Godek v. Winchell, No. Cv93 0345442 (Jul. 18, 1996)

1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 5123-YYY
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 18, 1996
DocketNo. CV93 0345442
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 5123-YYY (Godek v. Winchell, No. Cv93 0345442 (Jul. 18, 1996)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Godek v. Winchell, No. Cv93 0345442 (Jul. 18, 1996), 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 5123-YYY (Colo. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION In the instant case, the plaintiff seeks to recover damages for breach of a contract. According to the complaint, the plaintiff and the defendant Mark Winchell entered into an agreement on or about September 17, 1992 whereby the plaintiff furnished materials and labor in connection with the installation of a new septic system on a lot owned by the defendants in Middlefield. A motion made just before trial to add a second count in quantum meruit was denied.

On their part the defendants admit the existence of a contract but deny that it was solely for the installation of a septic system. In addition, the defendants have asserted three special defenses and a counterclaim. The special defenses allege that the material and/or services provided by the plaintiff were defective, unsuitable and/or not to their satisfaction; the plaintiff failed to perform the work adequately and the plaintiff did not complete the work nor provide all of the materials required by the agreement.

The counterclaim recites that pursuant to an oral contract entered into on or about September 17, 1992, the plaintiff was to provide, in addition to other items, a complete septic system, stones for a driveway and cellar floor, footing drains, excavate and back fill the foundation hole, and rough grade and spread topsoil. According to the counterclaim, the contract was breached in one or more of the following ways: the plaintiff failed to perform the work and furnish the materials set forth in the CT Page 5123-ZZZ contract completely and properly; the plaintiff used topsoil belonging to the defendant; the work performed by the plaintiff and the materials furnished by him were not of good workmanship or quality and not fit for the purposes intended; and the plaintiff failed to perform his duties in a skillful, competent and workmanlike manner. The defendants claim that these defaults have caused them to sustain monetary damages.

I.
Evidence at the trial was both testimonial and documentary. From it and including reasonable inferences, the court finds the facts set forth below.

The plaintiff and the defendant Mark Winchell knew each other before entering into the contract at issue. Mark Winchell solicited the plaintiff to do the excavating, septic system and driveway at the defendant's new home site in Middlefield. In response, the plaintiff telephoned Mark Winchell and read to him a list of items that at the time or subsequently were embodied in a written proposal. The plaintiff also quoted prices. The defendants wanted the plaintiff to get started right away. Although the written proposal is dated August 31, 1992, it was delivered to Mark Winchell at the job site about three weeks after the plaintiff began to work.

The proposal was on a printed form. Included in the printed language was "We hereby propose to furnish all the materials and perform all the labor necessary for the completion of". Below these words the plaintiff, in the space provided wrote:

Dig Backfill Foundation (1 day of pushing fill) around house and garage

Put stone inside plus Footing drain to drain water out

Stripping of all topsoil from Septic System and House

Digging of Electrical Line

Digging of Well Line CT Page 5123-AAAA

Installation of Septic System complete

Process driveway (No paved apron)

Spreading all topsoil back on lot

Extras (If more than one

((day pushing fill (will be additional cost of

(($500.00 per day for Machines

(Rain gutters pipe will be

(( (an additional cost of $400

(( (if wanted installed

Other printing on the form stated that "all material is guaranteed as specified and the above work to be performed in accordance with the drawings and specifications submitted for above work and completed in a substantial workmanlike manner for the sum of". In the blank space reserved for the amount, the plaintiff wrote $8,800.00 and in the additional space for terms of payment he inserted "Pay as we go along what I do and installed (sic) I get paid."

The proposal was signed by the plaintiff. It was not signed by either of the defendants. When it was delivered, however, the defendants did not raise any objection to its provisions.

Much of the controversy concerns the installation of the septic system and the amount of fill or topsoil used to cover it. The septic system was designed for the defendants by Frank Magnatta a licensed civil engineer in Durham. Magnatta had plotted road and lot lines and drawn plans for other septic systems in the subdivision where the defendants' lot is located.1 For vertical elevations, Magnatta had used a bench mark at 218.00 feet designated by a pipe located on Strickland Road, the subdivision's southerly boundary. CT Page 5123-BBBB

Later, but before construction of the defendants' septic system had begun, Magnatta saw that his benchmark pipe had been disturbed. He pulled the pipe out and transferred his vertical elevation marker to a new and comparable bench mark that he placed on the foundation of the defendant's house.

Before submitting the design of the proposed septic system to the Middlefield sanitarian for approval, Frank Magnatta had three test holes dug as part of the required procedure. None of the holes showed evidence of ledge. To satisfy Alex Cinotti, Middlefield's new sanitarian, Magnatta had two additional holes dug that were designated on the survey map as TH "A" and "B". Ledge was found at TH "A". Any leaching lines are required to be four feet above ledgetop.

When the contract was entered into, the plaintiff did not have a subsurface license so he engaged Donald Catrona to obtain the necessary permit and to install the septic system. Catrona previously had constructed from 75 to 100 such systems. The plaintiff gave Frank Magnatta's engineering drawings to Catrona. Also Catrona was present when Magnatta established his new elevation bench mark and he adhered to it in performing his work. It took Catrona one and one-half days to install the septic system. Apparently he did some other work under the contract.

In October, 1992, when the septic system was finished but open to view it was inspected by Alex Cinotti in the presence of the plaintiff, Frank Magnatta, Donald Catrona and the defendant Mark Winchell. In approving the plan for the system, Cinotti had specified that eight inches of soil were to be put over four inch perforated sewer pipe so that from the bottom of the pipe there would be twelve inches of soil. The inspection was visual with the engineer shooting elevations from his transit. Cinotti approved the installed system as being in compliance with Magnatta's original survey map, his own requirements, and the Public Health Code. He issued a certificate of occupancy. Pursuant to the Public Health Code, the eight inches of covering soil had to be put over the sewer pipes within twenty-four hours after final approval.

Mark Winchell was unhappy with Cinotti's approval. Winchell felt that Magnatta's elevations were based upon his original and subsequently disturbed bench mark which, when combined with the ledge, meant that the septic system had not been installed sufficiently below grade level. Winchell told the plaintiff to CT Page 5123-CCCC install the septic system eight inches below grade or do nothing further under the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 5123-YYY, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/godek-v-winchell-no-cv93-0345442-jul-18-1996-connsuperct-1996.