Quantum Concrete Inc v. Plaza De Kaza LLC

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 14, 2023
Docket361420
StatusUnpublished

This text of Quantum Concrete Inc v. Plaza De Kaza LLC (Quantum Concrete Inc v. Plaza De Kaza LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quantum Concrete Inc v. Plaza De Kaza LLC, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

QUANTUM CONCRETE, INC., UNPUBLISHED September 14, 2023 Plaintiff/Counterdefendant-Appellant,

v No. 361420 Kent Circuit Court PLAZA DE KAZA, LLC, and RONALD A. LC No. 19-003189-CB DYKSTRA, doing business as DYKSTRA HOMES,

Defendants/Counterplaintiffs- Appellees.

Before: SWARTZLE, P.J., and O’BRIEN and FEENEY, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this dispute over the payment for concrete improvements to a commercial property, plaintiff/counterdefendant, Quantum Concrete, Inc., appeals by right the judgment entered by the trial court after a bench trial. The trial court entered a judgment against defendants/counterplaintiffs, Plaza de Kaza, LLC, and Ronald A. Dykstra, who did business as Dykstra Homes, for $24,179.35 in unpaid construction expenses. On appeal, Quantum argues that the trial court erred when it dismissed Quantum’s claim for foreclosure under Michigan’s Construction Lien Act (CLA), MCL 570.1101 et seq., and erred when it denied Quantum’s motion for attorney fees as a sanction for frivolous litigation. Because we conclude that Quantum has not identified any errors warranting relief, we affirm.

I. BASIC FACTS

Kassra Darehshori, who was sometimes called “Kaz,” purchased a retail building on Division Avenue near 28th Street in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He testified that the building came with 9 acres of land, and he intended to develop a banquet hall in the back of the property. Darehshori created Plaza de Kaza to own that property, and he was its sole member. Testimony and evidence established that Darehshori hired an engineer, Daniel Hula, to design a parking lot for the building. Darehshori also stated that he had a longstanding relationship with Ronald Dykstra, who was a carpenter. He hired Dykstra on an hourly and as-needed basis to perform work and advise him on building projects.

-1- Dykstra testified that he assisted with renovations at the Plaza de Kaza property. He performed demolition, framed new walls, hung a drop ceiling, and helped bring the retail space up to standards. Dykstra also helped Darehshori find subcontractors for the drywall, electrical, and roofing work. He said that he typically solicited three estimates and submitted them to Darehshori, who selected the one that he wanted.

Dykstra had done business with Quantum when he built homes and had a good relationship with Quantum’s owner, John Trimberger. The building on Division needed a new concrete floor, and Dykstra called Trimberger and asked if he would submit an estimate. Dykstra said that he told Trimberger that the work was for “Kaz’s project” and that he would be working for “Kaz,” but Trimberger denied that Dykstra ever said he was representing Plaza de Kaza.

Trimberger testified that Dykstra called him in Spring 2018 and asked him to submit an estimate for a new floor in a restaurant. It was his understanding that Dykstra, as the general contractor for the owner, hired Quantum. Trimberger sent his estimates to Dykstra, and Dykstra approved them and asked him to schedule the work. He also sent his invoices to Dykstra.

Trimberger related that, after Quantum completed the floor work, Quantum submitted its invoice to Dykstra, and it was paid.1 Dykstra then contacted Quantum about replacing the property’s sidewalk. Dykstra accepted the estimate, Quantum completed the work, and Quantum invoiced Dykstra. Quantum received payment a few weeks later.

Trimberger stated that Dykstra then called him to submit an estimate for the curb and gutter work on the parking lot. The parking lot was large and required about 3300 feet of curbing. Trimberger submitted an estimate for $94,759.50 for the curb and gutter work to Dykstra. Dykstra called him and gave him the go-ahead to begin work.

Quantum’s foreman, Joseph Brooke, stated that they had problems with the curb and gutter project from the start. He stated that the concrete drainage basins were not properly placed, so the drains did not line up with the curbing. There were also problems with the parking lot’s grading. He repeatedly called Dykstra, and the excavator returned to correct some of the problems. Trimberger sent invoices to Dykstra for the parking lot work on October 1, October 15, and October 22. All invoices were paid to date. Brooke testified that the excavation work for the area of the traffic circle was in horrid shape. There was crushed concrete around one basin that was much too high, and both catch basins on the traffic circle were spun almost 90 degrees from where they were supposed to be set. Brooke would not touch it until the excavator spun the drains. The excavator eventually came out and adjusted the drains, but they were still too close to the radius point of the traffic circle’s center. Brooke ended up pouring the curbing by following the radius and then bringing the curb to the drain. That gave the curbing on that side of the traffic circle a flattened look. Trimberger stated that the last invoice that he sent to Dykstra was for the work performed from October 22, 2018 to November 6, 2018, which included work on the parking lot’s traffic circle. Darehshori stated that the traffic circle plainly did not conform to the blueprints—a

1 According to the trial court’s January 29, 2021 Opinion and Order Resolving Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Disposition Under MCR 2.116(C)(10), “[a]n entity controlled by Plaza de Kaza’s principal paid th[e] amount in full.”

-2- “third grader,” he opined, “could have seen that it was wrong.” He described the traffic circle as having a “taco” shape. The traffic circle was, in his view, the focal point of his whole project; it was the point where customers would drop off their guests, and he wanted it done properly.

Darehshori, Trimberger, Brooke, Hula, and another person met at the site on November 12, 2018, to discuss the traffic circle.

Brooke stated that they discussed options for correcting the traffic circle’s appearance. He felt that the matter was merely cosmetic and that landscaping would fix it. Everyone at the meeting appeared to agree to tear out the curbing on one side of the traffic circle and raise its height, and then dovetail it down to the drain. He performed that work eight days later. Brooke said that Darehshori specifically approved the second pour.

Hula said that the traffic circle looked “goofy.” He explained that Quantum followed the surveyor’s stakes for the traffic circle until it got close to the basin, which was clearly misplaced. Quantum then brought the curb over to the drain without following the stakes. As a result, the traffic circle was not a circle. Quantum should have called the excavator to adjust the basin. If the excavator did not appear, the concrete contractor should have refused to pour. At the meeting on November 12, he said that it was agreed that “they were going to move the catch basin out and then bring the curb around a little more level and then slope down to the catch basin rather than adjust the catch basin.”

Trimberger agreed that the traffic circle had a “taco” look from a distance because there were two high ends and two low ends to accommodate the gutters. He stated that the drains were not properly positioned as detailed on the blue prints. In any event, Trimberger felt that it was a nonissue because landscaping would conceal it. He admitted that they agreed to redo the concrete work to raise the height of the curb on the lower side and then dovetail it down to the drain at the meeting held on November 12, 2018.

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Bluebook (online)
Quantum Concrete Inc v. Plaza De Kaza LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quantum-concrete-inc-v-plaza-de-kaza-llc-michctapp-2023.