OPINION
Opinion By
S & I Mаnagement, Inc. appeals the summary judgment rendered in favor of Sungju Choi a/k/a Sung Ju Choi a/k/a Sam Choi and The Michael Group, L.L.C. Appellant brings four issues asserting the trial court erred in granting appellees’ motions for summary judgment. We affirm the trial court’s judgment as to The Michael Group, we reverse the judgment as to Choi, and we remand the cause for further prоceedings.
BACKGROUND
In 2005, Steven Lee was looking to purchase a new business for his company, appellant. He met with Choi, a real estate agent or broker, 1 who advertised that he worked for The Michael Group real estate brokerage. Choi directed appellant to a gas station and store owned by New Chu- *852 dhri Enterprises, Inc., and appellant agreed to buy the businesses. Before appellant purchased the property, Choi and Lee were surveying the businesses’ neighborhood when Lee asked Choi about a nearby property with a defunct gas station. Choi told Lee that no one would move into that space because the gas station there was decrepit and old. Chоi said he would ask Chudhri Iqbal, the owner of New Chudhri Enterprises, about the property with the defunct gas station. Later, Choi told Lee that no one would move into that property because the gas tanks were old and leaking. After appellant purchased the businesses from New Chudhri Enterprises, Quiktrip opened a gas station on the lot with the old gas station. 2 Lee stated in his affidavit that after he bought the businesses, other brokers told him “that all the brokers knew about the coming of Quiktrip about the time I purchased the businesses.” He stated he “never would have purchased the business had [he] known that Quiktrip was coming into that space.” “As a result of purchasing the business and with Quiktrip having come, the business has lost revenue and with it value.” Lee stated he “had to sell one of [the businesses] to keep the other afloat.”
Appellant sued Choi and The Michael Group for fraud, violations of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices-Consumer Protection Act (DTPA), negligent misrepresentation, breach of fiduciary duty, and conspiracy with Iqbal and New Chudhri Enterprises. 3 Appellant’s causes of action against The Michael Group assert that The Michael Group is vicariously liable under the doctrine of respondeat superior for Choi’s tortious conduct. Appellant sought actual and exemplary damages as well as attorney’s fees. Choi and The Michael Group filed no-evidence motions for summary judgment, and The Michael Group also filed a traditional motion for summary judgment. The trial court granted appel-lees’ motions for summary judgment.
TRADITIONAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT
In the first issue, appellant contends the trial court erred in granting The Michael Group’s traditional motion for summary judgment, which asserted The Michael Group was not liable as a matter of law under the doctrine of respondeat superior for Choi’s torts.
The standard for reviewing a traditional summary judgment is well established.
Nixon v. Mr. Prop. Mgmt. Co.,
Under the doctrine of respondeat superior, an employer is vicariously liable for the negligence of an agent or employee acting within the scope of his agency or employment even though the principal or employеr has not personally committed a wrong.
Baptist Mem’l Hosp. Sys. v. Sampson,
The Michael Group attached a form contract to its motion for summary judgment with an affidavit of its vice-president, Kern Coleman, who testified the document was “a true and correct copy of the Indеpendent Contractor Agreement entered into between [The Michael Group] and Sungju Choi.” The Independent Contractor Agreement provided:
The Michael Group, LLC, and _ (“Contractor”) ... hereby agree as follows:
Contractor agrees to work for Broker as an INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR, and not as [an] employee; however, Contractor understands that Broker is lеgally accountable for the activities of the Contractor. All costs and obligations incurred by Contractor in conducting his/her independent business shall be paid solely by Contractor, who will hold Broker harmless from any and all such costs and obligations. Contractor will act independently as to the management of his/her time and efforts, and will be responsiblе for all of his/her expenses, such as industry association, dues, licensing renewals, pagers, cellular telephones, etc. as they are incurred.
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Contractor understands and agrees that because Contractor is an Independent Contractor and not an employee of Broker, Broker will not withhold any Federal or State Income Tax, Social Security (FICA) or Unemployment (FUTA) taxes from Contractor’s commission paid. Contractor is personally responsible for paying any and all Federal and State Income, Social Security and other taxes, and for maintaining all expense records as required by law, and represents to Broker that all such amount •will be withheld and paid. Contraсtor shall indemnify and hold Broker harmless from any liability or costs thereof. *854 Contractor further understands and acknowledges that Broker provides no Workman’s Compensation coverage. Contractor hereby specifically waives such coverage and represents to Broker that he/she understands that if Contractor desires such coverage, Contractor must personally obtain such coverage.
(Emphasis omitted.) Nothing in the contract gave The Michael Group the right to control the means and methods of Choi’s work.
Appellant argues that the Agreement was insufficient to establish Choi’s independent-contractor status as a matter of law because it does not identify the contraсtor and it is not signed by the alleged contractor. Under the statute of frauds, certain contracts are not enforceable unless they are in writing and signed by the person against whom enforcement of the contract is sought. See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code Ann. § 26.01(a)(2) (West 2009). However, The Michael Group was not seeking to enforce the Agreement against Choi or anyone еlse; it attached the Agreement to show the terms of the agreement between it and Choi. Appellant cites no authority showing the Agreement was inadmissible or that it had to be signed for its terms to be admissible in evidence in a dispute with a third party such as appellant. Coleman testified in his affidavit that the terms in the Agreement constituted the terms between it and Choi, аnd appellant does not explain why Coleman’s testimony, together with the Agreement, did not establish the terms of the contract between Choi and The Michael Group.
Appellant also points to the statement in the Agreement that “Contractor understands that Broker is legally accountable for the activities of Contractor.” However, whethеr The Michael Group is vicariously liable to third parties under the doctrine of respondeat superior for Choi’s torts depends on whether it had sole control over the means and methods of Choi’s work. Nothing in the contract, and no evidence presented by appellant, purports to give it that authority. The statement that “Contractor understаnds that Broker is legally accountable for the activities of Contractor” did not give The Michael Group sole control over the manner and means used by Choi to sell real estate.
The Independent Contractor Agreement, with Coleman’s affidavit, established Choi’s independent-contractor relationship with The Michael Group. Appellаnt does not assert on appeal that it presented any evidence controverting this relationship.
See Bell,
NO-EVIDENCE SUMMARY JUDGMENT
In the second issue, appellant asserts the trial court erred in granting Choi’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment. We review a no-evidence summary judgment under the same legal sufficiency standard used to review a directed verdict.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(i);
Flood,
Summary Judgment Evidence
Appellant attaсhed the affidavit of its president, Lee, to its response to appel-lees’ motions for summary judgment. Choi made numerous objections to this affidavit, and he submitted a draft order for the court’s rulings on the objections. The trial court did not make a written ruling on the objections. However, in a subsequent hearing, Choi requested the court to rule on his objections to Lеe’s affidavit. The court stated, “Because your motions were granted, you can assume that the objections have been granted.”
For a ruling on an objection to summary judgment evidence to be effective, the ruling must be reduced to writing, signed by the trial court, and entered of record.
Utils. Pipeline Co. v. Am. Petrofi-na Mktg.,
On appeal, Choi argues that much of Lee’s affidavit should not be considered as evidence because it contains hearsay; it is self-serving statements of an interested witness that are not clear, positive, dirеct, credible, free from contradiction, and readily controvertible; and it is conclusory. Defects in the form of an affidavit must be objected to, the opposing party must have the opportunity to amend, and the trial court must rule on the objection; otherwise, the objection is waived and the objected-to material is in evidence.
See Hogan v. J. Higgins Trucking, Inc.,
Objections that statements in an affidavit are conclusory assert defects of substance, which may be raised for the first time on appeal.
Brown v. Brown,
Causation
Choi’s nо-evidence motion for summary judgment asserted appellant had no evidence to support the causation element of its causes of action, that is, that Choi’s conduct was a proximate cause or producing cause of appellant’s damages.
4
For negligent misrepresentation, fraud, and breach of fiduciary duty, the plaintiff must рrove proximate causation.
Finger v. Ray,
Lee testified in his аffidavit that his broker, Choi, represented to him that the vacant gas station would remain vacant, that all brokers knew Quiktrip was moving into that space, that he relied on Choi’s representations, that appellant would not have bought “the business” if he had known Quiktrip was moving into the vacant gas station, and that “as a result of purchasing the business and with Quiktrip having comе, the business has lost revenue and with it value.” This evidence shows Choi’s representations about the vacant gas station were a substantial factor in appellant’s purchasing the businesses and that he would not have purchased the businesses if Choi had told him Quiktrip would be moving into the vacant gas station. As Lee’s affidavit demonstrates, if appellant had not purchased the gas station then it would not have suffered the alleged loss of revenue and value from Quiktrip’s presence. We conclude Lee’s testimony constitutes some evidence of the causation element of appellant’s causes of action.
We conclude the trial court erred in granting Choi’s no-evidence motion for summаry judgment, and we sustain appellant’s second issue.
Conspiracy
In the fourth issue, appellant contends the trial court erred in granting the no-evidence motion for summary judgment asserting appellant had no evidence to support its conspiracy allegations. Appellant alleged that Choi and Iqbal agreed to commit the acts constituting the torts appellant alleged. Choi asserted in his motion for summary judgment that if appellant had no evidence to support its tort claims, then it had no evidence to support the *857 conspiracy claim. Because we have concluded appellant presented some evidence on the only element of appellant’s causes of action that Choi challenged, we conclude the trial court erred in granting Choi’s motion for summary judgment on appellant’s conspiracy cause of action. We sustain appellant’s fourth issue as to Choi.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of The Michael Group, we reverse the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of Choi, and we remand the causе to the trial court for further proceedings.
Notes
. Lee stated in his affidavit that Choi was a "broker,” but The Michael Group attached a document to its traditional motion for summary judgment indicating Choi was an "agent.”
. Appellees assert in their motions for summary judgment and in their brief on appeal that Quiktrip moved into the' vacant gas station two years after aрpellant purchased the businesses. No evidence in the record supports this statement.
. Appellant also sued Iqbal and New Chudhri Enterprises for a variety of causes of action related to the sale of the businesses. After the trial court granted appellees' motions for summary judgment, the court severed appellant’s causes of аction against appellees, rendering a final judgment on appellant’s causes of action against appellees.
. Choi did not move for summary judgment on the ground that appellant had no evidence of any of the other elements of the causes of action other than causation. Accordingly, we do not consider whether Lee’s affidavit contained any evidence of any element other than causation.
