Greggo and Ferrara, Inc. v. Vicscot, L.L.C.

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 8, 2025
DocketN23L-05-041 CEB
StatusPublished

This text of Greggo and Ferrara, Inc. v. Vicscot, L.L.C. (Greggo and Ferrara, Inc. v. Vicscot, L.L.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greggo and Ferrara, Inc. v. Vicscot, L.L.C., (Del. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF DELAWARE

GREGGO and FERRARA, ) INC., ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) C.A. No. N23L-05-041 CEB v. ) ) VICSCOT, L.L.C., ) ) Defendant. ) )

Submitted: August 28, 2025 Decided: September 8, 2025

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Upon Consideration of Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss Count IV of the Complaint- GRANTED

Jeffrey M. Weiner, Esquire, LAW OFFICES OF JEFFREY M. WEINER, Wilmington, Delaware. Attorney for Greggo and Ferrara, Inc.

Victoria K. Petrone, Esquire and Mark A. Denny, Jr., Esquire, BROCKSTEDT, MANDALAS, FEDERICO, LLC., Wilmington, Delaware. Attorneys for Defendant Vicscot, L.L.C.

BUTLER, R.J. FACTS

This is a dispute concerning the quality of certain site improvements that were

made to land on East Seventh Street in Wilmington. The property is apparently on

land of some environmental sensitivity, as the Department of Natural Resources and

Environmental Control (“DNREC”) was involved in developing criteria for the

improvements to be done. The property was developed by Defendant Vicscot, which

built a sound studio of some sort.

A part of the development included site grading and landscaping, which was

to be completed by Plaintiff Greggo & Ferrara. Their part of the job included

bringing water service and waste sewers within five feet of the building to be

constructed. It seems all went according to plan until the final grading and seeding

of the property, which Vicscot felt was beneath the quality expected for the finished

product. Vicscot withheld a portion of the final payment. Having been shorted on

the final payment, Greggo & Ferrara sued for 1) a mechanic’s lien, 2) breach of

contract and 3) the Building and Construction Payments Act, 6 Del. C. §3509 et seq.

The question before the Court today concerns Count IV of the Complaint,

asserting a claim under the Building and Construction Payments Act (“BCPA”).

Vicscot says this claim should be dismissed because treatment under the BCPA is

limited to construction of buildings, not improvements to land. Plaintiff says site

2 improvements qualify because they were done “in connection with” construction of

a building.

HISTORY AND POLICIES OF THE BCPA

Delaware – and 48 other states – have enacted some variant of a “prompt

payment act” for the benefit of contractors and subcontractors on construction

projects. 1 While we might tarry longer with all of the many iterations of these

statutes, suffice it to say Delaware’s is the one we are concerned with here.

Delaware’s statute benefits “contractors” who supply labor or materials “in

connection with the erection, construction, completion, alteration or repair of any

building or for additions to a building.” 2 As noted above, this dispute involves

grading and improvement to the land, and not erection, completion, alteration or

repair of a building.

For contractors whose work falls under the BCPA, there are financial benefits

as well as disincentives for those who fail to pay invoices when due. Broadly

speaking, the contractor who prevails in the dispute may be awarded attorney fees. 3

1 Deborah F. Buckman, Annotation, State Prompt Payment Statutes—Construction Cases, 83 A.L.R.7th Art. 6 (2023). 2 6 Del. C. §3501(2). 3 See 6 Del. C. §3509 3 And the party withholding payment may be held to interest payments on the amount

withheld. 4 Thus, applicability of the statute has financial consequences.

It is worth mentioning that the mechanic’s lien statute is broader in defining

the class of potential plaintiffs, permitting those who make improvements to land –

and not just buildings – to file a lien.5 But it is narrower in its remedy: attorney fee

recovery is not available.6

Exactly why the definition of “contractor” in the BCPA is not coextensive with

the definition of “persons entitled to obtain lien” in the mechanic’s lien statute is not

clear, but they clearly are not. Rather than attempting to harmonize two definitions

of a remedial statute that the General Assembly could harmonize itself, the safer

course for the Court is to read the language as written.

COURT INTERPRETATIONS OF BCPA

Several Delaware cases have interpreted Delaware’s BCPA and they are

helpful to the resolution here. First, we have a federal District Court decision in VSI

Sales, LLC v. Griffin Sign, Inc., a case that stands for the rather unremarkable

4 See 6 Del. C. §3506. A discussion of the applicability of interest penalties and attorney fees under the BCPA may be found in Suppi Construction, Inc., v. EC Developments I, LLC, 2024 WL 939851, at *8-10 (Del. Super. Mar. 24, 2024). 5 See 25 Del. C. §§2702-03. 6 See Gaster v. Coldiron, 297 A.2d 394 (Del. 1972). 4 proposition that a highway sign is not a building.7 The highway sign maker’s claim

under the BCPA was thus rebuffed. But the argument rejected by the Court was that

it should take a broad reading of the BCPA and apply it to “a broader range of

improvements to land in accordance with the corollary mechanics' lien statutes.”8

The Court found no ambiguity in the BCPA statute and said “[h]ere, the court finds

the Construction Prompt Payment Act is unambiguous and its plain language states

that the statute only applies to the construction of buildings.” 9

In Pearce & Moretto, Inc. v. Hyett’s Corner, LLC, Pearce & Moretto was hired

to do site improvements on land being developed into a residential subdivision.10

When its final payment was withheld, it sued, claiming a mechanic’s lien, breach of

contract, a BCPA claim and unjust enrichment, much like the Complaint here.11 The

Court allowed the mechanic’s lien claim to proceed, but dismissed the BCPA claim,

ruling that site improvements for buildings “intended to be built at some point in the

future” do not qualify for treatment under the BCPA.12 The Court reiterated the VSI

decision’s ruling that “the law only applies to building construction work.”13

7 VSI Sales, LLC v. Griffin Sign, Inc., No. CV 13-1970-GMS, 2014 WL 1653271, at *3 (D. Del. Apr. 25, 2014). 8 Id. at *2. 9 Id. 10 Pearce & Moretto, Inc. v. Hyetts Corner, LLC, No. CV N19L-06-090 WCC, 2020 WL 532748, at *1 (Del. Super. Jan. 31, 2020). 11 Id. 12 Id. at *4. 13 Id. at *5 (citing VSI Sales, LLC, 2014 WL 1653271, at *2). 5 Erosion Control Specialists, Inc. v Hyetts Corner, LLC 14 was a similar lawsuit

over landscaping services for the same development as the Pearce & Moretto case.

Erosion Control sued for a mechanic’s lien over seven properties, breach of contract,

unjust enrichment and the BCPA. 15 Its specific landscaping services, however, were

to the common areas of the subdivision.16 Because Erosion Control’s work was not

related to any specific property, its mechanic’s lien claim failed, and because Erosion

Control did not meet the definition of a “contractor” under the BCPA – in that it did

not furnish work in connection with a structure – its BCPA claim failed as well.17

ANALYSIS

Greggo & Ferrara have not cited to the Court authority defining the term “in

connection with” the construction of a building under the BCPA. The Defendant’s

citations above, while not defining “in connection with” specifically, do point to a

conservative reading of the definition. Plaintiff argues that bringing sewer and water

service to within five feet of the building is sufficiently connected to the construction

of the building to qualify, but Plaintiff must concede that doing so requires a broad

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Greggo and Ferrara, Inc. v. Vicscot, L.L.C., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greggo-and-ferrara-inc-v-vicscot-llc-delsuperct-2025.