Norried v. Caribbean Contractors, Inc.

899 A.2d 129, 2006 D.C. App. LEXIS 275, 2006 WL 1418544
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 2006
DocketNo. 05-CV-453
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 899 A.2d 129 (Norried v. Caribbean Contractors, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norried v. Caribbean Contractors, Inc., 899 A.2d 129, 2006 D.C. App. LEXIS 275, 2006 WL 1418544 (D.C. 2006).

Opinion

SCHWELB, Associate Judge:

This case involves a dispute between Barbara E. Norried, a homeowner, and Caribbean Contractors, Inc. (Caribbean), a home improvement contractor which is not [131]*131licensed in the District of Colombia, over renovation work performed by Caribbean on Ms. Norried’-s home. Following, a lengthy bench trial, the trial judge ruled substantially in favor of Caribbean on_the merits of Ms. Named's suit, and she entered judgment in favor'Of .Caribbean in the amount of $172.10, plus' interest, on Caribbean’s counterclaim. Therjudge rejected Ms. Norried’s claim that Caribbean’s- Unlicensed status underminedfhe contractor's defense and barred Caribbean from filing a counterclaim.- --The judge ruled that Ms. Norried had failed to adequately identify the .licensing regulation 'that Caribbean allegedly violated, and that she -presented insufficient evidence on the point. Concluding that the judge misapprehended what she perceived to be a dispositive precedent, we reverse the judgment and remand for further proceedings.

I.

BACKGROUND

A. Preinahproceedmgs.

On -January 2.6, 2001, Ms. .Norrj'e'd'--en-tered intuya contract' with Caribbean for the renovation bof her " home at '116 "VS ' Street,.N.W., in jVashington^D.Ci-The.to-tal -cost of the contract whs to fbe $22,025.00, Ms. Norried made-.three.mstallment payments -to. Caribbean, -totaling $16,668.40, in advance of the work being-done. Prior to the completion of the renovation, Ms. Norried complained that’ll was mot being satisfactorily performed. On "May 23, 2001, she filed a pro se complaint for breath of-'Contract in which she asked, somewhat inconsistently, that Caribbean ,be required to

1. complete all terms and .conditions under contract to satisfactionnf customer; ‘and
2. refund monies paid plus interest to allow’.ineomplete -and remaining work to be completed by another .qualified and honest contractor.

There was no allegation in the pro se -complaint-that Caribbean was not licensed.

Caribbean responded to the -complaint by fifing- an answer and counterclaim. Caribbean asserted, inter alia, -that it had ^performed all of,its obligations'in conformity witlrthe contract afldthat Ms". Norried had terminated the contract on May 19, 2001. In. its counterclaim, Caribbean requested damages in the amount of $6,676.0iJ'“for .services- rendered pursuant - to the contract.”

On" March -8, AGQ4, the -parties filed a Joint Pretrial Statement which began as follows:

1. Sole 'Issue for Trial: Whether or not defendant breached the contract dated January 26; 2001 .between theparties for -'Specifie3.'.home improvement services?
-•2.^. There, is nonnecessity or, desirability - -of amendments to the pleadings.

■Phe - Joinf-Pretrial Statement made no-, di.■rect ..inference to Caribbean’s'-unlicensed -.Status, but It included the .names ;ofi.seven witnesses > for. the. .plaintiff and - three ’-.wit- . nesses for the defendant. “Plaintiffs'List *df J3áfifeits’r and '“Defendant’s 'List of . Exhibits” were also ".included in the Pretrial •Statement.

Plaintiffs 'Exhibit "-3C to . the Pretrial Státement'was an affidavit -dated September 10, 2001, Toy Meredith R. Scott, Acting Program Manager of the Business Service Division of the District of Columbia Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (DGRA). Ms. ‘ Scott’s affidavit .concluded a'sfollows:

No .Home Improvement Contractor Business License have [sic] been issued "to Qarihbean'.Gontractors Inc., for the period February 1,-2000 to present.

Plaintiffs Exhibit -3D was a letter to Ms. Norried dated May -5, "2003, from Vacylla [132]*132Williams, a DCRA investigator, stating that Alvaro Tovar, t/a Caribbean Contractor^], Inc., “was conducting business as an unlicensed home improvement contractor in the District of Columbia, and performing electrical work without a permit.” Ms. Williams further stated in her letter that “[t]his violation was referred to the Office of the General Counsel for further review,” and that “[t]he notice of infraction was forwarded to the Office of Adjudications.”

Ms. Scott and Ms. Williams were included on Ms. Norried’s list of witnesses, as were two other DCRA employees: Ronald White, identified as Plumbing Inspector; and Colonias Anderson, identified as Electrical Inspector.1 Thus, although Ms. Nor-ried, acting pro se, agreed to a Joint Pretrial Statement which identified the only issue for trial as Caribbean’s compliance or noncompliance with the contract, Caribbean and its attorney were on notice of Ms. Norried’s claim that Caribbean was not licensed.

On October 20, 2004, the judge entered a Pretrial Order which provided, in pertinent part, as follows:

2. Except as specified below, the parties’ Joint Pretrial Statement is incorporated in this Pretrial Order.
3. The nature of the action and the claims and defenses of the parties are set forth in the Joint Pretrial Statement. No other claims or defenses will be entertained at trial absent exceptionally good cause.

B. The trial and the judge’s decision.

The trial in this case began on December 27, 2004, resumed on February 7, 2005, and ended on February 14, 2005. Ms. Norried has not provided us with a transcript, and the details of what occurred at trial are not before us. On April 1, 2005, however, the judge issued a written “Bench Order and Opinion,” and her order provides a sufficient description of the proceedings to enable us to address the principal issue on appeal.

At the beginning of her opinion, the judge stated that the case came on for non-jury trial “on Plaintiffs complaint for breach of contract, housing code violations, allegations of unlicensed contractors and substandard workmanship.” (Emphasis added.) On the merits of the parties’ dispute over Caribbean’s performance, the judge found that the contractor had substantially performed the terms of the agreement. She ruled that the amount to which each party was .entitled would be determined by the contract price, which was to be adjusted by the amount of her own money that Ms. Norried had to expend on the project, and also by the work that Caribbean had performed. The judge found that Ms. Norried had spent $6,503.90 of her own funds to complete the part of the agreed-upon renovation that Caribbean had failed to perform. The judge subtracted Ms. Norried’s expenditures from the unpaid portion of the contract price, ie., $6,676.00, and she awarded Caribbean the difference — $172.10—on Caribbean’s counterclaim.

The judge then addressed as follows Ms. Norried’s claim that Caribbean was an unlicensed contractor:

Next, the [c]ourt considers Plaintiffs testimony that the Defendant and his [133]*133subcontractors were not licensed to perform home improvement renovations in the District of Columbia. The general rule is that a contract made in violation of regulations relating to licensing of home improvement contractors is void. Truitt v. Miller, 407 A.2d 1073 (D.C. 1979).

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Bluebook (online)
899 A.2d 129, 2006 D.C. App. LEXIS 275, 2006 WL 1418544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norried-v-caribbean-contractors-inc-dc-2006.