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CourtListener opinion 10564994

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pending
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806 S.W.2d 791
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pending
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Machine-draft public headnote: CourtListener opinion 10564994 is included in the LexyCorpus QDRO sample set as a public CourtListener opinion with relevance to QDRO procedure / domestic relations order issues. The current annotation is conservative: it identifies source provenance, relevance signals, and evidence quotes for attorney/agent retrieval. It is not a Willie-approved legal headnote yet.

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Category: QDRO procedure / domestic relations order issues

Evidence quotes

QDRO

ain lots 4X and then 2X contrasts with the Phase Nine Plat's forward-looking language that lot 2X is "to be" dedicated to the City. Cf. Araujo v. Araujo, 493 S.W.3d 232, 237 (Tex. App.––San Antonio 2016, no pet.) (holding that divorce decree's language that a QDRO was "to be" entered after decree did not evidence a present intent to render a QDRO in the decree). 18 disputes the meaning the trial court placed on the word maintain. The Declaration does not define the term; thus, we must look to its ordinarily accepted meaning. Black's Law Dictionary defines maintain in three applicable ways: "1. To continue (som

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reporter: 806 S.W.2d 791
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May 14, 2026

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Clean opinion text

In the
 Court of Appeals
 Second Appellate District of Texas
 at Fort Worth
 ___________________________
 No. 02-22-00192-CV
 ___________________________

MUSTANG PARK OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC. AND LEGACY SOUTHWEST
 PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, LLC, Appellants

 V.

 CHRISTOPHER LUMLEY, Appellee

 On Appeal from the 16th District Court
 Denton County, Texas
 Trial Court No. 20-7230-16

 Before Kerr, Birdwell, and Walker, JJ.
 Memorandum Opinion by Justice Birdwell
 MEMORANDUM OPINION

 This appeal concerns whether a homeowners' association with a contractual

duty to "maintain" a subdivision common area's drainage facilities is liable under the

subdivision's Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (Declaration)

for water damage to a subdivision homeowner's lot caused by water flowing from

those common-area drainage facilities. The trial court held that Appellants Mustang

Park Owners Association, Inc. (the Association) and its property manager Legacy

Southwest Property Management, LLC were liable under the Declaration and awarded

Appellee Christopher Lumley (1) specific performance and damages, (2) a declaratory

judgment, and (3) attorney's fees. Because we hold that (1) the evidence does not

show that Legacy was liable under the Declaration, (2) the evidence is insufficient to

support the trial court's entire damages award and all of the specific-performance

relief, and (3) only part of the declaratory relief was proper, we reverse and vacate the

judgment in part and suggest a remittitur. Regardless of whether Lumley accepts our

suggestion of remittitur, we will remand this case to the trial court to recalculate

attorney's fees.

 I. Factual and Procedural Background

A. Mustang Park Subdivision

 Mustang Park is a residential subdivision in Carrollton, Texas, that was

developed in phases. On April 19, 2013, JBGL Mustang, LLC (the Declarant) filed in

 2
 the county deed records a "Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions for

Mustang Park Phase Five."

 In November 2013, Mustang Park Phase Six was annexed to the subdivision;

JBGL filed a "Supplemental Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions

for Mustang Park Phase Six," making Phase Six subject to the Declaration. The Phase

Six Plat identifies a lot 4X (also labeled on another page as Lot 4X Block A) and

includes the following sentences, under the title, "HOME OWNER'S

ASSOCIATION NOTES": (1) "All open space and screening walls shall be owned

and maintained by the . . . Association" and (2) "All ‘X' lots shall be considered open

space lots." Directly underneath the last sentence, the plat states, "Lot 4X Block A

shall be dedicated to the City of Carrollton and maintained by the" Association. No

other X lots are located on this plat.

 In December 2014, Mustang Park Phase Nine was added to the subdivision; it

includes the addition of a lot identified as "LOT 2X BLOCK A OPEN SPACE TO

BE DEDICATED TO THE CITY OF CARROLLTON AND TO BE

MAINTAINED BY THE" Association. The Phase Nine Plat includes the same

open-space ownership and maintenance language as the Phase Six Plat underneath the

title "HOME OWNER'S ASSOCIATION NOTES." The only other X lot noted on

the plat is immediately adjacent to lot 2X and is identified as "LOT 1X BLOCK A

OPEN SPACE TO BE DEDICATED TO AND MAINTAINED BY THE"

Association.

 3
 Lots 2X and 4X abut one another and together constitute an area known as the

Greenbelt, which is a subdivision Common Area according to the Declaration's

definition. 1 The Greenbelt has a drainage system that was installed by JBGL. The

drainage system includes a swale that runs along the backside of the subdivision lots

that abut the Greenbelt. Rainwater flows from the Greenbelt via the drainage system

into the swale. Within the same area of the Greenbelt––about ten feet from the

backyards of the abutting homeowners' lots––a sidewalk/walking trail runs along its

length, parallel to the homeowners' lots.

 According to the Declaration, the Association manages Mustang Park and is

responsible for maintaining its Common Areas. As authorized by the Declaration, the

Association's Board of Directors engaged Legacy to serve as the Association's

property manager.

B. The Lawsuit

 Lumley owns a residential lot in Mustang Park Phase Six that backs up to the

Greenbelt. The Greenbelt's drainage system diverts rainwater to the swale that abuts

Lumley's yard. As water moves through the swale, it can overflow a wall that separates

the back portion of Lumley's lot from the swale and the Greenbelt. After a heavy

rainstorm, Lumley's yard floods from the water and, consequently, has at times

become inhabited by crawfish and mosquitos. The flooding often results in ankle-

 1
 Despite being named "LOT 2X" and "LOT 4X" on the plat, the Greenbelt––
as a Common Area under the Declaration––is excluded from the Declaration's
definition of "Lot."

 4
 deep, standing water that does not recede for several days. The overflowing water and

resulting pooling interferes with Lumley's and his family's use and enjoyment of his

yard and has damaged his lawn, plants, and soil.

 On numerous occasions, Lumley asked Appellants to address the Greenbelt's

drainage problem. From May 2018 to the time he filed this lawsuit in 2020, Lumley

reached out to Appellants approximately sixty to seventy times to complain about the

flooding and request that Appellants correct the drainage problem. At first,

Appellants, having previously maintained the Greenbelt for years, informed Lumley

that under the Declaration, they were responsible for the maintenance of the

Greenbelt and the drainage system. Appellants attempted, on at least two occasions,

to implement solutions to correct the drainage issue, but those solutions failed.

 Lumley eventually sued Appellants2 for breach of contract and declaratory

relief, among other causes of action.3 Lumley asserted in his petition that Appellants

"materially breached the [Declaration] by . . . failing to fix, repair, or reinstall a faulty

drain located within the Common Area"; "continued to refuse to maintain or take

proficient corrective action on the drain behind [Lumley's] home"; and refused "to

assess or accept responsibility for" the Greenbelt. For breach of the Declaration, he

 Lumley also sued JBGL, but he nonsuited those claims.
 2

 3
 Lumley included additional claims for negligence, gross negligence, negligent
misrepresentation, civil conspiracy, actual fraud, and intentional infliction of
emotional distress, on which the trial court eventually declined to grant relief. He
further sought an accounting and temporary and permanent injunctive relief, which
the trial court denied.

 5
 sought specific performance, damages, and attorney's fees. Lumley sought

declarations that the Association "is responsible for the maintenance and upkeep of

the" Greenbelt as well as "the repair, upkeep, re-installation, and ensuring the full

functionality of the drain located" on the Greenbelt.

 In the midst of the suit––on March 4, 2021––JBGL conveyed the Greenbelt to

the City of Carrollton by special warranty deed.

C. The Judgment

 Following a bench trial, the trial court rendered judgment for Lumley on his

breach-of-contract and declaratory-judgment claims:

 • The trial court awarded Lumley breach-of-contract damages from Appellants,
 jointly and severally, in the amount of $18,950.

 • The trial court ordered Appellants to

 (1) "repair" Lumley's "black-barred fence . . . to it[]s original condition"
 and do the same for the part of the black-barred fence located on
 Lumley's neighbor's property (Lumley's neighbor was not a party to the
 suit),

 (2) "repair" the drainage system on lot 4X according to certain
 specifications, 4

 4
 Those specifications are as follows:

 a. Runoff compounding along Lot 59 through Lot 48 created and eroded
 steeper side slopes. Curb integration between side slopes and the
 sidewalk;

 b. Greenbelt drainage currently converges and empties into the
 backyard of Lots 44 and 45. Installation of a subsurface drainage system
 to capture [G]reenbelt runoff to effectively reduce erosion, confine

 6
 (3) "pay all expenses, goods, equipment, and labor necessary for the
 installation of a new, properly functioning drain . . . on [l]ot 4X, as well
 as all stone surrounding [Lumley's] property . . . necessary to ensure
 proper drainage . . . to avoid flooding of [Lumley's] property," and

 (4) "repair and make ongoing additional repairs to the drainage system
 located within the common areas and [l]ot 4x in the future to ensure that
 there is not a drainage or flooding problem that affects [Lumley's]
 property."

 • The trial court rendered declaratory judgments that the Association "is legally
 responsible for the maintenance and upkeep of . . . [l]ot 4x . . . behind
 [Lumley's] property . . . due to [its] being a Common Area" and that the
 Association "is legally responsible for the repair, upkeep, re-installation, and
 ensuring the full functionality of the drain located on [l]ot 4x."

 • And the trial court awarded Lumley $75,006.67 in attorney's fees from
 Appellants, plus an additional $50,000 in conditional appellate attorney's fees.

 Upon request, the trial court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law and

then amended findings and conclusions.

 drainage into well-defined boundaries, and eliminate overflows onto
 Lots 44 and Lot 45;

 c. Approximately four 24-inch drains, 1,500 linear feet of 12-inch
 pipe, and other material and all labor required to install a subsurface
 drainage system beneath the [G]reenbelt;

 d. Installation of a brick retaining wall (approximately 200 square
 feet) offsetting the property boundary of Lots 42 through 44 to absolve
 erosion of steep side slopes in that arena;

 e. A subsurface system interconnecting downspouts while
 spanning the side and backyards of Lots 44 and Lot 45 to eradicate
 surface drainage and erosion. A subsurface drainage system to capture
 Greenbelt drainage must be implemented for effective lot drainage.

 7
 II. Issues on Appeal

We quote the six issues in Appellants' brief:

(1) The Trial Court erred in finding Legacy liable for any of the damages, as
Lumley presented no contractual or other relationship to Legacy, including
agency, under which to establish liability.

(2) The Trial Court erred in finding in favor of Lumley as the Declaration, the
contract under which Lumley was seeking enforcement[,] specifically states
(1) the Association is only responsible to maintain the Common Areas; (2) "in
no event shall . . . the Association be liable to maintain, repair or restore any
grading or drainage on or serving any Lot"; and (3) the Association [as the
Declarant's successor or assign], shall not be liable "for any loss of, or damage
done to, any shrubbery, grass, flowers, improvements, fences, sidewalks,
driveways, or buildings of any type or the contents thereof on any Lot caused
by any water levels, rising waters or drainage waters."

(3) The Trial Court erred in ordering a declaration under the Declaratory
Judgment[s] Act as (1) there was no justiciable controversy as to the rights and
status of the parties; and (2) the judgment rendered simply addressed whether
the Association breached the Declaration.

(4) The Trial Court erred in finding in favor of Lumley in the amount of
$18,950.00 as (1) there is no liability pursuant to the Declaration and (2) no
evidence was presented for an award in this amount.

(5) The Trial Court's judgment is insufficient, as [it] fails to "sufficiently
define . . . and protect the rights of the litigants," as the Association is unable to
ascertain what "properly functioning drain," "ensure proper drainage," and
"ensure that there is not a drainage or flooding problem" requires to satisfy the
judgment[.]

(6) As there was no liability under the Declaration, Lumley was not entitled to
attorney fees, and thus, the Trial Court erred in awarding Lumley $75,006.67 in
attorney fees.

 8
 III. Standard of Review

 A trial court's findings of fact have the same force and dignity as a jury's

answers to jury questions. Anderson v. City of Seven Points, 806 S.W.2d 791, 794 (Tex.

1991). As with jury findings, a trial court's fact-findings on disputed issues are not

conclusive, and when the appellate record contains a reporter's record, an appellant

may challenge those findings for evidentiary sufficiency. Catalina v. Blasdel, 881 S.W.2d

295, 297 (Tex. 1994). We review the sufficiency of the evidence supporting challenged

findings using the same standards that we apply to jury findings.5 Id.

 We may review conclusions of law to determine their correctness based upon

the facts, but we will not reverse because of an erroneous conclusion if the trial court

rendered the proper judgment. City of Austin v. Whittington, 384 S.W.3d 766, 779 n.10

(Tex. 2012) (citing BMC Software Belg., N.V. v. Marchand, 83 S.W.3d 789, 794 (Tex.

2002)); City of Forest Hill v. Benson, 555 S.W.3d 284, 289 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2018,

no pet.). That is, because a trial court's conclusions of law are not binding on us, we

will not reverse a trial court's judgment based on an incorrect conclusion of law when

the controlling findings of fact support the judgment on a correct legal theory. Super

Ventures, Inc. v. Chaudhry, 501 S.W.3d 121, 127 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2016, no pet.);

 5
 Here, Appellants bring legal-sufficiency challenges. We may sustain a legal-
sufficiency challenge—that is, a no-evidence challenge—only when (1) the record
bears no evidence of a vital fact, (2) the rules of law or of evidence bar the court from
giving weight to the only evidence offered to prove a vital fact, (3) the evidence
offered to prove a vital fact is no more than a mere scintilla, or (4) the evidence
establishes conclusively the opposite of a vital fact. Gunn v. McCoy, 554 S.W.3d 645,
658 (Tex. 2018).

 9
 Wise Elec. Coop., Inc. v. Am. Hat Co., 476 S.W.3d 671, 679 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth

2015, no pet.).

 IV. Legacy Not Liable for Contract Breach or Declaratory Judgment

 In their first issue, Appellants assert that there is no evidence that Legacy––

who is not a party to the Declaration––can be liable to Lumley––a homeowner––for

the Declaration's breach or for a declaratory judgment construing the Declaration.

The Declaration provides that "[t]he [Association's] Board may, at its sole dis[c]retion,

enter into contracts with third parties to oversee the operation and management of

the Association." Although no one disputes that Legacy was so engaged––Lumley

alleges in his live pleading that Legacy was the Association's agent for purposes of the

Declaration––no evidence was presented about the nature of Legacy's contract with

the Board or the extent to which Legacy might have accepted responsibility or liability

for the Association's Declaration-related obligations. Although Lumley argues that

Appellants have waived this issue by failing to challenge a specific fact-finding,

Appellants' challenge is a no-evidence challenge to conclusion of law number 26––that

 6
 Lumley also inexplicably argues that this challenge "attempts to flip the burden
on appeal" from Appellants to him. But Lumley, as the plaintiff, was required to
prove contract liability at trial; thus, we adhere to the well-established no-evidence
standard of review in considering this issue. See Blue Sky Satellite Sales & Theater Servs.,
LLC v. K18th, LLC, No. 14-22-00774-CV, 2023 WL 8431244, at *2 (Tex. App.—
Houston [14th Dist.] Dec. 5, 2023, no pet.) (mem. op.) ("In a breach of contract
action, the plaintiff has the burden to prove that the defendant has obligated himself
under the contract; the defendant's denial of this element does not constitute an
affirmative defense under Rule 92."); Sanders v. Total Heat & Air, Inc., 248 S.W.3d 907,
912 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2008, no pet.) ("Privity is an essential element for recovery in

 10
 both the Association and Legacy "have the duty and sole responsibility to properly and

adequately maintain the Greenbelt and Drainage System"––which as to Legacy is not

supported by any finding of fact.

 "As a general rule, a suit for breach of contract may not be maintained against a

person who is not a party to the contract . . . ." MVS Int'l Corp. v. Int'l Advert. Sols.,

LLC, 545 S.W.3d 180, 205 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2017, no pet.) (quoting Bernard

Johnson, Inc. v. Cont'l Constructors, Inc., 630 S.W.2d 365, 369 (Tex. App.––Austin 1982,

writ ref'd n.r.e.)); see Mission Grove, L.P. v. Hall, 503 S.W.3d 546, 552 (Tex. App.––

Houston [14th Dist.] 2016, no pet.) (describing as axiomatic principle "that a contract

between other parties cannot create an obligation or duty on a non-contracting party,

which non-contracting party was a stranger to the basic, underlying construction

contract"). Thus, "[t]he right to relief for a violation of a restrictive covenant exists

only against persons bound by the covenant or restriction." 16 Tex. Jur. 3d

Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions § 160 (2013).7

 In his second amended petition, Lumley described Legacy as the Association's

agent and pleaded that the Association was liable to him for its agent's acts and

any action based on contract; a breach of contract action normally requires privity
between the injured party and the party sought to be held liable.").
 7
 The Declaration provides that its covenants and restrictions "run with and
bind the Property, shall be binding on all Owners[,] and shall inure to the benefit of
and be enforceable by Declarant, the Association, the legal representatives thereof,
and their successors and assigns." Legacy is not a property owner bound by the
Declaration.

 11
 omissions "within the scope of the actual, implied, and/or apparent authority of such

person on behalf of" the Association.8 But an agent is not personally liable on

contracts made for a disclosed principal in the absence of an express agreement to be

so bound.9 Neel v. Tenet HealthSystem Hosps. Dall., Inc., 378 S.W.3d 597, 605 (Tex.

App.––Dallas 2012, pet. denied); Nagle v. Duncan, 570 S.W.2d 116, 117 (Tex. App.––

Houston [1st Dist.] 1978, writ dism'd).

 Lumley argues on appeal that the evidence shows that Legacy agreed to be

bound by the Declaration and that the following findings of fact support the

conclusion that Legacy is liable according to the Declaration:

 • "Pursuant to Article VI, Section 6.01(a)(v) of the Declaration, the
 Association engaged Legacy . . . to serve as the Association's property
 management company";

 • "Defendants [defined as the Association and Legacy] informed Mr.
 Lumley that under the Declaration, they are responsible for the
 maintenance of the Drainage System, the Greenbelt and the drainage
 waters from the Greenbelt."

Citing All Metals Fabricating, Inc. v. Ramer Concrete, Inc., 338 S.W.3d 557, 560–61 (Tex.

App.––El Paso 2009, no pet.), and National Casualty Co. v. Lane Express, Inc., 998

 8
 Appellants filed answers with general denials of liability. And at trial,
Appellants' counsel told the court in his opening statement, "Now, . . . the
management company at all times, as the evidence will show, was an agent for the
Association. Anything the management company did or didn't do was at the direction
of the Association."
 9
 The trial court's amended findings of fact include findings that "Lumley failed
to establish the [Association] is liable for agency" and that "Lumley failed to establish
Legacy is liable for agency."

 12
 S.W.2d 256, 262 (Tex. App.––Dallas 1999, pet. denied), Lumley argues that these

findings support a conclusion that Legacy agreed to be bound by the Declaration's

provisions vis á vis the subdivision's homeowners. All Metals involved a subcontractor

who had agreed in writing to be bound by the agreement between the owner and

general contractor, which was expressly incorporated by reference into the

subcontractor's agreement. No such evidence exists here; no contract between the

Association and Legacy was entered into evidence. And National supports the

conclusion that, absent evidence that Legacy agreed to be liable to owners under the

Declaration, it was not. The fact that the Association contracted with Legacy to

perform the Association's maintenance obligations is not sufficient proof that Legacy

agreed to be bound to the individual homeowners under the Declaration. Cf. Interstate

Contracting Corp. v. City of Dallas, 135 S.W.3d 605, 610 (Tex. 2004) (describing operation

of pass-through claims for construction-contract litigation, which are necessary

because the owner and subcontractor have no privity of contract and therefore cannot

sue one another).

 Accordingly, we hold that no evidence supports the trial court's conclusion that

Legacy was liable for breach of the Declaration.

 For the same reason, Lumley could not obtain declaratory relief against Legacy;

as a stranger to the Declaration, Legacy had no legally cognizable interest in the

outcome of the Declaration's interpretation; thus, no justiciable controversy existed as

to Lumley and Legacy. See Savannah Ct. P'ship v. Strait, No. 02-23-00200-CV, 2024 WL

 13
 482227, at *5–8 (Tex. App.––Fort Worth Feb. 8, 2024, no pet.) (mem. op.) (holding

that no justiciable controversy existed as to declaratory-judgment action when

defendant had sold affected property and thereafter had no legally cognizable interest

in outcome of declaratory relief at the time of trial).

 We sustain Appellants' first issue.

 V. Scope of Association's Liability for Failure to Maintain
 as Defined by Declaration

 In the appeal's second issue, the Association10 challenges the trial court's

finding and conclusion that it is liable to Lumley for breach of the Declaration. The

trial court found that Appellants' "failure to properly and adequately maintain the

Greenbelt and the Drainage System is the sole cause of the water that flows from the

Greenbelt onto the Property, as well as the resulting pooling of that water on the

Property." The Association contends that the trial court's liability and damages

findings are based on a misinterpretation of the meaning of maintain as used in the

Declaration.

A. Applicable Law

 We construe restrictive covenants de novo, applying general rules of contract

construction. Severs v. Mira Vista Homeowners Ass'n, Inc., 559 S.W.3d 684, 696 (Tex.

App.—Fort Worth 2018, pet. denied) (citing Pilarcik v. Emmons, 966 S.W.2d 474, 478

(Tex. 1998)). Our primary task is to determine the drafter's intent from the

 Hereafter, we will refer to the complaints as being brought solely by the
 10

Association.

 14
 instrument's language. Id. In doing so, we must examine the covenant as a whole in

light of the circumstances present when the covenant was made, id. at 697, and

endeavor to harmonize and give effect to all the provisions of the contract so that

none will be rendered meaningless, Italian Cowboy Partners, Ltd. v. Prudential Ins. Co. of

Am., 341 S.W.3d 323, 333 (Tex. 2011).

 Words used in a restrictive covenant must be given their commonly accepted

meanings and may not be enlarged, extended, stretched, or changed by construction.

Severs, 559 S.W.3d at 697. A restrictive covenant that can be given a definite legal

meaning is unambiguous and should be construed liberally to effectuate its intent. Id.

The interpretation of an unambiguous contract is a question of law for the court.

Farmers Grp., Inc. v. Geter, 620 S.W.3d 702, 709 (Tex. 2021). Only when a restrictive

covenant may reasonably be interpreted in more than one way is it ambiguous. Severs,

559 S.W.3d at 696.

 When a trial court's findings of fact and conclusions of law show the trial

court's judgment was based on an incorrect construction of a contract and

interpretation of the law, we cannot infer a finding of intent to support the judgment.

See Nautilus Ins. v. Steinberg, 316 S.W.3d 752, 756 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2010, pet.

denied); Jones v. Smith, 291 S.W.3d 549, 553 (Tex. App.––Houston [14th Dist.] 2009,

no pet.).

 15
 B. Association's Responsibility to Maintain Greenbelt

 The Association first argues that the Declaration did not obligate it to maintain

the Greenbelt until JBGL––the Declarant––expressly conveyed that property to the

City in March 2021. JBGL's intent regarding the Greenbelt is expressed in Article III

of the Declaration, as well as the plats for Phases Six and Nine.

 Article III of the Declaration reads as follows 11:

 ARTICLE III

 COMMON AMENITIES AND EASEMENTS

 3.01 Obligation of Declarant. Declarant has installed and
 constructed, or caused to be installed and constructed, or will install and
 construct, various improvements and infrastructure to be dedicated
 and/or conveyed to the City or the Association as determined by
 Declarant in such condition as required by the City in order to obtain
 approval of the Plat. Upon completion of all Common Amenities and Common
 Areas and dedication or conveyance of the same to the City or the Association,
 Declarant shall have no further obligation whatsoever to construct any
 improvements on the Property or maintain any of same, or otherwise fund
 or be liable for any matters concerning such improvements or otherwise
 related to the Subdivision.

 3.02 Responsibilities of the Association for Maintenance of
 the Common Amenities and Easement Areas; Maintenance
 Reserve Fund. Upon dedication or conveyance by Declarant to the Association,
 the Association shall, and has the sole responsibility to, maintain (a) the Common
 Amenities (including any Amenity Center and the Retention Pond),
 Common Areas and any Easement Areas and associated improvements
 and Common Amenities thereon, and (b) any of the off-site Easement
 Areas outside the limits of the Subdivision which are or may become
 necessary or desirable in the future on any Easement Areas for the

 11
 Throughout this opinion, we quote entire articles and sections of the
Declaration to show the context of the relevant provisions in light of the larger whole.

 16
 benefit of any present or future improvements and Common Amenities
 for the benefit of the Subdivision. The Association's costs of
 maintaining the Common Amenities and such Easement Areas will be
 collected from the Owners through Assessments as provided in
 Article V hereof. The Association shall not seek, by either act or omission, to
 abandon the Association's obligations as established by this Declaration to maintain
 the Common Amenities and/or any Easement Areas. In order to provide
 for extraordinary and unanticipated items regarding the maintenance
 obligations contained herein, prior to the transfer of control of the
 Board by Declarant to non-Declarant Owners, the Association shall
 establish a maintenance reserve fund for the maintenance of the
 Common Amenities and Easement Areas in an amount the Board shall,
 in its sole and absolute discretion, determine to be sufficient, but which
 shall in no case be less than the equivalent of one-sixth (1/6) of the then
 current Regular Assessment multiplied by all Lots within the Plat.

 3.03 Association's Easement for Maintenance. Declarant prior
 to the establishment of the Association, and thereafter the Association,
 shall have a maintenance easement on all Lots to the extent reasonably
 necessary for the· purpose of maintaining the Common Amenities and
 for the removal of any obstruction that may be placed on any Easement
 Areas that would constitute interference with the Association's use of
 any such easement, including, without limitation, the Easement Areas
 established pursuant to Sections 2.l0(a) and 3.06 hereof.

[Emphases added.]

 The Declaration thus contemplates that either JBGL or the Association will

maintain the subdivision's Common Areas, including the Greenbelt. Sections 3.01 and

3.02 simply describe when the Association takes over that maintenance responsibility

from JBGL––either upon (a) dedication of the Greenbelt to the City or the

Association or (b) conveyance of the Greenbelt to the Association. The Association

argues that the dedication of the Greenbelt to the City as shown on the plats "did not

occur" until JBGL conveyed ownership of the Greenbelt to the City in March 2021.

 17
 The Phase Six and Phase Nine Plats recorded in 2013 and 2014, respectively,

indicate that lots 4X and 2X "shall be" open spaces owned and maintained by the

Association. Property can be dedicated to a homeowners' association by recorded

plat. See Raman Chandler Props., L.C. v. Caldwell's Creek Homeowners Ass'n, Inc., 178

S.W.3d 384, 394 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2005, pet. denied). And such a dedication is

contemplated by Sections 3.01 and 3.02 of the Declaration.12 Further, the evidence

shows that before the date of the deed to the City, the Association did, in fact, accept

responsibility for maintaining the Greenbelt, albeit while disputing the scope of that

responsibility.

 The evidence is sufficient to show that the Association was responsible for

maintaining the Greenbelt before the deed conveyance to the City. Thus, the trial

court did not err by concluding that Section 3.02 did not bar Lumley's cause of action

for breach of contract occurring before March 4, 2021.

C. Meaning of maintain

 The Association does not dispute that––after the Greenbelt was conveyed to

the City––the Association was required according to the Declaration's language to

maintain the Greenbelt, including the drainage system thereon. But the Association

 12
 Both plats' expression of a present intent for the Association to own and
maintain lots 4X and then 2X contrasts with the Phase Nine Plat's forward-looking
language that lot 2X is "to be" dedicated to the City. Cf. Araujo v. Araujo, 493 S.W.3d
232, 237 (Tex. App.––San Antonio 2016, no pet.) (holding that divorce decree's
language that a QDRO was "to be" entered after decree did not evidence a present
intent to render a QDRO in the decree).

 18
 disputes the meaning the trial court placed on the word maintain. The Declaration

does not define the term; thus, we must look to its ordinarily accepted meaning.

 Black's Law Dictionary defines maintain in three applicable ways: "1. To

continue (something). 2. To continue in possession of (property, etc.). . . . 4. To care

for (property) for purposes of operational productivity or appearance; to engage in

general repair and upkeep." Maintain, Black's Law Dictionary (12th ed. 2024). Maintain

is also defined as "to keep in existence or continuance; [to] preserve; [or to] retain";

"to keep in an existing state (as of repair, efficiency, or validity)[; or to] preserve from

failure or decline." Ladner v. Prop. Owners Ass'n of Mountain Lakes Ranch, Inc., No. 07-21-

00210-CV, 2023 WL 424846, at *4 (Tex. App.––Amarillo 2023, no pet.) (mem. op.)

(first citing Owasso ISD No. I-011 v. Falvo, 534 U.S. 426, 433, 122 S. Ct. 934, 939

(2002); and then citing Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed. 2014)); see

also Bartlett v. Bartlett, 465 S.W.3d 745, 756 & n.8 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]

2015, no pet.) (Frost, J., concurring) ("The ordinary meaning of the word ‘maintain' is

‘to prevent a decline, lapse or cessation from existing state or condition.'" (citing

Black's Law Dictionary 953 (6th ed. 1990))). "Thus, maintenance contemplates

routine action to keep something operational or in a specified state," as opposed to

"repair," which is defined as "to restore by replacing a part or putting together what is

torn or broken." Ladner, 2023 WL 424846, at *4. However, from these definitions,

maintenance might sometimes include repair necessary for restoration to the original

state; in other words, maintenance applies to preservation of something's original

 19
 condition or restoration to its original condition, not to causing it to do something it

hasn't done before.13 See id. Notably, although in some places the Declaration uses the

terms repair, restore, and replacement, it does so in addition to––and not in lieu of––the

word maintain; nonetheless, it uses only the word maintain to describe the Association's

duty as to the Common Areas.14

 Lumley argues that this court's decision in Lindemann Properties, Ltd. v. Campbell,

524 S.W.3d 873 (Tex. App.––Fort Worth 2017, pet. denied) (op. on reh'g), stands for

the proposition that maintain also means replace. But in that case, this court construed

easement language to determine whether the right to "maintain" a radio tower gave

the easement grantee the right to use the easement to replace the radio tower. Id. at

881. Not only was a different type of agreement at issue, but also construing maintain

to exclude replacement in that case would have frustrated the very purpose of the

agreement. See id. at 881–84. We conclude that the right to maintain as construed in

Lindemann does not inform the Association's duty to maintain as used in the

Declaration.

 The Declaration expressly disclaims JBGL's liability for "damages . . . in
 13

connection with any construction, design, engineering[,] or defect associated with any
improvement (or otherwise) constructed on" subdivision property. [Emphasis added.]
 14
 This is in contrast to the easement right given to the Association within five
feet of the "shared property line of each Lot . . . for the purpose of access, ingress,
egress, as is reasonably necessary to maintain, repair and/or restore the grading
and/or drainage improvements serving the Lots and/or the [s]ubdivision." Thus,
contrary to the Association's assertions in its briefing, the Greenbelt is not an
Easement Area as defined by the Declaration.

 20
 With the proper definition of maintain in mind, we consider whether the

evidence at trial supports the trial court's liability conclusions.

D. Evidence About Greenbelt's Drainage System

 1. Lumley's Expert's Testimony

 Lumley's expert testified that water runs within the Greenbelt––both lots 2X

and 4X––"and concentrates along the backside of the residential lots, mainly past the

hillside." It starts to accumulate around Lot 50 and is "directed toward 42," but it

"gets hung up between 44 [Lumley's property] and 45 because there's a drop inlet

where its purpose is to accept water, but the velocity discharges are too high for that

water to go into that drop inlet." As water accumulates in the swale, "you get erosion

that is reflected in debris along the sidewalk, broken down vegetation, and then the

accumulation of debris along [the] backside of these residential lots." The drop inlet

between Lots 44 and 45 "that was purposed . . . is really not effective because the

velocity of discharge is flowing right across it." The existing drop inlet is too small,

and the water going over it moves too fast to deflect it into the pipe. In the expert's

words, "the way it's constructed right now, it's not working. So there has to be some

type of modification for it to be effective, to accept the drainage." He agreed that the

problem is either a design issue or construction issue.

 When asked why the drainage onto Lumley's property was occurring, the

expert stated, "[T]here was a swale that was purposed along the backside of these

 21
 properties, and th[at] swale is not large enough to convey that water without over

topping the wall."15 Additionally,

 [T]here's no vegetation that would dissipate erosive velocities, so we
 have erosion that accumulates around that drop inlet. And then . . . to
 try to assist that drop inlet, there [were] rocks and a grate put in the drop
 to slow down water, and that reduces the flow of water.

 It's just like traffic. If you were in a traffic jam and slowing down,
 that water is going to pile up like the vehicles would behind you. So that
 piling up of water also leads to flowing between lots 44 and 45.

However, he acknowledged that "it's difficult to grow vegetation there because the

trees are blocking the sunlight."

 According to the expert, the "leak in drainage" was not from Lumley's

property.

 Pointing to a photograph of Lumley's property, the expert identified "a

retaining wall that was constructed during the development" that "holds the fence"

but that "also confines the water." He also confirmed that pavers were later put in

place, he assumed, "to assist drainage, to help [the water] from topping over." But he

did not know who placed the pavers there or when. According to the expert, on the

one hand, the pavers caused overflow between Lumley's lot and his neighbor's

adjacent lot: "[T]he velocity discharge hits this rock riffraff. It slows down, and it piles

up. Some of it goes down the drain, but ultimately, it gets constricted by debris. And

then it will flow into their lots." When water flows into those lots, there is a "resin

 He later agreed that his conclusion that the swale was not large enough was
 15

"speculative."

 22
 velocity that causes dissipation of dirt transferred into [Lumley's] lot." But when asked

whether the gaps between the pavers increased or decreased the drainage onto

Lumley's lot, he answered, "It doesn't help. It just allows water to go through those

areas. It's not going to act as a barricade as the retaining wall would."

 When asked why the sides of Lumley's yard were so muddy, the expert opined,

"[B]ecause water flows through there. So it's an accumulation from his gutters, which

he seems to have known because he's got some protective measures in place. But

there's a large amount of volume coming from the backside of [the] lot." He

acknowledged that some of the water in Lumley's yard comes from his gutters. But he

also acknowledged that with respect to the water, "It's compounding effects."

According to the expert, "[t]he main thing" needed to protect Lumley's property from

water damage was "just keeping the water out of his yard."

 The expert opined that what was needed to "adequately maintain[16] the

drainage on [Lumley's] property," was "to collect the water at a different area where it

doesn't generate the velocities that would cause erosion and capture it away from

those residential lots, and that would require additional inlets and piping and grading."

This solution included (1) "creat[ing] a curb to protect th[e] side slopes";

 16
 Lumley argues that this testimony is proof supporting a more expansive
definition of the word maintain as used in the Declaration and that the Association
failed to adequately challenge the trial court's finding of fact based on this testimony.
But Lumley's expert did not testify as a legal or contract expert on the proper
construction of what the Declaration meant in using the word maintain. Absent
ambiguity, the proper construction of this word is a question of law that we determine
de novo. See URI, Inc. v. Kleberg Cnty., 543 S.W.3d 755, 763 (Tex. 2018).

 23
 (2) "dispers[ing] drop inlets throughout the lot and collecting them locally";

(3) transporting water collected through those inlets "through a pipe that would then

connect [to the] existing piping system"; and (4) flattening the steep slopes17 to help

prevent erosion. He also stated that maintenance should include taking care of the

vegetation.

 When asked whether his proposed remedies would be "adequate for the

[Association] to adequately maintain the drainage system in the common areas," the

expert replied, "Yes. I believe that it would. It would not only protect . . . Lumley, but

it would protect his neighbors. And ultimately, there might be a deeper look and

opportunity to correct other things, simplify the system." On cross-examination,

however, he answered "No" when asked whether these solutions were guaranteed to

fix the problem.

 The expert saw the erosion along the retaining wall as the main problem but

opined that the rate of erosion depended on the particular rainfall event. He agreed

that the "issues . . . don't occur every time it rains; they occur when there's a big

storm." The expert also gave the conclusory opinion that, "when you see erosion, that

is a maintenance issue, that is an identifier that something needs to be maintained."

 17
 It is unclear if the expert was referring to the slopes on Lumley's property,
other subdivision lots, the Greenbelt, or some combination thereof.

 24
 When asked about the nature of his proposed solution to the drainage and

erosion problems, the expert stated, "It's a structural design." He agreed that the

"issue" was with "the original design of the drainage facilities."

 2. Expert's Report

 The August 20, 2021 expert report was admitted into evidence and was based

on an August 4, 2021 inspection. Lumley provided the expert with videos showing the

flooding into his backyard; although they were dated October 8, 2018; June 1, 2019;

March 13, 2020; and November 1, 2020, Lumley told the expert that "these were not

the only times flooding [had] occurred." The expert described the videos as "typical

flooding" from Lumley's backyard.

 The report notes that

 Lumley's backyard stores runoff before pouring into the southeast side
 yard (between Lots 44 . . . and 45). Combined drainage from the
 backyard, neighboring yard, and roof drainage downspouts eroded
 vegetation and soil. Concrete splash blocks had been installed beneath
 downspouts to dissipate flow energy. Sand had been placed in areas to
 fill the holes, but the issue appears to compound with each subsequent
 rain event.

Regarding the drain inlet, the report concludes,

 Media confirms drainage from the [G]reenbelt crosses the sidewalk and
 channels along the back of the properties. The inlet is ineffective during
 larger quantities of runoff and is prone to clogging. The drainage
 channel capacity is inadequate to handle flows and needs to be
 supplemented. However, even with modification, the current
 configuration would not be effective. Essentially, a depression needs to
 be constructed around the drain, but it will slow down the drainage,
 deepening discharge depths and exacerbate[ing] the condition.
 Deepening the drainage depths would permit overtopping, like observed

 25
 in the videos, without creating a barrier (raising the wall height). Even if
 this were rectified, it would not address erosion and maintenance that
 may always be a problem. Other alternatives are likely more suitable.

 According to the report, the stone wall that the Association installed to try to

mitigate flow into Lumley's backyard "did not reduce water entering the Lumley lot;

rather, it cause[d] the flow to concentrate through the opening left in the wall (behind

Lots 44 and 45). Ultimately, drainage still conveys through the Lumley lot and is not a

suitable modification."

 Regarding causation, the report concluded,

 Water overtopping [Lumley's] retaining wall is essentially caused by too
 much water accumulating at that point of the watershed. Site erosion is
 caused by the accumulation of runoff energy when water is permitted to
 flow over long distances. Strategically constructing additional collection
 sites within the watershed will effectively eliminate erosion and
 discharges behind the Lumley lot. Placing more inlets within the
 [G]reenbelt (where the most land area is) is logical and could even
 eradicate post-storm ponding. Extending the existing collection network
 would require additional excavation and grading activities within the
 [G]reenbelt.

 The report ended with the proposed solutions that the trial court awarded as

specific performance for breach of contract.

 3. Lumley's Testimony

 Lumley testified that "the water that floods [his] backyard comes in from a

common space that does not stop the water from flowing over the back wall of [his]

property." According to Lumley, "when it rains, it pushes soil and debris down into

that one drain," which "fills up[ and] is overrun, and the water pours over the back of

 26
 the wall and floods into [Lumley's] backyard." Lumley opined, "until that drain is

opened up and unclogged, I'm doing maintenance for them because my kids can't

play in the yard." But Lumley also admitted on cross-examination that by removing

the screening grate––something he had done "many times to get the water to get out

of [his] backyard"––he had seen grass and debris go into the drain, even though he

had been told the grate's purpose was "to filter out large items from going down th[e]

drain" and that grass and debris could clog the drain.

 Lumley also testified,

 Several months before I reached out to you, there was an attempt made
 to cut down the one inlet, the one drainpipe that is behind mine and [my
 neighbor's] property. That is the only drainage outlet for water for 15
 houses up to the east of me. All of that water that you saw in that video
 drains to the one outlet.

 It eroded all of the soil and filled in the void or cut out a void
 rather around that dome grate and that pipe. So I don't know if it was
 the management company or the [Association], they got tired of hearing
 me gripe probably. They went out there and had someone with a chop
 saw, and they cut two inches or so off the top of that pipe to make it
 lower so that the water would keep flowing into it because it eroded
 around it where there was a lip kind of sticking up.

 After that, they made an attempt to put a secondary wall behind
 my retaining wall that is by my fence. Not realizing what the problem is
 and that void keeps filling up because the soil just washes off, washes
 off. And it fills that void.

 Well, they put another wall back there, but that wall does nothing.
 It's actually probably more funneling the drainage, the water, into my
 neighbor's yard and underneath my fence and cutting the side yard than
 it is helping.

 27
 Lumley identified Section 3.02 of the Declaration as the source of the

Association's duty. His goal for the suit was "to correct the problem that is flooding

my backyard." On cross-examination, Lumley provided some explanation of the relief

he was seeking:

 Q. Okay. And aren't the damages that you're seeking at least partly for
 erosion on your lot?

 A. Yes.

 Q. Okay.

 A. Because of damages done from outside my property which I cannot
 control.

 ....

 Q. . . . Are you contending that the Association has the duty to repair and
 restore grading and drainage on your lot?

 A. On my lot?

 Q. Yes, sir.

 A. With damage caused from the common area? Yes, I do.

 Q. Okay. And are you asserting that the Association has a duty to redesign the
 original drainage plan?

 A. If that is what needs to be done. They have accepted the property. The
 homeowners are paying for that upkeep.

[Emphases added.]

 When asked what improvements needed repair, Lumley testified, "The walking

trail, the soil eroding, the fence that is just to the south of my property alongside that

 28
 easement that is falling over because of the water, the drainage. Putting in more catch

basins or whatever the engineering side deems is appropriate so that it's not one basin

for 15 houses." In response to the question, "That is not a repair, right? That is not

fixing something that is already there. That is adding something new, right?" Lumley

answered, "Some of that is adding something new. Some of it is correcting what is

there. Some of it is the damage that's done from the erosion. For example, the

walking trail, the water is starting to undercut it. And it's going to cost all of the

homeowners even more money to fix that. That would be maintenance."

 Lumley also testified that several of his neighbors had installed French drains

and retaining walls on their properties.18 But he had not done so, contending that the

Association was financially responsible for doing so. Lumley also asked that as part of

maintaining and repairing the lot 4X drainage, the Association "repair" the fence

located in the Common Area behind his backyard.

E. Analysis

 According to the plain meaning of maintain as used in the Declaration, the

Association's responsibility vis á vis the Greenbelt was to keep it in its existing––i.e.,

 18
 In an email to Legacy, the Association's attorney noted, "In one photograph
[of Lumley's property], it appears that . . . Lumley's neighbor has installed a small
retaining wall on the common area to help ensure that the surface water does not
drain onto his property."

 29
 originally designed––state.19 Most of the evidence was that the flooding into Lumley's

backyard was caused by the way the Greenbelt drainage itself was designed. Thus, the

trial court erred by ordering the Association to make the following design changes to

the Greenbelt and Lumley's property:

 • "Curb integration between side slopes and the sidewalk";20

 • "Installation of a subsurface drainage system to capture [G]reenbelt
 runoff to effectively reduce erosion, confine drainage into well-defined
 boundaries, and eliminate overflows onto Lots 44 and Lot 45";

 • "Approximately four 24-inch drains, 1,500 linear feet of 12-inch pipe,
 and other material and all labor required to install a subsurface drainage
 system beneath the [G]reenbelt";

 • "Installation of a brick retaining wall (approximately 200 square feet)
 offsetting the property boundary of Lots 42 through 44 to absolve
 erosion of steep side slopes in that arena";

 • "A subsurface system interconnecting downspouts while spanning the
 side and backyards of Lots 44 and Lot 45 to eradicate surface drainage
 and erosion. A subsurface drainage system to capture Greenbelt drainage
 must be implemented for effective lot drainage."

 • "[P]ay all expenses, goods, equipment, and labor necessary for the
 installation of a new, properly functioning drain . . . on [l]ot 4X, as well

 19
 And although the Declaration gives the Association an easement on certain
Lots "for installation, maintenance, repair, removal and operation of utilities and
drainage facilities," it also provides that the Association "shall not have any obligation
to repair any improvements installed in any Easement Areas." That the Declaration
gives the Association an easement on owners' Lots for purposes of installation, repair,
and removal of improvements in the Common Areas does not enlarge the
Association's sole duty only to maintain those areas, including the Greenbelt.
 20
 The expert had opined that "a curb to protect th[e] side slopes" would need
to be "create[d]" and that the existing steep slopes would need to be "flatten[ed]" to
curb erosion.

 30
 as all stone surrounding [Lumley's] property . . . necessary to ensure
 proper drainage in the common area to avoid flooding of [Lumley's]
 property"; and

 • "[R]epair and make ongoing additional repairs to the drainage system
 located within the common areas and [l]ot 4x in the future to ensure that
 there is not a drainage or flooding problem that affects [Lumley's]
 property."

The trial court also erred by granting declaratory relief to the effect that the

Association "is legally responsible for the repair, . . . re-installation, and ensuring the

full functionality of the drain located on [l]ot 4x, the Common Area behind [Lumley's]

property."

 That the drain itself was not properly designed to handle all of the water flow

from the swale during heavy rain does not show that the Association failed to

maintain the Greenbelt's originally installed drainage system. However, there is other

evidence of a lack of maintenance. Both Lumley and his expert testified that erosion

along the swale––particularly the walking-trail part––and some erosion around the

drain itself contributed to the backing up of water into Lumley's backyard by allowing

the water to move too quickly through the swale and toward the drain. This

unmitigated erosion is proof of a lack of maintenance of the original design.

Additionally, Lumley testified that he had cleared debris from the drain repeatedly.

This is some evidence that the Association failed to address debris accumulating in

the Greenbelt, thus contributing to the slow flow of rainwater into the drain. Both

Lumley and his expert testified that the water that did not drain quickly enough into

 31
 the inlet backed up into his yard; Lumley also provided photographs showing this

backup. Accordingly, the evidence supports a conclusion that the Association's failure

to address erosion and debris-accumulation issues caused some damages to Lumley's

backyard by allowing more water than otherwise would have to flow into his

backyard. And other evidence was admitted to support a conclusion that the excess

water flow into his backyard also caused soil and vegetation erosion there. Because

there is evidence to support the conclusion that the Association failed to maintain the

Greenbelt by failing to address erosion, debris-accumulation, and vegetation issues,

we review the rest of the Association's arguments related to liability and damages.

F. No Contractual Limitation of Association's Liability

 The Association contends that even if Lumley proved that its failure to

maintain the Greenbelt––as that term is intended in the Declaration––resulted in

some damage to Lumley's property, it cannot be liable for that particular damage

under Section 2.10 of the Declaration. That section provides as follows:

 2.10 Drainage.

 (a) All Lots shall be graded so that no storm water drainage shall
 flow onto other Lots except that storm water drainage may flow to a
 neutral swale at the side property line at the side of the adjacent Lot
 provided that the swale shall drain to the street or alley property line.
 Declarant prior to the establishment of the Association, and thereafter
 the Association, are hereby granted a perpetual non-exclusive easement
 over an area five feet (5′) on both sides of the shared property line of
 each Lot within the Subdivision for the purpose of access, ingress,
 egress, as is reasonably necessary to maintain, repair and/or restore the
 grading and/or drainage improvements serving the Lots and/or the
 Subdivision; provided, however, in no event shall Declarant and/or the

 32
 Association be liable to maintain, repair or restore any grading or drainage on or
 serving any Lot.

 (b) Each Owner shall be liable and responsible for the
 maintenance, repair and/or restoration of grading and/or drainage
 improvements on such Owner's Lot. Neither Declarant nor Declarant's
 successors or assigns shall be liable for any loss of, or damage done to, any shrubbery,
 grass, flowers, improvements, fences, sidewalks, driveways or buildings of any type or
 the contents thereof on any Lot caused by any water levels, rising waters or drainage
 waters.

 (c) Unless approved by the Architectural Control Committee, no
 Owner will: (i) alter the surface water drainage flows of a Lot as
 originally established at the time of the initial construction of the
 Residence; or (ii) install landscaping or other improvements that may
 interfere with, obstruct or divert drainage flows established by Declarant
 or any approved homebuilder. The foregoing shall not prevent or limit
 Declarant from performing any grading work and/or changing any
 surface water drainage flow on any Lot.

[Italics added.]

 Although Section 2.10(a) provides that "in no event shall . . . the Association be

liable to maintain, repair or restore any grading or drainage on or serving any Lot," the

evidence shows that the grading and drainage Lumley alleged was not maintained is

not "on or serving" a subdivision Lot as defined by the Declaration. The evidence

shows that the flow of water into the swale serves the Greenbelt and other property,

not Lumley's. Therefore, Section 2.10(a) does not prevent breach-of-contract liability

for specific performance or damages caused by the Association's failure to maintain

the Greenbelt.

 Additionally, the Association urges that it is a successor of JBGL such that

Section 2.10(b) affirmatively disclaims the Association's liability "for any loss of, or

 33
 damage done to, any shrubbery, grass, flowers, improvements, fences, sidewalks,

driveways or buildings of any type or the contents thereof on any Lot caused by any

water levels, rising waters or drainage waters."

 A sister court has explained the ordinary meaning of the phrase "successors

and assigns," a phrase that the Declaration does not define:

 The term "successor" in contract law is a term of art. A successor is
 "one who replaces or follows a predecessor" or "[a] corporation that,
 through amalgamation, consolidation, or other assumption of interests,
 is vested with the rights and duties of an earlier corporation."

 When applied to corporations, the term

 ‘successor' does not ordinarily connote an assignee, but is
 normally used in respect to corporate entities, including
 corporations becoming invested with the rights and
 assuming the burdens of another corporation by
 amalgamation, consolidation, or duly authorized legal
 succession, and does not contemplate acquisition by
 ordinary purchase from another corporation. . . .

 The Texas statutory scheme concerning domestic business
 organizations supports the interpretation of "successor and assigns"
 language as extending responsibility or liability to an entity that expressly
 agrees to assume a liability or obligation as part of an asset purchase.
 Specifically, the Business Organizations Code provides:

 [A] person acquiring property described by this section may
 not be held responsible or liable for a liability or obligation
 of the transferring domestic entity that is not expressly assumed
 by the person.

 Thus, the use of the contractual language of "successors and
 assigns," when connoting assumption of future liability to perform a
 particular act—such as offering comparable employment—extends to a
 business entity that makes an express agreement to assume such an
 obligation as part of an asset purchase.

 34
 Tyco Valves & Controls, L.P. v. Colorado, 365 S.W.3d 750, 773–74 (Tex. App.—Houston

[1st Dist.] 2012) (citations omitted) (first quoting Int'l Ass'n of Machinists, Lodge No. 6 v.

Falstaff Brewing Corp., 328 S.W.2d 778, 781 (Tex. App.––Houston 1959, no writ); and

then quoting Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Ann. § 10.254(b)), aff'd, 432 S.W.3d 885 (Tex.

2014). Such language therefore binds a subsequent entity by merger, conversion, or by

express agreement to assume contractual liability. See id.

 The Association is not a successor to JBGL nor did it assume JBGL's liability

as part of an asset purchase; it is a separate entity formed for specific purposes

outlined in the Declaration. Thus, according to the ordinary meaning of the phrase,

the Association is not included.

 Lumley also points out that while Section 2.10(a) expressly disclaims the

Declarant's and the Association's liability to repair, maintain, or restore grading or

drainage on any Lot, Section 2.10(b) names only the Declarant and its "successors or

assigns" as those not responsible for "any loss of, or damage done to, . . . any Lot

caused by any water levels, rising waters or drainage waters"––without expressly

naming the Association. This further supports the conclusion that Section 2.10(b)

intended to employ the ordinary meaning of "successors and assigns" such that

"Association" is defined as the Association "or such other name as is selected by

Declarant or Declarant's successors."

 35
 Moreover, other language in the Declaration supports this reading. Declarant is

defined as JBGL "and its successors, and any assignee of Declarant to whom

Declarant, by instrument recorded in the Real Property Records of Denton County,

Texas, expressly assigns all of Declarant's rights and obligations as Declarant under

this Declaration." [Emphasis added.] The Association has not succeeded to or been

assigned "all of" JBGL's rights and obligations according to the Declaration. Also, in

describing Class B voting rights in the Association, the Declaration states, "Declarant

(and Declarant's successors and assigns, in accordance with the terms hereof), shall be the

sole ‘Class B Member' (herein so called) so long as Declarant, or any such successor

or assign, owns a single Lot or any portion of the Property." [Emphasis added.]

Under the Declaration, the Association is not a voting member of itself.

 Based on the foregoing, we conclude that the disclaimer of liability in Section

2.10(b) does not apply to the Association and that the trial court did not err by so

concluding. Accordingly, we sustain Appellants' second issue in part and overrule it in

part.

 VI. Some Contract Damages Unavailable from the Association

 The Association contends in its fourth issue that it cannot be liable for

damages according to the Declaration; alternatively, it argues that no evidence

supports the amount of the trial court's $18,950 damage award for breach of the

Declaration.

 36
 A. No Limitation of Damages Liability

 The Association first contends that Section 7.08 of the Declaration disclaims its

liability for damages related to any breach of the Declaration. Section 7.08 of the

Declaration is tacked onto the end of Article VII, entitled "Architectural Control

Committee." Section 7.08 contains a broad limitation of liability for damages or other

relief:

 7.08 Limitation on Liability. Declarant, the Association, the Board (or
 any of its members) and the Architectural Control Committee (or any of
 its members), shall not, individually or in combination, be liable in damages
 (or otherwise) to any Owner for any act or occurrence, or any failure to act, relating to
 this Declaration, including any claims by any Owner regarding or arising
 out of any subjective decisions, mistakes in judgment, negligence or
 nonfeasance arising out of, or in connection with, the approval or
 disapproval or failure to approve or to disapprove any Plans submitted,
 or for otherwise acting in good faith in such capacities. Declarant and
 the Architectural Control Committee (or any of its members) shall not,
 individually or in combination, be liable in damages (or otherwise) in
 connection with any construction, design, engineering or defect
 associated with any improvement (or otherwise) constructed on the
 Property. . . .

[Emphases added.] This section immediately follows the section describing the

consequences of an owner's failing to obtain proper approval for "[t]he construction,

repair, replacement, installation[,] or placement of any Residence, Structure[,] or

improvement of any type on a Lot."

 But Section 9.05 of the Declaration, entitled Enforcement, provides that a Lot

owner may "enforce the [Declaration's] covenants and restrictions . . . by any

proceedings at law or in equity against any Person violating or attempting to violate any

 37
 part of this Declaration, . . . to restrain or enjoin violations thereof, to recover damages[,]

or to seek such other relief available pursuant to applicable law." [Emphases added.]

Because the Declaration defines Person as "any natural person, corporation,

partnership, trust or other legal entity," the Association is a Person under

Section 9.05. Thus, these two provisions are seemingly in conflict.

 Construing Sections 7.08 and 9.05 in light of the entire Declaration––to

harmonize and give effect to both––we conclude that the limitation in Section 7.08

applies to alleged acts or failures to act related to the specific duties and obligations of

Article VII––review, approval, disapproval, or inaction related to a subdivision

homeowner's proposed or completed construction or modification of improvements

on a Lot. Accordingly, the trial court did not erroneously conclude that "[t]he

Association's affirmative defense of limitation of liability, as provided by Article VII,

Section 7.08 of the [Declaration] . . . was not . . . applicable to Lumley's cause of

action for breach of contract."

B. Evidence Supports Only Some of Damages Award

 The Association next contends that no evidence supports the amount of the

trial court's damages award for breach of the Declaration.

 Lumley testified that he had incurred $3,500 for his expert's drainage

evaluation; had paid a $4,500 retainer for his expert's testimony at trial but sought to

be reimbursed $4,990; had incurred a $450 bill for an engineering evaluation of his

home's foundation; and according to his own testimony, had spent $4,000–$5,000

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 attempting to get grass to grow in his yard––by purchasing sod, two aerators, and

rakes "and things . . . to clean up the mess in the backyard from the mulch washing

over." He also testified that he was seeking $500 "for the actual damages to [his

yard's] erosion for all the sod and replacement [he] had to make." The Association

complains that no expert bills nor evidence supporting the $500 spent were admitted.

But assuming that Lumley can recover his expert-related costs as contract damages––

which the Association does not challenge––Lumley's testimony alone is sufficient

evidence of his expenditures. See, e.g., Okumus v. Mouton, No. 14-18-00220-CV, 2020

WL 6278664, at *4–5 (Tex. App.––Houston [14th Dist.] Oct. 27, 2020, no pet.)

(mem. op.); Canyon Vista Prop. Owners Ass'n, Inc. v. Laubach, No. 03-11-00404-CV, 2014

WL 411646, at *6 (Tex. App.—Austin Jan. 31, 2014, no pet.) (mem. op.). Adding

these up but excluding the $490 in additional expert fees (which Lumley requested but

did not explain or testify that he had paid)––and using the low end of what Lumley

testified he had paid to grow grass in his yard––we calculate $12,950 in damages that

is supported by Lumley's testimony.

 Lumley also testified that he had received "certain bids for drainage on the side

of [his] yard"––he thought "the sum total of those was somewhere around $20,000 for the

side yard and the back" and included

 [r]eplacing sod, primarily, and elevation, just making sure that anything
 that was compacted was put back up, replanting grass, worked in weeds
 and pack soil, having to pull in soil and drainage, assuming that there's
 going to be a time period when there's not going to be or that there is

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 going to be work being done behind here that it's going to need to divert
 water temporarily.

[Emphasis added.] But this testimony was too vague and conclusory to support value

amounts for the different types of work included. Cf. Tuttle v. Builes, 572 S.W.3d 344,

356–58 (Tex. App.—Eastland 2019, no pet.) (holding tenant's testimony about

monthly rental-value amount was conclusory––and therefore legally insufficient to

support damages award––when tenant provided no facts to support how he

calculated the total); Lefton v. Griffith, 136 S.W.3d 271, 277 (Tex. App.––San Antonio

2004, no pet.) (holding owner's value evidence––that inventory she had to sell for

$10,000 was actually worth $300,000––conclusory because no evidence showed the

type or amount of furniture sold).

 We conclude that the evidence is legally sufficient to support only $12,950 in

damages. We sustain the Association's fourth issue in part.

 If part of a damages verdict lacks sufficient evidentiary support, the proper

course is to suggest a remittitur of that part of the verdict, giving the party prevailing

in the trial court the option of accepting the remittitur or having the case remanded

for a new trial on liability and damages. See Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, L.L.P.

v. Nat'l Dev. & Rsch. Corp., 299 S.W.3d 106, 124 (Tex. 2009) ("[W]hen there is some

evidence of damages, but not enough to support the full amount, it is inappropriate to

render judgment."); Golden Corral Corp. v. Noble Austin Apartments L.L.C., No. 03-19-

00463-CV, 2021 WL 2878565, at *11 (Tex. App.—Austin July 9, 2021, no pet.) (mem.

 40
 op.). Therefore, we will suggest a remittitur of $6,000. See Tex. R. App. P. 46.3; Werner

Co. v. DeVallee, No. 02-19-00043-CV, 2021 WL 1134387, at *18 (Tex. App.—Fort

Worth Mar. 25, 2021, pet. denied) (mem. op.).

 VII. Declaratory Judgments

 In its third issue, the Association contends that Lumley was not entitled to

declaratory relief because the trial court's declarations merely addressed the same

issues as the breach of contract action and that therefore there was no justiciable

controversy between the parties.

 The Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act (UDJA) provides that "[a] person

interested under a deed, will, written contract, or other writings constituting a contract

. . . may have determined any question of construction or validity arising under

the . . . contract . . . and obtain a declaration of rights, status, or other legal relations

thereunder." Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 37.004(a). The UDJA's purpose is

to "settle and to afford relief from uncertainty and insecurity with respect to rights,

status, and other legal relations." Id. § 37.002(b). "A declaratory judgment is

appropriate only if a justiciable controversy exists as to the rights and status of the

parties and the controversy will be resolved by the declaration sought." Bonham State

Bank v. Beadle, 907 S.W.2d 465, 467 (Tex. 1995). The UDJA does not grant courts the

authority to render advisory opinions, see Patterson v. Planned Parenthood of Hous. & Se.

Tex., Inc., 971 S.W.2d 439, 443 (Tex. 1998), nor does it permit courts to grant

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 declaratory relief when the real issue is determining whether a party breached an

agreement, see Bonham State Bank, 907 S.W.2d at 467.

 In his second amended petition, Lumley requested declaratory relief "with

respect to the . . . breach of the . . . Declaration[] . . . and the Texas Property Code

involving the upkeep and maintenance of common areas allocated to" the

Association. Although in its brief the Association misidentifies the part of the

judgment containing the declaratory relief, its argument clearly challenges the granting

of any declaratory relief at all. Nevertheless, we conclude that the remaining

declaratory relief––although confirming the Association's legal duty under the

Declaration, which was also an element of the contract-breach action––was not

improper for lack of a justiciable controversy, nor was it improper because it

duplicated an issue in the breach-of-contract action.

 The Texas Supreme Court has held that "the existence of another adequate

remedy does not bar the right to maintain an action for declaratory judgment" and

that "prohibiting declaratory judgments whenever a breach of contract claim is

available would negate the [UDJA's] explicit terms covering such claims." MBM Fin.

Corp. v. Woodlands Operating Co., 292 S.W.3d 660, 669 (Tex. 2009) (first quoting Cobb v.

Harrington, 190 S.W.2d 709, 714 (Tex. 1945); and then citing Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.

Code Ann. § 37.004(a)–(b)). The Association does not challenge the propriety of the

declaratory relief as it relates to the attorney's fees award, which is a separate issue. See

MBM Fin. Corp., 292 S.W.3d at 669.

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 The scope and nature of the Association's legal obligation vis á vis the

Greenbelt was at the center of the dispute between Lumley and the Association. The

Association filed an answer in which it expressly raised the argument that it had no

responsibility to maintain the Greenbelt unless and until expressly conveyed to it by

JBGL. Thus, we conclude that a justiciable controversy existed so as to allow the trial

court to grant the surviving declaratory relief.

 We overrule the Association's third issue as it pertains to the remaining

declaratory relief.

 VIII. Attorney's Fees Awards

 Because we have determined that the trial court erred by awarding the specific-

performance relief for breach of contract and part of the declaratory relief, attorney's

fees must be recalculated as to the Association only. See Hicks Airfield Pilots Ass'n v.

Hicks Asset Partners, LLC, No. 02-22-00291-CV, 2023 WL 4007353, at *6 (Tex.

App.—Fort Worth June 15, 2023, no pet.) (mem. op.); Britton v. Laughlin, No. 02-20-

00226-CV, 2021 WL 5227169, at *3 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Nov. 10, 2021, pet.

denied) (mem. op. on reh'g). 21

 When asked by the trial court whether he was "attributing the lion's share" of
 21

attorney's fees to the Association, Lumley's counsel stated, "The [Association], no.
The [Association], the management company and JBGL . . . when I could not
properly segregate those and they were for the same claims."

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 IX. Conclusion

 We reverse the trial court's judgment in part as delineated below.

A. Legacy

 Having sustained Appellants' first issue, we reverse the part of the judgment

holding Legacy jointly and severally liable with the Association for the breach of

contract damages and attorney's fees, and we render a take-nothing judgment as to

Legacy. See Tex. R. App. P. 43.2(c).

B. The Association

 Having sustained the Association's second issue in part, we vacate the

following paragraphs of the trial court's judgment and render a take-nothing judgment

with respect to the specific-performance relief awarded:

 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED by the Court that Defendant, Mustang
 Park Owner's Association, Inc., LLC, shall repair the drainage system
 located on Lot 4x pursuant the below requirements which shall be listed
 within the scope of work:

 a. Runoff compounding along Lot 59 through Lot 48 created and
 eroded steeper side slopes. Curb integration between side slopes and the
 sidewalk;

 b. Greenbelt drainage currently converges and empties into the
 backyard of Lots 44 and 45. Installation of a subsurface drainage system
 to capture greenbelt runoff to effectively reduce erosion, confine
 drainage into well-defined boundaries, and eliminate overflows onto
 Lots 44 and Lot 45;

 c. Approximately four 24-inch drains, 1,500 linear feet of 12-inch
 pipe, and other material and all labor required to install a subsurface
 drainage system beneath the greenbelt;

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 d. Installation of a brick retaining wall (approximately 200 square
 feet) offsetting the property boundary of Lots 42 through 44 to absolve
 erosion of steep side slopes in that arena;

 e. A subsurface system interconnecting downspouts while
 spanning the side and backyards of Lots 44 and Lot 45 to eradicate
 surface drainage and erosion. A subsurface drainage system to capture
 Greenbelt drainage must be implemented for effective lot drainage.

 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED
 by the Court that Defendant, Mustang Park Owner's Assocition [sic],
 Inc., shall pay all expenses, goods, equipment, and labor necessary for
 the installation of a new, properly functioning drain in the common area
 behind Plaintiff's property located at [home address redacted] on Lot 4x,
 as well as all stone surrounding Plaintiff's property located at [home
 address redacted] necessary to ensure proper drainage in the common
 area to avoid flooding of Plaintiff's property located at [home address
 redacted].

 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED
 by the Court that Defendant, Mustang Park Owner's Assocition [sic],
 Inc., shall repair and make ongoing additional repairs to the drainage
 system located within the common areas and Lot 4x in the future to
 ensure that there is not a drainage or flooding problem that affects
 Plaintiff's property located at [home address redacted].

We also vacate most of the trial court's second declaration as follows: "Mustang Park

Owner's Association, Inc. is legally responsible for the repair, . . . re-installation, and

ensuring the full functionality of the drain located on Lot 4x, the Common Area

behind Plaintiff's property . . . ."22

 22
 Because we are vacating those parts of the judgment that reference the
phrases "properly functioning drain"; "necessary to ensure proper drainage"; and
"ensure that there is not a drainage or flooding problem," we have not addressed the
Association's fifth issue alleging that the inclusion of those phrases in the judgment
fails to accord it the requisite finality and certainty. See Tex. R. App. P. 47.1.

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 But having affirmed Lumley's third issue as to the remaining declaratory relief,

we modify the judgment so that the declaratory relief reads as follows:

 THE COURT FURTHER JUDICIALLY DECLARES that:

 a. Mustang Park Owner's Association, Inc is legally responsible for the
 maintenance and upkeep of the field (Lot 4x) behind Plaintiff's property
 located at [home address redacted] due to the field being a Common
 Area; and

 b. Mustang Park Owner's Association, Inc. is legally responsible for the
 upkeep of the drain located on Lot 4x, the Common Area behind
 Plaintiff's property located at [home address redacted].

 According to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 46.3, as to the Association

only, we suggest a remittitur of $6,000. See Tex. R. App. P. 46.3. If Lumley files a

remittitur within twenty days from the date of our judgment and notifies this court of

such, we will reform the trial court's damages award to $12,950 and affirm that part of

the judgment as modified; further vacate and modify the judgment as indicated above

and affirm those parts as modified; and reverse the attorney's fees award and remand

the case solely for a recalculation of those fees as to the Association only. If a

remittitur is not timely filed, we will reverse the judgment as to the breach-of-contract

claim and attorney's fees only, vacate and modify the judgment as indicated above,

and remand the case for a new trial solely on the breach-of-contract claim and

attorney's fees as to the Association only.

 /s/ Wade Birdwell
 Wade Birdwell
 Justice
Delivered: August 22, 2024

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