Gerald Raine Plumbing & Heating, Inc. v. Friedman

254 A.2d 679, 254 Md. 356, 1969 Md. LEXIS 877
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 27, 1969
DocketNo. 317
StatusPublished

This text of 254 A.2d 679 (Gerald Raine Plumbing & Heating, Inc. v. Friedman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gerald Raine Plumbing & Heating, Inc. v. Friedman, 254 A.2d 679, 254 Md. 356, 1969 Md. LEXIS 877 (Md. 1969).

Opinion

McWilliams, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellant (Raine), a Silver Spring plumbing contractor, replaced the coils, ruptured by freezing, in two (#1 and #2) “air handlers,” in a large office building in Bethesda owned and operated by appellees (Friedman). When Friedman refused to pay the bill (stipulated to be $1,646.47) Raine filed suit. From the judgment in favor of Friedman for costs, entered by Loveless, J., sitting without a jury, Raine has appealed. Prior to the incident out of which this dispute arose Raine had done several jobs for Friedman and their relationship had been mutually satisfactory.

In October 1966 Friedman was anxious to increase the flexibility of his heating and cooling system. He telephoned Raine and asked him for an estimate of the cost of installing several gate valves in the pipes which supplied hot and cold water to the system. To accomplish this the entire system had to be drained because of the [358]*358necessity of cutting into the main supply and return lines which were located between the first floor ceiling and the underside of the second floor. It was arranged to do this on a weekend when the building would be vacant. Raine told Friedman his men might accomplish it in one day but he “wasn’t sure, it was a little hard to figure it out he “didn’t know how long it would take to drain down * * Friedman told him “he would take care of draining the building before * * * [Raine’s men] got there.” A price was quoted and agreed upon. Saturday, 3 December 1966, was established as the day on which the job was to be undertaken.

At 8 a.m. on the appointed day Willis Washington, Friedman’s resident engineer, arrived at the building. He was two hours late, having been directed to report at 6 a.m. He shut down the boiler, opened the drain valves in the basement and the relief valves in the penthouse. It was very cold. Saturday’s temperature had averaged 26 degrees; Sunday was even colder. On neither day did the thermometer rise above 32 degrees. Raine’s men, led by Hildebrand, the foreman, arrived at 9 a.m. Water was still draining from the system, a process which requires from an hour and a half to two hours. Washington said he “had a few things to do upstairs” so he took Hildebrand to the boiler room and showed him where the water was running out. He said there was nothing Hildebrand had to do to complete the draining of the system except to wait until the water stopped running out. When that happened Hildebrand and his men began the work.

To properly comprehend the crux of this dispute it becomes necessary, at this point, to understand the function and the operation of the two (of five) air handlers that had been placed between the first floor ceiling and the underside of the second floor. Their function, of course, is the exchange of heat. A length of coiled tubing to which fins are attached is arranged within the air handler so that a fan driven by an electric motor blows a stream of air across the tubing. If hot water is running through the tubing the air will be heated. If the [359]*359water is cold the air will be chilled. The air which is blown across the tubing comes from two sources; the main source is from the outside through an opening in the building and then by way of ducts to the fan; the other source is the air inside of the building. The mixture is controlled manually; the inside air can be blocked off so that only air from the outside is used. The air handlers were installed so that they were below the main supply and return lines to which they were connected. Lest the significance of this fact be overlooked it should be observed that as long as there is positive pressure in the supply line, as is the c.ase in normal operation, the fact that the unit is below the supply and return lines makes no difference; the pressure provides a constant flow through the coiled tubing to the return line. When, however, the pressure in the supply line is equaled by the pressure in the return line, which would be the situation when the system is being drained, there would be no movement of the water in the coiled tubing. In short, the water would be trapped; and it would remain trapped after all of the water had drained out of the system.

There appears to be no dispute about the fact that the fans in all of the air handlers were operating when Washington left the building at 9 a.m. He said he “had no reason to turn them off.” It is undisputed also that they continued to operate during the day. When Washington returned to the building at 6 p.m. (Saturday) Hildebrand told him one of the welders had complained about cold air “blowing in on him” and he asked him (Washington) “to cut the fans off.” He could have accomplished this by tripping a circuit breaker in the boiler room but Washington did not know about that. He was not familiar with the air handlers as they had been installed at a time when he had been employed elsewhere. Hildebrand helped him remove the ceiling panels beneath each of the five air handlers so as to gain access to the switch which was affixed to each one. In this manner each of the fans was stopped.

The job did not move along as rapidly as Raine hoped [360]*360it would. Hildebrand and his men kept going all night and through most of Sunday. When Washington arrived at 7 a.m. on Sunday he found Hildebrand “sitting on a ladder * * * holding a thermometer.” It is undisputed that the temperature inside the building did not go much below 40 degrees. Washington said that when the work was completed around 3 p.m. Hildebrand told him he “could fill the system back up and turn the heat on.” Not long after the departure of Hildebrand and his men Washington discovered water leaking from #1 air handler. He shut down the water pump and called Raine who dispatched one of his men to the building. After he had plugged.up the leak he rigged a by-pass for the air handler. Washington thereupon refilled the system, “cut the heat back on again and by the time he [the workman] léft the next one [#2] busted,” making it necessary for him “to do the same procedure all over again.”

Friedman testified that on Monday, 5 December, he told Raine that he was “in terrible jeopardy * * * and it was absolutely necessary to have everything possible done to replace these coils and put these air handlers back into operation.” After Raine had inspected the coils he told Friedman that repair was impossible; the coils would have to be replaced. Price was not discussed. Friedman said he was not “concerned about a price” at that time. Friedman, to expedite matters, guaranteed the payment of the bill for the new coils. Two weeks later, upon the delivery of the coils, Raine did the work and in due course submitted his bill. It ought to be noted that, in the meantime, his bill for the installation of the gate valves (on 3 and 4 December) had been paid, apparently without question.

We think the record makes it quite clear that when Friedman instructed Raine to replace the ruptured coils with new ones, he expected eventual reimbursement from his insurance company (Lumbermens), but we think it is equally clear that Raine did not agree to make his bill subject to such a contingency. Friedman testified “that if the insurance company had paid * * * [him, he] would have [361]*361paid Mr. Raine.” However, his letter of 14 April 1967 to the insurance adjuster, a copy of which he sent to Raine, casts some doubt on his assertion that the payment of Raine’s bill was to be contingent on reimbursement from the insurance company. The text of the letter follows:

“Dear Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
254 A.2d 679, 254 Md. 356, 1969 Md. LEXIS 877, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerald-raine-plumbing-heating-inc-v-friedman-md-1969.