Pro Commercial, LLC v. K & L Custom Farms, Inc., D/B/A K & L Landscape & Construction, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMay 20, 2015
Docket14-0633
StatusPublished

This text of Pro Commercial, LLC v. K & L Custom Farms, Inc., D/B/A K & L Landscape & Construction, Inc. (Pro Commercial, LLC v. K & L Custom Farms, Inc., D/B/A K & L Landscape & Construction, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pro Commercial, LLC v. K & L Custom Farms, Inc., D/B/A K & L Landscape & Construction, Inc., (iowactapp 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 14-0633 Filed May 20, 2015

PRO COMMERCIAL, LLC, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

K & L CUSTOM FARMS, INC., d/b/a K & L LANDSCAPE & CONSTRUCTION, INC., Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Story County, Dale E. Ruigh,

Judge.

A subcontractor appeals the district court’s ruling finding it breached the

terms of the subcontract. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Todd W. Weidemann, Brian S. Koerwitz, and Monica L. Freeman of

Woods & Aitken, L.L.P., Omaha, Nebraska, for appellant.

Brenton D. Soderstrum of Brown, Winick, Graves, Gross, Baskerville &

Schoenebaum, P.L.C., Des Moines, for appellee.

Heard by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Tabor and Mullins, JJ. 2

MULLINS, J.

K & L Custom Farms d/b/a K & L Landscape and Construction, Inc.

(K & L) appeals the district court’s decision concluding it breached the terms of a

subcontract with Pro Commercial, LLC. K & L claims the district court incorrectly

interpreted the terms of the subcontract and also should have awarded K & L

damages in its counterclaim for breach of contract against Pro Commercial.

Finally, K & L claims, in the event we affirm the district court’s decision regarding

the breach of contract, the district court erred in not giving it credit for the work it

performed under the contract with Pro Commercial.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Pro Commercial decided to bid on a rest area construction project with the

Iowa Department of Transportation (IDOT). It requested subcontractors submit

bids for the project, and various subcontractors, including K & L, responded. The

plans and specifications prepared by the architect and engineers employed by

the IDOT were available to the subcontractors as they prepared and submitted

their bids to Pro Commercial. K & L submitted an estimate for the dirt work and

grading required for the project. On the estimate, K & L itemized descriptions of

the work it proposed to do along with the price associated with the work. The

estimate listed the following work descriptions: 3

The total of all this work was $74,267.50.

Steve Aldred, estimator and project manager with Pro Commercial,

contacted Bruce Hovey, estimator with K & L, to discuss the bid. Aldred testified

he explained to Hovey, “I will want to make sure that you have everything in the

dirt work and you’re a hundred percent covered.” Aldred stated that Hovey had

to check with “Hector,” but Hovey eventually called back and said “Yes, we’re

complete.” Hovey also testified regarding the conversation he had with Aldred

but stated he told Aldred that “what [K & L was] doing was written out on the

proposal.” He then instructed Aldred to call the president of K & L, Kevin

Alexander, if he had other questions. Alexander testified he did have a

conversation with Aldred, but that conversation dealt with Aldred’s request for

K & L to remove the landscaping portion of the estimate.1 Alexander stated

Aldred never asked him about the scope of the dirt work.

1 K & L also bid to perform landscaping work for a cost of $46,851.00. 4

Pro Commercial took K & L’s estimate along with the estimates from the

other subcontractors and compiled them in order to submit a final bid to the IDOT

for consideration. The IDOT awarded the construction contract to Pro

Commercial, who in turn drafted contracts with the various subcontractors to do

the work,2 including K & L. The subcontract sent to K & L stated, in relevant part:

SECTION 1. The Subcontractor agrees to furnish all labor, material and equipment, necessary to perform and complete all the work for [the] Adair County Rest Area, . . . as described in Section 2 hereof, and in accordance with the Drawings, General Conditions of the Contract, Supplementary General Conditions, Specifications, and Addenda No. 1. (as supplied) inclusive prepared by Yeggy Colby Associates. SECTION 2. Scope of Work: The Subcontractor agrees to promptly begin said work IMMEDIATELY after notification by said Contractor, and complete all work IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE SCHEDULE AS OUTLINED BY THE CONTRACTOR AND IN ACCORDANCE WITH OTHER TRADES in accordance with this Agreement upon Acceptance and notice to proceed by the Bonding Company. (Work Description) In accordance with the contract documents, as listed on Attachment “A,” furnish labor, material and equipment complete as described by the following Specification Sections: Division 1-General Requirements (as applicable to your work); Division 31 Complete, Section 024100. Supply all labor, material and equipment to provide all dirt work, site clearing, subsoil work, building removal, demolition, misc items per your quote in its entirety per plans and specifications. Work includes, but is not limited to: A. 1 Electronic set of Submittals per your specifications within 10 days. B. Supply a schedule of values breaking out labor and materials. C. Attach current insurance certificate specific to this project and naming Pro Commercial LLC as an additional insured.

2 Pro Commercial acted as a project manager only and did not perform any of the construction work. 5

D. Supply Federal ID # and list of suppliers and subcontractors. E. Work per the attached construction schedule. Project to begin April 19th and complete in December 2010. ALL subcontractors will be required to work 6 days per week unless approved by Pro Commercial. F. Work per your proposal dated 3/17/10.

Both parties signed the subcontract, but disputes regarding the scope of

work K & L was to perform erupted almost immediately. K & L insisted it

contracted to perform only the work itemized in its estimate; whereas Pro

Commercial argued K & L was to perform all of the work described in Division 31,

which included the specifications for dirt work for the project. Division 31

included items such as digging the footings for the buildings and retaining wall,

supplying granular fill (rock) for the project, and excavating the sidewalk.

K & L agreed to do some of the work Pro Commercial requested, but

K & L insisted this work would be billed on a time-and-materials basis. Pro

Commercial asserted the cost of the work requested was included in the contract

price. In addition to disputing the scope of the work, disputes arose regarding

the timeliness and quality of K & L’s performance. Eventually Pro Commercial

stopped making further payments to K & L in July 2010, and K & L stopped

working on the project in November 2010. Construction on the rest area project

resumed in the spring of 2011, and Pro Commercial hired other subcontractors to

complete the dirt work on a time-and-materials basis.

Pro Commercial filed a petition against K & L in February 2012 to recover

the money it spent remediating K & L’s work under the subcontract. K & L filed a

counterclaim against Pro Commercial for the work it claims it completed but for 6

which it was not compensated. The case proceeded to a bench trial in August

2013. The district court issued its “Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and

Order” on March 17, 2014.

The court concluded the subcontract between Pro Commercial and K & L

included all the work described in Division 31. Any unilateral mistake made by

K & L regarding the scope of work called for in the contract would not excuse

K & L from performing the contract, the court stated. It thus concluded Pro

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Pro Commercial, LLC v. K & L Custom Farms, Inc., D/B/A K & L Landscape & Construction, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pro-commercial-llc-v-k-l-custom-farms-inc-dba-k-l--iowactapp-2015.