preserved error as to the impact that these issues had upon the

erroneous conditioning instruction that the Court added to the issue

regarding Cimco’s attorney’s fees.

                Once a party objects to the inclusion of invalid
                bases for liability in the charge, this objection
                also preserves error for any impact the wrongful
                inclusion has on other charge questions.
McFarland v. Boisseau, 365 S.W.3d 449, 454-55 (Tex. App^—^Houston[l®<^

Dist.] 2011, no pet.) citing Missouri Pacific R.R. Co. v. Limmer, 180



                                      - 18-
PD.23767115.1
S.W.Sd 803 (Tex. App.-Houston [14*^ Dist.] 2005), rev’d on other

grounds, 299 S.W.Sd 78 (Tex. 2009);                see also Gonzales v Southwest

Olshan Foundation Repair Co., LLC, 400 S.W.Sd 52 (Tex. 2013);

Schrock         V.   Sisco, 229 S.W.Sd 392 (Tex. App.^—^Eastland 2007, no pet.)

Cimco’s objection to Question Nos. 2 and 3 preserved error for the

impact that the erroneous conditioning instruction had on Question No.

24 regarding attorney’s fees.

         Cimco preserved error as to the erroneous conditioning instruction

in the same manner that this Court has recognized that the plaintiffs

had preserved error in Cunningham v. Haroona, 382 S.W.Sd 492, 508-

09 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2012, pet. denied). In that case, even though

the plaintiffs had not objected to an erroneous conditioning instruction,

they were held to have preserved error by objecting to the issues upon

which the conditioning instruction was based. This court noted that

error was preserved because the “trial court clearly understood the

[plaintiffs’] complaint and this is all that was required.” Id. at 510.

         The cases the court relied upon in the Memorandum Opinion on

Remand are inapposite to the issue of error preservation under the

circumstances of this case.               Neither case involves “no evidence”



                                           - 19-
PD.23767115.1
objections to liability issues upon which a conditioning instruction is

premised.

         More specifically, in Environmental Procedures, Inc. v. Guidry,

282 S.W.Sd 602 (Tex. App.—Houston [14*^ Dist.] 2009, pet. denied), the

appellants were held to have waived a right to a new trial because they

did not object to the conditioning instructions for jury issues concerning

the principal issues of liability and damages, as opposed to a subsidiary

issue of attorney’s fees. Unlike the instant case, the trial evidence had

not “conclusively proved liability and damages as to the [appellants’

claims]. “ Id. at 631. Because Cimco has been held to be entitled to

recover damages for breach of contract, the trial court’s conditional

submission of its attorney’s fees issue on the Bartush defense issues for

which there was no evidence is error that was preserved by Cimco’s

objections. Cimco’s award of contract damages mandates a remand to

determine the amount of the statutory attorney’s fees to which Cimco is

entitled.

         The decision in Hunter v. Carter, 476 S.W. 2d 41 (Tex. App.—

Houston [14*1^ Dist.] 1972, writ refd n.r.e.), is inapplicable because the

appellant failed to object, unlike the instant case, to the errors in the



                                   -20-
PD.23767115,1
issues upon which the unanswered issues were conditioned. Moreover,

the unanswered issues were immaterial as a result of the jury’s answer

to other issues. The opinion merely holds in accord with Rule 279 of the

Texas Rules of Civil Procedure that issues omitted from submission to

the jury may be deemed found so as to support a judgment if there is

factually       sufficient evidence to support the finding.   See Martin v.

MeKee Realtors, 663 S.W.2d 446, 449 (Tex. 1984).

         The reversal of the trial court’s judgment and the award of

contract damages to Cimco requires a remand for a determination of the

reasonable amount of attorney’s fees. In a case in which damages are

awarded for breach of contract. Section 38.001 of the Civil Practice and

Remedies Code mandates the award of attorney’s fees where there has

been proof of presentment and proof that the amount of the fees is

reasonable. See, e.g., Smith v. Patrick W.Y. Tam Trust, 296 S.W.3d 545,

547 (Tex. 2009); Stovall & Associates, P.C. v. Hihbs financial Center,

Ltd., 409 S.W.3d 790, 803 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2013, no pet.);

Daimler Chrysler Motors Co., LLC v. Manuel, 362 S.W.3d 160, 198 (Tex.

App.—Fort Worth 2012, no pet.); AMX Enterprises, LLP v. Master

Realty Corp., 238 S.W.3d 506, 517 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2009, no



                                     - 21 -
PD.23767I15.1
pet.); World Help v. Leisure Lifestyles, Inc., 977 S.W.2{i 662, 683 (Tex.

App.—Fort Worth 1998, pet. denied). While a trial court does have

discretion to determine the amount of attorney’s fees, it has no

discretion to deny attorney’s fees entirely. Smith, 296 S.W.Sd at 547;

Stovall & Associates, P.C., 409 S.W.Sd at 803; World Help, 977 S.W.2d

at 683.

                  “Once a jury finds that a party should prevail on
                  a claim on which attorney’s fees are mandated,
                  the only question remaining is the reasonable
                  value of the attorney’s fees, not whether they
                  should be awarded.”
West      V.    Brenntag Southwest, Inc., 168 S.W.3d 327, 338 (Tex. App.—

Texarkana 2005, no pet.). To recover the attorney’s fees mandated by

statute, it is necessary only that a party prevail in its claim for breach

of contract and recover damages. E.g, Green International, Inc. v. Solis,

951 S.3d 384, 390 (Tex. 1997); Woodhaven Partners, Ltd. v. Shamoun &

Norman, LLP, 422 S.W.3d 821, 838 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2014, no pet.).

Only in cases in which there are no damages recovered for the breach of

contract is the prevailing party not entitled to recover attorney’s fees.

See Mustang Pipeline Co. v. Driver Pipeline Co., 134 S.W.3d 195 (Tex.

2004); Green International, Inc. v. Solis, 951 S.3d 384, 390 (Tex. 1997).



                                        - 22 -
PD.23767115.1
         The fact that the trial court erroneously conditioned the Cimco

attorney’s fee issue on Bartush’s unsupported claim that Cimco had

breached the Contract does not and should not deny Cimco its

statutorily mandated attorney’s fees when Cimco has recovered

damages.

         VI.    Conclusion

         The Memorandum Opinion on Remand should be reconsidered. A

unilateral oral statement by one party to a written contract complete in

itself should never be permitted to contradict the written terms..

Unsupported by precedent and the evidence presented at trial, the

Memorandum Opinion on Remand creates confusion in the law of

contracts and in the market place where parties need to rely upon

written terms to know their duties and obligations.

         The Memorandum Opinion on Remand should be withdrawn and

replaced with an opinion holding that parol evidence of a post­

installation warranty is not admissible, that the record contains no

evidence that Cimco breached the Contract or that Bartush sustained

damages as a result of a breach by Cimco and that Cimco preserved

error as to the conditioning instruction to its attorney’s fees issue by



                                   - 23 -
PD.23767115.1
objecting to the issues upon which the conditioning instruction was

based.

         The original opinion of this court in which no damages were

awarded to Bartush is correct as to that point. The Judgment issued on

April 26, 2018, should be reformed to award damages only to Cimco and

to remand the case to the trial court for a determination of amount of

Cimco’s attorney’s fees.




                                 -24-
PD.23767115.1
                              Respectfully submitted,

                              /s/ Patricia Hair
                              Patricia Hair
                              Texas Bar No. 08713500
                              PHELPS DUNBAR LLP
                              500 Dallas Street, Suite 1300
                              Houston, Texas 77002
                              (713) 626-1386 Telephone
                              (713) 626-1388 Fax
                              Patricia.hair@phelps.com

                              Blake A. Bailey
                              Texas State Bar No. 01514700
                              Christopher R. Jones
                              Texas State Bar No. 24070018
                              PHELPS DUNBAR LLP
                              115 Grand Avenue, Suite 222
                              Southlake, Texas 76092
                              (817) 488-3134 Telephone
                              (817) 488-3214 Fax
                              blake.bailev@phelps.com
                              chris.iones@phelps.com
                              ATTORNEYS FOR CIMCO
                              REFRIGERATION, INC.


                    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE

         I certify that the foregoing document complies with the typeface

requirement of Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure Rule 9.4(e) because it

has been prepared in a conventional typeface no smaller than 14-point

for text and 12-point for footnotes. This document also complies with

the word-count limitations of Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure Rule


                                   -25-
PD.23767115.1
9.4(i) because it contains 4492 words, excluding contents exempted by

Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure Rule 9.4(i)(l).


                                            /s/ Patricia Hair
                                            Patricia Hair



                       CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
         I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the foregoing

instrument and served upon all counsel as listed below by facsimile,

electronically, and/or hand delivery on this 25th day of May, 2018, as

follows:

         Kevin J. Allen
         Jones, Allen & Fuquay, L.L.P.
         8828 Greenville Avenue
         Dallas, Texas 75243
         Telephone: (214) 343-7400
         Fax: (214) 343-7455
         kallen@ionesallen.com

         Melissa A. Lorber
         Enoch Kever PLLC
         5918 W. Courtyard Dr., Suite 500
         Austin, Texas 78730
         Telephone: (512) 615-1200
         Fax: (512) 615-1198
         mlorber@enochkever.com

                                           /s/ Patricia Hair
                                           Patricia Hair


                                    -26-
PD.23767115.1
                        COURT OF APPEALS
                         SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
                              FORT WORTH

                             NO. 02-14-00401-CV


CIMCO REFRIGERATION, INC.                                        APPELLANT

                                         V.

BARTUSH-SCHNITZIUS FOODS                                           APPELLEE
CO.




         FROM THE 16TH DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY
                  TRIAL COURT NO. 2011-11002-16



               MEMORANDUM OPINION ON REMAND^



                                   I. Introduction

      This case is on remand from the Supreme Court of Texas after the court

granted petitions for review filed by both Appellant Cimco Refrigeration, Inc.

(Cimco) and Appellee Bartush-Schnitzius Foods Co. (Bartush), issued a per

curiam opinion and a judgment reversing this court’s judgment, and ordered our

      ^See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4.
opinion published.^ See Bartush-Schnitzius Foods Co. v. Cimco Refrigeration,

Inc., 518 S.W.Sd 432 (Tex. 2017) {Bartush II). Holding that “neither the trial court

nor the court of appeals properly effectuated the jury’s verdict[,]” the supreme

court directed us on remand to address the following issues that we did not reach

in Bartush /:   (1) “Cimco’s alternative argument that the trial court’s judgment

should be reversed on the ground that no evidence supported the jury’s finding

that Cimco failed to comply with the parties’ agreement’’; (2) Cimco’s argument

that the parole-evidence rule bars enforcement of the disputed term regarding

temperature; and (3) “whether Cimco’s objection to Question 3 was sufficient to

preserve error on Question 24.”^ Id. at 438 & n.3.

      Because we hold that these issues lack merit but that we must give effect

to the jury’s damages awards to both parties as instructed by the supreme court,

we will reverse the trial court’s judgment that Cimco take nothing, and remand for

entry of a judgment that Cimco recover $113,400 from Bartush plus pre- and

post-judgment interest and affirm the trial court’s judgment that Bartush recover

$168,079 from Cimco plus pre- and post-judgment interest and that Bartush

recover from Cimco its attorney’s fees in the amount of $165,000.


      ^Cimco Refrigeration, Inc. v. Bartush-Schnitzius Foods Co., 518 S.W.3d 57
(Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2015, pet. granted) {Bartush /).

      ^We did not order new briefing from the parties on remand.

     '^Bartush II, 518 S.W.3d at 437 (“Bartush contends that the court [of
appeals] should have given effect to the jury’s damages awards to both parties.
We agree.”).

                                         2
                     II. Pertinent Background on Remand^

                                 A. The Dispute

      Cimco, a refrigeration contractor, agreed to install a specific refrigeration

system for Bartush, a food-product manufacturer. A dispute arose as to whether

the system worked properly because it did not maintain a consistent thirty-five-

degree temperature. Bartush II, 518 S.W.Sd at 434. Bartush claimed that Cimco

promised the system could maintain a consistent thirty-five-degree temperature,

while Cimco contended that it made no enforceable promise regarding a

consistent thirty-five-degree temperature.    Id.   Having already paid $306,758,

Bartush refused to pay the remaining $113,400 owed to Cimco and instead spent

an additional $168,079 to secure a system that could maintain a consistent thirty-

five-degree temperature. Id.

                       B. Proceedings in the Trial Court

      Cimco filed suit against Bartush and brought a breach-of-contract claim for

nonpayment.    Id.   Bartush filed a breach-of-contract counterclaim.      Id.   The

claims were tried to a jury.   Id. at 435.   After the close of the trial, the court

submitted breach-of-contract questions for both Cimco and Bartush. Id.




      ^The background facts of this case are set forth fully in Bartush /; we
therefore set forth only an abbreviated version of the facts that are necessary to
dispose of the remanded issues.

                                        3
      Question 1 regarding Bartush’s alleged breach of contract asked, “Did

BARTUSH fail to comply with the agreement to purchase the refrigeration

equipment and services for The Facility?”

      Question 2 regarding Cimco’s alleged breach of contract asked,

      Did CIMCO fail to comply with the agreement to provide the
      refrigeration equipment and services to [Bartush]?

            You are instructed that CIMCQ is required to perform its
      services under the contract in a good and workmanlike manner.

            A good and workman like manner is that quality of work
      performed by one who has the knowledge, training, or experience
      necessary for the successful practice of a trade or occupation and
      performed in a manner generally considered proficient by those
      capable of judging such work.

The court’s charge defined “agreement” as “the written documents reflecting the

agreement of the parties, together with any additional terms that supplement the

written documents.”     Notably, Question 2 did not predicate any breach-of-

contract finding on the thirty-five-degree-temperature requirement.

      Question 3 asked,

      if you answered “Yes” to both Question No. 1 and Question No. 2,
      then answer Question No. 3. Qtherwise, do not answer the following
      question.

            Who failed to comply with the agreement first?

            Answer “CIMCO” or “BARTUSH”.

      Question 4 asked, “If you answered “Yes” to Question No. 1, then answer

Question No. 4.     Otherwise, do not answer the following question.       Was

BARTUSH’s failure to comply excused?”          In determining whether Bartush’s

                                        4
breach was excused, the trial court instructed the jury in Question 4 to evaluate

the materiality of Cimco’s breach under the Mustang Pipeline^ factors.

      Cimco also submitted Question 24 for recovery of its attorney’s fees.       In

submitting Question 24, Cimco included the following conditioning instructions:

“If you have answered “Yes” to Question No. 1, “BARTUSH” to Question No. 3,

and “No” to Question No. 4, then answer the following Question. Otherwise, do

not answer the following question.”       Question 23, Bartush’s attorney’s-fees

question, did not include the same conditioning instruction.

      The jury found that both parties breached the contract, that Cimco

breached first, and that Bartush’s breach was not excused.^ Id. at 435. Because

the jury found that Cimco breached first when it answered Question 3, the jury

did not answer Question 24, thus not awarding attorney’s fees to Cimco.          Id.

Despite the jury’s awards to both parties, the trial court entered a judgment solely

in favor of Bartush for its damages and attorney’s fees. Id.

             C. Proceedings in the Court of Appeals—Bartush I

      In Bartush /, we reversed the trial court’s judgment that Cimco take nothing

(despite the jury’s award of $113,400 to Cimco) and reversed the trial court’s

judgment that Bartush recover from Cimco $168,079 from Cimco plus pre- and



      ^Mustang Pipeline Co. v. Driver Pipeline Co., 134 S.W.3d 195 (Tex. 2004).

      ^The jury’s finding that Bartush’s breach was not excused constituted an
implied finding that Cimco’s first-occurring breach was not material. Bartush II,
518 S.W.3d at 435.

                                         5
post-judgment interest and attorney’s fees in the amount of $165,000.          We

remanded the case to the trial court for entry of judgment solely in favor of Cimco

because of the jury’s implied finding that Cimco’s breach was not material, which

we held rendered irrelevant the jury’s finding that Cimco breached first and

precluded Bartush’s recovery. Bartush /, 518 S.W.Sd at 62. We held, however,

that Cimco failed to preserve any error in the jury’s failure to answer Cimco’s

attorney’s fees question because Cimco did not object to the conditional

submission of its attorney’s fees question. Id. at 62 n.9. For this reason, and

because Cimco did not raise an issue challenging attorney’s fees, we declined to

remand the issue of Cimco’s attorney’s fees to the trial court. Id.

             D. Proceedings in the Texas Supreme Court—Bartush II

      Both parties filed petitions for review with the supreme court. Bartush II,

518 S.W.Sd at 435. Bartush asserted that despite the jury’s implied finding that

Cimco’s breach was not material, the breach by Cimco constituted a material

breach as a matter of law. Id. at 435-36. In rejecting Bartush’s argument, the

supreme court noted that “[gjenerally, materiality is an issue ‘to be determined by

the trier of facts’” and may “be decided as a matter of law .only if reasonable

jurors could reach only one verdict.” Id. at 436 (quoting Hudson v. Wakefield,

645 S.W.2d 427, 430 (Tex. 1983)).       The supreme court explained that in this

case, the evidence concerning the materiality of Cimco’s breach was not such

that it enabled the jurors to reach only one verdict. Id. The supreme court further

explained:

                                         6
       The parties presented trial evidence that could have led the jurors to
       reasonably disagree regarding the application of these [Mustang
       Pipeline] factors, including conflicting evidence on the parties’
       communications regarding temperature requirements.

Id. at 437. Consequently, the supreme court held that the evidence supported

the jury’s finding that Cimco’s breach was not material:

       No such conclusive evidence of materiality [of Cimco’s breach]
       exists in this case. Because reasonable jurors could have disagreed
       on whether Cimco breached a material obligation, we may not
       overrule the jury’s implied finding on that issue.

Id. The supreme court then agreed with Bartush’s alternative contention that we

should have given effect to the jury’s damages awards to both parties, explaining

that

       the jury’s findings that Cimco failed to comply with the agreement
       first and that its failure to comply was not material mean that (1)
       Bartush remained liable for its subsequent failure to comply, but (2)
       Bartush’s claim for damages caused by Cimco’s prior breach
       remained viable. Cimco had a preexisting duty to perform under the
       contract, and the jury found that Cimco violated that duty before
       Bartush breached by withholding payment.

Id. at 437-38 (citations and footnote omitted).

       Thus, the supreme court affirmed the jury’s finding that Cimco breached

the agreement first (Question 3) and agreed with our conclusion that the jury

made an implied finding that Cimco’s breach was not material because of the

jury’s finding that Cimco’s breach did not excuse Bartush’s performance

(Question 4).     The supreme court, however, reversed our judgment that

Bartush’s subsequent material breach precluded Bartush from recovering for

Cimco’s prior nonmaterial breach.         Because Cimco had three remaining

                                         7
unaddressed issues challenging the jury’s finding in favor of Bartush, the

supreme court remanded this case to us.

              III. CiMCO’s No-Evidence Challenges to Question 2

      In the first remanded issue, Cimco argued that the trial court’s judgment

should be reversed on the ground that no evidence supported the jury’s finding in

Question 2 that Cimco failed to comply with the parties’ agreement to provide a

refrigeration system.   In the second remanded issue, Cimco argued that no

evidence supported the jury’s finding in Question 2 that Cimco failed to comply

with the agreement because any evidence of a thirty-five-degree-temperature

requirement was barred by the parol-evidence rule.

                             A. Standard of Review

      In determining whether there is legally sufficient evidence to support a

finding under review, we must consider evidence favorable to the finding if a

reasonable factfinder could and disregard evidence contrary to the finding unless

a reasonable factfinder could not. Cent. Ready Mix Concrete Co. v. Islas, 228

S.W.Sd 649, 651 (Tex. 2007); City of Keller v. Wilson, 168 S.W.Sd 802, 807, 827

(Tex. 2005). Anything more than a scintilla of evidence is legally sufficient to

support a finding, and more than a scintilla of evidence exists if the evidence

furnishes some reasonable basis for differing conclusions by reasonable minds

about the existence of a vital fact. Rocor Int’l, Inc. v. Natl Union Fire Ins. Co. of

Pittsburgh, 11 S.W.Sd 253, 262 (Tex. 2002).        Direct evidence of a vital fact

defeats a legal-sufficiency challenge.       See Serv. Corp. Inti v. Guerra, 348

                                         8
S.W.Sd 221, 228 (Tex, 2011). In circumstances where a reasonable jury could

resolve conflicting evidence either way, we presume the jury did so in favor of the

prevailing party. Thota v. Young, 366 S.W.Sd 678, 696 (Tex. 2012).

                                   B. Analysis

                1. Some evidence supports the jury’s finding

      Regarding the first remanded issue, the supreme court gave us guidance

in its opinion. In rejecting Bartush’s contention that Cimco’s breach was material

as a matter of law, the supreme court explained,

      The parties presented trial evidence that could have led the jurors to
      reasonably disagree regarding the application of these [Mustang
      Pipeline] factors, including conflicting evidence on the parties’
      communications regarding temperature requirements. . . . Because
      reasonable jurors could have disagreed on whether Cimco breached
      a material obligation, we may not overrule the jury’s implied finding
      on that issue.

Bartush II, 518 S.W.Sd at 437 (emphasis added).

      We have thoroughly reviewed the evidence presented at trial and viewing

all evidence favorable to the jury’s finding, we conclude, as did the supreme

court, that there was some evidence to support the finding in Question 2 that

Cimco breached the agreement.         Cimco’s representative, Michael Winslow,

testified that Bartush required the system to maintain a thirty-five-degree

temperature. This testimony was supported by Winslow’s notes from the initial

walkthrough, which were admitted as a trial exhibit. And, apart from the thirty-

five-degree temperature, there was evidence that the Cimco system did not



                                        9
function properly by failing to maintain a sufficient cool temperature because the

testimony supported that temperatures rose to the 50s and 60s.®

      Because conflicting evidence exists concerning whether Cimco failed to

comply with the agreement and because the jury could have reasonably so

concluded, we presume that the jury resolved this conflicting evidence in favor of

Bartush. See Thota, 366 S.W.Sd at 696. Viewed in the light most favorable to

the jury’s findings, deferring to the jury’s reasonable resolution of conflicting

evidence, more than a scintilla of evidence exists enabling a reasonable

factfinder to conclude that Cimco failed to comply with the agreement.          See

United Serve. Auto. Ass’n v. Croft, 175 S.W.Sd 457, 467 (Tex. App.—Dallas

2005, no pet.) (holding that testimony of breach was legally sufficient to affirm

trial court’s breach-of-contract finding). We overrule the first issue on remand.

             2. The parol-evidence rule does not bar evidence of
                the thirty-five-degree-temperature requirement

      In the second issue on remand, Cimco claims that no evidence supports

the jury’s finding that it failed to comply with the parties’ agreement because any

evidence of a thirty-five-degree-temperature requirement was barred by the

parol-evidence rule.



      ®ln rejecting Bartush’s contention that Cimco’s prior breach was a material
breach as a matter of law, the supreme court recognized the “conflicting
evidence on the parties’ communications regarding temperature requirements”
that existed; this same conflicting evidence constitutes some evidence that
Cimco did breach the parties’ agreement concerning temperature requirements.
This evidence is likewise dispositive of all Cimco’s sufficiency complaints.

                                         10
      To the extent the jury relied on the alleged parol evidence concerning the

thirty-five-degree-temperature   requirement that Cimco complains         of,   that

evidence was admissible because it explained and supplemented the parties’

partially integrated agreement, which was silent as to a temperature requirement.

See Morgan Bldgs. & Spas, Inc. v. Humane Soc’y of Se. Tex., 249 S.W.Sd 480,

488 (Tex. App.—Beaumont 2008, no pet.) (holding that parol evidence regarding

design of the building to be constructed was admissible even though contract

contained a merger clause because parole evidence supplemented the written

contract); see also Sanders v. Future Com, Ltd., No. 02-15-00077-CV, 2017 WL

2180706, at *4 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth May 18, 2017, no pet.).

      We also note that although the jury found that Cimco had failed to comply

with “the agreement to provide the refrigeration equipment and services,” the

finding was not predicated on the system’s failure to maintain a thirty-five-degree

temperature because no question was submitted to the jury regarding the thirty-

five-degree-temperature requirement.      Thus, even if evidence concerning the

thirty-five-degree-temperature requirement was barred by the parol-evidence rule

and improperly admitted, it is not a ground for reversal. See U-Haul Int’l, Inc. v.

Waldrip, 380 S.W.Sd 118, 132 (Tex. 2012) (“Even if the trial court abused its

discretion in admitting certain evidence, reversal is only appropriate if the error

was harmful, i.e., it probably resulted in an improper judgment.”).

      Therefore, we overrule the second remanded issue.



                                         11
                    IV. Cimco’sObjectionto Question 3
          Did Not Preserve Cimco’s Asserted Error as to Question 24

      In the third remanded issue, Cimco argued that although it did not object to

Question 24, which conditionally submitted the issue of Cimco’s attorney’s fees,

its objection to Question 3 adequately preserved any error in Question 24.

Cimco contends that an objection to a question with an invalid basis for liability

preserves error for any impact the wrongful inclusion has on other charge

questions,

                          A. Law on Error Preservation

      The fundamental premise underlying error preservation is that the party

seeking to preserve an alleged error must take some action to apprise the trial

court of the alleged error in a way that provides the trial court with the opportunity

to correct it. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a) (preservation requires either a ruling or

a refusal to rule); Burbage v. Burbage, 447 S.W.3d 249, 257 (Tex. 2014) (“[Tjhe

objection must apprise the trial court of the error alleged such that the court has

the opportunity to correct the problem.”); see also Thota, 366 S.W.3d at 691.

“There should be but one test for determining if a party has preserved error in the

jury charge, and that is whether the party made the trial court aware of the

complaint, timely and plainly, and obtained a ruling.” Transcon. Ins. Co. v.

Crump, 330 S.W.3d 211, 226-27 (Tex. 2010) (quoting State Dep’t of Highways v.

Payne, 838 S.W.2d 235, 241 (Tex. 1992) (op. on reh’g)).




                                          12
                     B. Question 3 and Cimco’s Objection

       Question 3 was conditioned on the jury’s findings in Questions 1 and 2 that

both Bartush and Cimco breached the agreement. Question 3 then asked the

jury, if both parties failed to comply with the agreement, “[wjho failed to comply

with the agreement first?” Question 3 instructed the jury to answer “CIMCQ or

Bartush.” The jury answered, “CIMCQ.”

      At the charge conference, Cimco’s trial counsel objected to Question 3 as

follows:

      [CIMCO’S COUNSEL]: Cimco objects to the submission of Question
      No. 3 and that there is no evidence that Cimco failed to comply with
      the agreement and, therefore, there is no reason to suggest or to
      submit that issue.

             THE COURT: Your objection is noted and overruled.

       Question   24—Cimco’s      attorney’s   fees   question—was     conditionally

submitted, instructing the jury to answer it “[i]f you have answered ‘Yes’ to

Question No. 1, ‘BARTUSH’ to Question No. 3, and ‘No’ to Question No. 4.”

Because the jury answered “CIMCO” to Question 3, it did not answer Question

24.

                                   C. Analysis

       Cimco’s above-quoted, no-evidence objection to Question 3 did not

preserve the error alleged by Cimco in conditionally submitting Question 24

based on the jury’s answers to Questions 1, 3, and 4.         Cimco’s no-evidence

objection to Question 3 did not apprise the trial court of Cimco’s complaint (raised


                                        13
in the supreme court) that Question 24 should not be conditionally submitted

based on the jury’s answer of “BARTUSH” to Question 3. Because Cimco did

not object to the conditional submission of Question 24—its own question on its

attorney’s fees—any error in this submission was not preserved.          See EnvtI.

Procedures, Inc. v. Guidry, 282 S.W.Sd 602, 631, 652 n.28 (Tex. App.—Houston

[14th Dist.j 2009, pet. denied) (collecting cases to support holding that failure to

object to conditioning instructions waived error arising from the jury’s failure to

answer question when answer could not be implied and holding that lack of

objection waived right to new trial to have jury answer questions): Hunter v.

Carter, 476 S.W.2d 41, 46 (Tex. Civ. App.—Houston [14th Dist.j 1972, writ refd

n.r.e.) (holding failure to object to conditioning instructions waived error arising

from jury’s failure to answer question); Tex. Emp’rs’ Ins. Ass’n v. Ray, 68 S.W.2d

290, 295 (Tex. Civ. App.—Fort Worth 1933, writ refd) (holding appellant could

not complain of jury’s failure to answer question because charge instructed jury

not to do so based on its answer to prior question and because appellant did not

object to instruction).

       Cimco argues that once a party objects to the inclusion of an invalid basis

for liability in the charge, this objection preserves error for any impact the

wrongful inclusion has on other charge questions. Cimco bases its argument on

McFarland v. Boisseau, a defamation case that concerned a broad-form

submission question that comingled valid and invalid theories of liability.     365

S.W.3d 449, 454-55 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.j 2011, no pet.).          Because

                                        14
Question 3 is not a broad-form submission question comingling valid and invalid

theories of liability, Cimco’s authority supporting its argument is inapplicable to

the facts of this case.

       We hold that Cimco’s objection to Question 3 failed to preserve any error

arising from Question 24. Therefore, we overrule the third remanded issue.

                                 V. Conclusion

       Having overruled the issues that we were instructed to address on remand

and giving effect to the jury’s verdict as instructed by the supreme court, we

affirm the trial court’s judgment that Bartush recover $168,079 from Cimco plus

pre- and post-judgment interest and that Bartush recover from Cimco its

attorney’s fees in the amount of $165,000, reverse the trial court’s judgment that

Cimco take nothing, and remand this case to the trial court for entry of a

judgment that Cimco recover $113,400 from Bartush plus pre- and post-judgment

interest.

                                                  /s/ Sue Walker
                                                  SUE WALKER
                                                  JUSTICE


PANEL: WALKER, GABRIEL, and PITTMAN, JJ.^

DELIVERED: April 26, 2018



      ^Senior Justice Lee Ann Dauphinot, who served on the Bartush I panel, did
not participate in this decision on remand due to her retirement. Justice Pittman,
succeeding Justice Dauphinot, has been substituted in place of Justice
Dauphinot.

                                        15
                            COURT OF APPEALS
                            SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
                                 FORT WORTH

                                 NO. 02-14-00401-CV


Cimco Refrigeration, Inc.                  §    From the 16th District Court

                                           §   of Denton County (2011-11002-16)
V.
                                           §   April 26, 2018

Bartush-Schnitzius Foods Co.               §    Opinion by Justice Walker


                                   JUDGMENT

      This court has considered the record on appeal in this case and holds that

there was error in part of the trial court’s judgment.        It is ordered that the

judgment of the trial court is affirmed in part and reversed in part. We affirm that

portion of the trial court’s judgment that Bartush recover $168,079 from Cimco

plus pre- and post-judgment interest and that Bartush recover from Cimco its

attorney’s fees in the amount of $165,000. We reverse that portion of the trial

court’s judgment that Cimco take nothing and remand this case to the trial court

for entry of a judgment that Cimco recover $113,400 from Bartush plus pre- and

post-judgment interest.

      it is further ordered that all parties shall bear their own costs of this appeal.

for which let execution issue.
SECOND DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS


By /s/ Sue Walker
   Justice Sue Walker
                                                                     Cimco Refrigststian Inc.
                                                                       R707 Scurh 4'-' Sireirl
                                                                       Van Burery AB. 72956
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   ®    Standard one (1) year warranty*
   •>   Optional extended warranty available at an additional charge
   ®    Refrigerant (R507) runs to ail air coils
   "    Air Defrost on evaporator coils


Your costfor Option Number Two                                 $332,000.00

 Optional Warranty                                             Add $2700.00




Option NumberThvce-Multipie Condensing Units

   ®    Air cooling evaporators are grouped to condensing units
   »    Scroll compressors
   ®    One (1) year manufacturer’s warranty.
   “    Optional extended waixanty available at an additional charge
   “    Refrigerant (R507) inns to all air coils from multiple condcn.scrs
   "    Air Defrost on evaporator coils


Your cost for Option Number Three                             $ 282,100.00

Optional extended warranty                                    Add $3.100.00




                      Gimct) RsingnraJlon f;>c. 2/07 S. 4^'“ Slfoct Van Buran, Arkensas 7295G




                                                                                                     BSFCOOOOD3
                                                                                               Page 3 of10




 (1)    Lot of non-union labor to install the above, rates includes premium time to complete the
        installation.

 (1)    Lot of freight on materials shipped to the job site.

(I)     Lot of equipment rental to unload and set all refrigeration equipment and materials.


Items not included in this quote;

»      Taxes (Sales and Usage Taxes)
»      Applicable permits and bonds.
»      Housekeeping pads
«      Concrete work
«      Electrical (other than hook up)
°      Diffusers/ grilles
°      Hazardous material disposal


Note: This price does not include any sales or usatte taxes. Please advise how the customer
      will pay for tlie taxes or if this project is tax exempt. If tax excropL a tax exemption
      certificate must be provided with purchase order.

Please call if you have any questions concerning this proposal.

We appreciate the opportunity to quote on this project.

See attached sheets forCimco Refidgeration’s, Inc. tenns and conditions.

This proposal is firm for (30) thirty days.


Best Regards,


Cimco Refrigeration, Inc.

Danny Ro.se
Danny Rose
Branch Manager

                         Cimco Roingerstion Inc. 2707 S. 4*” Slme-t Van Bwen. Arkansas 7295G



                                                                                                    QSFC000004
                                      TERMS AND CONDmONS


SUBJECT TO WRITTEN APPROVAL BY A DULY AUTHORISED OEFICER OF CIMCO
REFRIGERATION INC. (THE "VENDOR”). THIS QUOTATION. IF ACCEPTED IN WRITING
BY THE PURCHASER. SHALL CONSTITUTE A BINDING CONDITIONAL CONTRACT OF
SALE AS OF THE DATE OF ITE PURCHASER'S ACCEPTANCE OR AS OF THE DATE OF
THE VENDOR’S APPROVAL, WHICHEVER IS LATER. TfflS QUOTATION IS INVALID IF
NOT ACCEPTED BY THE PURCHASER WmHN SIXTY DAYS OP THE DATE OF
QUOTATION.



1.   TITLE

     (a) The title and ownership to and in the materials, equipment and other goods sold
          hereunder’ (the “goods”) shall remain in the Vendor until payment in full of the
          Contract Price and any additional amounts payable to the Vendor pursuant to sections 2
          and 10 of these Terms and Conditions. The Vendor hereby reserves, and the Purchaser
          hereby grants to the Vendor, a security interest in and to the goods, and the proceeds
         thereof, to secure the said payment and all of the other obligations of the Purchaser. At
         the option of the Vendor, the Purchaser will join with tlie Vendor in executing, in a
         form satisfactory to the Vendor, one or more financing statements or similar
         instruments pursuant to any applicable personal propcity security legislation. The
         Purchaser hereby authorises the Vendor to file one or more such statements or
         instruments signed by the Vendor alone as the secm’ed party. If the goods are or are to
         become affixed to real properly, the Purchaser represents that a true and correct
         description of such real property and that the name of the registered owner thereof arc
         as indicated on Page 1 of tliis Quotation/Contract.

     (b) In the event of default by the Purchaser under the tcirns of payment of this contract, tire
         full amount of the Contract Price, less any payments previou.sly made, shall become
         due and payable, and the Vendor or its agent shall have the right to enter upon the
         premises and remove the goods, and to dispose of them as the Vendor may deteimine.
         If the proceeds from such disposal, less any related expenses, including but not limited
         to costs of seiznre, removal and sale, and legal costs (including reasonable attorneys’

                       Cimeo RofrigHrstjon Inc. 2707 S. -T' Strem Van Boren, ArKonsas 7^B5G




                                                                                              BSFC000005
                                                                                                   Page 5 of 10


           fees aad expenses) connected therewith (the “net proceeds”), are not sufficient to cover
           the amount in default, the Purchaser shall be liable to the Vendor for such deficiency.
          If the net proceeds exceed the amount in default such excess shall be returned to the
          Purchaser, and the Vendor shall not be bable further whether in respect of completion,
           performance, vvanranty or other contract terms.



     (c) The Purchaser- hereby waives all rights and ciaijii.s against the Vendor in the event that
         the circumstances provided for in section 1 (b) arise, except for the express right of
         recovery of excess net proceeds as provided in that section.

     (d) The Purchaser hereby waives the provisions of any Conditional Sales Act or otlier
         applicable legislation which limits the Vendor's rights to seize the security provided for
         herein, and to sue for my deficiency. The Pmehasw expressly confers upon the
         Vendor the rights to seize and sell the goods and to recover from the Purchaser, by
         action on the covenant, tire principal, interest and other moneys from time to time
         owing under this contract.

2.   PRICE ADJUSTMENTS

     (a) The Purchaser shall pay all taxes, duties, levies and other charges assessed against or in
         respect of the goods, except tl]Ose taxes, duties, levies and other charges expressly
         included in the Contract Price.

     (b) If any taxes, dudes, levies, or other charges shown to be included in the Contract Price
         are increased subsequent to the Date of Quotation, and increase the Vendor's costs
         hereunder, such increase shall be paid by the Purchaser to the Vendor.

     (c) The Contract Price quoted herein is based on prices, costs and conditions prevailing at
         the Date of Quotation. Unless otherwise specified, if the estimated delivery and / or
         installation date is more than six months from the date of the contract, and if prior to
         shipment or installation there is an increase in the Vendor's costs due to increases in
         labour rates, cost of materials, suppliers' prices, foreign exchange, storage charges, or
         freight rates, such increase shall be paid to die Vendor by the Purchaser.

     (d) If delivery or installation is delayed by the Purchaser, or by anyone under the
         Purchaser's control, for move than two months after the time estimated, any increase in
         those categories of the Vendor ' s costs listed in section 2(c) shall be paid to the Vendor
         by the Purchaser.

     (e) All payments by the Purchaser to the Vendor under section 2 shall be in addition to the
         Contract Price and shall be paid at the time the final payment under the contract is due.

                       Glmi20 Rolrijjeralion Inc. 2707 S. 4'" Street '/nn Buren, A{1<ansas 72956




                                                                                                        BSFC000006
                                                                                              Page 6 of 10

                                  .fe.^riir^&eS^2S5»¥




 3.          DELrVERY AND INSTALLATION - Delivery and installation times and dates ai'e
            approximate and are subject to extension for delays caused by fire, strike, lockont,
            labour dispute, civil or military authority, riot, embargo, car shortage, wrecks or delays
            in transportation. Acts of God, late delivery or non-delivery by the Vendor's suppliers,
            changes ia the scope of the work' as provided in section 8 of these Terms and
            Conditions, or other causes beyond the reasonable control of: the Vendor, and the
            Vendor shall not be liable for any losses or damages resulting from any such causes.
            Acceptance of the work shall be a waiver by the Purchaser of all claims for damages for
            delay from any cause whatsoever.


4.    RESPONSIBILITY AND INSURANCE

      (a) In respect of goods sold F.O.B. point of origin, the Vendor shall deliver the goods in
          good condition to a common carrier or to the Purchaser at the Vendor's shipping point,
          and thereupon all risks of loss or damage thereto shall pass to the Purchaser.

      (b) In respect of goods sold F.O.B. job site or sold with installation, all risks of loss or
          damage shall pass to the Purchaser upon receipt of the goods at the job site or at the
          Ptirchaser's designated delivery point.

      (c) The Purchaser shah insure the goods against loss or damage from fire, theft, malicious
          damage or other causes as and from the time the P\irchaser becomes responsible for the
          goods pursuant to sections 4(a) and 4(b) of these Torm.s and Conditions. The face value
          of the insurance policy shall be in an amount not less tlran the Contract Price. Any loss
          under such insurance policy shall he made payable to the Vendor as its interest may
          appear until the Contract Price shall be paid in full.

      (d) Upon the reque.st of the Vendor, the Purchaser shall provide an insurance certificate as
          evidence of the compliance with section 4(c) of these Terms and Conditions.

5.    TERMS OF TAYMENT

      (a)   Unle.s.s otherwise specified in this Quotation/Contract, payment shall be made by the
            Purchaser to the Vendor in respect of the Contract Price as follows:



                        Ctmco              ine. 2707 S. 4"* .SSroM   Bursji, ArKansBs 72950




                                                                                                   3SFC000007
                                                                                                    Page 7 of 10


          (i) Goods sold without installation: 25% upon acceptance of this quotation by the
                 Purchaser; an amount representing the value of each shipment, payable upon
                 delivery; and the unpaid balance upon final shipment.




      (ii) Goods sold with installation; 25% upon acceptance of this quotation by the Purchaser;
           an additional 30% upon written notification by the Vendor to the Purchaser that tlie
           goods are ready for shipment; an additional 35% immediately after installation but prior
           to the commencement of operation of the goods or related systems; and a final payment
           of 10% upon completion.

     (b) Timely payment according to the terms of this Quotation/Contract is of the essence of
         the contract

     (c) Payment shall be made in the specified currency.


6.          V/ARRANl'Y    -  UhlLBSS  OTHERWISE      SPECMED    IN  THIS
            QUOTATION/CONTRACT, THE VENDOR WARRANTS THE GOODS AND
            INSTALLATION SOLD IIERELINDER AGAINST ORIGINAL DEFECTS IN
            MANUFACTURE AND WORKMANSHIP FOR A PERIOD OF ONE YEAR FROM
            COMPLETION AS DEFINED IN SECTION 9 OF THESE TERMS AND
      ■     CONDITIONS. THIS WARRANTY IS IN LIEU OF ALL OTHER WARRANTIES,
            STATUTORY OR OTHERWISE, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING FOR
            MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE
            TERMS OF THE VENDOR'S WARRANTY ARE AS FOLLOWS;

     (a) In respect of goods sold without installation, the Vendor's sole liability shall be to
         repair or replace, at the Vendor's option. F.O.B. point of manufacture, any defective
         goods or parts thereof.

     (b) In respect of goods sold with installation, the Vendor’s sole liabDity shall be to repair or
         rcplacs, at the Vendor's option, any defective goods or parts thereof or any defective
         workmanship. The Vendor shall be responsible for all of its costs in connection
         therewith other than the out-of-pocket expen.ses incurred by the Vendor's employees
         and agents travelling from the Vendor's nearest place of business to the jobsite and
         charges for labour performed after normal working hours at the request of the
       ' Purchaser, which latter expenses and charges shall be for the account of thcPurchaser.




                        Gifuco Roffifleration Inc. 2707 S. 4"' SJrOf?t Van Suren, ArKan.sas 72555




                                                                                                         BSFCODOOD8
     ^■^SStSisrSissazacESXssT )>a-.i=i:'-=c.'^-iis;tr^-s> r<>csx»—-— •—------
        (c) The Vendor warrants goods not of the Vendor’s manufacture only to the extent to wlijch
             tfie Vendor is able to enforce a claim for liability against the inanufactmer thereof.




        (d)       The Purchaser shall promptly give written notice to the Vendor after the discovery of
                 an apparent defect.

        (e)        As a condition precedent to any liability by the Vendor hereunder, the Purchaser shall
                 use, operate and maintain the goods and related systems in a careful, prudent, and
                 reasonable manner, and in conformity with tlie Vendor's and I or the manufacturers'
                 instructions.

       (f) TflE FOREGOING CONSTITUTES THE PURCHASER’S EXCLUSIVE REMEDY
           AND THE VENDOR'S SOLE LIABILITY ARISING OUT OF THE DESIGN,
           MANUFACTURE, SALE, INSTALLATION. OR USE OF THE GOODS.

       (g)        Diis warranty shaO be void if the Purchaser is in default under the terms of payment
                 of this contract.

7.              'fhe Vendor shall not be liable for any losses, injuries, expenses or damages, whether
                 direct, indirect, special, incidental, consequential or punitive, arising out of the goods,
                 or the installation, operation, or failure of operation of the goods or related systems
                even if caused by the Vendor’s negligence.

8.              CHANGE IN SCOPE OF WORK - If the Purchaser requests a change in the scope of
                the work under this Quotation/Contract, the Vendor will submit a Contract Revision to
                the Purchaser which shall set forth the propo.scd changes in the work, and if the
                proposed changes result in an addition to or a deduction from tire Contract Price, the
                Contract Revision shall set forth the amount of such addition or deduction. A Contract
                Revision shall not be binding or enforceable unless accepted in writing by the
                Purchaser and approved in writing by a duly authorised officer of the Vendor. Upon
                such acceptance and approval, the Contract Revision shall become part of the conti'act
                and, except when inconsistent therewith, shall be sub ject to all its provisions.

9.              COMPLETIONAND ACCEPTANCE OF WO RK




                                         Cimeo Pefrigerration (nc. 2707 S. 4’*' Slrect Van Bnrsn, Arkansas 72356




                                                                                                                   BSFC000009
                                                                                                 Page 9 of 10



      (a)    Si respect of goods sold without installation, "Completion’ shall be deemed to occur
            when risk of loss of the goods passes to the Purchaser in accordance with section 4 of
            these Terms and Conditions.

      (b) In respect of goods sold with installation, and unless otherwise defined in this
           Quotation/Contract, ’Completion" shall be deemed to occur when any one of the
           following events takes place:




            (i) The Purchaser signs an acceptance certificate;
            (ii) The Vendor has installed and, where applicable, successfully tested the installation;
            (iii) The Purchaser commences regular use of the goods or related systems;
            (iv) An independent expert, mutually acceptable to the Purchaser and the Vendor,
                   certifies that tlie work has been completed.

      (c) Nothing in subsections (a) or (b) shall relieve the Vendor from its obligation to honour
          the wananty provisions contained herein.

      (d) The occurrence of any one of the events described in section 9(b)(i), (iii) and (Lv) shall
          constimte acceptance of the work.

10.         BONDS - Performance bonds and material and labour payment bonds will be provided
            by die Vendor npon request Unless the Contract Price expressly includes the cost of
            such bonds, the Purchaser, in addition to the Contract Price, shad pay the cost of such
            bonds to the Vendor at the time of the receipt thereof by the Purchaser.

11. MISCELLANEOUS.

            (a)   This Quotation and any resulting contract shall be governed, enforced and
                  construed in accordance with the laws of the State of New York without regard to
                  that state’s rules governing conflict of laws.

            (b)   All rights and remedies of the Vendor under this contract and under applicable
                  law s’nall be cumulative and may be exercised successively or concurrently, in any
                  order, and on more than one occasion. The election by Vendor to exercise one
                  remedy shall not preclude it from thereafter exercising one or more other
                  remedies.

            (c)   The Purchaser agrees to pay, in addition to the other amounts payable to Vendor
                  under the contract, all costs and expenses, including reasonable attorneys’ fees,
                  incurred by the Vendor in enforcing this contract, exercising its rights hereunder

                         Cimeo Relrigemtion Inc. 2707 S. 'i” SIroet Van Bu/sn, Arkansas 723.58




                                                                                                      BSFC000010
                                                                                       Page 10 of 10
  ^KWIH eEMeo ^
            or collecting or attempting to collect all amounts due the Vendor hereunder
            following default by the Purchaser in the payment or performance of its
            obligations hereunder, includmg tliose incurred in connection with any
            bankruptcy, insolvency, liquidation, reorganization or similar proceeding
            involving the Purchaser.




        (d) Any assignment or attempted assignment of this contract, in whole or in part,
            without the prior written consent of tire Vendor shall be void. The Vendor may
            assign any of its rights, liabilities or obligations arising out of this contract
            without prior notice to the Purchaser and without the Purchaser’s written consent.

        (c) If any provision of this contract is unenforceable, such uncnforceabilily shall not
            affect tire remaining terms, which shall be enforced, if the .same can be done,
            without regard to the unenforceable provision.

       (f) The headings to the paragraphs of this contract are provided for ease of reference
           only and shall not be co.nstrued to vary or limit the terms thereof.




TfflS QUOTATION/CONTRACT CONTAINS THE COMPLEfE AGREEMENT BEFWEEN
THE PURCHASER AND THE VENDOR, AND SUPERSEDES AI.L PRIOR ORA!, OR
WRITTEN REPRESENTATIONS, PROMISES. AGREEMENTS OR UNDERSTANDINGS
WITH RESPECl' TO 'nfE SUBJECT MATTER HEREOF. NQ REPRESENTATION, PROMISE,
AGREEMENT OR UNDERSTANDING ENTERED ETTO OR MADE SUBSEQUENT TO THE
DATE OF THE CONTRACT WHICH VARIES OR MODIFIES THE PROVISIONS OF THIS
CONTRACT SHALL BE BINDING ON THE VENDOR UNLESS CONVEYED IN WRITING
AND EXECUTED BY A DULY AUTHORISED OEHCER OF THE VENDOR.




                   Clmco Rftingor.'jHoH inn. 2707   Slrnnt Van Bursn, Arkansas 7295G



                                                                                             Bsrcoooon
                                                             Visit I3S aL www.dmcorefrigoration.com


                  December 2, 2010

                  Refrigeration Comparison

                  Chiiled Water System

                  Advantages:
                     B Freon Charge is out of the facility reducing the chance of contact will: production
                        workers.
                     o Freon charge is oniy in chiller package outside resulting in significantly reduced
                        Freon charge.
                     o Centrally located condensing unit built for easy maintenance,
                     a One housekeeping pad and one electrical point for condensing unit.
                     » Commercial/Industria] type unit designed for longer sciwice longevity,
                     a Electrical connection for condensing unit in one place.

                  Disadvantages:
                     B Longer lead time for equipment. Not an in stock item.
                     B Two refrigerant mediums to dea! with.
                     « Less than one percent efficiency loss due to usmg secondary refrigerant.
                     B Initial cost of equipment is more expensive.

                  Single Condensing unit System

                 Advantages:
                    « Centrally located condensing unit built for easy maintenance.
                    » One housekeeping pad and one electrical point for condensing unit.
                    • Commercial/Jndustrial type unit designed for longer service longevity,
                    o Electrical connection for condensing unit in one place.
                    B Initial costof equipment is less expensive that chilled water system.

                 Disadvantages:
                    « Longer lead time for equipment. Not an in stock item.
                    » Freon Charge is in the facility increasing fee chance of contact with production
                       workers.
                    a Initial cost of equipment is more expensive than packaged uiuts.




                        CIMCO Rerrigc)'^«lioii Inc.                                                                           Tel: (479) 474-5432
            2707 SoRib        Street • Van Buren, AR 72955                                                                    Fax (479) 474-5430




SLJohti's, DartiTioutlt, MontJon, A!Bra» QucliccCity, Gaape^ Montreal, 0?fawa,Turonta, London,'Wlniljon Wnnlp*^, Saslujtoon, Cal'Jiry. Eflmonjon, Kelowofl, Vjirieouvtr, Victoria
                                       T{nrtfor»J,CT—Syracuse, NY — Phocnijf, AT,- Detroit, MI-Motile, Air—Van Borer*, AR- Ddjin®, Chins


                                                                                                                                                         BSFC000012
                                                                               Page 2 of 2
                                                                                 CIMCO
                                                                               Comparisoji




                  Multiple Packaged Condensing Unit Systcnis

                  Advantages:
                     » Most of items arc in stock so lead times will be shorter on equipment,
                     o Initial cost of equipment is less expensive that chilled water system and Single
                        Condensing unit system.

                  Disadvantages:
                      “ Multiple condensing units resulting in multiple service points.
                      « Larger Freon charge that other (2) systems.
                      • Multiple housekeeping pads and several electrical points for multiple condensing
                         units.
                      « Commercial type unit resulting in shorter service longevity.
                     ®. Higher energy costs due to multiple condensing units.
                     « Freon Charge is in tlic facility increasing the chance of contact with production
                         workers.

                 Danny Rose
                 CIMCO refrigeration
                 Van Buren Branch Manager
                 (479) 474-5432




                                                                                                                          Tcl; (475)474-5432
                                                                                                                          Fai (479) 474-5430




St.Jolkft'i. D^rlnioulK Munctun, Alinu, QueUtc City, Gajjrc, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, J j>ndon,\Y>nilsor, WnnJpc;;, Swsknioon, EJoiooton, ICctotrun. Vancouver, VJctorla^
                                     Hartford, cr-SjTaovue, MY —rjioenix, AZ.—Detroit,Ml -iVlobUe, AL- Van Duren, AR - Beijing, CWna



                                                                                                                                                    8Sf-C000013
John Pearson
From;                    Jcj'in Peafson
Ssnt:                    iViondsy, January 24, 2011 2,52 PM
To:                      'Mfchael Winslow'
Subject;                 Givcol RetfigEration


TMs & confirm that we have awarded Cimco 'Refrigemtion the &fyco} Refrigeration Upgrade
as per Ctmco proposal Q045-10^ Option One, dated November 13,, 2010 in the amount of
$3S:4,0$0MO.

Please m&PO BSflM0l6, dated January 13,2011 m your reference.


John Pearson
Mainiensfroe Manaofer
Bartush Schniiizius
972-21&-1270
1137N, feJy
Lewisvlite Texas 75057




                                                       1
                                                                           BSFCDDOtteS
