Pacesetter Pools, Inc. (“Pacesetter”) and Pierce Homes, Inc. (“Pierce Homes”) were joint tortfeasors in an underlying cause of action for damage to the foundation of a home. The plaintiff prevailed in arbitration against Pierce Homes. Pierce Homes paid the arbitrator’s 1 award and sought contribution from Pacesetter. A jury found that the plaintiffs damages were caused by the negligence of Pacesetter and Pierce Homes and attributed the negligence ninety percent to Pacesetter and ten percent to Pierce Homes. The district court rendered judgment for Pierce Homes and against Pacesetter for $193,986.80 — ninety percent of the arbitrator’s award — plus interest and court costs. The court did not award attorney’s fees. Pacesetter appeals the award of damages, and Pierce Homes appeals the court’s denial of attorney’s fees. We will affirm the district-court judgment.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Julie Allcox 2 sued Pacesetter and Pierce Homes for damages to a home she purchased from Pierce Homes in Flower Mound. Alcox alleged that Pacesetter and Pierce Homes had negligently designed and built the home’s foundation and swimming pool and, as a result of such negligence, she sustained damages. 3 Pierce Homes cross-claimed against Pacesetter, asserting that any construction defects were the fault of Pacesetter and that “Pacesetter is liable to Pierce Homes for indemnity, contribution, and for any amounts Pierce Homes may be compelled to pay to [Alcox] as a result of the occurrences made the basis of [Alcox’s] Lawsuit.”
Allcox filed a motion to compel arbitration and plea in abatement, asserting that she was entitled to have her claims against Pierce Homes arbitrated pursuant to an arbitration clause contained in a homeowner’s warranty that Pierce Homes had provided Allcox. Over Pacesetter’s objection, the district court granted the motion and abated the action pending arbitration. Pacesetter was not a party to the warranty and refused to participate in the arbitration. The arbitrator awarded Alcox $215,541, including attorney’s and expert’s *830 fees. 4
Pierce Homes moved to confirm the arbitrator’s award. The district court rendered an interlocutory judgment granting Pierce Homes’ motion, converting the arbitrator’s award “into a partial judgment that is final as to [Allcox’s] claims against Pierce Homes,” and granting Allcox judgment against Pierce Homes for the damages, fees, and expenses awarded by the arbitrator. The interlocutory judgment recited that Pierce Homes had made payments to Allcox satisfying its liability under the arbitrator’s award before the judgment’s rendition. 5
Asserting that the arbitration award had resolved any liability they may have had to Allcox, both Pacesetter and Pierce Homes filed motions for summary judgment, asking the district court to dismiss Allcox’s action against them. The court granted the motions and realigned the parties, leaving only Pierce Homes’ claims against Pacesetter to be adjudicated.
Pierce Homes and Pacesetter stipulated that the arbitrator’s award of $215,541 constituted the total amount of Allcox’s damages.
At trial, Pierce Homes presented three expert witnesses who testified that improper construction by Pacesetter of the swimming pool and related decking had caused water to saturate the soils under the Allcox home. Pacesetter offered no expert testimony in opposition. The jury returned a verdict that both Pacesetter and Pierce Homes were negligent and caused the damage to the home. The jury apportioned the negligence ninety percent to Pacesetter and ten percent to Pierce Homes and found $81,000 to be a reasonable attorney’s fee “for the necessary services of Pierce Homes’ attorneys in representing Pierce Homes in the arbitration action brought by [Allcox].”
Pacesetter filed a motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, asserting that there was no legal theory under which it could be held liable to Pierce Homes and, in any event, Pierce Homes was not entitled to recover attorney’s fees. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 301. The district court rendered final judgment in favor of Pierce Homes in the amount of $193,986.90 — ninety percent of the stipulated damages — but did not award attorney’s fees. 6
In three issues on appeal, Pacesetter contends that: (1) Pierce Homes was not entitled to contribution after paying the arbitration award in full satisfaction of All-cox’s damages; (2) Pierce Homes did not have a right of subrogation under the warranty and, if it did, such right was barred by Pierce Homes’ voluntarily paying the arbitration award; and (3) Pierce Homes did not have standing to assert a cause of action for negligence and, if it did, Pierce Homes waived its cause of action by not requesting that it be submitted to the jury. Pierce Homes also appeals, contending that the district court erred in refusing to award it the attorney’s fees it incurred in defending Allcox’s claims.
DISCUSSION
Standard of Review
Whether Pierce Homes was entitled to either contribution or subrogation and whether it had standing to assert a
*831
cause of action for negligence are questions of law. “When an issue turns on a pure question of law, we do not give any particular deference to legal conclusions of the trial court and apply a
de novo
standard of review.”
Trinity Indus., Inc. v. Ashland, Inc.,
Contribution
By its first issue, Pacesetter asserts that Pierce Homes was not entitled to contribution. Contribution is allowed in Texas only among joint tortfeasors.
See Bonniwell v. Beech Aircraft Corp.,
Pacesetter recognizes that chapter 33 might provide Pierce Homes with a right of contribution but asserts that Pierce Homes waived any such right. Pacesetter bases its assertion on the fact that Pierce Homes paid the arbitration award. Pacesetter contends that the arbitration award is no different from a settlement, as it was paid in full before the district court’s confirming the award or conducting a trial to determine contribution. Pacesetter points out that Pierce Homes did not seek to vacate the arbitration award, nor did it await trial on the remaining issues in the cause, including the issue of whether, based on proportionate responsibility, Pierce Homes was jointly and severally liable for Allcox’s entire award.
The civil practice and remedies code does not include a definition of either “settled” or “settlement.” Section 33.011(5) defines “settling person” as “a person who at the time of submission has paid or promised to pay money or anything of monetary value to a claimant at any time in consideration of potential liability.”
Id.
§ 33.011(5). In reviewing the meaning of “settled” or “settlement,” the Texas Su
*832
preme Court has held “that ‘settlement,’ as used in the comparative-responsibility law, means money or anything of value paid or promised to a claimant in consideration of potential liability.”
C & H Nationwide, Inc. v. Thompson,
On Allcox’s motion, the district court ordered her claims against Pierce Homes to arbitration pursuant to a binding arbitration agreement. Arbitration is not settlement. An arbitrator’s award has the same effect as a judgment of a court of last resort.
Holk v. Biard,
Section 33.016(b) grants a right of contribution only to a “liable defendant.”
Id.
§ 33.016(b). A liable defendant is “a defendant against whom a judgment can be entered for at least a portion of the damages awarded to the claimant.”
Id.
§ 33.011(3). The interlocutory judgment against Pierce Homes did not absolve Pacesetter of liability to Allcox. The judgment established the total amount of damages due Allcox and found that Pierce Homes was liable for such damages pursuant to its warranty. The interlocutory judgment did not attempt to determine negligence culpability between Pierce Homes and Pacesetter. Both parties, in their respective motions for summary
*833
judgment against Allcox, invoked the “one-satisfaction rule,” asserting that Allcox could not seek damages beyond those awarded in the interlocutory judgment.
See Stewart Title Guar. Co. v. Sterling,
Under the facts presented by this case, we hold that, pursuant to chapter 33 of the civil practice and remedies code, Pierce Homes is not a settling person but is a hable defendant. Thus, Pierce Homes did not waive its right to seek contribution against Pacesetter. We overrule Pacesetter’s first issue.
Subrogation and Negligence
By its second and third issues, Pacesetter posits that Pierce Homes has no subro-gation rights and may not recover under a theory of neghgence unless it suffered damage to a property interest. Because we have held that Pierce Homes was entitled to recovery against Pacesetter for contribution, we need not consider whether Pierce Homes was also entitled to recovery through subrogation or negligence. Additionally, in its brief to this Court, Pierce Homes waives any recovery based on the jury’s negligence finding. We thus do not consider Pacesetter’s second and third issues. See Tex.R.App. P. 47.1 (opinions to be as brief as practicable).
Attorney’s Fees
Pierce Homes appeals the district court’s refusal to award the attorney’s fees it incurred in defending the arbitration demanded by Allcox and ordered by the court. The court asked the jury to determine the reasonable attorney’s fees incurred by Pierce Homes “in the arbitration action brought by [Allcox].” The jury responded, “$81,000.00.” However, the district-court judgment is silent as to attorney’s fees.
The availability of attorney’s fees is a question of law.
Cf. Holland v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
Generally, attorney’s fees may not be recovered “unless provided for by statute or by contract between the parties.”
Dallas Cent. Appraisal Dist. v. Seven Inv. Co.,
Pacesetter responds that Pierce Homes’ theory of recovery is inapplicable because the equitable recovery of attorney’s fees is premised on the prior litigation’s arising
solely
from the wrongful act of the party against whom the fees are sought. Here, because the jury found that Allcox’s damages were caused by the negligent conduct of
both
Pierce Homes and Pacesetter, equitable principles do not allow Pierce Homes to recover its previously incurred attorney’s fees as damages.
See Dayton Hudson Corp. v. Eldridge,
The case now before us is likewise distinguishable from
Baja Energy
and the cases that follow it. Baja Energy, the operator of an oil and gas well, contracted with Ball to plug the well. The contract provided that Baja was the owner of the well and would defend title to it.
Baja Energy,
Lesikar,
the other case on which Pierce Homes relies, is of questionable applicability. In
Lesikar
the defendants wrongfully transferred operations of an oil and gas lease, forcing the plaintiff to contest the transfer before the Texas Railroad Commission.
Lesikar,
Here, Allcox alleged negligence against both Pierce Homes and Pacesetter, and the jury found that both were in fact negligent to some degree. We hold that the district court, under the circumstances presented by this case, did not err in refusing to award against Pacesetter the attorney’s fees incurred by Pierce Homes in defending Allcox’s arbitration claim. We overrule Pierce Homes’ issue.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the district-court judgment.
Notes
. Texas law uses the terms “arbiter” and "arbitrator” interchangeably.
Compare, e.g., J.J. Gregory Gourmet Servs., Inc. v. Antone’s Import Co.,
. The suit was originally filed in the name of "Robert and Julie Stevens.” However, during the pendency of the suit and before arbitration, the Stevenses divorced, and Julie Stevens changed her name to "Julie Allcox.” Robert Stevens quitclaimed his interest in the home to Allcox, and she was the sole claimant in the arbitration. The district court dismissed Robert Stevens’s claims, and he is not a party to this appeal. For convenience, we will refer solely to Allcox as the plaintiff in the underlying suit.
.Allcox also sued Larry F. Smith, who she alleged "participated in the design of the foundation and/or the construction of the foundation of the home.” The district court rendered summary judgment for Smith, and he is not a party to this appeal.
.The arbitrator also ordered that Pierce Homes pay $8441 for American Arbitration Association administrative fees and expenses, including $980 that had been paid by Allcox, and arbitrator's fees of $19,832.42, including $5900 that had been paid by Allcox.
. The interlocutory judgment was signed by Judge Vicki Isaacks.
. The final judgment was signed by Judge Sam Houston.
. Pacesetter, in its brief, states that Pierce Homes asserted other theories of contribution in the district court, but the only theory under which it could recover is that found in chapter 33 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. §§ 33.001-.017 (West 1997 & Supp.2002). Because, in this Court, Pierce Homes briefs and argues a right to contribution only under chapter 33, we will not discuss other theories of contribution.
. The parties join issue here over whether the district court erred in granting Pacesetter's motion for judgment
non obstante veredicto
with regard to the jury's finding of the amount of reasonable attorney’s fees incurred by Pierce Homes in defending the arbitration.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 301. Because the availability of attorney’s fees is a question of law, "the jury’s finding about the
amount
of reasonable attorney’s fees is immaterial to the ultimate legal issue of whether such fees are recoverable....”
Holland v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
