Reynolds Aluminum Building Products Co. v. Leonard

1984 Mass. App. Div. 206, 1984 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 71
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedSeptember 13, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1984 Mass. App. Div. 206 (Reynolds Aluminum Building Products Co. v. Leonard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds Aluminum Building Products Co. v. Leonard, 1984 Mass. App. Div. 206, 1984 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 71 (Mass. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

Black J.

This is an action commenced June 11, 1981, by the plaintiff Reynolds Aluminum Building Products Company, against the defendants, Albert Leonard and Mary Frances Leonard, for breach of a written contract providing for the installation of a solar hot water heating system in their premises at 43 Lafayette Avenue, Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts. The plaintiff seeks to recover the sum of $3,795, representing the agreed price for the labor and materials called for under the aforesaid contract.

In answer to the complaint, the defendants allege that a solar heating system was installed in their home by the plaintiff, but say that the work was performed in an unworkmanlike manner, and that it never supplied hot water as promised from the utilization of the solar hot water heating system. The defendants further allege that the plaintiff failed to correct any of the defects in the system after having been informed of the same. As a consequence, the defendants deny owing the plaintiff anything.

In counterclaim, the defendants demand that the plaintiff remove the solar heating system and further demand the sum of $750, $250 of which is alleged to represent damage to the roof of defendants’ home and to the decor of one room as the result of faulty installation of the so-called “collectors” in the roof. The remaining $500 is for heating costs incurred as a result of the alleged faulty installation of the solar hot water heating system by the plaintiff.

The court found for the planitiff in the sum of $3,795 together with interest in the amount of $1,322.35 and costs in the amount of $91.51. The court dismissed the defendants’ counterclaim.

At trial, the defendants brought to the attention of the trial judge the fact that the defendants had served several requests for admissions upon the plaintiff which had never been answered.

Those requests are as follows:

1. Admit that you, your agents, servants or employees never applied or made application to the Town of Bourne, its officers, employees or agents for a permit for the installation of the work and materials set forth in Exhibit A of your complaint.
2. Admit that you, your agents, servants or employees never received a permit from the Town of Bourne, its agents or employees for the installation of the work and materials set forth in Exhibit A of your complaint.
3. Admit that after the installation of the work and materials set forth in Exhibit A of your complaint that no inspection of work or materials was made by the Town of Bourne, its agents or émployees.
4. Admit that you advertised that the solar hot water heater system installed for the defendants would provide sixty (60%) percent to eighty (80%) percent of the hot water requirements.
5. Admit that the hot water system installed for the defendants never did provide 60% to 80% of the defendants’ requirements.

At trial, there was evidence tending to show that the plaintiffs agents or employees who did the plumbing work involved in the installation of the solar hot water system in the defendants’ home failed to take out a plumbing permit. [208]*208A copy of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts’ rules and regulations governing the requirements for such permits was duly admitted into evidence by the defendants. The defendant, Albert Leonard, testified that immediatély after the installation of the solar hot water system he was unable to get hot water from it, and that he complained to the plaintiff about it. A number of visits to the premises was made by representatives of the plaintiff, but according to the defendant, Albert Leonard, the system never produced 60%-80% of his hot water requirements.

The plaintiffs supervisor testified that on January 8,1982, he, together with one of the plaintiffs engineers, visited the defendants’ premises and discovered that the defendants had connected the solar hot water system, intended solely for heating domestic hot water, into a radiator in order to heat one room.

At the close of the evidence, the defendants filed the following requests for rulings, all of which were denied by the.trial judge:

1.Reynolds Aluminum failed to furnish a solar hot water system which they represented would provide (60%) to eighty (80%) percent of the hot water requirements of the Leonards, and therefore Reynolds Aluminum cannot recover in this action.
2. The installation of the solar hot water system without a permit for installation and plumbing was a violation of the state building code and the law, and therefore Reynolds Aluminum cannot recover for the illegal installation of the solar hot water system.
3. On all the evidence and the law, Reynolds Aluminum cannot recover any damages in this action.
4. Plaintiff Albert Leonard in counterclaim can recover for the costs of removing the solar hot water system and for the cost to restore his house to the condition it was in before the installation of. the solar hot water system.
Plaintiff Albert Leonard in counterclaim can recover the difference in value his house was worth before the installation of the system and what it was worth immediately after the installation of the. solar system. .

The'defendants claim to be aggrieved by.the court’s findings and by denial of their requests for rulings.

With respect to requests for admissions, it is clear that under Mass. R. Civ. P., Rule 36, a party failing to answer requests for rulings admits the matters set forth therein, subject to the court’s power to ameliorate the effect of the admission [see SMITH AND ZOBEL, 7 MASS. PRACTICE, RULES PRACTICE, § 36.9 (1975) ]. In this connection, however, Smith and Zobel have noted that, “ [a] feeling underlies the admininstration of Rule 36 that disposing qf cases on admissions is, if not downright unfair, at least a subject which ought carefully to be regulated.” Id., at § 36.10. A trial court may allow a party, even after an explicit admission to withdraw or amend his reponse. Id. The standard to be applied in such situations is whether the withdrawal or amendment will subserve presentation of the merits. It is the burden of the party who obtained the admission to then satisfy the court that the withdrawal or amendment will prejudice him in maintaining his action or defense. Mass. R. Civ. P., Rule 36 (b); SMITH AND ZOBEL at § 36.10. In Silva v. Baker Tractor Corp., Mass. App. Div. Adv. Sh. (1979) 97, 103-104, the Appellate Division quoted with approval language from Pickens v. Equitable Life Assurance Society, 413 F.2d 1390, 1393-1394 (5th Cir. 1969): “[Requests for admissions as to central facts in dispute are beyond the proper scope of the rule." The Pickens court also noted [209]*209that even if the plaintiffs failure in that case to respond to a Rule 36 request was an admission, it would be grossly unjust to treat it as anything but evidentiary. The failure to respond was clearly inadvertent rather than deliberate. Silva v. Baker Tractor Corp., supra at 104, quoting Pickens v. Equitable Life Assurance Society, supra, at 1393-1394.

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Bluebook (online)
1984 Mass. App. Div. 206, 1984 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-aluminum-building-products-co-v-leonard-massdistctapp-1984.