E. Carl Schiewe, Inc. v. Brady

611 P.2d 1184, 46 Or. App. 441, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 2852
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 2, 1980
DocketNo. A7803-04007, CA 13126
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 611 P.2d 1184 (E. Carl Schiewe, Inc. v. Brady) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. Carl Schiewe, Inc. v. Brady, 611 P.2d 1184, 46 Or. App. 441, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 2852 (Or. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

JOSEPH, P. J.

Plaintiff, a construction company, brought suit to foreclose a construction lien for the balance owing for labor and materials it supplied under a contract to remodel part of defendants’ building into a dental laboratory.1 Defendants Brady, Semler and Nudelman alleged as an affirmative defense that plaintiff failed in several respects to perform the remodeling work according to contract specifications; they also counterclaimed under the contract’s provision for payment of damages for delay by reason of failure to complete the work by the specified completion date. Defendant Davis’ separate answer merely denied the complaint’s allegations and requested no relief.

The trial court found in favor of plaintiff on its suit and against defendants Brady, Semler and Nudelman (hereafter "defendants”) on their counterclaim. (The court had earlier granted plaintiff’s motion for a voluntary nonsuit against defendant Davis.) The trial court also awarded attorney fees to plaintiff in the amount of $2,500, and in a separate order it awarded costs, including attorney fees in the amount of $100, to defendant Davis. Defendants appeal from the foreclosure decree, the denial of their counterclaim for damages and from the award of attorney fees. Defendant Davis appeals his award of attorney fees, claiming the amount awarded was unreasonably low. We modify the judgment and decree for plaintiff to delete the award of attorney fees and otherwise affirm it as modified. We vacate the award of attorney fees to defendant Davis.

Defendants attack the validity and the amount of plaintiff’s lien, claiming the evidence does not support the trial court’s finding that plaintiff performed the work specified in the remodeling contract. Defendants [444]*444specifically contend only that plaintiff failed properly to prepare one of the laboratory’s walls for painting and that plaintiff failed to install properly the laboratory’s air conditioning, ventilation and heating equipment.

, Defendants showed that some new paint peeled in places from one of the laboratory’s walls and contend that the cause was plaintiff’s nonperformance of the contract’s "Wall and Ceiling Repair” provision.2 The gist of that provision is that plaintiff was to prepare the surface of the wall for painting. The only explanation of the cause of the peeling paint was the expert testimony of the painting subcontractor. He testified that the problem was due to the disintegration of a coat of calcimine or casein base paint applied many years ago, which had since been covered by four to six coats of other kinds of paint. According to the expert, calcimine paint has little bonding agent or "vehicle” in it and so may eventually break down into a powdery film that is highly soluble in water. The peeling began in the winter months of 1977, when the remodeled rooms were heated after being cold for some time, and it was the expert’s opinion that water vapor caused by the heating up penetrated and expanded behind certain weak spots in the coat of calcimine paint, break[445]*445ing the film of later applied paint and causing all subsequent coats of paint to peel. We are convinced that the peeling paint was not caused by failure to prepare the wall’s surface for painting, but by a fracturing of the wall’s subsurface which was unconnected with plaintiff’s performance. There was no breach of the contract in that respect.

The second issue concerning plaintiff’s performance is whether plaintiff properly installed the laboratory’s cooling, ventilation and heating equipment. Both the project architect and the consulting mechanical engineer who actually designed the systems testified unequivocally that the equipment was installed according to the plans and specifications. The only contrary evidence admitted or even offered was the testimony of a second consulting mechanical engineer, who testified that some "piping to the airconditioning unit was not installed as specified” and that some valves in the heating equipment were disassembled or not installed. The ventilation equipment was not mentioned.

The evidence of improper installation is not convincing. Aside from the imprecision and omissions in his testimony, defendant’s witness on cross-examination could not even recall the date he inspected plaintiff’s work, other than that "it was before July of 1978,” some six months after the remodeling work was completed. The record as a whole shows that the equipment was properly installed.

Defendants raise a related issue by their contention that they were prejudiced when the trial court refused to allow them to elicit testimony that the cooling, ventilation and heating systems failed to operate properly. While conceding that proper installation of the equipment rather than the adequacy of the systems’ design is the issue in this case,3 defendants argue that [446]*446improper installation may be inferred from operational deficiencies and that it was therefore error to exclude evidence of the latter. The answer to the argument is that the operational deficiencies also may raise an inference that the systems were improperly designed, and prior to trial the court ruled that evidence going to the systems’ design (the adequacy of which was a principal issue in the severed third-party action by defendants against the architect) would not be permitted in this suit. That pretrial ruling is not challenged here.

Moreover, in State Highway Comm. v. Carmel Est., 15 Or App 41, 51, 514 P2d 1124 (1973), this court held that:

"In determining prejudicial effect of error the appellate court looks to the entire record [citation omitted]. A ruling, in order to warrant reversal, must not only be erroneous, but also must be prejudicial.”

To the same effect, see Fassett v. Santiam Loggers, Inc., 267 Or 505, 509, 517 P2d 1059 (1973). The record here demonstrates neither error nor prejudice. Defendants were never denied the opportunity to inquire as to whether the systems’ equipment was properly installed per se, and the record reveals they in fact had ample opportunity to make such an inquiry.

Defendants assign error to the trial court’s denial of their counterclaim for damages. The pertinent parts of the delay damages provision found in the contract’s Supplemental General Conditions are:

"If the said Contractor shall neglect, fail or refuse to complete the work within the time herein specified or any proper extension thereof granted by the Owner, then the Contractor does hereby agree, as a part consideration for the awarding of this contract, to pay the Owner the amount specified in the Contract, not as a penalty but as liquidated damages for such breach of contract as hereinafter set forth, for each and every calendar day that the Contractor shall be in default after the time stipulated in the contract for completing the work.
"* * * * *
[447]*447"* * * Provided, That the Contractor shall not be charged with liquidated damages or any excess cost when the delay in completion of the work is due:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
611 P.2d 1184, 46 Or. App. 441, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 2852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-carl-schiewe-inc-v-brady-orctapp-1980.