As this case comes to us, it is primarily a dispute between an apartment management company and the owners thereof. It began when a tenant, Larry Allen Thoen (“Tenant”), sued Keystone Equity Management Corporation (“Manager”), together with the alleged owner of the apartment complex, pleaded to be a partnership of Pacifica/Camelot Associates, Inc. and Camelot Associates, Ltd. (“Owner”), together with Pacifica Real Property Investments Corporation. 1 Tenant alleged the breach of a lease agreement by failing to correct defective conditions on the leased premises and by withholding his security deposit in bad faith.
Owner answered and filed a cross-claim against Manager, alleging (1) that Manager
In response to special issues, a jury found that both Tenant and Owner breached the lease; that Manager did not breach the management agreement; and that Owner agreed to indemnify Manager for its attorney’s fees. The trial court rendered a judgment non obstante veredicto, denying all parties any recovery on their respective claims. Both Manager and Owner appeal.
Manager contends that the trial court erred in disregarding the jury’s finding that Owner agreed to indemnify Manager for its attorney’s fees. We agree.
An indemnitee may recover the expenses of litigating an indemnified claim if the right of indemnity is implied by law or arises by contract.
Fisher Construction Co. v. Riggs,
Indemnity agreements are to be strictly construed in favor of the indemnitor.
Smith v. Scott,
Owner directs our attention to sections 3.1 and 4.2 of the management agreement, which explicitly indemnify Keystone for attorney’s fees incurred in the particular types of actions enumerated therein. Owner contends that the explicit provision for attorney’s fees in those sections implies the exclusion of attorney’s fees from section 4.1, under the legal maxim,
expressio uni-us est exclusio alterius.
We hold that Owner’s contractual promise to “defend ... all suits in connection with the premises” includes the obligation to pay for the defense of such suits. Even the strict interpretation and narrow reading of the agreement urged by Owner would not permit disregard of the plain meaning of the language employed.
Young v. Kilroy Oil Company of Texas, Inc.,
The trial court submitted an issue inquiring whether Manager materially breached the management agreement that it executed with Owner. The jury answered in the negative. The negligence issues that Owner requested were merely different shades or phases of the special issue submitted because the acts or omissions alleged as negligence would have constituted a breach of the management agreement.
See Williams v. Texas Refining, Inc.,
In their second cross-point, Owner contends that the trial court erred in disregarding jury findings that would have permitted them to recover damages and attorney’s fees from Tenant. However, Owner did not file an appeal bond to perfect an independent appeal against Tenant. An appellee that fails to file an appeal bond cannot assert error against another appel-lee.
Stendebach v. Campbell,
The trial court’s judgment is reversed and rendered in part, and affirmed in part.
Notes
. At the close of the evidence, Tenant non-suited Pacifica Real Property Investments Corporation and such defendant is not a party to the appeal.
. In response to Special Issue No. 9, the jury found reasonable attorney’s fees for Manager in the amounts of $5,300 for trial preparation; $5,000 for appeal to the Texas Court of Appeals; $3,000 for application for writ of error to the
. It was not objected below nor is it argued here that the issue as submitted propounded a question of law or a mixed question of law and fact to the jury. We express no opinion thereon.
