Rosano-Davis, Inc. v. Sastre

2004 Mass. App. Div. 55, 2004 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 18
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 23, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2004 Mass. App. Div. 55 (Rosano-Davis, Inc. v. Sastre) 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
Rosano-Davis, Inc. v. Sastre, 2004 Mass. App. Div. 55, 2004 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 18 (Mass. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Williams, J.

The defendants, Marcos Sastre (“Sastre”), Rosa M. Sastre, and Rosa M. Sastre, trustee of Tiara 34C Realty Trust (‘Trust”), appeal pursuant to Dist./Mun. Cts. R. A. D. A., Rule 8C, the trial judge’s denial of their motion for involuntary dismissal and his subsequent finding in favor of the plaintiff, Rosano-Davis, Inc. (“Rosano-Davis”), on a quantum-meruit theory. The issue is whether the landowner Trust on the facts here may properly be held liable for paying the bills of the subcontractor Rosano-Davis when the general contractor had not fully done so. For the reasons set out below, we find it may not, and we therefore reverse, and order the entry of judgment in favor of all defendants.2

In November 1997, the Trust entered into a written contract with Christopher McKenna (“McKenna”) to act as general contractor for the construction of a house on the Trust’s property in Hingham. McKenna would submit certificates to Simon Tempest (‘Tempest”), the Trust’s architect, for payment for completed work. Upon approving a certificate, Tempest would present an invoice to the Trust to pay McKenna. The Trust made four payments to McKenna.

The Trust contracted separately with McKenna for site work. McKenna orally subcontracted that work to Rosano-Davis. The Trust did not participate in arranging that subcontract, and in fact Sastre did not know who that site-work subcontractor would be. Pursuant to its subcontract, Rosano-Davis worked between January and August 1998, and submitted invoices to McKenna for his payment. Rosano-Davis submitted no invoices to the Trust.3 McKenna made six payments to Rosano-Davis between March and June 1998, but in August Rosano-[56]*56Davis notified McKenna it would cease work until a claimed outstanding balance was paid.

As a result of McKenna’s non-performance, the Trust terminated its contract with him in November 1998. About that time Tempest advised Brian Davis (“Davis”), the principal of Rosano-Davis, of McKenna’s termination. Tempest also said Sastre was satisfied with the work Rosano-Davis had done, wanted it to continue work on the site, and that Sastre wanted to “clean up” or “square up” some outstanding bills. Davis, Tempest, and Sastre met in November 1998, and Davis was asked about performing further work at the site. Davis then said he wanted payment. Sastre immediately replied he had already paid McKenna and that Davis’s “beef’ was with McKenna. Davis said he thought one of the reasons he was called to the meeting was because Sastre wanted to “square up” with him. Sas-tre pointed out that he had not said that, that his contract was with McKenna, who had Rosano-Davis’s money. Sastre offered to pay Rosano-Davis to complete the job, but no such agreement was reached.

Rosano-Davis perfected no mechanic’s lien as to the project site pursuant to M.G.L.c. 254, §1 et seq. Its complaint asserted two counts: breach of contract, and “implied contract,” or quantum meruit. The trial judge found that Rosano-Davis was entitled to recover $14,782.50, presumably under a quantum-meruit theory,4 because the Trust, as evidenced by Tempest’s statement to Davis that Sastre wanted to “square up,” had accepted Rosano-Davis’s services with the expectation of compensating Rosano-Davis and that Rosano-Davis expected the Trust to pay it for those services.

Outside the context of a lien against its property perfected under the mechanic’s lien statute, M.G.L.c. 254, §1 et seq., a property owner such as the Trust that enters into a general contract for improvements on real property “is not ordinarily liable” to subcontractors such as Rosano-Davis whose sole contractual arrangements are with the general contractor — here, McKenna. Evans v. Multicon Constr. Corp., 30 Mass. App. Ct. 728, 740 (1991); see also, e.g., Brick Constr. Corp. v. CEI Dev. Corp., 46 Mass. App. Ct. 837 (1999); Superior Glass Co. v. First Bristol County Nat’l Bank, 8 Mass. App. Ct. 356, 359 (1979); Stamski and McNary, Inc. v. Anderson, 1996 Mass. App. Div. 199. The insulation afforded such owners as the Trust extends to the very claim asserted here, that of “unjust enrichment.” Brick Constr., 46 Mass. App. Ct. at 840. Allowing a subcontractor to recover damages in a quasi-contract action against a property owner with whom that subcontractor was not in contractual privity would in essence eliminate the reason the long-lived mechanic’s lien statute exists, and would render its strictly-construed provisions superfluous in their entirety. The statute exists to provide security to subcontractors and others for the value of their goods and services provided to improve the owner’s real property, and it affords the protections it does likely because of the long-standing bar preventing a subcontractor’s recovery against a landowner when the general contractor fails to pay the subcontractor. See, e.g., Tremont Tower Condo., LLC v. George B.H. Macomber Co., 436 Mass. 677, 679 (2002), citing Hammill-McCormick Assocs., Inc. v. New England Tel. & Tel. Co., 399 Mass. 541, 542-43 (1987); see also LaChance v. Rigoli, 325 Mass. 425, 427 (1950), citing, inter alia, Farquhar v. Brown, 132 Mass. 340 (1882); see generally Comment, Mechanic’s Lien Law: More Clarity from the Supreme Judicial Court, 88 Mass. Law Rev. 107, 109 (2003).

One might argue that Evans’s “not-ordmarily-Ymhle” language suggests that special circumstances might allow an unsatisfied subcontractor’s common-law recovery against a property owner whose property that subcontractor has enhanced. [57]*57The only such circumstance Evans “imaginejdj,” however, was “an unusual construction contract under which the owner agreed to pay to subcontractors all claims in connection with the owner’s job against the contractor which were reduced to judgment” Evans, 30 Mass. App. Ct. at 740. There was no such contract in Evans, id., or here. This Court has found no case positing any other situation that would allow a subcontractor’s quasi-contract recovery against a property owner with whom that subcontractor was not in privity.

Even if the plain holdings of the Evans/Brick Construction line of cases were set aside, however, and such a claim as Rosano-Davis’s here were theoretically permissible, applying a quantum-meruit analysis in this case would lead to the same result. Our courts treat the theories of quantum meruit, quasi contract, and implied contract similarly. See, e.g., Cantell v. Hill Holliday Connors Cosmopoulos, Inc., 55 Mass. App. Ct. 550, 554 n.6 (2002), and authorities cited. Such theories of recovery are grounded in the notion of one party’s having been unjustly enriched to the unjust detriment of the other. See, e.g., Salamon v. Terra, 394 Mass. 857, 859 (1985) (citations omitted); see also, e.g., LaChance, 325 Mass. at 427.5 “Unjust enrichment, as a basis for restitution, requires more than benefit. The benefit must be unjust, a quality that turns on the reasonable expectations of the parties.” Community Builders, Inc. v. Indian Motocycle Assocs., Inc., 44 Mass. App. Ct. 537, 560 (1998).

Here, there was insufficient evidence to conclude that Rosano-Davis expected the Trust to pay it for the work it would do pursuant to its agreement with McK-enna or that the Trust expected to pay Rosano-Davis for that work.

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Bluebook (online)
2004 Mass. App. Div. 55, 2004 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosano-davis-inc-v-sastre-massdistctapp-2004.