Nina Firey v. Tammie Myers

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 1, 2015
Docket33232-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of Nina Firey v. Tammie Myers (Nina Firey v. Tammie Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nina Firey v. Tammie Myers, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

FILED OCTOBER 1, 2015 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

NINA M. FlREY, a single woman, ) ) No. 33232-2-111 Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) NICOLAS SA OROZCO and MIGUEL ) OROZCO, wife and husband and the ) marital community composed thereof, ) d/b/a OROZCO CONSTRUCTION; and ) UNITED STATES FIRE INSURANCE ) COMPANY; CHRISTOPHER COOK and ) "JANE DOE" COOK, husband and wife ) and the marital community composed } UNPUBLISHED OPINION thereof; ALBERT OTTERNESS and ) "JANE DOE" OTTERNESS, husband and ) wife and the marital community composed ) thereof, d/b/a AOK CONSTRUCTION, ) and AMERICAN CONTRACTORS ) INDEMNITY COMPANY, ) ) Defendants, ) ) TAMMIE MYERS and RON MYERS, ) husband and wife, and the marital ) community composed thereof; ) KENNETH BANNISTER and DORIS ) BANNISTER, husband and wife and the ) marital community composed thereof; ) No. 33232-2-III Firey v. Orozco

K & T CONSTRUCTION, a partnership; ) STATE FARM FIRE & CASUALTY, ) MICHAEL F. LYON and JOAN D. ) LYON, husband and wife and the marital ) community composed thereof, d/bla ) CROWN MOBILE HOME SET -UP/SVC; ) RLI INSURANCE COMPANY, ) ) Respondents, )

LAWRENCE-BERREY, J. - We are asked to decide whether the trial court properly

granted summary judgment to K&T Construction and Crown Mobile Homes. In this

lawsuit, Nina Firey claims breach of contract against the first five of several contractors

she hired to make livable a house that she purchased from a foreclosure sale. The central

issue on appeal is whether the trial court erred in determining that the opinions of Ms.

Firey's two experts lacked a sufficient factual basis to withstand summary judgment. We

hold that the trial court did not err and affirm the summary judgment dismissals.

FACTS

Nina Firey purchased a vacant, foreclosed home in Centralia, Washington, in

2011. The purchase price was $75,000. The home was in significant disrepair. Ms.

Firey obtained a prepurchase home inspection that revealed a number of issues that

needed to be addressed to rehabilitate the home. Ms. Firey had a budget of $25,000 to

complete the necessary repairs.

Ms. Firey first hired K&T Construction to perform work on the home. K&T

Construction is owned by Kenneth Bannister. Mr. Bannister said he would work for an

No. 33232-2-III Firey v. Orozco

hourly rate plus cost of materials. Invoices submitted for each week's work show that

K&T Construction worked on the house during the latter half of May 2011. Ms. Firey

fired K&T Construction because she believed its hourly rate of $1 00 was excessive.

After firing K&T Construction, Ms. Firey hired Michael Lyon, d/b/a Crown

Mobile Homes Set-Up, on a time and materials basis. Crown Mobile did not have a

written contract identifYing the scope of work to be performed, nor were there written

estimates, quotes, plans, or specifications. With the exception of the final contractor,

none of the contractors who worked on Ms. Firey's house had written contracts, plans,

bids, or estimates. Crown Mobile worked on the project for approximately 10 days in

late May and June 2011. It charged Ms. Firey $6,540. Crown Mobile persuaded Ms.

Firey that it was too busy to continue the project and assisted Ms. Firey in hiring her third

contractor.

Over the next few months, Ms. Firey went through several other contractors and a

friend to continue repairs to the house. I In August or September 2011, Ms. Firey hired

her last contractor, Bar-None Construction.

Bar-None began a series of repairs. Eventually, Bar-None advised Ms. Firey that

additional repairs should not be done until the house was re-Ieveled. Ms. Firey directed

Respondents contend that Ms. Firey hired a total of 12 contractors. The record I shows at least 10 contractors worked on the project, but we are unable to determine how many contractors performed general repairs and how many performed specific projects.

Bar-None to re-Ievel the house. This caused structural damage throughout the house,

requiring Bar-None to repair some of its own work in the process. Around February

2012, Bar-None prepared a scope of work document, setting forth the work it had

performed, the amounts charged, and the scope and charges to complete necessary

repairs. The total cost of completed and remaining repairs exceeded $100,000.

In July 2012, Ms. Firey filed a single complaint against the first five contractors

and their insurance companies. She asserted a breach of contract claim against the

contractors. Ms. Firey settled with two of the contractors. This action proceeded against

K&T Construction and Crown Mobile and their respective insurance companies. The

remaining contractor is not a party to this appeal.

K&T Construction and Crown Mobile filed separate summary judgment motions.

Each construction company presented its own argument and documents to support its

motion. The trial court reviewed the summary judgment motions independently from

each other.

K&T Construction. In its summary judgment motion, K&T Construction argued

that Ms. Firey could not bring a claim for breach of contract based on work not

performed or left uncompleted because she terminated the contract when she fired it and

would not let it finish the project.

Attached to K&T Construction's summary judgment motion were portions of Ms.

Firey's deposition. In her deposition, Ms. Firey admitted that she was paying K&T

Construction an hourly rate for the time that it spent working on the home and that she

kept track of its hours. As for the scope of the project, Ms. Firey told K&T Construction

that she had a very limited budget of$25,000 and wanted a "fully functional house."

Clerk's Papers (CP) at 52. In her deposition, Ms. Firey stated that she did not tell K&T

what work to perform, except not to touch the front porch. When asked if there were

other terms discussed between her and K&T Construction, Ms. Firey responded, "There

were probably little things here and there, but not on the big picture, no." CP at 52. She

also stated that she fired K&T Construction because she was angry about the hourly rate

she was paying. Later in her deposition, she explained that after she fired K&T

Construction, she noticed workmanship problems.

In a declaration submitted after her deposition, Ms. Firey said that she compiled a

list of projects that she wanted completed, but did not direct how the work would be

performed. There is no indication that she provided her list to K&T Construction. Ms.

Firey said in her declaration that she was concerned that the work was not being done

properly, "including electrical and plumbing work that [Ms. Firey] later realized K&T

was not authorized to do." CP at 302. She said that K&T Construction damaged existing

structures, including the front porch and kitchen cabinets.

Curiously, the name of the second contractor, "Crown," appears on this list. The

list contains dates by some of the projects, but the dates do not correspond with K&T

Construction's work on the house. For example, K&T Construction's last invoice was

dated June 3, 2011, whereas the dates on Ms. Firey's list start with June 16,2011. Ms.

Firey checked off some of the projects as completed, but did not attribute the work to any

particular contractor. There was no other evidence to establish the scope of K&T

Construction's work on Ms.

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