Moorefield Construction, Inc. v. R.L. Hurst Concrete Construction, Inc.

2019 Ark. App. 594
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 11, 2019
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2019 Ark. App. 594 (Moorefield Construction, Inc. v. R.L. Hurst Concrete Construction, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moorefield Construction, Inc. v. R.L. Hurst Concrete Construction, Inc., 2019 Ark. App. 594 (Ark. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Cite as 2019 Ark. App. 594 Digitally signed by Elizabeth ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS Perry Date: 2022.08.09 13:40:33 DIVISION II -05'00' No. CV-19-216 Adobe Acrobat version: 2022.001.20169 Opinion Delivered December 11, 2019 MOOREFIELD CONSTRUCTION, INC. APPEAL FROM THE GARLAND APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 26CV-14-884] V. HONORABLE MARCIA R. R.L. HURST CONCRETE HEARNSBERGER, JUDGE CONSTRUCTION, INC. A/K/A R.L. HURST AFFIRMED APPELLEE

N. MARK KLAPPENBACH, Judge

Appellant Moorefield Construction, Inc., appeals the judgment entered against it and

in favor of appellee R.L. Hurst Concrete Construction, Inc., a/k/a R.L. Hurst for

$14,596.67. Hurst had filed a breach-of-contract complaint against Moorefield contending

that Moorefield failed to pay the full contract price on the concrete parking-lot repair job

that Hurst completed. The circuit court found, after a bench trial, that Hurst completed the

contracted work, that a subsequently signed amendment to the contract that reduced the

contract price was not supported by consideration, and that Hurst was granted judgment for

the outstanding $14,596.67 plus court costs and a reasonable attorney’s fee. Moorefield contends that the circuit court’s findings in the November 19, 2018 judgment are clearly

erroneous. 1 We disagree and affirm.

In order to prove a breach-of-contract claim, one must prove “the existence of an

agreement, breach of the agreement, and resulting damages.” Barnes v. Wagoner, 2019 Ark.

App. 174, 573 S.W.3d 594. There is no dispute that in May 2013, Moorefield and Hurst

entered into a written contract for Hurst to repair paved areas on the exterior of a Wal-

Mart store, specifically to address cracking in the concrete, for which Moorefield would pay

$58,000. The “scope of work” was described as Hurst’s completing “all barricade, removal

of concrete, doweling of concrete and placement of concrete” in “strict accordance with

the contract documents” and the photographs attached as exhibits to the contract. The

contract required Hurst to complete “all work indicated or implied on the drawings.” Hurst

promptly started the job and finished it in mid-June. Moorefield had made substantial

payments on the $58,000 contract price, and Moorefield was satisfied with Hurst’s work,

but thousands of dollars remained unpaid. Hurst sent Moorefield an invoice for the

outstanding balance.

On or about July 1, 2013, Moorefield determined that not all the originally identified

concrete needed to be removed and repaired, so it wanted to pay a proportionately lower

contract price. Moorefield offered Hurst a $10,000 check as payment in full, which was

$14,596.67 less than the original outstanding balance due. Hurst believed that all the work

encompassed by the contract had been done. Moorefield, however, presented Hurst an

1 The circuit court entered a separate order on November 28, 2018, awarding Hurst $5355 in attorney’s fees and $165 in filing fees. Moorefield’s notice of appeal designates only the November 19 judgment and does not mention the November 28 order.

2 “Amendment to Subcontract” that stated that the 9000 square feet of concrete work in the

original contract was actually 6735 square feet, so based on a per-square-foot price, the

contract price was now $43,403.33. This reduced the $58,000 original contract by

$14,596.67. According to Mr. Hurst, he signed the amendment under duress that day

because Hurst needed the $10,000 payment immediately to continue operating the business.

Moorefield made no further payments.

In December 2014, Hurst filed the breach-of-contract action contending that it had

satisfactorily completed the job pursuant to the original contract, that it was owed the full

contract price, that the subsequent contract amendment was not supported by consideration

but was instead entered into under duress, and that Moorefield breached the original

contract by not paying what was owed. Moorefield answered the complaint with a general

denial of all allegations. In its pretrial brief, Moorefield contended that “it was determined

during the progress of this work that not all of the originally identified concrete would need

to be removed and replaced” leading to the preparation of a “Change Order” to reduce the

contract price based on the reduced scope of work Hurst was required to perform.

Moorefield asserted that Hurst consented to and signed the “Change Order.”

At the bench trial, Mr. Hurst testified that his initial bid on this concrete-repair job

was about $80,000, which he lowered to $70,000, but the final agreed flat price was $58,000.

Mr. Hurst explained that in making a bid on the job, there are “just many, many factors”

to consider, such as the transportation necessitated by the sixty miles this job was from his

place of business, the area of work to be done, and the equipment and people required to

do the work. Hurst said that he completed the work exactly as the contract required, that

3 Wal-Mart and Moorefield accepted the work, and that there was no “by-the-square-foot-

of-concrete” contract. Mr. Hurst said Moorefield owed approximately $24,000 after the

job was completed, and he sent Moorefield an invoice in mid-June.

On July 1, 2013, according to Mr. Hurst, Moorefield (through its project manager,

Josh Daves) offered Hurst a $10,000 check but only if Hurst agreed that this would be

payment in full. According to Mr. Hurst, Daves required him to change his invoice, sign a

lien waiver, and amend the contract in order to get the check. Mr. Hurst testified that he

signed the amendment that day under duress, “absolutely had to have” the payment to keep

his business going, and felt he had no choice. Mr. Hurst stated that Daves came up with

the square-foot calculation, which was nowhere in the original contract. Mr. Hurst said

there was no actual reduction in the work, though, because he was already finished with

the job before the final invoice was sent to Moorefield.

Mr. Daves testified that Moorefield prepared and presented Hurst with the change

order in July 2013. Mr. Daves testified that Hurst’s work was acceptable but that a

preliminary inspection showed that the scope of the concrete job was less than first

anticipated. Daves did not dispute that the contract set a flat price and that the job was to

replace damaged 20 x 20 foot concrete panels, which were described in the contract by a

document from a structural-services company and accompanied by attached pictures. Daves

explained that nineteen of the panels ended up not having to be replaced. Daves said that

Hurst and the Wal-Mart representative were present on the walk to inspect the work, that

Hurst saw which portions he would not have to finish, and Hurst did not appear surprised

by the amendment. Daves stated that “at the start of this contract,” he personally went out

4 with a survey crew to measure the square footage of concrete at issue, although he conceded

that there was no mention of square footage or price per square foot in the original contract.

Daves said he measured the reduced scope of the work and reduced the price accordingly.

Daves did not remember exactly what was said when he got together with Hurst on July 1,

but he did not believe that the $10,000 check was made contingent on Hurst’s signing the

amendment nor did he think Hurst had any objection to signing the amendment.

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