BrunoBuilt, Inc. v. Erstad Architects, PA

CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 2023
Docket49175
StatusPublished

This text of BrunoBuilt, Inc. v. Erstad Architects, PA (BrunoBuilt, Inc. v. Erstad Architects, PA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BrunoBuilt, Inc. v. Erstad Architects, PA, (Idaho 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO

Docket No. 49175

BRUNOBUILT, INC., an Idaho corporation, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Boise, January 2023 Term ) v. ) Opinion filed: March 21, 2023 ) ERSTAD ARCHITECTS, PA, an Idaho ) Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk professional service corporation; ANDREW ) C. ERSTAD, CHERYL PEARSE, ) ) Defendants-Respondents, ) ) and ) ) MATERIALS TESTING & INSPECTION, ) LLC, an Idaho limited liability company; ) KEVIN L. SCHROEDER, CHARLES E. ) KAISER, ELIZABETH BROWN, DAVID O. ) CRAM, BRIGGS ENGINEERING, INC., an ) Idaho corporation; DEAN W. BRIGGS, ) TREASURE VALLEY ENGINEERS, INC., ) an Idaho corporation; MATRIX ) ENGINEERING, INC., an Idaho corporation; ) DOUGLAS L. UNGER, KLEINFELDER, ) INC., a California corporation; and G. ) ALEXANDER RUSH, ) ) Defendants. )

Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, Ada County. Steven J. Hippler, District Judge.

The judgment of the district court is affirmed.

McConnell Wagner Sykes & Stacey, PLLC, Boise, for Appellant. Richard Lee Stacey, Jr. argued.

Brassey Crawford, PLLC, Boise, for Respondents. Ryan Janis argued.

_______________________________________________

1 MOELLER, Justice. This appeal concerns a residence in the Boise foothills that was damaged by a landslide, which ultimately prevented the builder from obtaining a certificate of occupancy. BrunoBuilt, Inc., the general contractor of the project, sued multiple parties, including Erstad Architects, PA, the architectural firm for the project, Andrew C. Erstad, the principal architect, and Cheryl Pearse, the project manager from Erstad Architects, PA (collectively the “Erstad Defendants”), 1 for professional negligence in connection with work completed for construction of the residence. The Erstad Defendants successfully moved for summary judgment on the basis that the two-year statute of limitations in Idaho Code section 5-219(4) barred BrunoBuilt’s claim. Two years after the district court issued its memorandum decision and order granting summary judgment, BrunoBuilt moved the district court for reconsideration, citing new evidence and arguments. BrunoBuilt explained that it, at least in part, sought “to ensure that all facts and arguments that support its position have been raised in this case for purposes of appeal.” The district court denied the motion for reconsideration, concluding it was “untimely, lacking in diligence, and improper.” BrunoBuilt then appealed, challenging the decision of the district court on summary judgment and additionally asserting that the court erred in an earlier order deconsolidating the cases with other defendants. Prior to oral argument, the Erstad Defendants moved this Court to sanction counsel for BrunoBuilt pursuant to Idaho Appellate Rule 11.2 for non-disclosure of material procedural facts in its opening brief. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the district court’s decision granting summary judgment against BrunoBuilt. Additionally, we agree that the conduct of BrunoBuilt’s attorney on appeal runs afoul of Rule 11.2 and impose sanctions. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The property central to this appeal is Lot 16 of Terra Nativa Subdivision No. 4 in Boise (“the Property”), which was purchased by William and Amy Dempsey in 2014. In April 2014, the Dempseys, as owners of the Property, entered into a construction contract with BrunoBuilt for the construction of a residence on the Property. Per the terms of the Dempseys’ contract with BrunoBuilt, “the plans, specifications, and drawings [were to be] provided by [the Dempseys].”

1 At all relevant times to this appeal, Erstad Architects was organized as Erstad Architects, PA. However, Erstad Architects, PA, filed a statement of conversion and converted to a general business corporation (Erstad Architects, Inc.) on November 30, 2021. Throughout this appeal, “Erstad Architects, PA” or “Erstad Architects” is used to refer to the general corporation that is now organized as Erstad Architects, Inc. 2 However, the plans provided by the Dempseys were not strictly binding on BrunoBuilt. Among other provisions, the agreement provided that: [BrunoBuilt] may deviate from adherence to the Plans if adherence to the Plans becomes impractical or unfeasible, based upon Contractor’s job-site experience or for other reasonably commercial reasons, provided such alteration does not materially change the Project. Further, the Plans and the Price (defined below), shall be modified to accommodate any change required by applicable laws, codes, ordinances, covenants, unforeseen site conditions or any architectural control committee. Any material deviation from the Plans will be initiated by a change order as provided further herein. The construction contract also “required that the Dempseys convey Lot 16 into BrunoBuilt’s name to serve as a security for [BrunoBuilt’s] construction loan.” In January 2015, the Dempseys contracted with Erstad Architects, PA, to design the home. The scope of the work included “[a]rchitectural, civil, and structural design and documentation for [their] new 2 story home approximately 3,000 to 3,200 sf with a pool.” The agreement between Erstad Architects, PA, and the Dempseys also contained a detailed scope of service and list of “understandings” that Erstad based its fees upon. The understandings included a delineation of key personnel working on the project: 1. erstad ARCHITECTS (eA) will be the Architect of Record for the project. Key personnel assigned to this project include: a. Architect: erstad ARCHITECTS, P.A. Principal-in-Charge: Andy Erstad, AIA Project Manager: Cheryl Pearse b. Civil Engineering: Dean Briggs, Briggs Engineering c. Structural Engineering: Eric Wolfe, Wolfe Engineering d. Landscape, Mechanical. Plumbing, and Electrical work to be design-build [sic] by Bruno Built. Further, the terms and conditions of the agreement also provide that “Client and Architect understand and agree that Architect has not been retained or compensated to provide . . . site surveys, site evaluations, environmental studies, soil analysis and geological surveys[.]” Importantly, while the Dempseys contracted separately with BrunoBuilt and Erstad Architects, PA, there was no agreement between BrunoBuilt and any of the Erstad Defendants. This arrangement is confirmed in an email from Robert Bruno, President of BrunoBuilt, to Cheryl Pearse, where Mr. Bruno stated: “I don’t think I am obligated to comply with your Contract Documents outside of code or engineering requirements since I have no contract with Erstad Architects.” (Emphasis added).

3 As agreed, the Dempseys conveyed the property to BrunoBuilt in July 2015 via a quitclaim deed. Shortly thereafter, BrunoBuilt secured financing. Over the next eight months, work on the site commenced and the project moved forward. At this time, it was unknown to BrunoBuilt and the Erstad Defendants that a portion of the subdivision where the Property was located was constructed on a pre-existing landslide. In February 2016, as observed by BrunoBuilt’s retained civil and geotechnical engineering expert, “the North Alto Via Landslide (‘NAVL’) reactivated. The NAVL began moving beneath a portion of the Subdivision where [the Property is] located.” At this time, construction on the home was practically complete. BrunoBuilt continued finishing work up to the final inspections, despite awareness of the landslide’s reactivation in Terra Nativa. As Robert Bruno later detailed in an affidavit, “final heating, final plumbing, final electrical, and final building inspections were conducted in and around February and March of 2016. The Dempsey Home passed all final building inspections relating to the physical structure of the home.” The only remaining hurdle was the certificate of occupancy from the City of Boise.

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