McAllister Construction Co. v. Liu

343 Or. App. 53
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 27, 2025
DocketA178831
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 343 Or. App. 53 (McAllister Construction Co. v. Liu) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAllister Construction Co. v. Liu, 343 Or. App. 53 (Or. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

No. 759 August 27, 2025 53

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON

McALLISTER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, an Oregon corporation, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. Andy LIU, Defendant-Appellant. Washington County Circuit Court 20CV04702; A178831

Theodore E. Sims, Judge. Argued and submitted July 12, 2023. David R. Nepom argued the cause and filed the brief for appellant. Bradley T. Crittenden argued the cause for respondent. Also on the brief was Brian D. Chenoweth, Bradley T. Crittenden and Chenoweth Law Group, PC. Before Ortega, Presiding Judge, and Powers, Judge, and Hellman, Judge. POWERS, J. Reversed and remanded. 54 McAllister Construction Co. v. Liu

POWERS, J. This appeal concerns an action arising out of the development of two residential lots in Beaverton into a 16-lot subdivision. Defendant Andy Liu appeals from a judg- ment in favor of plaintiff McAllister Construction Company. The judgment awards plaintiff $59,840 against defendant on plaintiff’s claim to recover in quantum meruit. A quan- tum meruit claim “typically seeks compensation for services rendered in the expectation of payment, but in the absence of explicit agreement as to amount.” In re Klemp, 363 Or 62, 74-75, 418 P3d 733 (2018) (internal quotation marks omitted). Here, plaintiff provided development services in the expectation of payment, but there is no evidence that plaintiff expected payment by defendant. Instead, plain- tiff expected to pay defendant. Plaintiff expected to profit by purchasing the developed subdivision from defendant and building homes on it. However, plaintiff was unable to timely pay the contract price for six of the lots, the contracts to sell those lots to plaintiff were cancelled, and defendant sold the entire subdivision to a third party. As explained below, we conclude that the trial court erred in determining that defendant was unjustly enriched by that series of events. Although defendant benefited from plaintiff’s development work, the requirements for estab- lishing a legal obligation to compensate plaintiff for unjust enrichment were not met. The trial court’s apparent focus on “unjust” in a moral sense, not in a legal one, does not explain how the parties’ conduct gave rise to a legal liability to compensate plaintiff. Defendant always intended to sell the developed subdivision for a profit, and there is no evi- dence that plaintiff expected compensation for its develop- ment work from defendant. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand for entry of an amended judg- ment denying plaintiff’s claim to recover in quantum meruit. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The relevant facts are mostly undisputed. Defendant owned a residential lot in Beaverton and, in late 2015, he and his wife purchased an adjoining lot. In March 2015, plaintiff and defendant agreed to work together to develop Cite as 343 Or App 53 (2025) 55

the two lots into a 16-unit subdivision. In April 2016, defen- dant formed Happy Ha, LLC. In March 2018, defendant and his wife transferred ownership of the two lots to the LLC. In late 2018 and early 2019, the LLC entered into contracts to sell six of the subdivided lots to plaintiff; however, plaintiff was unable to timely close on the purchase of the lots. In March 2019, plaintiff and the LLC agreed to cancel escrow, and plaintiff’s earnest money payment of $15,000 was dis- bursed to the LLC. In April 2019, the LLC sold the entire subdivision to a third party, and about two months later the LLC was dissolved. Based on development work that plaintiff performed for the project since around 2015, plaintiff sued defendant for breach of implied contract and also included a claim to recover in quantum meruit. The parties engaged in pretrial motion practice, the trial court denied defendant’s motion for summary judgment, and then the parties tried the case to the court without a jury. When plaintiff rested, defendant moved to dismiss plaintiff’s two claims on a number of grounds. With respect to the first claim for breach of an implied contract, the trial court granted defendant’s motion to dismiss, reasoning that the March 2015 agreement between plaintiff and defendant was replaced with a series of purchase and sale agreements (PSAs) for the six lots. However, the court denied defen- dant’s motion to dismiss plaintiff’s claim to recover in quan- tum meruit, which the court viewed as a claim for unjust enrichment. The court explained that there was “a lot of tes- timony about how much effort went into this project and it’s abundantly clear that this subdivision could not have been successfully sold without all that work having gone into the project.” In addition, the trial court denied defendant’s motion to dismiss the claims on the ground that defendant was not a proper party to the litigation. As noted above, it was the LLC that owned and sold the subdivision. In deny- ing the motion, the court appears to have relied on the fact that plaintiff began performing development work for defen- dant around March 2015, but the LLC was not formed until over a year later. 56 McAllister Construction Co. v. Liu

After post-trial briefing, the trial court issued a let- ter opinion awarding plaintiff $59,840 on its claim for unjust enrichment. The court explained that “plaintiff expended hundreds of hours of [its] time working on the creation of a subdivision, which defendant sold for a taxable profit of $179,520.”1 That is, in making its ruling, the court relied on evidence that the subdivision was sold for a taxable profit of $179,520, and it awarded one third of that amount to plain- tiff as an equitable division. The court explained: “Reduced to its essence, the overall agreement between plaintiff and defendant was a joint venture to create a sub- division, with defendant supplying the land and the needed cash, and plaintiff supplying the expertise and the over- sight. The original expectation that plaintiff would profit by purchasing and building on the lots once developed did not come to fruition for various reasons, including defen- dant’s refusal to extend an additional $5,000 credit per lot to accommodate plaintiff’s lender * * * and, of course, defen- dant’s unilateral decision to sell the entire development to a third party after plaintiff’s delay in closing on the first six lots without notice to plaintiff, who continued to finalize the details on readying the product for sale.” According to the court, the doctrine of unjust enrichment is an equitable theory that has three elements: “a benefit conferred, awareness by the [recipient] that a benefit has been received, and that under the circumstances it would be unjust to allow retention of the benefit without paying for it.” Here, the court concluded that the facts support each of those elements: “Defendant’s property value was increased by the work done and overseen by plaintiff, defendant was aware of, indeed, acknowledged, that such benefit had been received. The circumstances, taken as a whole, where plaintiff expended hundreds of hours of his time working on the creation of a subdivision, which defendant sold for a taxable profit of $179,520, compel the conclusion that it would be unjust to allow retention of this benefit without paying for it. The question then becomes determining what that payment

1 Strictly speaking, the LLC sold the subdivision, not defendant. That dif- ference, however, is immaterial in this case given the trial court’s subsequent finding that defendant was the sole owner of the LLC and that “any increase in its value inure[d] to the benefit of defendant individually.” Cite as 343 Or App 53 (2025) 57

should be, as factors other than plaintiff’s services were involved in creating that profit. The normal division of profit in a joint venture, which is essentially what this was, would be a 50/50 split.

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McAllister Construction Co. v. Liu
343 Or. App. 53 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2025)

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343 Or. App. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcallister-construction-co-v-liu-orctapp-2025.