Miller-Davis Co. v. Ahrens Construction, Inc.

777 N.W.2d 437, 285 Mich. App. 289
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 4, 2009
DocketDocket 284037
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 777 N.W.2d 437 (Miller-Davis Co. v. Ahrens Construction, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller-Davis Co. v. Ahrens Construction, Inc., 777 N.W.2d 437, 285 Mich. App. 289 (Mich. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Defendant Ahrens Construction, Inc., appeals by right the judgment entered after a bench trial for plaintiff, Miller-Davis Company, on its breach of contract claim. Plaintiff cross-appeals the trial court’s entry of a judgment of no cause of action on plaintiffs claim for contractual indemnity of the amount awarded for breach of contract and its attorney *292 fees for this action. Ahrens (hereafter defendant) argues that the trial court clearly erred regarding several factual findings underlying the trial court’s key ruling that defendant’s workmanship installing a roof caused a severe condensation problem in the natatorium housing the indoor pool at a YMCA complex at Sherman Lake near Augusta, Michigan. Defendant also contends that the trial court clearly erred in calculating plaintiffs damages and prejudgment interest. Also, defendant argues that the trial court abused its discretion by not granting it a default judgment after learning during trial that plaintiff had violated a discovery order by failing to disclose the identity of an expert plaintiff had consulted during its investigation of the condensation problem. Finally, defendant argues that the trial court erred by not granting it judgment based on the statute of repose, MCL 600.5839(1). We agree. Our resolution of this issue renders all other issues moot. We reverse and remand for entry of judgment for defendant.

A. BACKGROUND AND TRIAL

Plaintiff, a general contractor and construction manager, brought this breach of contract action against subcontractor Ahrens and its bondsman, Merchants Bonding Company, alleging faulty workmanship by Ahrens when installing a wooden (Timber-Deck) roofing system covering the natatorium of a YMCA recreational complex at Sherman Lake, Augusta, Michigan. During cold weather, condensation would form and drip from the ceiling of the natatorium; the parties referred to this as the natatorium moisture problem (NMP). Plaintiffs theory of the case was that the NMP was caused by rips, tears, and missing sections of a Visqueen vapor barrier installed above the inner wood tongue and groove decking system, which was supported by a “T” *293 and “sub-T” superstructure, and by defendant’s failing to install Styrofoam block insulation “tight” enough in rectangular cells that were formed by the T’s and sub-T’s. This roofing system was a last-minute cost-saving substitution for a roofing system consisting of a four-by-six inch plank ceiling, with nail-based Styrofoam insulation covered by oriented strand board (OSB or plywood), roofing felt, and a standing seam steel shell.

Defendant’s theory of the case was that the NMP was the result of several design errors, the most serious of which allowed the vapor barrier covering the uninsulated tops of the T’s to come in contact with cold outside air. Defendant supported its theory of the case with the testimony of an expert with a Ph.D. in engineering who specialized in building moisture problems. Defendant’s expert opined that moisture from the humid pool air migrated through both the wood T’s to their tops and the gaps in the tongue and groove ceiling planks, then along the underside of the vapor barrier to the top of the T’s, where it condensed and fell back down through the ceiling. Defendant’s expert also opined that any of the alleged defects in defendant’s workmanship that plaintiff found after tearing off the outer portions of the roof actually helped prevent the NMP because it allowed moisture to escape through the airspace between the insulation and the outer roof structure. Defendant also argued that the alleged defects plaintiff found were caused by plaintiff’s deconstruction of the roof.

Plaintiff theorized that the NMP was eventually “fixed” when, after a series of attempts at correcting it, 1 *294 it deconstructed the roof system in 2003 to inspect it. Plaintiff contracted with the architect and the YMCA to perform “corrective work,” which included three items that were not a part of the original plans and specifications for the roof system: (1) a spray-on rubberized waterproofing substance (Procor), (2) the sealing of any gaps between the Styrofoam block insulation and the wood “T” decking structure with spray-on, self-expanding, urethane foam, and (3) caulking the top of the T’s and sub-T’s with silicone, thereby sealing a polyethylene vapor barrier placed on top of the Procor. Plaintiff demanded that defendant perform the corrective work without compensation, but defendant refused because it believed that the NMP was the result of design defects, not its workmanship. At trial, defendant’s expert testified that the added elements in the corrective work trapped moisture in the wooden structure of the roof facing the interior of the pool so that it would temporarily fix the condensation problem until sometime in the future when the Procor might break down, particularly at the tongue and groove gaps.

After a bench trial, the trial court concluded that Ahrens breached its contract with plaintiff, and that this breach caused the NMP Plaintiffs damages were calculated on the basis of expenses plaintiff incurred tearing off and reinstalling the roofing system with the “corrective measures” noted above, plus 10 percent for “overhead,” 15 percent for a “fee,” and interest of “prime plus 2%” from December 2003 (after completion of the corrective work) to September 2007 (during trial). The trial court determined that plaintiff used Procor as a cost saving measure to mitigate its damages *295 by avoiding completely removing the roofing system elements. Both the trial court in its opinion and findings and plaintiff in its brief on appeal fail to cite any testimony or other evidence specifically establishing a causal link between Ahrens’s alleged defective workmanship and the NME Plaintiffs theory, which the trial court obviously accepted, appears to be based on the following logic: (1) deconstructing the roof revealed defective workmanship in the installation of the vapor barrier and insulation; (2) the corrective work was performed using Procor as a cost saving measure, and (3) after the roof was reconstructed, the NMP was solved. However, plaintiffs CEO admitted at trial that plaintiff never determined what caused the NME On the basis of photographs taken during plaintiffs disassembly of the roof system and good old-fashioned common sense, the trial court decided that Ahrens’s poor workmanship caused the NME

The trial court concluded that “Ahrens materially and substantially breached [its] contract by performing the nonconforming and defective work described above, and upon notice and the opportunity, Ahrens failed to correct its work, or to otherwise cause it to come into conformance.” Further, the trial court determined that plaintiff “suffered damages of $348,851.50” performing corrective work. The trial court also awarded the same amount against Merchants with respect to the performance bond it had issued. 2 The court also ruled that plaintiff had no cause of action for contractual indemnity because “no claims, suits, actions, recoveries, or demands were ever made, brought or recovered against” plaintiff within the meaning of the indemnity clause in the parties’ contract. This ruling is the subject of plaintiffs cross-appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
777 N.W.2d 437, 285 Mich. App. 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-davis-co-v-ahrens-construction-inc-michctapp-2009.