Show Business Entertainment, a music band, prevailed in its suit against Sambu-ca, a restaurant, and Doctors Hospital, the host of a party at Sambuca, when neither paid the band for playing at a Christmas party. Sambuca, in turn, successfully claimed that Doctors Hospital was responsible for the band’s fees. On appeal, Doctors Hospital complains only about attorney’s fees awarded to Sambuca. First, it asserts the fees should not have been awarded because Sambuca recovered on a promissory estoppel claim, not a contract claim, and second, it argues the court should not have reopened the evidence to receive testimony about Sambuca’s attorney’s fees. We modify the judgment to delete the attorney’s fee award because Sambuca recovered on its promissory es-toppel claim, which, under Texas law, is available to a claimant only when a valid contract does not exist, and the attorney’s fee statute is limited to valid contract сlaims.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Sambuca and Doctors Hospital disputed who should have paid Show Business Entertainment for playing at the Christmas party. When no one paid, Show Business Entertainment brought suit against both parties. Sambuca ultimately paid the band and cross-claimed against Doctors Hospital, alleging that Doctors Hospital was responsible for the band’s fee. After both parties rested their cases and closed, the judge announced his decision in favor of Sambuca and asked the parties to submit a judgment. Sambuca prevailed only on its promissory estoppel theory, although it had also pleaded breach of contract, and the judge awarded attorney’s fees to Sambuca. Sambuca’s counsel then received permission from the court to reopen briefly to testify — over Doctors Hospital’s objection — about anticipated attorney’s fees in the event of an appeal.
ANALYSIS
I. Does a PkomissoRY Estoppel Theory OF RECOVERY SUPPORT AN ATTORNEY’S FEE Award Under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 38.001(8)?
In its first point of errоr, Doctors Hospital asserts that section 38.001(8) of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code does not permit the court to award attorney’s fees to a party that prevails on a promissory estoppel theory of recovery. Because determining whether a statute provides for attorney’s fees is a question of law, our review is de novo.
Holland v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
A. Section 38.0001(8) Provides for Recovery of Attorney’s Fees When a Party Has a Valid Contract Claim.
Section 38.001(8) allows a party to recover its “reasonable attorney’s fees ... in addition to the amount of a valid claim and costs, if the claim is for ... an oral or written contract.” Tex. Civ. PRAC.
&
Rem. Code § 38.001(8). Section 38.001’s most basic requirement is that the party seeking attorney’s fees must first prevail on a valid contract claim.
Mustang Pipeline Co., Inc. v. Driver Pipeline Co., Inc.,
B. In Texas, a Promissory Estoppel Claim and a Contract Claim are Mutually Exclusive.
For many years, Texas courts have held that promissory estoppel becomes available to a claimant only in the
absence
of a valid and enforceable contract.
See Montgomery Indus. Int’l, Inc. v. Thomas Constr. Co., Inc.
C. Section 38.001(8) Cannot Include Promissory Estoppel Claims.
If the two previous propositions — that section 38.001(8) authorizes attorney’s fees only when a party has a valid contract claim, and a party can recover on promissory estoppel only if it does not have a valid contract claim — are correct, then they are mutually exclusive remedies. If they are mutually exclusive remedies, then section 38.001(8) cannot include a promissory estoppel claim. Were we to hold otherwise, we would have to (1) ignore a long line of cases holding that a recovery under promissory estoppel means no valid contract existed and (2) add a cause of action that the statute’s plain language does not include. We intend to do neither of these.
D. The Contrary Case Law Is Not Persuasive.
In holding that a party may not recover attorney’s fees on a promissory estoppel claim, we recognize that we are a lоne voice.
See Preload Tech., Inc. v. AB & J Constr. Co., Inc.,
When Texas courts have concluded that section 38.001(8) includes promissory estoppel, they have relied upon
Preload
to some extent.
See Traco, Inc.,
We think the Texas cases allowing attorney’s fees probably did so because the parties did not join the issuе as directly as the parties before us. None of the cases discuss Texas’s long history of treating contract claims and promissory estoppel claims as mutually exclusive remedies.
See Preload,
E. Construing the Statute Liberally Does NOT Include Adding a Cause of Action.
We finally consider the last reason some courts have given for allowing attorney’s fees on a promissory estoppel claim: the statute’s requirement that it should be construed liberally. Tex. Civ. PRAC. & Rem. Code § 38.005. Some courts allowing a party to recover attorney’s fees on a promissory estoppel claim have relied on this admonishment that we construe the statute liberally.
Preload,
Some Texas courts construing the statute have applied the liberal interpretive mandate in procedural settings. This is a good example of what the legislature meant when it told the courts to construe the statute liberally. For example, courts have relied on the liberal construction mandate to permit an attorney’s fee recovery even without a net recovery.
See McKinley,
In short, the requirement to construe the statute liberally does not mean that we are at liberty to add new causes of action to the statute. When the legislature required the courts to construe the statute liberally, it is reasonable to assumе the legislature contemplated procedural issues, not substantive issues. When the legislature codified the attorney’s fees stat
ute
Thus, even mindful of the legislative mandate to construe section 38.001 liberally, we find that section 38.001(8) does not authorize the award of attorney’s fees to a promissory estoppel claimant.
See Wesco Distrib., Inc. v. Westport Group, Inc.,
As attorney’s fees should not have been awarded, the appellant’s complaint that the trial court should not have reopened the evidence to permit additional testimony аbout attorney’s fees is moot. We modify the judgment to delete the attorney’s fee award and affirm as modified.
Notes
. A claim for quantum meruit and a contract claim are juxtaposed in the same way: they are mutually exclusive.
Richter,
