ABG Contractors Inc. and John K. Hunter Sr. v. I-55 Development LLC and Dave Thind;

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedAugust 18, 2020
DocketNO. 2018-CA-01673-COA
StatusPublished

This text of ABG Contractors Inc. and John K. Hunter Sr. v. I-55 Development LLC and Dave Thind; (ABG Contractors Inc. and John K. Hunter Sr. v. I-55 Development LLC and Dave Thind;) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ABG Contractors Inc. and John K. Hunter Sr. v. I-55 Development LLC and Dave Thind;, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2018-CA-01673-COA

ABG CONTRACTORS INC. AND JOHN K. APPELLANTS HUNTER SR.

v.

I-55 DEVELOPMENT LLC AND DAVE THIND APPELLEES

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/14/2018 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JANNIE M. LEWIS-BLACKMON COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HOLMES COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: WARREN LOUIS MARTIN JR. ROBERT EARL THOMPSON II ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: TERRIS CATON HARRIS JAMIE DEON TRAVIS NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - CONTRACT DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED - 8/18/2020 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

LAWRENCE, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. ABG Contractors Inc. (ABG Contractors) and John K. Hunter Sr. (collectively, the

Appellants) appeal from the judgment of the Holmes County Circuit Court expunging their

notice of construction lien on property owned by Dave Thind and I-55 Development LLC

(collectively, the Appellees). On appeal, the Appellants assert that the circuit court (1)

violated Mississippi law by setting aside their notice of construction lien without making any

findings that the lien was false, fraudulent, or improper; (2) abused its discretion by granting

relief to the Appellees during the hearing because the Appellees failed to appear at the hearing; and (3) abused its discretion by refusing to allow Hunter to present testimony and

evidence about the construction lien’s validity.

¶2. Upon review, we find that the circuit court erred by expunging the Appellants’ notice

of construction lien without first making any findings as to the lien’s validity. We therefore

reverse the circuit court’s judgment and remand this case for a new hearing so that the parties

may present their evidence regarding the validity of the construction lien and so that the

circuit court may make findings of fact as to this issue.

FACTS

¶3. The Appellees owned real property in Holmes County, Mississippi. On August 18,

2017, the Appellees contracted with the Appellants to build a gas station and convenience

store (collectively, the C-Store) on the Appellees’ real property. The contract terms stated

that ABG Contractors would act as the prime contractor and “provide the labor and materials

to perform the services to complete the C-Store, located at I-55 at MS Hwy 17, Pickens,

MS.” The contract further provided that ABG Contractors would complete the project within

180 days of the project’s August 21, 2017 start date. In addition, the contract stated that

“[a]ny alteration or deviation from the described work above involving extra costs shall be

executed only upon [a] signed Change Order agreement between the Owner and Contractor.”

¶4. On October 24, 2018, the Appellants filed a notice of construction lien on the

Appellees’ property. The lien stated that ABG Contractors was entitled to the contract price

of $900,000 “for satisfaction of a claim which became due on or around 180 days after

August 21, 2017, for work performed or labor, materials, services provided (or whatever the

2 claim may be).”

¶5. On November 1, 2018, the Appellees filed a petition seeking (1) expungement of the

notice of construction lien from the land records, (2) assessment of penalties against ABG

Contractors for filing a false lien, and (3) entry of a declaratory judgment. The Appellees

claimed that ABG Contractors’s lien was defective because the lien alleged that ABG

Contractors was “owed the entire contract price and presupposes that [ABG Contractors]

ha[d] not been paid under the terms of the contract.” The Appellees further asserted that the

lien was fraudulent because ABG Contractors had already received a total amount of

$832,054 under the contract. The Appellees also stated that despite the contractual

requirement that ABG Contractors provide all materials to perform the services, they (the

Appellees) had paid invoices for materials on ABG Contractors’s behalf, totaling $186,815.

Thus, even though the agreed contract price was only $900,000, the Appellees argued that

they had already paid $1,018,869 to ABG Contractors and to vendors on ABG Contractors’s

behalf. The Appellees asserted that their good-faith payments to ABG Contractors for the

work ABG Contractors had completed and to the vendors for materials ABG Contractors had

ordered, along with ABG Contractors’s failure to complete the project, created an absolute

defense and invalidated the lien.

¶6. The Appellees attached a Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 81 summons to their

petition that set the hearing for November 9, 2018. To avoid scheduling conflicts, however,

the circuit court held a telephonic conference on the Appellees’ petition on November 8,

2018. On behalf of the Appellants, both Hunter and his attorney attended the hearing.

3 Although the Appellees’ attorneys attended the hearing, the Appellees themselves did not.

The circuit court heard arguments by the parties’ attorneys but declined to receive testimony

from Hunter about the construction lien’s validity. The circuit court also declined to accept

video evidence that Hunter attempted to enter into evidence.

¶7. During the hearing, the parties agreed that the Appellees had paid ABG Contractors

around $832,000 for work performed under the contract. Hunter claimed, however, that the

Appellees had waived the contract requirement for all change orders to be in writing and that

the Appellees had requested three major revisions to the building plans: (1) the addition of

1,000 square feet for a pharmacy, (2) the addition of 1,250 square feet for a liquor store, and

(3) an increase in the overall elevation of the project by about twenty feet. To support his

assertions regarding the first two revisions, Hunter provided two change orders that detailed

each of the revisions. Neither change order, however, contained Thind’s signature. Hunter

also presented an invoice to support his contention regarding the third revision. Again,

however, Hunter provided no signed change orders that reflected the revision.

¶8. After hearing the parties’ arguments, the circuit judge issued a bench ruling in which

she stated the following:

Before this Court is a petition to expunge [a] lien that the plaintiff claims is a false and fraudulent lien. The Court having heard arguments in this matter and hav[ing] not heard testimony because the plaintiff is not here, what I’m going to do, I’m going to cancel the contractor’s lien. . . . [A]t this point, I can’t say whether it was a fraudulent lien or a false lien, but I don’t have any evidence before me to say it is a valid lien. Therefore, I’m going to cancel the lien. And I’m going to reset this matter for hearing, and I think the only question is the change orders, in that the change orders [are] not in line with the actual contract. And the exhibit on the [$743,800] in dirt work. And I’m going to continue this matter to have . . . evidence presented to the Court on those

4 issues.

....

And that’s what I need, in order to make a decision on whether or not it was a false or fraudulent lien. Now, I’m canceling the lien until after I have that evidence before me[] to make a decision.

¶9. On November 14, 2018, the circuit court entered an order to expunge the Appellants’

notice of construction lien on the Appellees’ property. Because the Appellees had failed to

attend the hearing, the circuit judge ordered that the matter reconvene on December 12, 2018,

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ABG Contractors Inc. and John K. Hunter Sr. v. I-55 Development LLC and Dave Thind;, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abg-contractors-inc-and-john-k-hunter-sr-v-i-55-development-llc-and-missctapp-2020.