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Home Buyer Beware |
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How a new state agency of the builders, by the
builders, and for the builders makes it harder for
you to sue, yes, your builder. |
highlights added
IN THE GOOD OLD DAYS, if you scrimped and saved
and bought your dream home in Texas, you could sleep easy
at night knowing that the roof over your head was
protected by a common-sense legal doctrine. Known as an
implied
warranty of habitability, in layman’s terms
it meant that-whether or not anything was put in
writing-the courts would hold the builder to a guarantee
that your home was fit to live in and constructed with
care. If your foundation sagged or your
windows leaked or your roof caved in, you could demand
that the builder fix the defect and take him to court if
he didn’t.
That option is no longer available. In 2003, after spreading
around $9 million in campaign contributions, the powerful home
builders’ lobby got the Legislature to agree with its
contention that implied warranties were too darn
vague and that the lawsuits
they produced were too damaging to the industry.
Instead, it asked lawmakers to create a new state agency to
protect builders from legal retribution. It was one of the most blatant power plays in recent
years, made possible by an anti-lawsuit fervor that swept
through the new Republican-controlled Legislature and by
the influence of two politically active builders: the biggest
individual contributor, Bob
Perry (no relation to Governor Rick Perry but lots
of political ties), and the co-founder of Texans for Lawsuit
Reform, Dick
Weekley. Thus was born the Texas Residential
Construction Commission (TRCC), which in its
short life has served as the classic case
study of what can happen when a public agency is captured by
the industry it is supposed to regulate.
With four building-industry representatives among its nine
members (several other members have livelihoods that at times
relate to homebuilding as well), the TRCC has adopted a
torturous process for dissatisfied buyers with complaints
against builders. The new agency has also adopted “performance
standards” that form the basis of judging homeowners’
complaints, which, to chagrined but not especially surprised
consumer advocates, permit significant
flaws after the first year of ownership like cracks in the
walls, roof leaks, and the separation of tile from a
floor.
All this took place in relative obscurity during the tumultuous
2003 session and its aftermath, when battles over a $10 billion
budget shortfall, tort reform, and
congressional redistricting forced other issues out of the
spotlight. Not until the end of the 2005 session did the
actions of the commission come into public view, when a fight
in the Senate over confirming three gubernatorial appointments
to the TRCC highlighted the simmering discontent of consumers
and lawmakers in both parties over the change in Texas law that
puts at risk the biggest investment most families will
make.
One of Rick Perry’s first appointments to
the commission was John Krugh, the general
counsel for Bob Perry’s Houston-based homebuilding
company. Among the $3 million Bob
Perry contributed to politicians in the 2003—2004 election
cycle was $100,000 to the governor a month before Krugh’s
appointment. Krugh was a principal architect of the
legislation creating the TRCC and this year opposed legislation
that would have improved the agency’s ability to act on behalf
of consumers. Such cozy dealing led Mark McQuality, a Dallas lawyer who
has been practicing in the area of consumer protection law for
28 years, to offer in an academic paper on the new law a
concise analysis of why homebuyers now face an uphill battle to
have their grievances addressed: “Money talks.”
Loud and clear. In the confirmation fight, the homebuilders’
lobby would again prevail, but not before the flaws in the TRCC
were exposed for all to see. Consider these excerpts from an
exchange at a committee hearing between Krugh and
Robert
Duncan, a Republican state senator from
Lubbock, about Duncan’s bill proposing reforms of the
agency:
Duncan: “Did you object to the legislation . . .?”
Krugh: “[A]bout 30 percent of that…as a builder [emphasis
added] I found objectionable.”
Duncan: “I’m asking you to take off your builder hat. When you
are sitting on this commission, you are sitting in a fiduciary
[capacity] for the State of Texas. You have to make decisions
based on…what’s fair and balanced, not on what’s in the best
interests of the builder. Taking off that builder hat, do you
not think that it’s a good thing for consumers to know that
their house hasn’t been inspected?”
Krugh: “Once you put it that way, I agree with you. Yes, sir.
My involvement with the legislation was not as a member of the
commission.”
There you have it. Although a member of a
commission that is supposed to be concerned with protecting the
public, Krugh was concerned mainly with protecting his boss
from lawsuits. No wonder a pro-builder mentality has permeated
the agency’s actions. Consider the mandatory process for
dispute resolution: Blocked from going straight to the
courthouse, an unhappy homeowner must now file a complaint with
the TRCC, pay a minimum fee of $350 for a state inspection, and
present his evidence. Even if the agency rules in his favor, it
lacks the power to take any action against the builder. The
only effect of a favorable ruling is that it allows the
homeowner to use the commission’s findings as evidence. The
homeowner can still sue after an unfavorable ruling, but the
agency’s findings can be used against him.
Another hurdle for the homeowner is the agency’s rules, which
often favor builders. For instance, a consumer must list all
known defects associated with the home; if others are
discovered later, he must start the process anew with a second
complaint. The homeowner must name any inspector he has hired to
examine the defects or lose the right to use that inspector as
an expert witness. If the commission’s inspector notices
additional problems with the home not cited in the official
complaint, he cannot reveal them to the homeowner.
While the agency touts that it has found
in favor of the consumer in 92 percent of its cases, the
statistic is phony. It applies only to cases that the
commission determines are eligible for review. In fact, 814
consumers have contacted the agency with complaints, but only
186 cases were accepted as eligible. Homeowner advocate
Janet Ahmad
points out that the agency refuses to hear cases involving
incomplete construction, even though one of the most common
complaints against homebuilders involves those who disappear
and leave behind half-finished projects. Ahmad conducted
telephone interviews and found overwhelmingly that the
consumers who had “won” their cases at the agency felt it did
no good because they still had to pursue action in court
against their builders.
Builders do have to register with the TRCC, at a cost scheduled
to rise to a maximum fee of $500, but, as Duncan pointed out
during a committee hearing, the
commission conducts no screening of builders, nor does
it require them to meet any standards in order to appear as
registered on the agency’s Web site. “We’re giving them a badge
that gives them elevated credibility with the public,” Duncan
said. His legislation would have required the agency to make
available to the public any court judgments or bankruptcy
filings involving a builder. A bill by
state representative Jessica Farrar, a Houston
Democrat, that required registered builders to carry insurance
also died this session after fierce opposition from the
building industry.
Even the performance standards adopted by the TRCC, providing
the first uniform definition of what should be covered under
homebuilding warranties in Texas, have generated criticism.
According to Mark
Eberwine, a San Antonio home inspector, the
standards—which are based on input from professional engineers
and Texas A&M’s Construction Sciences Department—allow,
among other things, a significant tilt in foundations,
one-eighth-inch cracks in brick mortar, deficient water
pressure, and dips and cracks in driveways. “The state has now
sanctioned poor builder behavior,” he said. TRCC member
Paulo Flores, a
lawyer who has represented homeowners against builders, voted
for the standards because they gave consumers some
predictability. “Prior to what we’ve done, there was nothing,”
said Flores. “As a lawyer, you never knew where you stood.” But
Mickey Redwine,
an East Texas cable construction company owner who was
appointed to represent the public, abstained from voting,
indicating, he said, his “personal belief that we could have
stronger consumer protections.”
It is ironic that Duncan has become the
TRCC’s chief critic, because he co-sponsored and later
fine-tuned the bill that created the agency in 2003. The
argument that he found persuasive was that lawsuits were a
costly and time-consuming way to resolve homeowners’ disputes
and that administrative findings against builders could lead to
quick settlements. But that was before the governor saw to it
that the commission would be so builder-friendly.
During the 2005 session, Duncan
proposed legislation that would have made the complaint
process more attuned to consumers and forced builders to
disclose possible defects. One draft was made
available to Krugh, who responded by marking through
pages to indicate his disagreement. “No counteroffers or
suggestions,” Duncan said.
After losing the fight over the bill, Duncan decided to “send a
message” to the TRCC by attempting to block Krugh’s
confirmation. At one point, Duncan said, he had the necessary
votes, but his efforts unraveled after an intensive lobby
effort. “Nobody wanted to take on Bob Perry,” he said. The
Senate ultimately confirmed Krugh, but not before long speeches
by Duncan and Royce
West, a Democrat from Dallas, harshly
criticizing the TRCC.
In an interview at Perry Homes’ headquarters on Houston’s Gulf
Freeway, Krugh called the controversy “both embarrassing and
humbling.” A soft-spoken man who seemed honestly perplexed by
the uproar, Krugh said that his years in the trenches with
emotional homeowner lawsuits led him to seek the creation of an
agency to help resolve disputes. “On the one hand, I saw
lawsuits coming at builders based on criteria that would
vacillate depending on whatever an expert had to say, as
opposed to something uniform,” he told me. “On the other side,
I saw consumers who had problems with their houses and, I
thought, basically wanted to get them fixed. The old system
drove them to their lawyers and their experts, and they got
caught up in what I call this vortex of litigation, and they
couldn’t get out. The third-party-intervention method at least
gives the homeowners some control over what goes on before they
get caught up in that vortex.”
Krugh said he believed the commission would adopt rules that
would accomplish a lot of what Duncan hoped to achieve with his
legislation and would “look at the methods by which consumers
could obtain information about builders’ lawsuits and
bankruptcy filings.” He also noted that the agency recently
changed its rules to require the builder to communicate with
the agency after it has inspected a home for a consumer
complaint to let the agency know “what goes on between
homeowners and builders with regards to resolution.” If a
builder fails to do that, “it will be considered grounds for a
potential fine, suspension, or revocation,” Krugh added. “If a
builder does not respond at all, we’re going to take that into
consideration.”
Clearly, the battle this session got Krugh’s attention. But did
it get Rick Perry’s? The effectiveness of the agency depends
upon the governor’s willingness to appoint commissioners who
will not wear their builder’s hats when deciding how to protect
the public against unscrupulous or careless action. With an
announced Republican primary opponent, Comptroller
Carole Keeton
Strayhorn, already lambasting him, Perry
might want to blunt an issue that would be easy to turn
into an effective television spot. After all, bad
foundations affect Republicans and Democrats
alike.
Patricia Kilday Hart, Texas Monthly
August 2005
Source:
http://www.texasmonthly.com/preview/2005-08-01/hart
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