Koland, Inc. v. Hanggi

320 N.W.2d 502, 1982 N.D. LEXIS 303
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1982
DocketCiv. 10 140
StatusPublished

This text of 320 N.W.2d 502 (Koland, Inc. v. Hanggi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koland, Inc. v. Hanggi, 320 N.W.2d 502, 1982 N.D. LEXIS 303 (N.D. 1982).

Opinion

SAND, Justice.

This is an appeal by the defendant, Robert E. Hanggi [Hanggi], from a district court judgment entered in favor of the plaintiff, Koland, Incorporated [Koland], for the balance due on a contract for the purchase and erection of a steel building ($10,492.09) less the amount required to make certain repairs to the building ($1,255.00).

On 3 October 1973 Hanggi executed an order with Koland through a salesman, Jack Stewart, for the purchase and erection of a steel building. The original order was for a 50' X 72' building for a total purchase price of $11,000.00. On 16 October 1973 Hanggi executed an order for a 24' extension to the building for an additional $4,300.00. Hang-gi executed another order in April 1974 for the purchase and installation of windows in the building for an additional $1,192.09. The total purchase price for the 50' X 96' building was $16,492.09, with a down payment of $1,000.00. The purchase price included a concrete slab for the floor of the building. Hanggi made an additional $5,000.00 payment on the purchase price sometime in 1974.

A concrete floor for the building was poured in November 1973 and construction on the actual building began in the spring of 1974. After the building was completed, Hanggi refused to pay the balance due ($10,492.09) because of certain alleged defects in the construction of the building *504 and, in particular, because the concrete floor was not properly sloped to accommodate drainage specifications he asserted he had requested.

Hanggi asserted that he informed Stewart the building was intended to be used as both a repair shop for his trucks and to wash the ice and salt off the trucks which accumulated as a result of hauling grain from Cavalier County, North Dakota, to Duluth, Minnesota. Hanggi also asserted that because of this intended use of the building, he informed Stewart that the concrete floor of the building would have to be sloped to accommodate the drainage. Hanggi further asserted that he showed Stewart a drawing indicating the drain location, slope, and gradient, and that prior to pouring the floor, he (Hanggi) gave that drawing to the concrete foreman and provided the materials for the drains.

The metal building was divided into two distinct areas, a shop area and a storage area. Hanggi provided his own drains for the building and one drain was set in the shop area and one drain was set in the storage area. There was limited drainage in the areas immediately surrounding each of these drains; however, the whole slab was not sloped so as to allow drainage of the whole floor into these two drains. The record reflects that, within allowable construction tolerances, the floor was level and not sloped.

Koland asserted that the contract for the building was for a flat floor and it was not informed by Hanggi that the intended use of the building was to wash salt from his trucks. Rather, Koland contended that Hanggi informed its representatives that the building was to be used as a garage and no mention was made of drainage specifications.

Hanggi made several other complaints concerning the building. These complaints, among other things, involved leakage into the building at the base of the wall panels, problems with a sliding door, a hole in the corner of the roof, three panels which were of shorter length than required, and a cracked concrete ramp. Koland in essence admitted these defects and calculated the cost necessary to repair them at $1,255.00. However, that figure did not include a cost for sloping the floor to accommodate drainage, because Koland asserted that the contract included a flat slab and the work slab was within normal construction tolerances.

The case was tried to the court without a jury, and the district court entered findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order for judgment and judgment in favor of Koland for the amount due under the contract ($10,492.09), less an offset to Hanggi for the defects admitted by Koland ($1,255.00). Hanggi appealed to this Court.

The issues raised by Hanggi relate to whether or not the contract between Ko-land and him included the construction of a floor that complied with the drainage specifications he allegedly requested.

Hanggi contended the terms of the contract included an obligation on the part of Koland to provide drainage for the concrete floor and that Koland breached that contractual obligation. Koland asserted that the parties’ contract did not include construction of a floor which complied with Hanggi’s drainage specifications.

The district court made the following findings of fact pertinent to the resolution of this issue:

“VI
“That the concrete slab floor did not properly drain water as expected by Defendant, however, there was no obligation on Plaintiff to provide such floor drainage for use of the building as intended by Defendant.
“VII
“That such design would have significantly increased the cost and was not contracted for or implicitly agreed upon.
“VIII
“That Defendant did the site preparation work for the slab and provided his own floor drains which were not adequate for his anticipated use.
*505 “IX
“Conversations between salesman Jack Stewart and Defendant regarding the floor drains do not rise to the level of a verbal contract to guarantee the floor drainage that Defendant now expects.
“X
“That certain defects have been acknowledged by Plaintiff (Exhibit 9) and it must repair them or pay to Defendant the sum of One Thousand Two Hundred Fifty-five and No/100th Dollars ($1,255.00); that other than these repairs, Plaintiff has fulfilled the express terms of the construction agreement.”

Hanggi contended that these findings were not supported by the evidence or were irrelevant.

The record reflects that the only written documents evidencing an agreement between the parties were the three written orders (invoices). 1 These orders did not include any specifications for the concrete floor. Rather, discussions, if any, relative to the specifications for the concrete floor were oral and were not evidenced by a written document.

In Tallackson Potato Co., Inc. v. MTK Potato Co., 278 N.W.2d 417, 422 (N.D.1979), we said:

“Obviously, however, the terms of an oral contract can be established only through extrinsic evidence. A determination of these terms, if they are disputed, must therefore be made by the trier of fact, and will be reversed by this court on appeal only if ‘clearly erroneous.’ After the terms of the oral contract have been determined, the issue of the parties’ intentions, if ascertainable from those terms, involves a question of law for the court to decide, and will be reversed by this court on appeal if erroneous.

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Bluebook (online)
320 N.W.2d 502, 1982 N.D. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koland-inc-v-hanggi-nd-1982.