Janicki v. Oates

5 Pa. D. & C.5th 280
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Alleghany County
DecidedJuly 10, 2008
Docketnos. AR 07-5448 and AR 07-5484
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Pa. D. & C.5th 280 (Janicki v. Oates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Alleghany County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Janicki v. Oates, 5 Pa. D. & C.5th 280 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2008).

Opinion

FRIEDMAN, J,

This decision is filed pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. 1038. See also, Pa.R.C.P. 227.1(c) (2).

The captioned matter consists of two cases which were consolidated by order of the Honorable R. Stanton Wettick Jr. of this court, dated November 9,2007. During the trial the Janickis were referred to as plaintiffs and Mr. Oates was considered the defendant. Mr. Oates’ claim, filed at AR 07-5484, was generally referred to as a counterclaim.1

The dispute involves the construction of an addition to the residence of the Janickis. According to the Jan[282]*282iclcis, Mr. Oates orally agreed to do two separate aspects of the addition: he was to dig a trench for the footers, to pour the footers, and lay five courses of cement block for the foundation, and, after the framing was completed, Mr. Oates was to install stone facing to cover the cement block so that the exterior of the addition would match the existing house.

The Janickis chose not to have an architect (or anyone else) draw up any plans or specs for their project. As a result, no one who worked on the job, nor indeed the Janickis themselves, knew prior to the start of the work exactly what would be involved and what decisions had to be made. Mr. Oates’ work was not adequately defined at the beginning of the work nor was its scope ever set down in a writing of any sort.

When the foundation was done, including an extra which we will discuss later, Mr. and Mrs. Janicki decided they should have a writing regarding the future stone work, which was to be done after the rest of the addition was framed in. They composed a statement on the back of an envelope, the original of which was available at trial and viewed by the court. A copy of the envelope (envelope agreement) is in evidence as plaintiffs’ exhibit 31. It is fully quoted below:

“As per our agreement, I, Oates, promise to install exterior stone on Ron Janicki’s addition for the total sum of $3,500 when addition is completed. Includes material and labor.
“November 21, 2005.”

[283]*283THE STONE FACING

We will first discuss the envelope agreement, which never was performed by either party. Mr. Oates acknowledged that he signed it, although the location of the signature is not at the end of the writing. The dispute about this exhibit is over its meaning, in particular, the meaning of the word “materials.” That crucial word is ambiguous in the circumstances of this case. The Janickis at trial contended that it included the cost of the stone. Mr. Oates says it reflects what he would charge for the mortar, sand, and labor to install the stone facing.

Mr. Oates is credible on this point based on the other circumstantial evidence which shows, inter alia, that at the time the envelope agreement was signed, no one knew how much new stone would be needed. This was because the Janickis wanted to salvage and re-use as much stone as possible from the demolition of a portion of the existing structure. Although the demolition appears to have been done before the envelope agreement was executed, there was no evidence adduced about the actual quantity of salvageable stone. In addition, the amount of stone overall would depend on the number of windows, gables, and other openings in the addition, none of which had been determined at the pertinent times. The most that would have been known to Mr. Oates when he signed the envelope agreement is the rough maximum square footage of the exterior walls of an addition that might be roughly the same height as the house.2

[284]*284The Janickis eventually purchased stone themselves after Mr. Oates refused to include the stone in the price he had given for installation, and another person, Lawrence O. Craig Jr., installed it. The cost of that stone was $2,140. See Prada testimony and plaintiffs’ exhibit 35. The cost for installation by Mr. Oates that the Janickis say was to include the cost of stone was only $3,500. The Janickis drafted the envelope agreement and failed to define what they thought “materials” was to include. They also failed to include words such as “provide and install,” which would have clarified what they expected of Mr. Oates.

The court believes Mr. Oates at the time considered “materials” to be the things that he needed for the installation he had agreed to do, i.e., mortar and sand. He described his policy never to allow anyone else to provide the sand needed, because when this sort of thing did occur, the wrong kind of sand was usually supplied. The court believes that, at the time, Mr. Oates reasonably understood “materials” to refer only to the mortar and sand. The court therefore concludes that the envelope agreement did not require him to provide the stone itself. There was no meeting of the minds on that point; at most there was a mutual mistake.

We now turn to the contract that was performed, the foundation work. Mr. Oates says he did all he was supposed to do and did it in a workmanlike manner. The Janickis admit they paid him in full for all he demanded for that work. However, the Janickis say they later learned, after the framing had been done and another mason, Mr. Craig, had been hired to do the stone work, [285]*285that Mr. Oates’ work was not done properly. They claim he did not leave enough of a ledge to receive the stone facing. They claim he left some joints open, without mortar and that he even left out parts of block. They claim one corner of the foundation was neither square nor plumb. They claim that Mr. Craig had to make various adjustments to the normal way of installing facing in order to deal with the problems that Mr. Oates created (and that he presumably would have to have corrected had he fulfilled his agreement to install the stone facing). As a result they say they had to pay more to Mr. Craig than Mr. Oates’ contract price and they also had to pay for the stone themselves, again instead of Mr. Oates supplying it for the price in the envelope agreement.

The court finds that Mr. Oates’ work was properly done in a workmanlike manner, that there was an adequate ledge left to receive the stone that the Janickis actually purchased, and that it was more probable than not that the framing, not the foundation, was out of plumb and not correctly set on the foundation wall. The supposed deficiencies in his work were not at all material to workmanlike quality and were at most merely cosmetic in nature, assuming anyone wished to crawl under the addition to gaze at the block walls. The supposedly missing block was more probably than not intentionally left out or cut out to accommodate the plumbing for a bathroom the Janickis had decided to include in the addition after the foundation was completed (more about this later, as it led to a dispute about an extra). In any case, the defects proven were minor, [286]*286easily and cheaply correctable, and were not a material breach by Mr. Oates.

The empty joints were vertical ones (called “head” joints) and were not structural in nature; in fact, the credible evidence was that the stone facing would have cured the only harm that might result, an opening for insects and small animals to enter the crawl space. The horizontal joints (called “bed” joints) were structural and were all in place.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Pa. D. & C.5th 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janicki-v-oates-pactcomplallegh-2008.