RSJ Construction Corp. v. C. H. Stuart, Inc. (In Re C. H. Stuart, Inc.)

17 B.R. 400, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4835
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 11, 1982
Docket1-18-12612
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 B.R. 400 (RSJ Construction Corp. v. C. H. Stuart, Inc. (In Re C. H. Stuart, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RSJ Construction Corp. v. C. H. Stuart, Inc. (In Re C. H. Stuart, Inc.), 17 B.R. 400, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4835 (N.Y. 1982).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND DECISION

EDWARD D. HAYES, Bankruptcy Judge.

On March 28, 1978, RSJ Construction Corporation (RSJ) entered into a contract with C. H. Stuart, Inc. (Stuart) for the construction of office, warehouse and manufacturing facilities on real property owned by Stuart and located in Saratoga County, New York. The new facility became the home for the Artcraft Concepts division of C. H. Stuart.

Stuart’s board of directors authorized capital expenditures of $5,450,000 for the building and furnishing of the new Artcraft complex. The construction budget for the RSJ contract was set at $3,600,000. The contract provided for payment to RSJ of costs incurred in pursuance of the contract plus a fee of $84,160.

On August 29, 1979, after construction was commenced and before it was completed, Stuart mortgaged the Saratoga Springs property to Lincoln First Bank. This mortgage secured antecedent indebtedness owed by Stuart to Lincoln. The bank advanced no new money to Stuart in consideration of the mortgage either at the time the mortgage was executed or thereafter. The mortgage did contain an Article 3-A trust fund clause as required by § 13 of the New York Lien Law.

On November 30, 1979, the architect issued his certificate of substantial completion of the project and a permanent certificate of occupancy was issued on December *402 18, 1979. Appended to the architect’s certificate of substantial completion was a lengthy checklist of items yet to be completed by RSJ. RSJ continued to perform this work and sometime during the course of performing its contractual duties (the record does not reveal precisely when) did some modification work that was outside the scope of duties required by the contract. The modification work had been requested by Artcraft officials.

According to the terms of the contract, RSJ periodically would forward to the architect a requisition for payment form which included a summary of job costs incurred subsequent to the date of the last requisition and through the date for which payment was requested. The cost of the extra-contractual modification work was included in the contractual payment process and paid for in due course after approval of the work by the architect.

On or about October 1, 1980, RSJ submitted its final requisition for payment in the aggregate amount of $3,634,513.56. Of this amount, $3,588,983.31 had already been paid. The aggregate bill included the modification costs previously billed by and paid to RSJ.

On October 3, 1980, Mr. Stewart, president of RSJ and Messrs. Waldrip and Van-derslice, president and vice-president respectively of Artcraft Concepts, met to discuss the fact that the aggregate requisition for payment exceeded the construction budget by $34,513.56. It was determined that $33,030.50 of the overage, an amount representing the cost of the modification work, should have been billed against a separate capital appropriations budget for furniture and other things and not the RSJ construction budget. The Artcraft people corrected the error by rebilling the modification costs to another account and adjusting downward RSJ’s request for payment on the contract to $3,601,483.06.

According to the testimony of Messrs. Stewart and Vanderslice, Mr. Waldrip, at the same meeting, approved and agreed to pay an additional $30,000 to RSJ for work performed on change orders during the course of construction. The contract provides for an adjustment of fees in the event change orders of major substance are approved that materially effect time of completion and any fee adjustment would be determined on the basis of the fee established for the original work. The parties have stipulated that change orders were approved from time to time in connection with the project but with respect to the fee on the change orders, no writing supporting the same exists (other than an unsigned memorandum in Mr. Waldrip’s handwriting) and such items were not included in any requisition for payment until included in the final requisition for payment.

At the time of the October 3, 1980 meeting, all work had been completed pursuant to the contract but for some unspecified work requiring 30 hours of labor by an RSJ employee during the week of November 18, 1980, the delivery on February 12, 1981 of some surplus asbestos floor tile and some landscaping that was completed in late April of 1981.

On March 6, 1981, Stuart filed with the Court its petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. On March 11, 1981, RSJ filed with the County Clerk of Saratoga County a mechanics lien against the Artcraft premises in the amount of $45,531.45. On September 9, 1981, RSJ initiated this adversary proceeding in which it seeks a determination: that it is an Article 3-A trust fund beneficiary and that it has a valid mechanics lien against the Saratoga property. Stuart disputes the amount of the RSJ claim, denies that RSJ is a trust fund beneficiary, disputes the validity of the mechanics lien and counterclaims for damages against RSJ alleging that the amount of the mechanics lien was willfully exaggerated.

The first issue to be resolved is the proper amount of the RSJ claim. RSJ filed a claim for $45,530.25, which amount includes the $30,000 fee on change orders allegedly approved by Mr. Waldrip on October 3,1980. Stuart argues that RSJ’s claim for the additional fee is unenforceable since it is predicated on an attempted oral modi *403 fication of a written agreement in violation of General Obligation Law § 15-301(1) which provides:

§ 15-301(1) A written agreement or other written instrument which contains a provision to the effect that it cannot be changed orally, cannot be changed by an executory agreement unless such execu-tory agreement is in writing and signed by the party against whom enforcement of the change is sought or by his agent.

This statute applies to oral executory agreements changing a written contract. The contract was not changed in any way by Mr. Waldrip’s oral agreement to pay an additional $30,000 fee on change orders. Article 6 of the contract expressly provides for an adjustment in the contractor’s fee for changes in the work that are of major substance and materially affect the time of completion of the contract. Article 15 provides that changes in the work must be authorized by a change order and signed by the owner. The parties have stipulated that such change orders were approved and Stuart has made no attempt to deny that RSJ satisfactorily performed the work.

The contract does not require the parties to agree in writing at the time a change order is issued to the compensation to be paid for said change order. Perhaps this is because at the time a change order is issued, the parties do not know what the costs should be. Only at the time the work was nearly complete did the parties know the costs.

At the October 3, 1980 meeting, it had already been known to the parties for some time that changes in the work had been approved, that the work had been done and that an additional fee would be required— all that was left was to negotiate the amount of the fee adjustment. The contract itself provided a formula for determining the additional fee: “Contractor’s fee for any such changes in the work shall be determined on the basis of the fee established for the original work.”

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Bluebook (online)
17 B.R. 400, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rsj-construction-corp-v-c-h-stuart-inc-in-re-c-h-stuart-inc-nywb-1982.