Affirmed and Majority and Concurring Opinions filed April 30, 2015.
In The
Fourteenth Court of Appeals
NO. 14-14-00058-CV
WILLIAM WADE BARTLETT, Appellant
V.
LORI LEE BARTLETT, Appellee
On Appeal from the 309th District Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. 2012-55541
CONCURRING OPINION
This is a case of mistaken identity. A condition precedent is mistaken for a
covenant. Due to the mischaracterization, the parties and the court apply the
wrong analysis to the interpretation and enforcement of the contractual provision at
the center of this appeal. Even so, the proper disposition is to affirm. Though I
respectfully disagree with the majority’s analysis, I concur in the court’s judgment.
A Conditional Obligation to Pay College Expenses
Former spouses Lori and William are parties to a contract that requires
William to pay for expenses incurred to send their son to college if William
approves the college, provided that the son is a full-time student, and the son
maintains a grade-point average of at least a “C” toward the completion of his
bachelor’s degree.1 This provision contains three conditions precedent that must
be satisfied to trigger William’s obligation to pay:
(1) William must approve the college;
(2) The son must be a full-time student; and
(3) The son must maintain a “C” average;
The only condition at issue in this appeal is the requirement that the son maintain a
“C” average.2 It is undisputed that the son’s grade-point average fell below a “C”
during the spring semester of his freshman year.
1
The contract provision at issue reads:
. . . WILLIAM WADE BARTLETT shall pay 100% of the reasonable education
expenses incurred to send each child either to college or to technical, vocational,
or business school of his approval, provided the child is a full-time student and
maintains at least a “C” or the equivalent grade-point average toward the
completion of either a college bachelor’s degree or a technical, vocational, or
business school diploma. The obligation includes tuition, activities fees,
laboratory fees, books, room and board, health insurance and related uninsured
health-care expenses, college dues and expenses, and other charges normally
related to such education.
2
William specifically denied that he approved the college. Although William argued in the trial
court that he did not approve the son’s college selection, he does not raise this issue on appeal. See Pat
Baker Co. v. Wilson, 971 S.W.2d 447, 450 (Tex. 1998) (per curiam); Izaguirre v. Rivera, No. 14-12-
00081-CV, 2012 WL 2814131, at *2 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] (Jul. 10, 2012, no. pet.) (holding
that appellate courts cannot reverse civil cases on unassigned error) (mem. op.). Nor does William
challenge the son’s status as a full-time student.
2
The parties characterize the son’s failure to maintain a “C” average as a
breach of contract, and the majority considers the son’s failure to meet this
requirement under a breach-of-contract analysis. Neither the characterization nor
the approach is correct. We are not faced with a breach of contract but with a
failure of a condition precedent. The difference is significant because it determines
which legal analysis applies.
An Unsatisfied Condition Precedent, Not a Breach of Contract
Contractual obligations may be absolute or conditional. 3 When a party is
accused of failing to perform under a contract, he may respond that he has not
breached the contract because any performance he was to render was conditional,
i.e., any duty he may have to perform has not yet arisen because some event has
not yet occurred. 4 The son’s achieving a “C” average was an event not certain to
occur that affected William’s duty to perform. The parties intended this event to
occur before Lori or the son had a right to William’s performance. The parties’ use
of the term “provided” in their contract is unmistakable language of condition
showing that satisfaction of the “C”-average requirement is a condition precedent
to William’s performance. 5 Under this contractual language of condition, if the
event does not occur, William’s performance is not owed.6
3
See Solar Applications Engineering, Inc. v. T.A. Operating Corp., 327 S.W.3d 104, 108
(Tex. 2010).
4
See id.
5
See id. at 109 (noting that the terms “if,” “provided that,” “on condition that,” or
similar language is used to make performance conditional); Hirschfield Steel Co., Inc. v. Kellogg
Brown & Root, Inc., 201 S.W.3d 272, 281 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2006, no pet.)
(same).
6
See id.; M7 Capital LLC v. Miller, 312 S.W.3d 214, 220 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th
Dist.] 2010, pet. denied) (holding that a successful breach-of-contract claim requires proof of a
(1) valid contract, (2) performance or tendered performance by the plaintiff, (3) breach of
contract by the defendant, and (4) damages sustained by the plaintiff).
3
The parties characterize the son’s failure to maintain a “C” average as a
breach of contract, and the majority considers the son’s failure to meet this
requirement under a breach-of-contract analysis. Neither the characterization nor
the approach is correct. We are not faced with a breach of contract but with a
failure of a condition precedent. The difference is significant because it determines
which legal analysis applies.
An Unsatisfied Condition Precedent, Not a Breach of Contract
Contractual obligations may be absolute or conditional. 3 When a party is
accused of failing to perform under a contract, he may respond that he has not
breached the contract because any performance he was to render was conditional,
i.e., any duty he may have to perform has not yet arisen because some event has
not yet occurred. 4 The son’s achieving a “C” average was an event not certain to
occur that affected William’s duty to perform. The parties intended this event to
occur before Lori or the son had a right to William’s performance. The parties’ use
of the term “provided” in their contract is unmistakable language of condition
showing that satisfaction of the “C”-average requirement is a condition precedent
to William’s performance. 5 Under this contractual language of condition, if the
event does not occur, William’s performance is not owed.6
3
See Solar Applications Engineering, Inc. v. T.A. Operating Corp., 327 S.W.3d 104, 108
(Tex. 2010).
4
See id.
5
See id. at 109 (noting that the terms “if,” “provided that,” “on condition that,” or
similar language is used to make performance conditional); Hirschfield Steel Co., Inc. v. Kellogg
Brown & Root, Inc., 201 S.W.3d 272, 281 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2006, no pet.)
(same).
6
See id.; M7 Capital LLC v. Miller, 312 S.W.3d 214, 220 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th
Dist.] 2010, pet. denied) (holding that a successful breach-of-contract claim requires proof of a
(1) valid contract, (2) performance or tendered performance by the plaintiff, (3) breach of
contract by the defendant, and (4) damages sustained by the plaintiff).
3
interpret the contract as containing an implied provision that the son must have
maintained the required “C average” status each semester to trigger William’s
obligation. 10
When expenses were incurred for the son’s first semester of college, the son
had no grade-point average and therefore had not dropped below a “C.” Thus, at
that time, when William’s performance was due, the “C”-average condition
precedent was satisfied and William was obligated to pay expenses incurred for the
son’s first semester. When the initial expenses were incurred for the second
semester of college (payments for textbooks, parking, and tuition made in advance
for the spring semester), the son had maintained a grade-point average of at least a
“C” and therefore the condition precedent was satisfied at that time. During the
second semester, however, the son’s grade-point average dropped below a “C.”11
Therefore, the “C”-average condition precedent was not satisfied for the following
semester or for any semester thereafter. When expenses were incurred for the son’s
summer school, William was not obligated to pay them because the condition
that medical expenses were incurred by party once party became liable for the expenses).
10
See Mann Frankfort Stein & Lipp Advisors, Inc. v. Fielding, 289 S.W.3d 844, 850
(Tex. 2009) (noting that contract terms are implied when they are “necessarily involved in the
contractual relationship, such that the parties must have intended them and must have failed to
express them”). Alternatively, the only reasonable interpretation is that the son is required to
have a “C” average each semester to trigger William’s obligation. See Milner v. Milner, 361
S.W.3d 615, 619 (Tex. 2012) (holding that agreement is unambiguous if there is only one
reasonable interpretation). The trial court found that the son maintained a “C” grade-point
average his freshman year, but the trial court did not find that the son fully performed the
contract his freshman year. To the extent the trial court and the majority do not analyze the
contract on a semester-by-semester basis, their interpretation of the contract is unreasonable.
11
The contract does not specify whether the son is required to maintain a cumulative
grade-point-average of a “C” or a “C” average each semester of college. We need not determine
whether the contract requires that the son maintain a cumulative grade-point average of a “C” or
achieve a “C” average each semester because in the spring semester of the son’s freshman year
he did not achieve a “C” average and his cumulative grade-point average fell below a “C.”
5
requiring William’s performance was not met. The son’s failure to meet the “C”-
average requirement vitiated William’s conditional obligations under the
contract.12
No Continuing Obligation to Pay After Failure to Maintain a “C” Average
The majority is incorrect to the extent it suggests that William has any
continuing obligation to pay for the son’s college expenses under the contract.
William agreed to pay the college expenses providing the son met the specified
academic standard (“C” average) until the completion of his degree. The
contractual language provides that the grade-point average was to be “maintained,”
meaning met on an uninterrupted basis. This particular word choice reflects the
parties’ intent that William’s obligation be conditioned on the son’s steady,
continuing, and unbroken fulfillment of this minimum academic requirement.
Because “maintain” connotes a lack of interruption, it is not reasonable to construe
this provision to mean that the son could come into and out of compliance with the
condition, getting college expenses paid when he had a “C’ average and not getting
them paid when he had below a “C” average. “Maintain” means no lapses.
The parties chose contractual language that would make William’s funding
obligation operate much like an academic scholarship; it does not obligate William
to finance an on-again, off-again academic experience, paying the son’s college
expenses on “C”-average-and-above semesters and not paying them otherwise.
One who turns in a “C” performance one semester and fails classes the next
unnecessarily increases the expense of a college education and the time necessary
to complete the degree plan. Thus, by contracting for maintenance of a “C”
12
See PAJ, Inc., 243 S.W.3d at 639.
6
average, the parties hedged the risk that the son might convert what is supposed to
be a four-year experience into a longer and costlier one. It is clear from their
choice of contractual language that the parties intended the son to continually keep
at least a “C” average or face the loss of funding. By conditioning payment of the
son’s college expenses on the son maintaining a minimally acceptable level of
academic performance, the parties sought to incentivize the son to stay on track for
timely completion of his degree. Nothing in the contract suggests the parties
intended for William to underwrite the son’s college expenses indefinitely.
Material Failure of the Condition Precedent and Inapplicability of the
Material-Breach Doctrine
In analyzing the son’s failure to maintain a “C” average as a breach of
contract, the majority incorrectly suggests that the trial court reasonably could have
found that any breach of the “C”-average requirement was immaterial. Even
presuming for the sake of argument that a breach-of-contract analysis would be
appropriate in this context, the failure to meet the grade requirement was material.
The “C” average requirement is the sine qua non of the agreement. The son’s
failure to satisfy this essential term went to the heart of the parties’ bargain. It was
a material failure. Indeed, because a condition goes to the root of the contract, the
failure of a condition is necessarily material.
A “D” is not a “C.” Saying the difference between a “D” and a “C” is
immaterial is like saying that almost scoring a touchdown is the same as scoring a
touchdown or that “second place” is no different than “first place.” Grade-point
averages, by nature, are precise measurements that set lines of demarcation
between one performance category and the next. The metric reflects an exact and
unforgiving standard. Anything that falls short of meeting it is a material failure.
As nearly any college student can attest, the difference between a letter grade and
7
the one just beneath it is often the difference in getting a scholarship, qualifying for
membership in an honor society, or meeting eligibility requirements for athletics.
In academia, the difference between one letter grade and another is material.
The lapse in the son’s “C”-average status during the spring semester was not
cured, as the majority suggests, by the son’s registering for summer school and
getting a grade that improved his grade-point average, just as the lapse could not be
cured by the son’s repeating his freshman-year courses, earning stellar marks the
second time around, and adding an additional year of expenses to his college
career. Because the son did not maintain a “C” average, the contractual condition
that he do so was not satisfied and that is a material failure that cannot be undone
or cured by application of the material-breach doctrine. 13
In sum, William had an obligation to pay for the son’s first semester of
college, as the trial court ordered in its judgment, because at the time those
expenses were incurred, the son had not established a grade-point average and thus
had not dipped below a “C” average. Lori and the son admit, however, that the
son’s grade-point average then dropped below a “C”. The son’s failure to maintain
a “C” average relieved William of any further obligations under this provision of
the contract. 14
13
Just as the rules of football do not apply to a game of basketball, the standards of good-
faith and fair dealing do not apply to the failure of conditions precedent. Likewise, neither a
benefit-of-the-bargain analysis nor a “significant forfeiture” analysis are germane to a failed
condition precedent. Even if these standards did apply, the son’s behavior could hardly be said
to satisfy them. The majority reasons that the son’s grades dropped when his attendance suffered
after his knee surgery because the injury prevented him from going to class. In spite of his injury,
the son managed to achieve an “A” in both “Conditioning and Weight Training” and in “Country
Western Dance I.” He received an “F” in both “Introduction to Chemistry” and “Principles of
Microeconomics.” He received a “C” plus and two “C” minuses in his other courses. The son
acknowledged that he was absent from class too often and did not timely discuss the situation
with his professors.
14
See PAJ, Inc., 243 S.W.3d at 639.
8
because, by operation of rule 54, Lori did not need to show satisfaction of the “C”-
average condition.
Conclusion
The outcome of this case should turn on the failure of the condition
precedent rather than a breach-of-contract analysis. But, the parties and this court
treat the condition as a covenant, so the appeal has a strange and ironic ending.
The “C”-average condition precedent, though unmet in the evidence, did not have
to be proved due to the operation of a procedural rule. Lori was thus relieved of the
burden of proving the occurrence of a condition she otherwise could not prove.
Though the trial court’s contractual analysis is flawed, there is no basis to overturn
the trial court’s judgment.
/s/ Kem Thompson Frost
Chief Justice
Panel consists of Chief Justice Frost and Justices Boyce and McCally. (McCally,
J., majority)
10
because, by operation of rule 54, Lori did not need to show satisfaction of the “C”-
average condition.
Conclusion
The outcome of this case should turn on the failure of the condition
precedent rather than a breach-of-contract analysis. But, the parties and this court
treat the condition as a covenant, so the appeal has a strange and ironic ending.
The “C”-average condition precedent, though unmet in the evidence, did not have
to be proved due to the operation of a procedural rule. Lori was thus relieved of the
burden of proving the occurrence of a condition she otherwise could not prove.
Though the trial court’s contractual analysis is flawed, there is no basis to overturn
the trial court’s judgment.
/s/ Kem Thompson Frost
Chief Justice
Panel consists of Chief Justice Frost and Justices Boyce and McCally. (McCally,
J., majority)
10