CONSTRUCTION DEFECT JOURNAL

"News and Information for Construction Defect and Claims Professionals"

CONSTRUCTION DEFECT JOURNAL - ISSUE 242749 - SUNDAY, MAY 11, 2025

The Devil is in the Details: The Texas Construction Trust Fund Pitfalls Residential Remodelers (and General Contractors) Should Avoid

Businessmen signing documents over coffee

Save yourself the headache of running afoul of the Texas Construction Trust Fund rules and provide your clients with clear, transparent accounting from the outset.

December 26, 2022
Rochelle Cabe & Roni Most - Kahana Feld

A tale of Texas Construction Trust Account woe. You’re a contractor running a business doing interior remodels for clients in a major metropolitan Texas area. You sign up clients with a contract developed by our friends at LegalZoom and get your team to work. Three months into your remodeling project with Mr. and Mrs. “you thought they were happy” Clients, you get this letter:

“Consistent with the requirements of §162.006 and §162.007 of the Texas Property Code, Mr. and Mrs. “you thought they were happy” Clients demand a full and complete accounting of all funds you have received from any source relating to this project.”

What should you do? Should you ignore it? Should you respond? Fear sets in, you call your crew, and you stop the work. Mr. and Mrs. “you thought they were happy” Clients become Mr. and Mrs. “irate and angry” Clients and they sue you alleging breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract, and perhaps fraud.

Reprinted courtesy of Rochelle Cabe, Kahana Feld and Roni Most, Kahana Feld
Ms. Cabe may be contacted at rcabe@kahanafeld.com
Mr. Most may be contacted at rmost@kahanafeld.com


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