Daggett v. Feeney

CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 2017
Docket7179 S-15799/S-15819
StatusPublished

This text of Daggett v. Feeney (Daggett v. Feeney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daggett v. Feeney, (Ala. 2017).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.us.

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

JAMES WILLIAM DAGGETT and ) NADIA TORA DAGGETT, ) ) Supreme Court Nos. S-15799/15819 Appellants and ) Cross-Appellees, ) ) Superior Court No. 3HO-11-00359 CI v. ) ) OPINION RICHARD L. FEENEY, ) ) No. 7179 – June 16, 2017 Appellee and ) Cross-Appellant. ) )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Homer, Charles T. Huguelet, Judge.

Appearances: James William Daggett and Nadia Tora Daggett, pro se, Anchorage, Appellants. Lindsay Wolter, Homer, for Appellee.

Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Bolger, and Carney, Justices.

CARNEY, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION A property owner cancelled a contract to install a wind turbine on his property and sued the contractor to recover his down payment. The contractor filed a counterclaim for breach of contract. The superior court concluded that the contractor was required to be licensed by the State and had misrepresented its licensing status. It also concluded that the contractor could not maintain the counterclaim because the contractor was unregistered. The court ordered the contract rescinded and the contractor to return the down payment less a setoff covering costs incurred in the transaction. The contractor failed to pay and the court amended the judgment to include the contractor’s individual owners and a successor company. The contractor’s individual owners appeal the licensing determination and the amended judgment. The property owner cross- appeals the setoff calculation. We conclude that the court erred only in its setoff calculation. II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS A. Facts This case involves a cancelled contract between Richard Feeney and Alaskan Wind Industries (AWI), a renewable energy contractor, for the sale and installation of a wind turbine on Feeney’s property in Homer. AWI was the trade name for Daggett LLC, owned by James and Nadia Daggett. The Daggetts owned several similarly named organizations, as well as Standard Steel, Inc. Feeney and his wife, Elizabeth Bashaw, began discussing the purchase of a wind turbine with AWI representatives in the summer of 2009. In these discussions AWI was often represented by sales representative Erik Schreier and occasionally by Nadia Daggett. The parties dispute whether Schreier told Feeney and Bashaw that AWI was licensed1 and bonded as a steel erection contractor and whether Schreier promised to make sure neighboring landowners would not oppose the turbine’s installation. But the parties agree that they discussed AWI’s successful installation of another turbine in the same area without opposition from neighboring landowners.

1 The parties and the superior court frequently used the term “license” to refer to registration under AS 08.18.011-.061.

-2- 7179 The parties ultimately signed a contract in October 2010, with Schreier signing on behalf of AWI. The contract was on AWI letterhead and did not mention Daggett LLC. It required AWI to provide and install a wind turbine, a 49-foot tower, and an inverter. The contract expressly affirmed that AWI was “qualified by law as a licensed steel erector in the state of Alaska” and allocated to Feeney the responsibility for “meet[ing] all builders[’] permit requirements, variances, [and] height restriction waivers.” Bashaw paid the 60% down payment of $32,880 immediately after the contract was signed. AWI then ordered the wind turbine from a California-based supplier and had it shipped to Alaska. AWI began digging the turbine’s foundation in November 2010. The work was soon stopped by Bashaw because a neighbor was concerned that the 49-foot turbine would violate a subdivision land-use covenant. AWI agreed that Feeney and Bashaw could take a few months to resolve the conflict with their neighbor. In late November the neighbor formally notified Feeney and Bashaw of a land-use covenant that prohibited structures over 35 feet tall in the subdivision and threatened legal action if the project moved forward. In December Bashaw emailed Nadia Daggett saying, “We need to get this contract cancelled as soon as possible, especially since it is illegal and you were aware that was so when it was signed.” Despite discussions during the first half of 2011 to try to reach a mutually agreeable solution regarding contract cancellation and refund, the parties were unable to reach an agreement. B. Proceedings Feeney filed suit in early December 2011, naming AWI, James Daggett, and Nadia Daggett as the defendants. Feeney alleged that AWI and its representatives had “assured” him that they were familiar with the subdivision covenants, that the wind

-3- 7179

turbine would not violate them, and that AWI would check with Feeney’s neighbors to make sure they did not object to the turbine. Feeney asked the court to rescind the contract and order the return of his down payment, “less any offset which the court deems appropriate”; he also requested an accounting to determine the offset amount. AWI’s answer admitted that it had entered into a contract with Feeney and asserted wrongful rejection of the turbine delivery as an affirmative defense. AWI also filed a counterclaim, alleging that Feeney had materially breached the contract by refusing to accept full performance and pay the full price for the turbine. James and Nadia Daggett filed separate answers raising affirmative defenses that they were not party to the contract between Feeney and AWI and were not liable to Feeney under AS 10.50.265, which limits LLC members’ liability to third parties.2 Feeney replied to AWI’s counterclaim and amended his complaint seeking to pierce the corporate veil and reach the Daggetts personally because of some confusion about the Daggetts’ various corporate entities.3 Feeney expanded his claim for contract rescission, alleging that rescission was justified because “AWI was not registered as a general or specialty contractor with the State of Alaska” when it entered the contract, as required by state law. Having discovered that AWI was no longer a registered business and that the Daggetts had set up a new entity under the name Standard Steel, Inc., Feeney also sought to add Standard Steel as a defendant.

2 AS 10.50.265 provides that “[a] person who is a member of a limited liability company or a foreign limited liability company is not liable, solely by reason of being a member, under a judgment, decree, or order of a court, or in another manner, for a liability of the company to a third party.” 3 Because the superior court ultimately concluded that the correct entity was Daggett LLC d/b/a Alaskan Wind Industries, we use that name throughout.

-4- 7179

A two-day bench trial took place in Homer in November 2012. Feeney testified that he had specifically asked Schreier whether AWI was a licensed and bonded contractor and that Schreier had affirmed AWI was licensed and bonded. Feeney explained that this information was important to him in deciding to purchase the wind turbine. Schreier testified that Feeney had never asked about AWI’s licensing status. Nadia Daggett testified that she and James had believed wind energy installers were not required to be licensed as construction contractors at the time of the contract with Feeney. She stated that “[i]t was industry standard” not to carry a license at the time and claimed that none of AWI’s competitors had done so. Nadia also testified that she had contacted the State and had been told there was no North American Industry Classification System (NAICS)4 code for renewable energy installers.

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