Texas Shortens Its Statute of Repose To 6 Years, With Limitations

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Texas has shortened its statute of repose from the existing 10-year statute for builders of new homes to 6-years under specific conditions.

October 2, 2023
Jason Daniel Feld & Roni Most - Kahana Feld

Effective June 9, 2023, Texas has shortened its statute of repose from the existing 10-year statute for builders of new homes to 6-years under specific conditions. The significantly shorter statute of repose bars suits against construction contractors of detached one-and two-family homes and townhomes, filed six years after the substantial completion of such homes, where the contractor also furnished a written warranty in compliance with the statute. Notably, projects including apartments, mixed-use, and hotels are not covered by the new law. It is also noted that a grey area in the law exists as to whether condominiums will be covered by the statute. The statute of repose strictly bars the filing of any action, claim or arbitration demand regardless of when the injury was actually discovered (latent defects) and is separate and distinct from any applicable statute of limitations.

The New Texas Statute of Repose Law
Under the Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 16.009, persons who construct or repair improvements to real property cannot be sued for defective or unsafe conditions of the property or deficiencies in the construction or repair of the improvement later than 10 years after substantial completion of the improvement, except in certain narrow circumstances. This statute is known as the “statute of repose.” The statute applies not only to suits for construction defects, but also personal injury, wrongful death, contribution, and indemnity.

Reprinted courtesy of Jason Daniel Feld, Kahana Feld and Roni Most, Kahana Feld

Mr. Feld may be contacted at jfeld@kahanafeld.com
Mr. Most may be contacted at rmost@kahanafeld.com



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