Kamco Supply v. Maplewood School Apt., No. Cv98 035 22 95 S (Sep. 19, 2001)

2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 13187
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 2001
DocketNo. CV98 035 22 95 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 13187 (Kamco Supply v. Maplewood School Apt., No. Cv98 035 22 95 S (Sep. 19, 2001)) 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
Kamco Supply v. Maplewood School Apt., No. Cv98 035 22 95 S (Sep. 19, 2001), 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 13187 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
This suit involves a claim by the plaintiff, Kamco Supply Corp. of New England, to recover $43,988.57 from the defendants for materials it supplied to and which were incorporated into two buildings located at 434 Maplewood Avenue owned by Maplewood School Apartments Limited Partnership ("Maplewood"). The two buildings on the site were previously used for school purposes and were now being converted to thirty-two units of low and medium income housing. The plaintiff claims the defendants were CT Page 13188 supplied the material between August 8, 1997, and December 1, 1997.

The defendant Naek Construction, Inc. ("Naek") was the general contractor for the job and pursuant to its contract provided a Labor and Material Bond which it signed as Principal and which the defendant. The American Insurance Company ("American") signed as surety. Naek thereafter contracted on including approximately $71,000 in extras. The first count of the amended complaint of July 30, 1999, is a claim on the bond.

The second and third counts of the complaint are suits on mechanics liens; in count two for the sum of $41,967.06; and the third count for $2,342.82 representing the same claim for materials supplied as in the first count. The fourth count sounds in unjust enrichment. As previously stated, the defendants Naek and American Insurance answered the first count only and the defendant Maplewood only answered counts 2, 3, and 4. The plaintiff filed the required notices on the bonds and mechanics liens.

The defendants Naek and American defend on the first count on the basis that Kamco did business with the Edward Ondy Construction Company not E.S. Ondy, Inc. and that the Edward Ondy Construction Company does not qualify as a claimant under the payment bond. The main defense of Maplewood is that not all of the materials were either delivered to or incorporated into their buildings and it has paid the general contractor the full purchase price set forth in the contract.

The plaintiff first called as a witness Edward S. Ondy who testified that he has been in the construction business since 1970, went into his own self proprietorship in 1986 and formed the Edward Ondy Construction Company. That company was dissolved by the Secretary of State for failure to file necessary papers on August 19, 1994. Despite that, Ondy continued to do business under that corporate name because he claims he was not aware of the dissolution until mid 1995. As such, he went to the plaintiff in early January of 1995 to acquire it as a supplier. He applied for credit and provided references to Kamco under the name Edward Ondy Construction Company on January 17, 1995, even though as of that date that corporation had been dissolved and he had formed a new corporation known as E.S. Ondy, Inc., on January 3, 1995, which corporation was a union shop. It is apparent that he used the old corporation on his credit application because it had a track record, whereas the new corporation had just been formed. He never applied for credit with the plaintiff under E.S. Ondy, Inc. He apparently did business with Kamco under Edward Ondy Construction Company during 1995, 1996 and all of 1997 until some time in late November of 1997 when E.S. Ondy, Inc., filed for bankruptcy.

Plaintiff's exhibit F is a series of invoices from Kamco to the Edward CT Page 13189 Ondy Construction Company for materials supplied to Maplewood School Apartments, L.P., from August 8, 1997, through December 1, 1997. Apparently, Kamco believed the Edward Ondy Construction Company was still alive and well, had no knowledge of the existence of E.S. Ondy, Inc., during this period although Ondy seems to recall telling Kamco's credit manager Bob Dombroski to change the name to E.S. Ondy. He admits to never formally or in writing advising Kamco of who it was really dealing with although he had actually paid for some previously ordered materials on checks of E.S. Ondy, Inc.

Ondy further testified that in his opinion all the materials shown in Exhibit F were delivered to and incorporated into the building by the time his company left the project upon going bankrupt. He estimated his contract to have been between 85 and 88 percent completed when he left the site. He did indicate that certain small items delivered to Maplewood by Kamco may have been used on other jobs of his; but they were replaced. He was sure that no sheetrock had been removed. He admitted he paid nothing on the invoices contained in exhibit F. He also admitted his company was in financial distress and he was doing business with Prinvest Corp. wherein he was selling it his account receivables for this project for 80 percent and assigning it his payment due from Naek.

Paul Taylor, he plaintiff's president, testified that all purchase orders from Ondy came from the Edward Ondy Construction Company and not E.S. Ondy, that the mechanic's liens referenced contracts between Kamco and the Edward Ondy Construction Company and that he only became aware of the existence of E.S. Ondy, Inc. at the very end. He admitted that credit probably would not have been extended to E.S. Ondy in 1995, if he knew of it, because the corporation was new with no credit history.

At the conclusion of the case, counsel made brief arguments and it became obvious to the court that plaintiff's counsel was arguing the liability of Naek and American Insurance as to the mechanic's lien counts, even though in their answer to the final complaint of July 30, 1999, both these defendants had specifically replied that they were not answering those counts because they did not apply to them. The plaintiff had never moved for default against them for failure to answer those counts and plaintiff's counsel seemed totally unaware of the pleading problem.

Post trial on June 28, 2001, the plaintiff filed a Motion for Permission to now file default motions against both defendants and default motions. The court denied both motions as untimely and more importantly because those defendants did not defend against or contest those counts at trial. CT Page 13190

To better understand the state of the pleadings and to understand the court's dilemma, the court will summarize the pleadings.

The first amended complaint dated December 31, 1998, was in four counts. In none of the counts does it direct to which of the defendants it is intended. The first count was on the Labor and Material Bond and the defendants Naek and American Insurance answered that count on March 2, 1999, as they were the principal and surety on the bond. They did not answer counts two and three based on mechanic's liens or count four sounding in unjust enrichment. The defendant Maplewood on February 19, 1999, filed its answer only as to counts two, three and four. Just prior to this amended complaint, the court on October 5, 1998, granted Naek and American's motion to substitute a bond in the amount of $60,000 in lieu of the mechanic's liens referred to in counts two and three.

Thereafter, the plaintiff on July 30, 1999, filed another amended complaint as to counts two and three to include an allegation that Naek and American had on June 11, 1999, provided a bond in the amount of $60,000 to substitute for the mechanic's liens. On October 1, 1999, the defendant Maplewood again answered as to counts two, three and four but did not answer count one and claimed it was not applicable to it. On April 17, 2001, the defendants Naek and American Insurance again filed an answer to the amended complaint of July 30, 1999, by again answering count one only and as to counts two, three and four stated that as to the allegations in count two, three and four, they are directed to other parties.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 13187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kamco-supply-v-maplewood-school-apt-no-cv98-035-22-95-s-sep-19-2001-connsuperct-2001.