Mank v. Webster

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJune 30, 2016
DocketCUMcv-15-545
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mank v. Webster (Mank v. Webster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mank v. Webster, (Me. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT- '

CUMBERLAND, SS Docket No.: CV-15-545

) KELLY MANK, ) NIELS MANK ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) JUDGMENT v. ) ) CHRIS WEBSTER d/b/a ) LAKE REGION PAVING and ) SEAL COATING, ) JA1\1ES SACCUZZO

Defendant

This matter came before the Court on a damages hearing. Plaintiffs

were present along with counsel, John Tourcotte, Esq. Defendants appeared

pro se. The Court entered a default against Defendants by Order dated April

13, 2016.

As a general rule, damages for defective performance under

a construction contract may be measured either by the reasonable costs of

reconstruction and completion in accordance with the contract, or by the

diminished value to the owner of the property by reason of the

defects. Parsons v. Beaulieu, 429 A.2d 214, 217 (Me. 1981 ); 5 A.

Corbin, Contracts § 1089 (1964 ). STATE OF MAINE Cumberland, ss, Clerk's Office

JUN 28 2016 1 RECEIVED The former measure of damages applies to the present fact scenario

and Plaintiff makes no claim for diminution of value.

The Court finds as follows:

The contract price for the ice hockey rink was $7,000.

See Plaintiff's Exhibit 1. Plaintiffs paid Defendant Webster d/b/a Lake

Region Paving and Seal Coating a total of $9, 000. Of this total amount paid,

$7,000 represents the full contract price for the ice rink and $2,000 was

advanced toward the driveway-paving contract. See Plaintiff's Exhibit 2. 1

Defendants never worked toward the driveway project or provided any

materials to Plaintiffs, related to that project.

The undisputed evidence regarding repair and completion of the job in

keeping with the contract is as follows. The tearing out of the asphalt

installed by Defendants totaled $13,000. The completion of the job was an

additional $15,600. Defendants questioned the relative cost difference

between what they charged and what the replacement contractor, Mr.

Mason, charged. Ostensibly this was to call into question the reasonableness

of the scope of work and the amount charged for the work performed.

1 Defendant Webster contends that the $2,000 represents an additional amount necessary

for the purchase of additional gravel and was not a payment toward the driveway work There was no change order to that effect in the record presented by the parties and no exhibit offered by the Defendants to support Mr. Webster's testimony. The Court therefore concludes that the additional sum above the contract price was a payment toward the driveway work

2 Admirably, Defendants conceded their fault in getting into a project they

knew very little about (ice rink construction) for the purposes of a loss leader

to be able to take on the more profitable companion job of paving the

Plaintiffs' driveway. While it is understandable for the Defendants to feel

that such an honest concession should lead to a reasonable resolution with

the Plaintiffs, short of litigation, that did not happen and does not itself

constitute a defense to the damages claimed by Plaintiffs. Moreover, to

claim that Defendants charged much less than Mr. Mason for similar or a

greater amount of work does not alone call into question the scope of work

or rate charged by Mr. Mason. In fact, given the margin by which the

project was found to be deficient (a 54-inch pitch for an ice skating rink), the

fortuity that Defendants work cost much less than Mr. Mason's work,

perhaps makes rather than undermines the ineluctable conclusion that the

project was dramatically under-estimated by Defendants when quoted for

$7,000.

Defendants admitted to Plaintiffs that the pavement all needed to be

removed in order to bring the project into alignment with the contract. Mr.

Webster testified that the project could have been remedied by repairing a

single quadrant. However, Mr. Webster provided no evidence regarding

how that might affect the cost of repair, if at all. Moreover, that testimony is

3 substantially undermined by an initial admission that the pavement needed

to be removed, in addition to Mr. Mason's rebuttal testimony that a quadrant

approach to the repair would not have worked. As a separate but related

point, the record suggests that it is not an acceptable building practice to

build up the declining grade over already existing pavement.

It is therefore ORDERED:

1. Defendants Chris Webster and James Sacuzzo are liable to Plaintiffs,

jointly and severally, for the sum of $21,600.

2. Defendant Chris Webster is liable to Plaintiffs for the additional sum

of $2,000 for the deposit for the driveway for which work was not

performed on Plaintiffs' property.

3. Defendant Chris Webster is ordered solely to pay Plaintiffs'

reasonable attorneys fees for a violation of the Maine Unfair Trade

Practices Act, which the court finds to be $3,798.50.

The Clerk is directed to enter this Order on the civil docket by

reference pursuant to Maine Rule of Civil Procedure 79(a).

Date: 06/27 /16

Justice, Superior Court

4 STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss Docket No.: CV-15-545

) KELLY MANK, ) NIELS MANK ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) AMENDED JUDGEMENT RULE 60(b) 1 v. ) ) CHRIS WEBSTER d/b/a ) LAKE REGION PAVING and ) SEAL COATING, ) STATE OF l*'UE JAMES SACCUZZO errmhArfAnrl • .CfP.rk'£ Ofb

Defendant JUN 30 20?·6 RECEIVED This matter came before the Court on a damages hearing. Plaintiffs were

present along with counsel, John Turcotte, Esq. Defendants appeared prose. The

Court entered a default against Defendants by Order dated April 13, 2016.

a construction contract may be measured either by the reasonable costs of

reconstruction and completion in accordance with the contract, or by the

diminished value to the owner of the property by reason of the defects. Parsons v.

Beaulieu. 429 A.2d 214. 217 (Me. 1981); 5 A. Corbin, Contracts§ 1089 (1964).

1 On the Court's own motion and precipitated by a letter dated June 29, 2016 from

Attorney Turcotte providing new evidence regarding the true cost of repair to finish the smaller-scale ice rink, the Court corrects and reduces the amount to $12,533.40 from $15,600. z Defendant Webster contends that the $2,000 represents an additional amount necessary for the purchase of additional gravel and was not a payment toward the driveway work There was no change order to that effect in the record presented by the parties and no The former measure of damages applies to the present fact scenario and

Plaintiff makes no claim for diminution of value.

See Plaintiffs Exhibit 1. Plaintiffs paid Defendant Webster d/b/a Lake Region

Paving and Seal Coating a total of $9,000. Of this total amount paid, $7,000

represents the full contract price for the ice rink and $2,000 was advanced toward

the driveway-paving contract. See Plaintiffs Exhibit 2. 2 Defendants never worked

toward the driveway project or provided any materials to Plaintiffs, related to that

project.

The undisputed evidence regarding repair and completion of the job in

keeping with the contract is as follows. The tearing out of the asphalt installed by

Defendants totaled $13,000. The completion of the job was an additional

$12,533.40. Defendants questioned the relative cost difference between what they

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Related

Parsons v. Beaulieu
429 A.2d 214 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1981)

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