Distinctive Design Build, LLC v. Thomas Nelson, Installed Building Solutions II, LLC, ...

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedApril 15, 2024
Docketa230718
StatusPublished

This text of Distinctive Design Build, LLC v. Thomas Nelson, Installed Building Solutions II, LLC, ... (Distinctive Design Build, LLC v. Thomas Nelson, Installed Building Solutions II, LLC, ...) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Distinctive Design Build, LLC v. Thomas Nelson, Installed Building Solutions II, LLC, ..., (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

This opinion is nonprecedential except as provided by Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 136.01, subd. 1(c).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A23-0718

Distinctive Design Build, LLC, Respondent,

vs.

Thomas Nelson, Appellant,

Installed Building Solutions II, LLC, Defendant,

BPC, Inc., Respondent,

Pinnacle Real Estate Group, LLC d/b/a Keller Williams Realty Integrity Edina, et al., Respondents,

Premier Title Insurance Agency, Inc., Third-Party Defendant.

Filed April 15, 2024 Affirmed Reyes, Judge

Washington County District Court File No. 82-CV-19-2353 Courtney J. Ernston, Taryn S. Wheeler, North Star Law Group, PLLC, St. Paul, Minnesota (for respondent Distinctive Design Build, LLC)

Timothy R. Maher, Joseph D. Kantor, Guzior Armbrecht Maher, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant Thomas Nelson)

Lars C. Erickson, Benjamin J. Kirk, Coleman & Erickson, LLC, Eden Prairie, Minnesota (for respondent BPC, Inc.)

David J. McGee, Natalie R. Walz, McGee Walz, PA, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondents Pinnacle Real Estate Group, et al.)

Considered and decided by Reyes, Presiding Judge; Larson, Judge; and Ede, Judge.

NONPRECEDENTIAL OPINION

REYES, Judge

On appeal from final judgment in this home-construction dispute, appellant-owner

brings numerous claims challenging the district court’s (1) grant of summary judgment to

respondent real-estate professionals on his third-party claims for breach of fiduciary duty,

negligence, vicarious liability, and unauthorized practice of law; (2) denial of his motion

to amend his answer to add direct claims against respondent-subcontractor; and

(3) determination that respondent-contractor’s mechanic’s liens were perfected. By notice

of related appeal, respondent-contractor challenges the district court’s denial of its motions

in limine regarding damages evidence. We affirm.

FACTS

Pre-Litigation

In 2017, appellant and cross-respondent Thomas Nelson (Nelson) sought to build a

new house and saw a model home constructed by respondent and cross-appellant

Distinctive Design Build, LLC (DDB). He connected with respondent Keith Greiman

2 (Greiman), DDB’s real-estate agent who was affiliated with respondent Pinnacle Real

Estate Group, LLC d/b/a Keller Williams Realty Integrity Edina (Keller). In early 2018,

Nelson and DDB discussed DDB building a house for Nelson on property he owned in

St. Paul Park (the property).

On February 28, 2018, Nelson, Greiman, and a representative for DDB met to draft

a purchase agreement. Greiman drafted the purchase agreement and served as a dual agent

for the transaction. Nelson stated that he expressed that he wanted to close within June to

August 2018. The purchase agreement reflects that DDB and Nelson executed the

agreement on March 6, 2018.

From mid-March to mid-April, Nelson demolished his existing home on the

property. In late April, Nelson and DDB agreed to the preconstruction specifications for

the new home. After growing concerned with DDB’s progress, on May 19, 2018, Nelson

requested a copy of the purchase agreement from Greiman and received it the next day. It

showed a closing date of September 14, 2018, on the first page and a closing date of July

18, 2018, on the twelfth page. Nelson texted Greiman, “I must say I never agreed to that

[September closing date] and I’m not too happy,” but did not tell Greiman or DDB that he

did not want to proceed. Greiman admitted that he changed the closing date to September

after a phone conversation with Nelson in late April or early May, during which he told

Nelson that DDB could not finish the house by July and would need an extension.

Greiman then notified Nelson that the home was scheduled to be completed in

August 2018. In late June, Greiman emailed an addendum to the purchase agreement to

3 Nelson to change the closing date to August 31, but Nelson refused to sign it. The parties

never executed the addendum and never rescheduled the closing date.

Construction began and between June 27 and July 10, 2018, the City of Cottage

Grove 1 (the city) building inspector approved, among other things, the footing forms,

formwork, block wall, and foundation waterproofing. Shortly after, Nelson contacted the

city regarding his concerns with the footing, foundation, and block wall. The city building

inspector reinspected the wall, issued a correction notice, discussed the concerns with

DDB, and agreed upon a plan to correct the work. Respondent BPC, Inc. (BPC), DDB’s

subcontractor tasked with building the concrete footings and foundation, performed the

work, and the city approved the block wall repair on August 10. However, Nelson refused

to approve draw requests and claimed that the quality of the workmanship was

unacceptable, and construction stopped.

In September 2018, DDB and Installed Building Solutions II, LLC (IBS), a

subcontractor for DDB that performed waterproofing and other improvements for the

project, filed mechanic’s liens against Nelson’s property.

Litigation

In May 2019, DDB sued Nelson and IBS. DDB alleged, in part, that Nelson had

breached the purchase agreement and owed $46,322 for DDB’s mechanic’s lien in that

amount. IBS cross-claimed against Nelson, in part, to foreclose its mechanic’s lien.

Nelson counterclaimed against both DDB and IBS and initiated a variety of third-party

1 The City of St. Paul Park has a service agreement with the City of Cottage Grove for building-inspection services.

4 claims against Greiman, Keller, and respondent John K. Butler, a real-estate broker for

Keller (collectively, respondent real-estate professionals).

In January 2020, DDB moved to join BPC. The district court granted DDB’s

motion, and DDB filed an amended complaint, alleging that BPC breached its

subcontractor agreement and seeking indemnification for any claims arising from BPC’s

work. BPC asserted counterclaims against DDB and cross-claims against Nelson. Nelson

answered BPC’s cross-claims, but notably did not assert any direct claims against BPC.

In October 2020, the district court granted summary judgment to respondent real-

estate professionals and dismissed Nelson’s claims against them. In June 2021, the district

court also granted summary judgment to IBS after IBS assigned its mechanic’s lien to DDB

under a settlement agreement.

Discovery Disputes

The district court issued its last standing scheduling order in August 2021 that set

December 27, 2021, as the deadline for Nelson’s disclosure of expert witnesses and

opinions and to hear nondispositive motions, other than motions in limine, and set close of

discovery for January 26, 2022.

Nelson disclosed architect David Campbell as an expert witness by the disclosure

deadline, and on January 11, disclosed Campbell’s expert report. On February 18, 2022,

BPC filed a motion in limine for an order, in part, prohibiting Nelson from asserting any

direct claims against BPC because a late amendment would prejudice BPC. That same

day, DDB filed a similar motion in limine to prohibit Nelson from presenting evidence

from Campbell or regarding damages related to the project. On February 23, Nelson

5 disclosed a Tice-Hause Design Build bid (Tice-Hause bid) of the estimated value of the

home contracted for under the purchase agreement. The following day, Nelson moved to

amend his answer to BPC’s cross-claim to assert counterclaims, arguing that he was a third-

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