Engineering Specialists, Inc. v. Micronoc, Inc.

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 20, 2026
DocketA-24-927
StatusUnpublished

This text of Engineering Specialists, Inc. v. Micronoc, Inc. (Engineering Specialists, Inc. v. Micronoc, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engineering Specialists, Inc. v. Micronoc, Inc., (Neb. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

ENGINEERING SPECIALISTS, INC. V. MICRONOC, INC.

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

ENGINEERING SPECIALISTS, INC., APPELLANT AND CROSS-APPELLEE, V.

MICRONOC, INC., ALSO KNOWN AS MIRCONOC, INC., APPELLEE AND CROSS-APPELLANT.

Filed January 20, 2026. No. A-24-927.

Appeal from the District Court for Douglas County: KATIE L. BENSON, Judge. Affirmed. James R. Place, of Place Law Office, for appellant. Stevie L. Lewis and William J. Hale, of Goosmann Law Firm, P.L.C., for appellee.

RIEDMANN, Chief Judge, and PIRTLE and FREEMAN, Judges. FREEMAN, Judge. INTRODUCTION Engineering Specialists, Inc. (ESI), appeals the order awarding ESI $12,483.26 for breach of contract entered by the district court for Douglas County. ESI argues, that based on the evidence, the district court erred in its award of damages to ESI. Micronoc, Inc. (Micronoc), cross-appeals the order denying its counterclaim for breach of contract. Micronoc argues that the district court erred when it did not determine that ESI was required to produce a written report of its findings. For the reasons explained below, we affirm. BACKGROUND Micronoc contacted ESI to investigate a fire that occurred at its facility in California on August 21, 2021. Specifically, ESI was to “look at the battery cabinet, the power surges in the area, and to determine the cause and the origin of the fire within the electrical closet in their space.” On August 28, 2021, a retainer agreement (agreement) was completed that stated the following:

-1- This signed agreement confirms that Engineering Specialists, Inc. (ESI) has been retained by the undersigned on behalf of Micronoc Inc., to provide forensic analysis and fire investigation services in the matter of the fire incident. .... The nature and scope of the services to be provided by ESI shall be agreed upon between the parties prior to the acceptance of this assignment and commencement of any work performed by ESI. .... 1. An initial retainer fee of ($9,750.00) 50% of estimated cost of investigation, estimated at a fee not to exceed of [sic] $19,500.00 will be due immediately and payable by Micronoc Inc. upon acceptance of this assignment. .... This retainer will be applied to the final invoice issued to this specific file. 3. ESI will submit to the undersigned client or other authorized representative service invoices on or about the end of each calendar month. All service invoices are due and payable immediately upon receipt and no later than 10 calendar days from the date of issue, or the client’s bill will be subject to an applied late payment fee of $1,000.00 per whole or partial month the payment is late in being received by ESI. .... 5. ESI will make reasonable attempt to minimize the cost of all expenses incurred on the client’s behalf. Any expenses incurred in the handling of any assignment shall be charged by ESI at actual cost plus a 20% handling and carrying charge or in accordance with ESI’s current rate @ $375.00 per hour . . . . Any additional travel related expenses for litigation purposes, mediation, appraisal, or meeting review visits with the client’s insurance carrier and/or other parties will be charged. .... 6. Work beyond the scope of this proposal . . . shall be requested in writing and will be charged at a rate of $375.00 per hour and cost of related travel expenses plus 20% handling charge. .... 8. By the signature below, as an authority with Micronoc Inc. I hereby agree that all invoices shall be paid in full and in a timely manner without regard to the investigative findings, testing results.

Micronoc paid the $9,750 retainer fee to ESI on August 27, 2021. Even before the agreement was fully executed, ESI appeared on site and then conducted two additional site visits in September and December. ESI claimed it received the data it needed and completed a report within a few days of the first site investigation, although it is unclear from the record whether the content of this report was communicated to Micronoc. However, ESI confirmed that a final, written report consisting of 229 pages was completed in mid-February 2022 but was not provided to Micronoc. According to Anthony Siahpush, president and owner of ESI, ESI was supposed to provide Micronoc with a final, written report at the conclusion of its investigation. However, later Siahpush

-2- explained ESI usually gave an oral report of its investigative findings and not a written report. Siahpush then claimed that it got “locked into” creating a written report for Micronoc based on Micronoc’s requests. Ting Chang, executive vice-president for Micronoc, testified that while she was initially unsure how Micronoc would receive the investigative findings from ESI, she knew ESI was supposed to provide some version of a report. Shelley Chu, Micronoc’s director of operations, stated the nature and scope of the services ESI was to provide included a final written report of its findings. Pursuant to the agreement, “[w]ork beyond the scope of this proposal . . . shall be requested in writing.” In February 2022, after ESI had reportedly completed its investigation, ESI asked in writing if Micronoc wanted ESI to attend a destructive exam scheduled by one of the insurance companies. ESI indicated that Micronoc would be charged for ESI’s attendance. ESI did not attend the destructive exam because Micronoc did not want to pay. The only written request for additional work contained in the record was for that destructive exam. Siahpush reported that all other claimed requests for work beyond the scope of the investigation were made by phone. ESI issued its first invoice to Micronoc in December 2021 after its site visits. In March 2022, ESI submitted an invoice to Micronoc for a total of $9,750. The invoice applied the retainer fee of $9,750 and deducted $45,937.50 of charges. Next to the deductions was a description that stated, “NOT TO EXCEED $19,500.” Other than the $9,750 retainer fee, Micronoc made no other payments to ESI, despite acknowledging that the agreement indicated that invoices should be paid in a timely manner regardless of ESI’s findings. Chang testified Micronoc did not pay the additional $9,750 because Micronoc did not understand how ESI could be done with its report when other investigators, such as the insurance companies, had not completed their reports. According to Siahpush, ESI shared a conclusion of its report orally to Micronoc in February 2022 but later stated that it withheld its findings because it had not received payment from Micronoc. Siahpush also stated that Micronoc knew there would be negative results from the investigation, and therefore Micronoc reportedly did not want those findings in writing. Chang disputed Siahpush’s claim. When Micronoc did not pay, a demand letter was sent from ESI’s attorney. ESI later submitted an additional invoice charging Micronoc a total of $64,170.76. ESI filed a complaint alleging that Micronoc breached its agreement when it failed to pay the balance of $64,170.76. ESI claimed that all the work it completed beyond the original site visit was outside the scope of the cost of investigation. According to ESI, it had previously reduced the total to $19,500 in the hope that the agreement would end quickly, not because $19,500 was a guaranteed maximum. Micronoc counterclaimed that ESI breached the agreement when it failed to produce a written report of its findings from the fire investigation. Contrary to ESI’s assertions, Micronoc claimed that the written report’s findings, whether positive or negative, were needed so Micronoc could correct what caused the fire and continue its research and development.

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Engineering Specialists, Inc. v. Micronoc, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engineering-specialists-inc-v-micronoc-inc-nebctapp-2026.