Palmetto Pointe v. Tri-County Roofing

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJune 7, 2023
Docket2019-001790
StatusPublished

This text of Palmetto Pointe v. Tri-County Roofing (Palmetto Pointe v. Tri-County Roofing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmetto Pointe v. Tri-County Roofing, (S.C. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

Palmetto Pointe at Peas Island Condominium Property Owners Association, Inc. and Jack Love, individually, and on behalf of all others similarly situated, Plaintiffs,

v.

Island Pointe, LLC; Complete Building Corporation; Tri- County Roofing, Inc.; Creekside, Inc.; American Residential Services, LLC d/b/a ARS/Rescue Rooter Charleston; Andersen Windows, Inc.; Atlantic Building Construction Services, Inc., n/k/a Atlantic Construction Services, Inc.; Builder Services Group, Inc. d/b/a Gale Contractor Services; Novus Architects, Inc., f/k/a SGM Architects, Inc.; Tallent and Sons, Inc.; WC Services, Inc.; CRG Engineering, Inc.; CertainTeed Corporation; Kelly Flooring Products, Inc, d/b/a Carpet Baggers; Cornerstone Construction and Mark Malloy d/b/a Cornerstone Construction; Miracle Siding, LLC and Wilson Lucas Sales d/b/a Miracle LLC; Mark Palpoint a/k/a Micah Palpoint; Elroy Alonzo Vasquez; Chris a/k/a John Doe 61; Alderman Construction; Stanley's Vinyl Fence Designs; Cohen's Drywall Company, Inc.; Mosely Concrete; H and A Framing Construction, LLC a/k/a H&A Framing Construction, LLC and d/b/a H and A Framing, LLC, H&A Construction, and Hand A Construction; JMC Construction, Inc., JMC Construction, LLC, John Doe 1-15, Defendants,

of which Palmetto Pointe at Peas Island Condominium Property Owners Association, Inc. and Jack Love, individually, and on behalf of all others similarly situated are the Respondents,

and

Tri-County Roofing, Inc. is the Appellant. Appellate Case No. 2019-001790

Appeal From Charleston County Jennifer B. McCoy, Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 5996 Heard February 14, 2023 – Filed June 28, 2023

AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART

Christian Stegmaier and James Lloyd Williams, both of Collins & Lacy, PC, of Columbia, for Appellant.

Stephanie D. Drawdy and Joshua Fletcher Evans, both of Justin O'Toole Lucey, P.A., of Summerville; Edward D. Buckley, Jr., of Clement Rivers, LLP, of Charleston; and Anna Scarborough McCann and Justin O'Toole Lucey, both of Justin O'Toole Lucey, P.A, of Mount Pleasant, all for Respondents.

KONDUROS, J.: In this condominium construction defect case, subcontractor defendant Tri-County Roofing, Inc. (TCR) appeals the trial court's decision regarding setoff. TCR contends the trial court erred in not setting off the entirety of a posttrial settlement between the plaintiffs and codefendant general contractor Complete Building Corporation (CBC). TCR further contends the trial court erred in denying its motion for a complete setoff of pretrial settlements between the plaintiffs and several other defendants involved in the project. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY In 2005, Island Pointe, LLC, as developer, entered into a contract with CBC for the construction of forty duplex condominium units 1 as a project called Palmetto Pointe at Peas Island, located near Folly Beach. CBC subcontracted with TCR to install the siding and roofing. Later, the installation of waterproof membranes on decks was added by change order. TCR's general scope of work included the roofing, siding, trim, and waterproofing the decks, and their bid included fascia, soffits, gutters, and downspouts. TCR hired subcontractors to complete its obligations to CBC, 2 including Eloy Alonzo Vazquez and Miracle Siding, LLC (Miracle). Vazquez was responsible for roofs and waterproof membranes, and Miracle was responsible for siding on seventeen of the twenty buildings. The units were built during 2006 and 2007.

In late 2014 to early 2015, the Palmetto Pointe Condominium Property Owners Association (the Association) noticed ongoing leaking issues related to the roofing. The Association hired a company to investigate. Later, an engineer was hired and discovered building code violations and other construction deficiencies.

On February 13, 2015, the Association and a homeowner, as class representative, 3 (collectively, Plaintiffs) filed a complaint. The complaint alleged negligence, gross negligence, and breach of implied warranty against CBC, TCR, and other subcontractors. The complaint requested actual and punitive damages. TCR answered and cross-claimed against its subcontractors. Plaintiffs amended their complaint twice and added TCR's subcontractors as defendants. CBC, the developer, and Novus Architects filed cross-claims against other defendants.

Prior to trial, numerous defendants reached settlement agreements with Plaintiffs totaling in aggregate between $4,725,000 and $5,012,500. The parties agree some of the settlements were for damages that were removed from the trial of the case.

1 Eventually, two more duplex buildings were built. Those were built at a later time by different entities and were not at issue in these proceedings. 2 TCR did not do any actual work on the construction of the units; it was a middleman between CBC and TCR's subcontractors and also supervised those subcontractors' work. 3 That representative was later replaced by another homeowner, Jack Love, who is a respondent in addition to the Association in this appeal. The class was never certified. Those settlements total $1,407,500 and have been referred to as issue release settlements. 4

In addition to the issue release settlements, Plaintiffs entered into several other settlement agreements. Plaintiffs settled with Novus Architects, Inc. f/k/a SGM Architects, Inc. for $650,000, 5 and with Cohen's Drywall Company, Inc. (Cohen's) for $125,000 for work related to installing insulation and drywall. Plaintiffs settled with framing subcontractor, Atlantic Building Construction Services, Inc. n/k/a Atlantic Construction Services, Inc. for $700,000 and with a subcontractor to Atlantic, H and A Framing Construction, LLC, (H and A) for $500,000. 6

Trial began on May 6, 2019, with eight remaining defendants: Stanley's Vinyl Fence Designs; JMC Construction, Inc. (JMC); Island Pointe; CBC; TCR; Miracle; Vasquez; and W.C. Services, Inc. Prior to the verdict, three defendants left the case. Stanley's settled on the second day of trial for $295,000. The trial court dismissed JMC at the directed verdict stage, and Plaintiffs released their claims against Island Pointe prior to closing arguments.

During trial, Plaintiffs presented testimony from various experts demonstrating numerous code violations and faulty workmanship. Plaintiffs' expert, Russell Mease, testified as to the scope of work that would be required to remedy the

4 Most of these settlement agreements are included in the record. For a few, the record only contains emails agreeing to settlement terms. The following settlements are referred to as issue release settlements: (1) American Residential Services, LLC d/b/a ARS/Rescue Rooter Charleston, HVAC, $795,000; (2) Andersen Windows, Inc.; window product manufacturer, $200,000; (3) Tallent and Sons, Inc., grading & paving, $195,000; (4) Kelly Flooring Products, Inc. d/b/a Carpet Baggers, carpet and wood flooring installer, $25,000; (5) Alderman Construction, interior trim & railings, $75,000; and (6) Mosley Concrete, concrete, $95,000. Plaintiffs also settled with Builder Services Group, Inc. d/b/a Gale Contractor Service, which had supplied and installed fireplaces, for $22,500. 5 The trial court's posttrial order states that the settlement amount was $600,000, but this appears to be incorrect. 6 Plaintiffs entered into a few more pretrial settlements that were not issue releases but are not at dispute on appeal: Creekside, Inc., $150,000, painting and caulking; Certainteed, Corp., $35,000, manufacturer of roofing shingles, siding, and trim; and Cornerstone Construction, $150,000, siding and flashing.

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