Double K Tiling, LLC v. Billy Reilly Veach

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 24, 2024
Docket22-1459
StatusPublished

This text of Double K Tiling, LLC v. Billy Reilly Veach (Double K Tiling, LLC v. Billy Reilly Veach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Double K Tiling, LLC v. Billy Reilly Veach, (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-1459 Filed January 24, 2024

DOUBLE K TILING, LLC, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

BILLY REILLY VEACH, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Jackson County, John D. Telleen

(summary judgment) and Stuart P. Werling (trial), Judges.

A civil defendant appeals from adverse summary-judgment and breach-of-

contract rulings. AFFIRMED.

McKenzie R. Blau and Alex L. Hofer of O’Connor & Thomas, P.C.,

Dubuque, for appellant.

D. Flint Drake and Samuel M. DeGree of Drake Law Firm, P.C., Dubuque,

for appellee.

Considered by Schumacher, P.J., and Chicchelly and Buller, JJ. 2

BULLER, Judge.

Billy Veach appeals from the district court’s denial of his motion for summary

judgment and bench verdict in favor of Double K Tiling, LLC (Double K) on a

breach-of-contract claim. We affirm, finding Veach waived his summary-judgment

claim when he failed to order the necessary transcript and substantial evidence

supports the breach-of-contract verdict.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Veach, a tenant farmer in northeast Iowa, hired Double K to install drainage

tiles on two tracts of land. Veach met with Keith Koppes, the owner of Double K,

to discuss the project in the context of a National Resources Conservation Service

(NRCS) reimbursement plan.

The parties dispute the scope of agreed-upon tiling work. There was no

written agreement between the parties, which Koppes and an expert witnesses

testified was typical in this industry. But there were verbal discussions. During the

multi-week construction project, Koppes invited Veach to inspect the work while it

was underway and immediately after completion. Veach declined those

opportunities.

Koppes testified he gave Veach a detailed explanation of the tiling he

planned to construct and informed Veach work beyond the “minimal” amount

covered by the NRCS reimbursement was necessary. Koppes explained farmers

“usually” hired him to tile beyond what NRCS reimburses on these projects

because the reimbursement covers only one side of the waterway and both sides

should be tiled. Koppes said he wouldn’t take a job to do only the minimal work

reimbursed by NRCS, as it would cost him more to transport his earth-moving 3

equipment than he would make on the project—in other words, he would lose

money. He also testified he obtained Veach’s oral approval or direction for each

installation, including tiling on both sides of the waterways.

The total bill for the tiling project was $52,377.65. An expert witness

testified the work done was appropriate, reasonable, consistent with best

practices, and completed in a workmanlike manner. According to Koppes, and

corroborated by combine data and expert testimony, Veach reaped the benefit of

improved crop yields for each harvest after the tiling was installed.

Veach, for his part, denied agreeing to any tiling significantly beyond the

NRCS reimbursement. He anticipated a total bill of around $12,000, and he

expected nearly all of that to be reimbursed by NRCS. And he testified that,

because he is a short-term tenant of the land where the tiling was done, it wouldn’t

make sense for him to agree to $52,000 in construction costs on land he doesn’t

own. Koppes’s expert partially rebutted this claim, explaining it was increasingly

common for tenants to pay for improvements. Before he refused to pay Koppes

the invoiced amount, Veach text-messaged Koppes that people had contacted him

and complimented the quality of Koppes’s tiling work.

Before the action that led to this appeal, Koppes tried to foreclose

mechanic’s liens on the properties at issue. The district court dismissed Koppes’s

foreclosure petition because the contract was entered into with Veach instead of

the property owners, and by statute the lien required a contract with the owner.

A month later, Koppes sued Veach for breach of contract and unjust

enrichment. Before trial, Veach moved for summary judgment, arguing Double K’s

breach-of-contract claim was precluded because it was not filed in the same action 4

as the mechanic’s lien foreclosure. Double K resisted, arguing it was not required

to bring its breach claim in the mechanic’s-lien case. A reported hearing was held

on the motion, but Veach did not order that transcript in his combined certificate,

so it is not part of our record on appeal. A one-sentence written order entered after

the hearing indicates, “For the reasons stated on the record and further set forth in

Plaintiff’s Resistance, Defendant’s Motion for Summary judgment is denied.” The

supreme court denied an interlocutory appeal of this order, and the matter

proceeded to bench trial.

During a litigation-related inspection, Koppes’s expert examined the work

completed, refuting some of Veach’s allegations about the pricing, location, quality,

and amount of tiling laid by Double K.

At trial, the district court found “the testimony of Koppes and Veach cannot

be reconciled” and both parties’ arguments were “internally logical.” In resolving

the conflicting evidence, the district court expressly found “Koppes’s testimony to

be believable and Veach’s to not be trustworthy.” The district court found Veach

liable for breach of contract in the amount of $52,377.65. Veach appeals.

II. Waiver

Before proceeding to the merits, we consider whether Veach’s failure to

order the transcript of the summary-judgment hearing precludes appellate review.

“It is the appellant’s duty to provide a record on appeal affirmatively disclosing the

alleged error relied upon,” and our court “may not speculate as to what took place

or predicate error on such speculation.” In re F.W.S., 698 N.W.2d 134, 135 (Iowa

2005). “Without the benefit of a full record of the lower courts’ proceedings, it is

improvident for us to exercise appellate review.” Id. at 135–36. 5

The written ruling explained the motion for summary judgment was denied

“[f]or the reasons stated on the record and further set forth in Plaintiff’s

Resistance.” This ruling communicates that the district court’s rationale was

captured in the record through an oral ruling, and some—but not all—of the court’s

rationale could be found in Double K’s resistance to summary judgment.

Consistent with supreme court precedent, we summarily affirm the summary-

judgment ruling based on the lack of transcript. Id.; accord Alvarez v. IBP, Inc.,

696 N.W.2d 1, 4 (Iowa 2005) (summarily affirming the district court when appellant

“fail[ed] to provide this court with a record that would permit an informed

consideration of the issue presented”).

III. Standard of Review

We review breach-of-contract claims for correction of errors at law.

NevadaCare, Inc. v. Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 783 N.W.2d 459, 465 (Iowa 2010). If

substantial evidence in the record supports the district court’s findings of fact, we

are bound by those findings. Id.

IV. Discussion

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