Kape Roofing & Gutters, Inc. v. Chebultz

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJuly 8, 2016
Docket113025
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kape Roofing & Gutters, Inc. v. Chebultz (Kape Roofing & Gutters, Inc. v. Chebultz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kape Roofing & Gutters, Inc. v. Chebultz, (kanctapp 2016).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 113,025

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

KAPE ROOFING & GUTTERS, INC., and CHUCK COOPER, Appellants,

v.

CHAD CHEBULTZ, an individual; and COMMUNITY FIRST NATIONAL BANK, a banking corporation, Appellees.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Dickinson District Court; DAVID R. PLATT, judge. Opinion filed July 8, 2016. Affirmed in part, vacated in part, reversed in part, and remanded with directions.

Caleb Boone, of Hays, for appellants.

Pedro L. Irigonegaray and Elizabeth R. Herbert, of Irigonegaray & Associates, of Topeka, and Tim W. Ryan and Arvid V. Jacobson, of Jacobson Ryan LC, of Manhattan, for appellees.

Before HILL, P.J., STANDRIDGE and ATCHESON, JJ.

Per Curiam: Our policy in Kansas is to try lawsuits on their merits and not to award judgments based on the inaction of trial counsel. Unfortunately, this case is an example of the struggle a trial judge has when a lawyer fails to do what he is supposed to do in a timely way. A Kansas judge, keeping in mind the rights of the parties, has the authority and duty to sanction parties and lawyers as needed in order to bring a legal

1 action to a just conclusion. Justice seldom arises from letting a case remain idle. In doing so, however, the judge must establish appropriate sanctions with an eye on what was done or not done. When setting sanctions, the judge must also consider the consequences of that lawyer's inaction. The more flagrant, harmful, foul deserves the more serious sanction.

We see no evidence in the record that Kape Roofing and Gutters, Inc. was complicit in Caleb Boone's failure to appear for a pretrial conference. We vacate the ultimate sanction of striking Kape's pleadings. We remand for reconsideration of imposing a more reasonable sanction.

Chad Chebultz bought a house in Abilene.

In 2011, Chad Chebultz contracted to purchase a house. Three days prior to the scheduled closing on the loan, the house suffered significant hail damage. Concerned that the bank would not close the loan on the purchase due to the hail damage, Chebultz got a repair estimate, in the form of a roofing contract, from Kape.

The contract total estimate from Kape was $20,226.34. It listed prices for roofing, guttering, and some power vents. The contract stated Kape was entitled to all insurance proceeds related to the work. On the contract there is also a check mark placed beside the term "contractor 10% O&P" (overhead and profit) but the corresponding blank line is filled in with the word "included." Chebultz never signed the contract. Kape, however, knew that Chebultz was not yet the owner of the house and that the insurance proceeds would first be paid to the original owner, Mike James, who, in turn, would give the proceeds to Chebultz.

Chebultz bought the house on July 18, 2011. Kape completed the roofing and guttering work on September 7, 2011, and Chebultz was satisfied with the work.

2 Their relationship deteriorated when the parties began disputing the amount owed. Kape sent Chebultz six conflicting invoices between September 2011 and February 2012. On February 22, 2012, Chuck Cooper, the owner of Kape, sent a letter to Chebultz demanding payment of $5,109.52 and threatened collection of the debt by his attorney.

Later, after Chebultz received a demand letter from Michael Alley, Kape's attorney, seeking $5,109.52 and threatening legal action, Chebultz placed signs in his yard critical of Kape's practices. Chebultz also threatened to post similar criticisms on local billboards, with some advertisers, in newspapers, and on radio and television.

On March 23, 2012, Alley recorded a mechanic's lien where Kape claimed a lien on the home for $5,109.52 plus interest from March 16, 2012, plus attorney fees. Alley relied on December 20, 2011, as the completion date for the Chebultz project to file the lien. Cooper told Alley, the attorney, that Chad Olson was a subcontractor for Kape. Alley did not have any knowledge of the facts surrounding how Olson came on the job, how Olson was paid, or who supervised Olson. Settlement negotiations between the parties failed.

The lawsuit begins.

Since the heart of this appeal is the subject of court-imposed sanctions, we elaborate on the various positions of the parties in the lawsuit. The tenor of the arguments, and the repeated inaction of one counsel demonstrates a case history that provides a context for our rulings. The progress of this legal action was not smooth, but was contentious and subject to frustrating delays. To illustrate this, we relate in detail how this action proceeded.

Kape filed a three-count petition against Chebultz and his lender, Community First. Count I sought a permanent injunction against Chebultz to prevent any further

3 display of signs and other alleged defamatory statements critical of Kape. Count II alleged causes of action against Chebultz for defamation, tortious interference with prospective business advantage, and breach of contract. Kape sought $7,200,000 in actual damages. Count III sought foreclosure of its mechanic's lien against Chebultz' property.

Chebultz and Community First filed general denials as answers. Chebultz did agree to a permanent injunction restraining him from posting any more signs but counterclaimed for fraud, violations of the Kansas Consumer Protection Act, and the tort of outrage.

Chebultz alleged for his consumer protection count that Kape committed deceptive acts by:

(1) attempting to obtain payments for overhead and profit when the contract specified that such payments (10 percent O&P) were included in the contract; (2) representing Olson's work as its own to both extend the time for the filing of a mechanic's lien and to increase its entitlement to overhead and profit payments; and (3) billing for both the materials already included in the contract, and for work not contemplated by the contract.

Chebultz also alleged that Kape's intentional outrageous conduct in filing a mechanic's lien and seeking foreclosure and sale of Chebultz' home unnecessarily caused Chebultz extreme and severe emotional distress. Chebultz subsequently amended his counterclaims for fraud and outrage to include claims seeking punitive damages.

4 Chebultz seeks partial summary judgment claiming the lien was filed out of time.

On January 27, 2014, Chebultz and Community First filed a joint motion for partial summary judgment, arguing that Kape had filed an untimely mechanic's lien because Kape could not establish a subcontractor relationship with Olson, whose work it relied upon to file its lien. Kape did not respond.

Then, on March 7, 2014, Kape's counsel, Caleb Boone, failed to appear at the scheduled pretrial conference. Chebultz and Community First moved to dismiss Kape's case for failure to appear. The district court struck the pleadings for Count II in Kape's petition as a sanction for not appearing and dismissed it for failure to prosecute. These were the claims for defamation, tortious interference, and breach of contract.

The court noted that Kape had not responded to Chebultz' and Community First's joint motion for partial summary judgment despite having received an extension of time to do so. The court granted their joint motion and then set a date of April 18, 2014, to hear evidence on Chebultz' remaining counterclaims. The journal entry reflecting the court's rulings noted that Kape's pleadings had been stricken for "failure to prosecute" and was filed on March 13, 2014.

After that, Kape filed a "MOTION TO DISMISS DEFAULT JUDGMENT PROCEEDINGS AND/OR MOTION FOR RELIEF FROM JUDGMENT OR ORDER OF DEFAULT BY FAX." In it, Kape argued:

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