Donald Greg Hopper v. Betty J. Moling

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 26, 2005
DocketW2004-02410-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Donald Greg Hopper v. Betty J. Moling (Donald Greg Hopper v. Betty J. Moling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donald Greg Hopper v. Betty J. Moling, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON MAY 17, 2005 Session

DONALD GREG HOPPER v. BETTY J. MOLING

Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Madison County No. 55911 James F. Butler, Chancellor

No. W2004-02410-COA-R3-CV - Filed August 26, 2005

The plaintiff, an unlicensed home improvement contractor, entered into an agreement with the defendant/homeowner to make certain improvements to her existing home. Shortly after the plaintiff left the job site, the defendant/homeowner began to experience several problems associated with the plaintiff’s work. The defendant/homeowner paid to have the defects repaired and/or completed. The plaintiff filed a petition against the defendant/homeowner to enforce a materialman’s lien. The defendant/homeowner filed a counter-complaint seeking damages for breach of contract, breach of implied warranties, fraud, and violations of the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act. At the conclusion of the bench trial, the chancellor held that the plaintiff’s conduct amounted to constructive fraud, thereby voiding the contract; the plaintiff was only entitled to recover the cost of his labor and materials under quantum meruit; and the defendant/homeowner was entitled to damages, attorney’s fees, and discretionary costs. The plaintiff appealed to this Court to contest the chancellor’s inclusion of certain costs in the damage award, the limitation of his quantum meruit recovery, the finding of constructive fraud, and the award of attorney’s fees to the defendant/homeowner. The defendant/homeowner appealed the chancellor’s exclusion of certain costs from the damage award and the method used by the chancellor in calculating the damages. We affirm in part and vacate in part.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part and Vacated in Part

ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAVID R. FARMER , J., and HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., joined.

Kevin Carter, Lexington, TN, for Appellant

J. Brandon McWherter, Jackson, TN, for Appellee OPINION

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 1998, Betty J. Moling (“Ms. Moling” or “Appellee”) entered into an oral contract with Donald G. Hopper (“Mr. Hopper” or “Appellant”) whereby Mr. Hopper agreed to make certain improvements to Ms. Moling’s home located in Jackson, Madison County, Tennessee. Ms. Moling is an elderly female, and she is the aunt of Mr. Hopper’s wife’s mother. Mr. Hopper is employed as a trooper with the Tennessee Highway Patrol. Mr. Hopper has also performed construction work for approximately ten years. He previously performed construction work for Ms. Moling prior to engaging in the projects which gave rise to the instant litigation.

Regarding the projects which are the center of this dispute, Ms.Moling asked Mr. Hopper to make two improvements to her home. First, Ms. Moling asked Mr. Hopper to install vinyl flooring in a significant portion of her home. Mr. Hopper agreed to perform this task for $2,600.00 , which represented the cost of his labor and materials. Second, Ms. Moling asked Mr. Hopper to construct a garage/bathroom addition onto her existing home. Mr. Hopper agreed to perform this task for $19,800.00, which represented the cost of his labor and materials. Thus, the total agreed upon cost of both projects equaled $22,400.00.

During the process of entering into the agreement with Ms.Moling, Mr. Hopper admitted that he held himself out as a person who was qualified and competent to perform the requested work. Ms. Moling believed that Mr. Hopper held the proper licenses and had obtained the proper permits necessary for the work she requested him to perform. In fact, Mr. Hopper did not have a contractor’s license, an electrician’s license, or a plumber’s license. Mr. Hopper obtained a building permit on January 15, 1999, after he began constructing the garage/bathroom addition, but he only obtained a permit for $4,000.00.

Mr. Hopper completed the installation of the vinyl flooring on December 9, 1998, and Ms. Moling paid Mr. Hopper the $2,600.00 agreed upon by the parties. According to Ms. Moling, Mr. Hopper assured her that the garage/bathroom addition would be completed by Christmas of 1998, which Mr. Hopper denied. Mr. Hopper began constructing the garage/bathroom addition on January 15, 1999. Ms. Moling paid Mr. Hopper $5,000.00 on January 15, 1999, $5,000.00 on January 28, 1999, and $5,000.00 on February 9, 1999. These payments, totaling $15,000.00, were the only payments Ms. Moling made to Mr. Hopper for the garage/bathroom addition. According to Ms. Moling, each time she gave Mr. Hopper a $5,000.00 payment, he would assure her that the garage would be completed in three to four days. Ms. Moling asserted that, when she gave Mr. Hopper the final $5,000.00 payment on February 9, 1999, he told her that his laborers quit, and he promised that the garage/bathroom addition would be completed in three to four more days. According to Mr. Hopper, the weather in January and February of 1999 delayed construction of the addition. There was a dispute between the parties as to whether Mr. Hopper abandoned the construction project or

-2- was fired after he received the final $5,000.00 payment on February 9, 1999. Mr. Hopper asserted that Ms. Moling fired him. Ms. Moling asserted that Mr. Hopper failed to return to complete the job after she made the last payment.

During the installation of the vinyl flooring, Ms. Moling asserted that she pointed out several problems to Mr. Hopper regarding the quality of his work, and he agreed to fix the problems. She also expressed her dissatisfaction with the installation when she tendered the $2,600.00 payment to Mr. Hopper on December 9, 1998. Mr. Hopper stated that the floor was “good” when he finished the installation, and he believed that Ms. Moling was satisfied with his work up to that point. However, within three months after Mr. Hopper completed the installation, the vinyl flooring began to “peel up.” Because she lacked the funds needed to repair the floor at that time, Ms. Moling placed rugs over the floor to cover those areas where the vinyl flooring was “peeling up.” Just prior to the trial in this matter, Ms. Moling hired Tim Roe (“Mr. Roe”) of T & L Tile Center to repair the flooring. Mr. Roe removed the vinyl flooring and installed a new vinyl floor of the same model installed by Mr. Hopper. Ms. Moling paid Mr. Roe $3,187.00 to repair the flooring.

Ms. Moling also experienced numerous problems with the new garage/bathroom addition constructed by Mr. Hopper. At some point after February 9, 1999, the last time that Mr. Hopper was at the job site, Ms. Moling began to experience electrical problems, and “the breakers kept kicking out all over the house.” Ms. Moling contacted Rodney Owens (“Mr. Owens”), a licensed electrician, to inspect her home and determine the cause of the problem. Mr. Owens inspected the home on or around February 15, 1999, and he discovered that Mr. Hopper had improperly installed the electrical wiring for the new garage/bathroom addition. Mr. Owens opined that Mr. Hopper’s electrical work was “not too good.” Mr. Owens, assisted by Charles Roe (“Mr. Roe”), Ms. Moling’s son, pulled off some of the walls erected by Mr. Hopper and noted problems with the plumbing as well. According to Mr. Hopper, he had only completed the “rough wiring” and “rough plumbing” when he left the job site, and he planned to have a friend, who is licensed electrician, finish the electrical and plumbing work.

Mr. Owens instructed Ms. Moling to contact Richard Woodard (“Mr. Woodard”), the building inspector for Madison County at the time, to inspect the garage/bathroom addition. In fact, Mr.

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