Labrecque v. Branton Yachts Corp.

457 A.2d 617, 1983 R.I. LEXIS 844
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 22, 1983
Docket80-288-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 457 A.2d 617 (Labrecque v. Branton Yachts Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Labrecque v. Branton Yachts Corp., 457 A.2d 617, 1983 R.I. LEXIS 844 (R.I. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

MURRAY, Justice.

This case is an appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court in which a jury found the defendant liable for breach of contract.

The sequence of events leading up to today’s appeal began in 1976 when plaintiff, Gerard Labrecque, purchased a partially completed forty-foot sailboat. For approximately two years plaintiff kept the boat in his backyard where he occasionally performed work on it. By 1978 plaintiff had completed all those tasks commensurate with his boat-building ability, but his craft still fell far short of being seaworthy. Therefore, he met with George Brandariz, the owner of defendant Branton Yachts Corporation, and the two agreed that defendant would complete the work on the boat. At trial plaintiff testified that the agreed price was $16,000 whereas Brandariz testified that he gave an estimate of $16,-000 to $18,000.

*619 The record indicates that plaintiff had made regular installment payments to defendant until July of 1978, at which time the payments totaled $15,000. In July the parties had a “falling out” with plaintiff ordering defendant to stop work on the still unfinished boat and demanding that the boat be returned. The plaintiff offered the remaining $1,000 to fulfill what he thought was his contractual obligation. However, defendant refused plaintiff’s offer of payment and demanded another $5,000 as compensation for the work he had done on the boat. The plaintiff in turn refused defendant’s demand for the additional amount. The defendant then prevented plaintiff from retrieving his boat.

On January 11, 1979, plaintiff filed a complaint in the Newport County Superior Court containing various counts requesting replevin, an injunction, damages for breach of contract, damages for conversion, damages for negligence, damages for breach of warranty, damages for deceit, and a temporary restraining order. 1 The defendant filed an answer denying plaintiff’s allegations and a counterclaim for the alleged balance due for the work it had performed.

From February 7,1980 until February 13, 1980, this matter was tried before a Newport County jury. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s case, the trial justice granted defendant’s motion for a directed verdict in regard to all counts of the complaint except those for breach of contract and breach of warranty.

During the trial plaintiff introduced evidence that some of defendant’s work was improperly performed and that some of the work agreed on was never done. He also presented a witness who testified that it would now cost plaintiff $18,000 to put the boat in seaworthy condition, with a good portion of that price going toward ripping out work done by defendant. In rebuttal defendant introduced evidence in an attempt to establish that plaintiff had accepted the work done, that he had prevented defendant from completing the work, and that he had selected the type of construction which he now claimed was improper. On February 13, 1980, the jury found for plaintiff in the amount of $16,000. After the verdict, defendant filed a motion for a new trial, which was denied on March 28, 1980. The defendant now appeals from both the Superior Court judgment and the denial of the motion for a new trial.

The defendant first contends that the trial justice improperly denied three of his requests for jury instructions. The first denied instruction concerned defects caused by the type of construction selected. It reads:

“27. If Plaintiff consulted with Defendant as to the type of construction of the interior of the cabin and Defendant gave its advice, leaving the Plaintiff to decide what type of construction would be used to finish the interior, and the Plaintiff selected the type of construction, then the Defendant is not responsible for any defects that might have occurred due to the type of construction. Fletcher & Brothers v. Seekell, 1 RI 267 (1849).”

It is well settled in Rhode Island that the charge given to the jury must be applicable to the facts that have been adduced in evidence and that a request for instructions is properly denied when there is no basis for such instructions in the evidence. Hamrick v. Yellow Cab Co., 111 R.I. 515, 521, 304 A.2d 666, 670 (1973).

In the present case we find no evidence that supports the proposition that plaintiff selected a type of construction which caused any defects. At the trial defendant consistently testified that he was never furnished specifications, plans, or layouts that would assist him in the construction process. The plaintiff did choose to have vinyl installed to cover some of the surface area inside of the cabin. However, the evidence reveals that the defects corn- *620 plained of were the result of the unwork-manlike manner of installation, not the result of the type of construction selected. Consequently, we find that the trial justice correctly denied defendant’s request No. 27 because there was no basis for such an instruction in the evidence.

The trial justice also denied the following request for a jury instruction:

“28. You will remember that according to the testimony, the Plaintiff went to Defendant’s place of business on several occasions and inspected the boat and made payments on those occasions to the Defendant without making any complaint as to the workmanship.
“I will charge you as to the law governing the acceptance of the work. If you are sold an article and that article is not as represented, it would be your duty to return that article in a reasonable time, rather than to keep it a long time and, finally, when suit was brought against you, complain that the article sold you was not such an article as you agreed to buy. Of course, the labor which was expended on this boat could not be returned as such, and the material installed could not be taken and handed over bodily to the Defendant. It is a physical impossibility. But, if you have work of this nature done and you accept the work, in other words, by your conduct you tacitly agree that the work is all right, you cannot, at some later date, when a man would like to have his pay for the labor, complain that the work which you once accepted was not all right, or not proper work and labor furnished to you.
“That is one question for you to take into consideration, whether or not the Plaintiff, by his conduct, did apparently accept the work — not whether he took the boat and went away with it, — it is admitted that he does not have the boat — but whether or not the work was acceptable to him at that time. Nock v. Lloyd, 32 R.I. 313 [79 A. 832 (1911)].”

The defendant contends that plaintiff inspected the boat on various occasions and never complained about the defects present. By not complaining, defendant asserts that plaintiff accepted the work done and that he should be estopped from raising such defects in his breach-of-contract action. In support of this contention defendant cites Nock v. Lloyd, 32 R.I. 313, 79 A. 832 (1911), and requests that the jury be given the same charge that was given to the Nock jury.

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Bluebook (online)
457 A.2d 617, 1983 R.I. LEXIS 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/labrecque-v-branton-yachts-corp-ri-1983.