Chief Justice Hecht delivered the opinion of the Court.
Chapter 95 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code limits a property owner's liability for injuries to a contractor "who constructs, repairs, renovates, or modifies an improvement to real property".
First Texas Bank asked Chris Carpenter to investigate a leak in the Bank's roof. For years, Carpenter was the Bank's "go-to guy" for roof repairs. Carpenter reported that the roof had hail damage. The Bank decided to make an insurance claim and use the proceeds to repair the damage, and possibly make other repairs as well. The Bank asked Carpenter to show the insurance adjuster the damage. As Carpenter later testified:
The Bank's roof has two tiers. Carpenter and the adjuster climbed to the first tier using Carpenter's ladder, then used a ladder the Bank had stored there to climb to the second tier. While descending from the second tier, Carpenter fell, crushing two vertebrae.
Carpenter sued the Bank, alleging that its ladder was defective. The Bank invoked Chapter 95, which "applies only to a claim: (1) against a property owner ... for personal injury ... to ... a contractor...; and (2) that arises from the condition or use of an improvement to real property where the contractor ... constructs, repairs, renovates, or modifies the improvement."
The Bank contended that it could not be liable for Carpenter's injuries because it did not control his work or know of any defect in its ladder. In response, Carpenter argued that Chapter 95 is inapplicable because he had no contract with the Bank and was therefore not its contractor, and because he was not engaged in the work described by the statute at the time he was injured. The trial court granted summary judgment for the Bank.
The court of appeals reversed, holding that "Carpenter was not a `contractor' as contemplated by the statute."
The court did not reach Carpenter's argument that Chapter 95 is also inapplicable because he was not injured while performing any of the work described in the statute.
We granted the Bank's petition for review.
Chapter 95 does not define "contractor", so we give the word its ordinary meaning unless a more precise meaning is apparent from the context of the statute.
Chapter 95 is not a statute regulating contracting in general but one prescribing the conditions under which an owner is liable to someone working on improvements to real property. Its applicability turns on the kind of work being done, not on whether an agreement for the work to be done is written, or formal, or detailed. Many agreements for such work are informal. In Carpenter's words, he was a "handshake guy" and worked for the Bank without "16 pages of contracts to paint or fix something." The statute covers not only contractors who have agreements with owners, but their employees, subcontractors, and their subcontractors' employees, none of whom would ordinarily have a contract with the owner. The statute cannot fairly be read to cover only contractors with formal written contracts, but still cover subcontractors and employees with no contracts at all with the owner.
As used in Chapter 95, a "contractor" is someone who makes improvements to real property. Carpenter was, by his own admission, the Bank's roofing contractor. As a matter of law, he was a "contractor" under Chapter 95. The court of appeals erred in concluding that Chapter 95 was, for that reason, inapplicable.
But Chapter 95 does not cover everyone injured while working on real property; it expressly covers only contractors, subcontractors, and their employees "who construct[ ], repair[ ], renovate[ ], or modify] an improvement to real property".
The evidence before us does not establish that Carpenter's injury occurred while he was performing work described by Chapter 95. The Bank initially requested that Carpenter investigate a leak, and then when he found hail damage, asked him to show the insurance adjuster. In his original petition, Carpenter pleaded that "it was [his] understanding that he was to perform the needed repairs to the roof", not that the Bank had the same understanding. Carpenter testified only that "the general plan" was "possibly", "maybe", to use insurance proceeds to repair the hail damages, and "if possible", make other repairs to the roof, and that it "made sense" that he would get the job.
The Bank argues that roof repairs are a process, and that Carpenter was well into the work when he was injured. The Bank points to Gorman v. Meng, a case involving the electrocution death of a worker asked by a convenience store owner to investigate why customers were suffering electrical shocks when touching the doors to a walk-in cooler.
We disagree that the findings on which the Gorman court relied supported its conclusion that the decedent's work was covered by Chapter 95. The diagnosis the decedent was asked to make could have been the first step of the repair process, as one might easily expect, but it need not have been. The present case is clearer. Had the Bank hired Carpenter to fix the roof, and a necessary first step was demonstrating hail damage to the adjuster and obtaining insurance proceeds, then he would have been engaged in repairing or modifying the roof, an improvement to real property. But the evidence does not come close to establishing those things. Rather, the evidence fairly shows that the Bank had never fully decided what, if any, repairs to make to the roof before Carpenter was injured. Had the insurance claim been denied, the Bank might have decided not to make any roof repairs. Carpenter might well have expected to get the job, if one was let, as he had before, but there is no evidence that the Bank had decided whom to hire.
The record does not establish that the Bank had retained Carpenter to perform work covered by Chapter 95 at the time he was injured. Whether Chapter 95 applies remains in dispute, and the trial court erred in granting summary judgment for the Bank. For these reasons, the case must be remanded to the trial court for further proceedings. The judgment of the court of appeals is therefore
Affirmed.