Beaufort Builders, Inc. v. White Plains Church Ministries, Inc.

783 S.E.2d 35, 246 N.C. App. 27, 2016 WL 787959
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 1, 2016
Docket15-582
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 783 S.E.2d 35 (Beaufort Builders, Inc. v. White Plains Church Ministries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beaufort Builders, Inc. v. White Plains Church Ministries, Inc., 783 S.E.2d 35, 246 N.C. App. 27, 2016 WL 787959 (N.C. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

DAVIS, Judge.

*28 White Plains Church Ministries, Inc. ("White Plains") appeals from the trial court's amended judgment granting the motion of Charles F. Cherry ("Cherry") for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. On appeal, White Plains contends that the trial court erred by determining that it was precluded from recovery on a theory of negligence against Cherry individually as president of Beaufort Builders, Inc. ("Beaufort Builders") for economic injury resulting from the construction of a building that was the subject of a contract between White Plains and Beaufort Builders. After careful review, we affirm.

*37 Factual Background

On 23 May 2011, Beaufort Builders and White Plains entered into a written contract ("the Contract") pursuant to which Beaufort Builders agreed to construct a church ("the Church") on land owned by White Plains in Belhaven, North Carolina in Beaufort County. Cherry and his wife are the co-owners of Beaufort Builders, and Cherry serves as the company's president.

As part of the construction of the Church, it was necessary to pour a concrete "pad" foundation upon which the actual structure would be built. Due to the low elevation in the Belhaven area, Federal Emergency Management Agency ("FEMA") regulations required the pad foundation for the Church to be built above the base flood elevation ("BFE"), which was set at seven feet in that part of Beaufort County. In order to ensure that the foundation was compliant, White Plains hired Ralph Jarvis ("Jarvis"), a surveyor, to determine the elevation at the building site. In the course of performing this task, Jarvis inserted a metal pole into the ground at the building site and marked it at an elevation of eight feet-one foot higher than necessary for compliance with the seven-foot BFE. Based on his survey, Jarvis obtained an elevation certificate reflecting that the mark he had made at the site was, in fact, set at eight feet.

Cherry testified that in preparation for the pouring of the pad foundation, Pat Harrington ("Harrington") and Dave Saul, two individuals who were working under Cherry's direction on the building project, used a bulldozer to move dirt off of the site of the foundation to an area that was ultimately going to be used for the parking lot of the Church. Cherry elaborated on this issue as follows:

Q. Who actually removed the dirt?
*29 A. Mr. Harrington and Dave Saul they worked together and he was actually the one on the site. They would do this because the grader was still on the site. He removed it.
Q. Did you personally ever remove any dirt off this pad?
A. No.
Q. Did you ever do any grading outside the pad?
A. I did.
Q. What grading did you do outside the pad?
A. The dirt they had pushed off the pad into the parking lot. You're looking at 4' of dirt. They pushed all that dirt off so that it was just above so it was just above-had some steep places on it and we grade that we could work [sic]. We could get on the site properly. You know drive up without somebody getting hurt. The hurricane came shortly after that. There was a lot of water that washed and eroded some. We did grade that up on the actual side of the pad.
Q. As far as the pad in the parking lot, you did not do that?
A. No.
Q. Okay. Now, during this time did you ever push off dirt from the pad to the parking lot?
A. No. I did that to save time and the only reason I did that was to save the church money.... Dug some ditches, didn't have any. Had to get ready to pour a slab.... a foot below to where the water came up to on the site.

Cherry further testified that during a conversation with Reverend Douglas Cogdell ("Reverend Cogdell"), the senior pastor of White Plains, Reverend Cogdell had expressly given him permission to move the dirt from the foundation to the parking lot.

White Plains offered testimony from Gloria Rogers ("Rogers"), White Plains' administrative assistant, who recounted an occasion on which she had driven by the Church during its construction and observed Cherry moving dirt from the foundation.

Q. You've been sitting in the courtroom for the last two and a half days, Ms. Rogers. You've heard this testimony, I take it, that about dirt being pushed off the mound?
*30 A. Yes, sir.
Q. By Mr. Harrington onto the parking area?
A. Yes, sir.
*38 Q. Separate from that, did you observe Mr. Cherry pushing dirt off the mound?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Tell me about that.
A. My husband and I we rode by the church every day to see about the progress. And I saw Fred out with his truck, Mr. Cherry out with his truck. And I said, Mr. Cherry, what are you doing? And he says I'm pushing the dirt off of this mound because my men got to have some place to work. Because they say it's too muddy. It was really muddy. So, I've got to push the dirt off the mound. He was in-in a big truck with the push thing that push [sic] the dirt out in front of it. And he was sitting in the middle of the mountain. As we set there he was pushing around-he was pushing it systematically around the mound.
Q. Pushing the-pushing the dirt-
A. Dirt off to the side.
Q. Off to the side.
A. All-all around, you know, like pushing it around. He said he had to do that because his men needed to come to work and that it was too muddy and they got to get the steel frame up. The building was supposed to be coming in soon.
....
Q. Ms. Rogers, did-did Mr. Cherry tell you that the reason he was pushing dirt off the mound onto the muddy areas was because his workers told him that the ground was too muddy for them to work?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And you-I think you characterized the piece of machinery that he was atop as a truck with-with some blade on the front?
*31 A. Yeah, it was a big, you know, truck that you push the dirt off. One of those big things that you push the dirt off with. I guess you use it to push the dirt off. He was pushing the dirt off.
Q. Was it a truck or a tractor?
A. It-it wasn't a truck like-it might have been a tractor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
783 S.E.2d 35, 246 N.C. App. 27, 2016 WL 787959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaufort-builders-inc-v-white-plains-church-ministries-inc-ncctapp-2016.