Martin Moreno v. Jose Servando Ruiz

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 12, 2007
DocketM2005-02223-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Martin Moreno v. Jose Servando Ruiz (Martin Moreno v. Jose Servando Ruiz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin Moreno v. Jose Servando Ruiz, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE September 12, 2006 Session

MARTIN MORENO v. JOSE SERVANDO RUIZ, ET AL.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County No. 05C-208 David Randall Kennedy, Judge

No. M2005-02223-COA-R3-CV - Filed on March 12, 2007

A small contractor entered into an oral agreement to install brick facades on new houses in a Mt. Juliet subdivision. He did brickwork on eleven houses pursuant to the agreement, and was paid in cash for the work on an irregular basis. Because he believed the other party to the agreement did not pay him in full, he walked off the job and brought suit for breach of contract. A bench trial in Circuit Court ultimately resulted in a net judgment for the plaintiff in the amount of $397.50. He argued on appeal that the evidence showed that he was entitled to receive over $10,000 on his claim. We affirm the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., P.J., M.S., and FRANK G. CLEMENT , JR., J., joined.

W.H. Stephenson, II, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Martin Moreno.

Owen R. Lipscomb, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Jose Servando Ruiz and Vincente Ruiz.

OPINION

I. AN ORAL CONTRACT

Martin Moreno owned a small construction business in Davidson County. His friends Jose and Vicente Ruiz worked as contractors under the name J.R. Masonry.1 They were the primary masonry contractors at Willoughby Station, a large subdivision under construction in Mr. Juliet. In

1 Jose Ruiz and Vicente Ruiz were brothers and worked together in the construction business. Although both were named in M r. M oreno’s suit, Jose Ruiz testified that he was the 100% owner of the company. There was no testimony at trial as to any interactions between V icente Ruiz and any party or witness. Thus, any reference in this opinion to “Mr. Ruiz” means either Jose Ruiz or the construction business he operated with his brother. May of 2004, they offered Mr. Moreno subcontracting work at Willoughby Station. The parties agreed that Jose Ruiz would tell Mr. Moreno which houses he and his workers should lay brick on, and Mr. Ruiz would pay Mr. Moreno at the rate of $285.00 for each 1,000 bricks laid.

The agreement was never reduced to writing. However, the parties do not dispute its terms, but only whether Martin Moreno was fully paid. The proof showed that Mr. Moreno would periodically tell Mr. Ruiz how many bricks his workers had laid, and Mr. Ruiz would pay Mr. Moreno in cash every two weeks for his work. The amount of such payments did not necessarily correspond to the exact number of bricks laid, but was usually a round number like $4,000 or $3,000. Mr. Moreno worked on eleven houses in the subdivision before the parties’ agreement fell apart.

According to Mr. Moreno, he approached Mr. Ruiz for payment of completed work in August of 2004 and was told that Mr. Ruiz did not have the money. However, Mr. Moreno’s laborers continued working, and when Mr. Moreno approached Mr. Ruiz again and told him he couldn’t pay his laborers, Mr. Ruiz gave him $4,000. The next day, Mr. Ruiz paid him $2,000. Two weeks later, he paid $2,000, and the day after that he paid $1,000. Mr. Moreno believed that Mr. Ruiz still owed him for completed work, but Mr. Ruiz refused further payment, contending that he had paid everything he owed.

Mr. Moreno then complained to Robert Posner, a construction superintendent at Willoughby Station who had worked with Jose Ruiz for many years. Mr. Posner talked to both Mr. Moreno and Mr. Ruiz in an attempt to settle their dispute, but was not able to make any headway. At that time, Mr. Moreno’s workers were laying brick on a house at Lot 157. When it became apparent to him that Mr. Ruiz would not pay what he believed was owed, Mr. Moreno abandoned the job, leaving the house at Lot 157 only partially bricked.

II. TRIAL PROCEEDINGS

Mr. Moreno filed a civil warrant in the General Sessions Court of Davidson County on November 22, 2004. After a hearing, the court rendered judgment in his favor in the amount of $11,362. Mr. Ruiz timely appealed to the Circuit Court, where a bench trial was conducted on June 6, 2005.

The only witnesses to testify were Martin Moreno, Jose Ruiz, and Robert Posner.2 Mr. Moreno testified that he worked on eleven houses under his agreement with Mr. Ruiz and that Mr. Ruiz paid him in full for six of the houses. He claimed, however, that he only received partial payment for the other five houses. To support that claim he produced photos, which purported to show the five houses in question, and a sheet summarizing the alleged shortfall. The five houses were labeled on the photos and identified in the summary sheet as Mail Box # 2010, Lot 155, Lot 758, Mail Box # 2017, and Lot 157.

2 W e note that Mr. Moreno and Mr. Ruiz both spoke English and that no Spanish language court interpreter was used, but they both experienced difficulty at times responding to the questions of the attorneys.

-2- The summary sheet set out the numbers of bricks on each house which Mr. Moreno’s workers had laid but for which he had allegedly not been paid (ranging from 5,500 to 34,000 bricks per house) and the price for that number of bricks at the rate of $285 per thousand. According to Mr. Moreno’s summary sheet, the total payments that he should have received for the brickwork on those five houses was $22,087.50. The sheet recited total payments received in the amount of $9,000, leaving a balance due of $13,087.50.

Robert Posner testified that he had been working on the Willoughby Station subdivision for over ten years and that it included about 700 homes. He was asked if he was familiar with the lots in the subdivision, and he responded that he was and that each lot number corresponded with a street number. He acknowledged that he had brought a list of the subdivision lots with him, and was questioned as follows:

Q. Tell us what Lot No. 155 – what the street number Lot 155 coincides with?

A. Twenty-seventeen (2017) Arden Court.
Q. So, twenty-seventeen (2017) Arden Court is the same thing as Lot 155?
A. That’s correct.
Q. Any doubt about that at all?
A. No, sir.

Mr. Posner was also asked about another house shown in one of Mr. Moreno’s photographs, which was labeled Mail Box 2010. The photo showed a fully-bricked house, but according to Mr. Posner, that particular house had not been bricked at the time Mr. Moreno walked off the job. On cross-examination, he was shown the photo that was labeled Mail Box 2010, and was asked, “Does that house look familiar to you.” He responded, “I really couldn’t tell you sir. We’ve built so many like it. So, yes, I’ve seen that house before.”

When Mr. Ruiz was called to the stand, he testified that Mr. Moreno’s work was initially very good, but that after a while it deteriorated, with bricks laid out of alignment and no weep holes installed where they were needed for ventilation and drainage. Mr. Ruiz testified that where this happened, he had to drill holes and make any necessary adjustments at his own expense.

He also testified that when Mr. Moreno’s crew walked off the job on Lot 157, only 15,000 bricks out of the 21,000 that had been delivered had been laid. Some of the bricks were installed in the wrong position and had to be removed so the work could be re-done. Mr Ruiz testified that the remaining bricks were dumped or destroyed, forcing him to order more brick. He testified that he lost between $3,000 and $4,000 on that house.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Martin Moreno v. Jose Servando Ruiz, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-moreno-v-jose-servando-ruiz-tennctapp-2007.