Lignell v. Berg

593 P.2d 800, 1979 Utah LEXIS 860
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1979
Docket15001
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 593 P.2d 800 (Lignell v. Berg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lignell v. Berg, 593 P.2d 800, 1979 Utah LEXIS 860 (Utah 1979).

Opinion

MAUGHAN, Justice:

Appellants Lignell and Todd (“Owners”) appeal from a judgment entered against them in favor of Berg Brothers Construction Company (BBC) on BBC’s counterclaim. The litigation was commenced by the Owners against their general contractor. The contract involved was for construction of the Incline Terrace condominium complex in Salt Lake City. BBC was not the entity identified as the “contractor” in the formal contract; that contract identifies as the contractor a joint venture composed of BBC and Respondent Frank C. Berg.

The Owners sued the joint venture alleging financial damage from the joint venture’s failure to complete the work on time, failure to pay for labor and materials, and defective workmanship. BBC counterclaimed alleging it (rather than the joint venture) was the general contractor in fact, and that the Owners had breached the contract to BBC’s damage by interfering with the work, by failure to make progress payments, and by failure to pay for extra contract work ordered by Owners and performed by BBC or its subcontractors.

While the Owner-BBC litigation was in progress, two of BBC’s subcontractors sued BBC seeking payment for work performed and materials supplied for the complex. Both a performance bond and a labor and material payment bond having been obtained for the job, the surety, Respondent Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland, was joined as party defendant in all the actions.

The cases were consolidated for trial over the Owner’s objection. All issues except those relating to interest and attorneys’ fees were submitted to a jury. The jury found by special verdict “the contractor was not estopped to deny it was a joint venture.” The jury’s verdicts also awarded the subcontractors a combined $104,346.69 on their claims against BBC and the surety, and awarded BBC $159,148.68 on its claim against the Owners. The Owners were found by the jury to have no cause against BBC. The court then made findings and conclusions pertinent to the interest and attorneys’ fee issues, entered judgment awarding interest on all money judgments from the date the money became due (as established by the evidence in the case); and further awarded to the prevailing parties attorneys’ fees totalling $74,000.00. The subcontractors’ attorneys’ fees and all interest charges ordered to be paid by BBC were treated by the trial court as damages from the Owners’ breach. The attorneys’ fees of BBC and its surety were treated by the court as recoverable from the Owners under Sec. 14-2-3, U.C.A., 1953. The end result was the Owners were ordered to pay all the attorneys’ fees of all the prevailing litigants.

We affirm, but modify as to attorneys’ fees directly awarded BBC, and the surety. We do not disturb the award of attorneys’ fees to BBC as damages. All statutory references are to U.C.A., 1953. Costs awarded to BBC and its surety.

*803 The appeal raises the following seven distinct issues:

1. Whether there is evidence to support the verdict against Owners and in favor of BBC.
2. Whether certain exhibits were improperly received without foundation.
3. Whether a judgment of any kind in favor of BBC is proper in litigation on a contract to which BBC was not a party.
4. Whether BBC is precluded from recovering for work performed as a general contractor, because it was not licensed as a general contractor at the time of contract execution or during performance.
5. Whether the trial court’s consolidation of the subcontractors’ actions against BBC with the Owners’ action was reversible error.
6. Whether BBC and its surety were entitled to recover from the Owners their own attorneys’ fees and the attorneys’ fees recovered by subcontractors’ against BBC in the consolidated action.
7. Whether interest was properly assessed against and added to the verdict amounts.

We treat the issues in the order stated.

1. The evidence supports the verdict.

The jury was given eight instructions as to damages, and none is challenged on appeal. The primary damage instruction directed the jury to determine the amount due from the Owners to BBC or vice versa by (1) determining the price the Owners agreed to pay for work under the original contract and all written and oral addenda or change orders less the amount contemplated to have been charged for work covered by the contract but not performed by BBC, and (2) subtracting from the amount so determined the amount paid by Owners to BBC or for BBC to laborers, materialmen or subcontractors plus the costs of remedying defective work of BBC or its subcontractors.

Other instructions gave the jury considerable latitude to award BBC damages for unwarranted Owner interference with the contract performance and failure to make promised payments promptly, or at all. The jury may well have exercised that latitude in BBC’s favor if, indeed, the proof was technically inadequate to support its award under the primary damages formula. The record does not indicate, however, that the proof was deficient in any particular. There is testimony to support the BBC contentions that $1,938,678.32 was promised to be paid for the work actually done by BBC, that only $1,179,529.68 of Owner outlay is properly to be credited against the debt, and that $159,148.68 (the amount of the BBC verdict against the Owners) remains to be paid.

To a large extent, the evidence about the Owners’ promises consists of Clifford Berg’s naked and controverted testimony about conversations with Appellant Lignell. The need to resort to such evidence is chargeable to the Owners, because they chose to proceed on the basis of frequent oral and undocumented modification of the plans and because they usurped general contractor authority. The total sum the jury found the Owners to have promised to pay 1 includes amounts which were promised only by implication. The Owners did not, for instance, expressly promise to pay the costs of bonding the job, or the amount (plus BBC’s mark-up) by which the cost of dry-wall or electrical subcontract work exceeded, because of Owner interference, original bids, or the costs entailed in revisions of structures to satisfy the Salt Lake City Building Department. As the jury was instructed, however, it was entitled to regard these costs as legitimate charges against the project to be absorbed by the Owners. The result does not do violence to established principles of equity and implied contract.

2. Exhibits complained of were properly received.

The Owners objected to Exhibit 210P (a summary of charges for “extras”) *804 on the principal ground that Clifford Berg, the witness through whom the exhibit was introduced, did not have personal knowledge of the details of charges for electrical extras. 2 Nevertheless, the electrical subcontractor had been a previous witness in support of his own claim against BBC. He had introduced exhibits and testified as to the details of the work for which payment was demanded.

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Bluebook (online)
593 P.2d 800, 1979 Utah LEXIS 860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lignell-v-berg-utah-1979.