F.p.h. Construction, Inc. v. Mahmoud Shahrezaei

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 17, 2017
Docket76024-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of F.p.h. Construction, Inc. v. Mahmoud Shahrezaei (F.p.h. Construction, Inc. v. Mahmoud Shahrezaei) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
F.p.h. Construction, Inc. v. Mahmoud Shahrezaei, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE

F.P.H. CONSTRUCTION, INC., No. 76024-6- a Washington corporation,

Respondent,

v.

MAHMOUD SHAHREZAEI and ESHMAIL SHAHREZAEI, husband and wife; and C&SH ENTERPRISES, LLC, a Washington limited liability company, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant. FILED: January 17, 2017

Verellen, C.J. — Eshmail Shahrezaei appeals from the judgment entered

against him in favor of F.P.H. Construction, Inc. He contends the trial court abused its

discretion when it allowed F.P.H. to amend its complaint before trial de novo to correct

mistakes in its initial complaint and to plead a quantum meruit theory. It was within the

discretion of the trial court to conclude F.P.H.'s delay was not inexcusable. And

because the initial complaint identified Eshmail as a defendant and referred to unjust

enrichment, there was no unfair surprise. Eshmail does not establish any genuine issue

of material fact precluding summary judgment on quantum meruit.

We affirm the trial court's order. No. 76024-6-1/2

FACTS

F.P.H. alleges it had an agreement with Mahmoud Shahrezaei and Eshmail

Shahrezaei1 to perform work at a nightclub and bar located in Silverdale, Washington

known as the Old Town Bistro.

The work consisted of three phases. The first phase for work, between June

2006 and April 2009, was paid in full. The final two phases were undertaken in late

2009 through March 2010. These final two phases were memorialized in two written

contracts. The first contract for a fire suppression system had a fixed price of

$82,921.00. The second contract for a grease trap and associated work had a fixed

price of $19,320.00.

F.P.H. billed approximately $120,000.00 for this work and approximately

$50,000.00 remains unpaid.

In November 2012, F.P.H. sued C&SH Enterprises LLC, Mahmoud and Eshmail,

but the complaint alleged Mahmoud and Eshmail were "husband and wife."2 The

complaint sought a judgment against them individually "and their marital community" in

the amount of $38,652.24.3 In Eshmail's answer, he alleged he "is not spouse of

Mahmoud Shahrezaei" and "is not and never been officer of corporation or managing

partner."4 The matter proceeded to mandatory arbitration on July 29, 2013.5 The

1 For ease of reference, we refer to Mahmoud Shahrezaei and Eshmail Shahrezaei by their first names. 2 Clerk's Papers (CP) at 4. 3 CP at 5. 4CPat18. 5Although each written contract included an arbitration clause, it does not appear any party invoked private arbitration. No. 76024-6-1/3

arbitrator awarded F.P.H. a total of $90,555.45 against Mahmoud and Eshmail "and

their marital communities, jointly and severally."6 The arbitration award was served on

August 15, 2014.

It is undisputed that in September 2014, Mahmoud and Eshmail timely requested

a trial de novo.7

F.P.H. moved to amend its complaint on February 23, 2015 to correct errors in its

original complaint:

[Mahmoud] and [Eshmail] are brothers and not husband and wife; there were two written contracts rather than one, together with an oral contract pertaining to certain incidental work; and the amounts due were incorrectly identified in the Complaint.181

In addition, F.P.H.'s counsel attached a declaration explaining the errors in the initial

complaint. The trial court granted the motion, and F.P.H. filed its amended complaint on

March 24, 2015. The initial complaint alleged "[t]he LLC received the value and benefit

of such work would be unjustly enriched if it were allowed to retain the benefit of such

work without full payment therefor[ ]."9 In paragraphs VII and VIII of the amended

complaint, F.P.H. alleged

[t]he reasonable value of the work exceeded $120,000.00. The Defendants received the value and benefit of such work and were unjustly enriched to the extent it failed to pay the contracted amounts due Plaintiff.

Defendants are justly indebted to the Plaintiff for the principal sum of $54,733.90 plus interest thereon as provided in the Contract at 18% per annum in an amount to be proven at the time of trial or further hearing.1101

6 CP at 20 (emphasis added). 7 Mahmoud subsequently withdrew his request for a trial de novo. 8 CP at 22. 9CPat4.

10 CP at 61. No. 76024-6-1/4

F.P.H. moved for partial summary judgment supported by the declaration of Stephanie

Nevarez, who worked at the Old Town Bistro. Nevarez states that Mahmoud and

Eshmail approached her and her husband in early 2009 to "help them turn around a bar

and nightclub they represented they owned in Silverdale known as the 'Old Town

Bistro.'"11 According to Nevarez, Eshmail and Mahmoud invited Nevarez and her

husband "to invest in the business."12 Nevarez also said:

At all material times, [Eshmail] and [Mahmoud] held themselves out as the owners of the Bistro. My husband and I were not aware title to the Bistro might be in the name of a Limited Liability Company until we began receiving paychecks.

Although the checks contained the name "C&SH Enterprises, LLC", [Mahmoud] or [Eshmail] always referred to themselves as the owners of the Bistro.t131

Navarez's declaration included the employee handbook for the Old Town Bistro. In the

employee handbook, Eshmail and Mahmoud are each referred to as owners. They also

referred to themselves as proprietors on their business cards for the Old Town Bistro.

F.P.H. also submitted a declaration from Michael Brown, the president of F.P.H.

Brown said that Eshmail and Mahmoud requested the work, held themselves out as co-

owners of Old Town Bistro, and did not disclose that the business was a corporation or

limited lability company.

Two written contracts were attached to Brown's declaration. The opening

paragraph of each contains handwritten entries identifying Eshmail Shahrezaei and

Mahmoud Shahrezaei as the owner with no mention of C&SH LLC. Each of the two

11 CP at 95. 12 CP at 96. 13 CP at 96. No. 76024-6-1/5

contracts contains two apparent signatures at the end of each contract in the space for

signature by the owner.

Eshmail offered his own four-sentence declaration opposing partial summary

judgment, stating

I am one of the defendants in this action and a resident of Florida. I did not sign the contracts that [F.P.H.] alleges I signed. I have never entered into any contract or agreement with [F.P.H.] or anyone acting on [F.P.H.]'s behalf. I also have not benefitted from any work or services provided by [F.P.H.] or anyone acting on [F.P.H.]'s behalf.1141

On F.P.H.'s motion, the court struck two of Eshmail's statements as conclusory: "I have

never entered into any contract or agreement" and "I also have not benefitted from any

work or services provided by Plaintiff."15 The trial court granted F.P.H.'s motion for

partial summary judgment and entered judgment against Eshmail.

Eshmail appeals.

ANALYSIS

We review a motion for summary judgment de novo and engage in the same

inquiry as the trial court.16

Eshmail argues the trial court abused its discretion when it allowed F.P.H. to

amend its complaint because those amendments "were a subversion of the mandatory

arbitration process," F.P.H. "failed to demonstrate excusable neglect," and Eshmail was

"prejudiced by undue delay and unfair surprise."17

14 CP at 263. 15 CP at 280. 16 Hartley v. State, 103 Wn.2d 768, 774,

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