Fostveit v. Poplin

301 P.3d 915, 255 Or. App. 751
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 27, 2013
Docket073690; A145352
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 301 P.3d 915 (Fostveit v. Poplin) 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
Fostveit v. Poplin, 301 P.3d 915, 255 Or. App. 751 (Or. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

ORTEGA, P. J.

This appeal arises out of a dispute between the owners of a self-storage facility and the general contractor they hired to construct additional storage units on their property. Defendants James and Debra Poplin appeal from a judgment awarding plaintiff Fostveit damages on his claims for foreclosure of a construction lien and breach of contract.1 Defendants also appeal a supplemental judgment awarding attorney fees to plaintiff. On appeal, defendants contend that the trial court committed legal error by shifting the burden of proof to defendants on the issue of whether plaintiff substantially performed under the contract. As to the attorney fees award, defendants maintain that because the underlying judgment must be reversed, so must the supplemental judgment awarding fees. We affirm, concluding that the trial court did not commit legal error and that the court’s factual findings are supported by evidence in the record.

We state the facts in the light most favorable to plaintiff, who prevailed at trial. Fowler v. Cooley, 239 Or App 338, 340, 245 P3d 155 (2010). Defendants, who own a self-storage facility in Lincoln County, hired plaintiff, a general contractor, to construct additional storage units at the facility in the same construction style as the existing units. The parties executed a contract that provided for the construction of two one-story buildings and one two-story building that would contain a total of 35 additional storage units. The terms of the contract provided a per-unit price that varied depending on the size of the unit and a 12 percent “overhead fee” on the total cost of the contract. The contract also provided that costs for excavation, pavement, gates, and a retaining wall would be determined at a later date. In addition, the contract contained a clause that “[a] 11 work shall be completed in a workmanship like manner and in compliance with all codes and other applicable laws.” To reduce the total cost to defendants, the parties agreed that [754]*754defendants would be responsible for installing the metal roofing, siding, insulation, and wall partitions and for paving the area surrounding the buildings.2

Lincoln County later issued a building permit, and plaintiff hired subcontractors for excavation, concrete work, electrical work, and engineering of the retaining wall. The retaining wall, as designed by a subcontractor, provided for a cantilevered wall that reached eight feet at its highest point and abutted the construction of the two-story building. In construction of the two-story building, plaintiff built the “flooring system” for the second floor on top of the retaining wall and, because the wall was not tall enough, backfilled gravel and dirt against approximately 18 vertical inches of untreated lumber that plaintiff used as part of the flooring system. Defendants later installed the roofing and siding materials and altered the grade of the gravel driveway that abutted the two-story building. Defendants did not install gutters as part of the roofing system.

About seven months after the building permit was issued, Lincoln County issued a certificate of occupancy and conducted final inspections of the buildings. Around that time, a dispute arose between plaintiff and defendants over the 12 percent “overhead fee,” and defendants refused to pay plaintiff’s final invoice of $76,097.20. Around the same time, defendants discovered that there was water intrusion into the two-story building, which compromised some of the newly constructed storage units. Defendants’ attorney sent plaintiff a letter instructing him to stop work on the site. Plaintiff testified that he was unaware of the water intrusion until after he received direction to stop work, but defendants dispute plaintiff’s testimony, contending that the parties had discussed the need to fix the thresholds before plaintiff was directed to stop work. Less than two months later, plaintiff recorded a construction lien for the unpaid balance due under the contract.

One month after recording the construction lien, plaintiff filed an action against defendants for foreclosure of [755]*755the construction lien and breach of contract. Both claims were based on the same basic theory: that plaintiff performed all conditions imposed by the contract and defendants failed to pay the full amount due. Defendants filed an answer generally denying plaintiff’s claims, raising affirmative defenses and counterclaims against plaintiff, and a third-party complaint against the designer of the retaining wall. As an affirmative defense to both of plaintiff’s claims, defendants asserted that plaintiff failed to perform his obligations under the contract, including his refusal to finish the job and his failure to perform his work in a “workmanship like” manner. Defendants also asserted abreach-of-contract counterclaim againstplain-tiff, seeking $275,000 in damages related to plaintiff’s construction of the storage units.

We pause here to provide a general overview of the law that applies to construction cases such as this, because an understanding of the legal framework helps to frame the arguments and evidence presented by the parties at trial and illuminates our analysis on appeal. In general, “[a] construction lien may not be had by one who has failed to substantially perform his part of a contract.” Welch v. Webb, 47 Or App 771, 775, 615 P2d 391 (1980). Similarly, “a party to a contract who complains that the other party has breached the terms of a contract must prove performance of the contract on his own part, or a valid tender of performance rejected by the other party.” Huzar v. Certified Realty Co., 266 Or 614, 620, 512 P2d 982 (1973). “Substantial performance is accomplished although the contract is not completely performed if the omissions and deviations from the performance required by the contract are inadvertent and unintentional, do not impair the structure as a whole, can be easily remedied, and may be paid for by deductions from the contract price.”Mathis v. Thunderbird Village, Inc., 236 Or 425, 438-39, 389 P2d 343 (1964); see also Edmunds v. Welling, 57 Or 103, 109, 110 P 533 (1910) (concluding that a contractor who had substantially completed the work was entitled to recover the contract price, “less such amount as will compensate * * * for the defects and omissions”). “Whether there has been substantial performance is a question of fact.” American Petrofina v. D & L Oil Supply, 283 Or 183, 195, 583 P2d 521 (1978).

[756]*756Accordingly, when the case was tried before the trial court without a jury, the parties focused in large part on the quality of plaintiff’s construction. Plaintiff contended that he substantially performed under the contract, while defendants argued that plaintiff’s construction was substandard, meaning that he could not recover on the lien or for breach of contract, and that defendants were entitled to prevail on their counterclaim for breach of contract. The parties presented conflicting evidence and expert testimony regarding construction of the storage units and the cause of the water intrusion into the two-story building. As explained in more detail below, 255 Or App at 757, the parties’ evidence fell into five general categories of possible sources of water intrusion: (1) plaintiff’s faulty installation of “thresholds,”3 (2) plaintiff’s faulty installation and “damp proofing”4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
301 P.3d 915, 255 Or. App. 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fostveit-v-poplin-orctapp-2013.