Sandblom v. Timber Tree Serv.

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 27, 2009
DocketNo. PD 06-0705
StatusPublished

This text of Sandblom v. Timber Tree Serv. (Sandblom v. Timber Tree Serv.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sandblom v. Timber Tree Serv., (R.I. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

DECISION
This matter was heard de novo on appeal from the District Court. It was tried to the Court without a jury. Consequently, the following shall constitute the Court's findings of facts and conclusions of law.

Findings of Fact
1) The Plaintiffs are married and jointly own property located at 33 Arlington Street in the City of Pawtucket.

2) The property was purchased by the Sandbloms in June 2004.

3) Sometime in March 2005, Mr. Sandblom contacted the Defendant Corporation, Timber Tree Services, Inc., ("Timber") to provide tree services to five trees located on the Arlington Street property. Mr. Sandblom advised Defendant that he and his wife wanted the removal of one tree, and the trimming of four trees — two in the backyard and two in the front yard one of which was a mature Silver Maple tree.

4) The Defendant provided Plaintiffs with a written estimate of the charges for the work to be performed. That written estimate was introduced as a full trial exhibit. The written estimate did not contain a breakdown of the cost for each of the five trees; rather, it stated that the total charge would be $1400. *Page 2

5) The Defendant began the work in April 2005.

6) Mr. Sandblom was home on that day and observed initially that the project was proceeding as he expected. However, late in the day, one of Defendant's workers contacted Mr. Sandblom and asked if Mr. Sandblom wanted the Silver Maple tree cut down entirely. Mr. Sandblom said he was surprised at the condition of the Silver Maple.

7) Even before work commenced, total removal of the Silver Maple tree was an option offered by Defendant, through its owner, Mr. Carl S. Hamerle, Sr., due to the fact that the tree appeared to be damaged. The damage was evidenced by a basketball-sized cement plug appearing in the base of the tree, suggesting that there may have been rot in the tree. It was, in fact, rot that Defendant's worker discovered and reported to Mr. Sandblom on April 5, 2005. Mr. Sandblom acknowledged that the cement plug existed when Plaintiffs purchased the property in 2004.

8) The Sandbloms now claim that as a result of the negligent services of Defendant, the large Silver Maple tree in the front yard suffered permanent and irreversible damage, thereby proximately causing a reduction in the value of their property as a whole. Pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 34-20-1, they seek twice the value of the tree and three times the value of the wood. The Defendant has counterclaimed for the outstanding balance due for services rendered to Plaintiffs.

9) Although no photographs were introduced showing the tree's condition prior to the commencement of work in April 2005, Mr. Sandblom testified that before Timber's work, the Silver Maple was "overgrown" with vegetation and needed trimming, but was otherwise healthy. His testimony as to the health of the tree was not credible in light of the observations of rot made by Mr. Hamerle and one of his workers. Furthermore, the placement of a cement plug *Page 3 commonly was considered to be a structural enhancement of a tree over forty years ago, suggesting that the rot may have been present for a considerable period of time.

10) The absence of a photo by Plaintiffs to corroborate Mr. Sandblom's statements about the previous condition of the tree, leads the Court to find credible the testimony of Mr. Hamerle that the Silver Maple may well have been damaged prior to April 2005. Despite Mr. Hamerle's suggestion that perhaps the tree was not worth further substantial investment, Mr. Sandblom instead chose to proceed with the request to trim or "top off" the maple. This decision in part was due to Mr. Hamerle's suggestion that after "topping off" the tree would be healthy and regain a healthy condition, similar to a fully grown Silver Maple observed in a neighbor's yard.

11) Mr. Sandblom's expectation before Defendant's work commenced was that that the Silver Maple would be "topped" to get tree growth away from electrical wires. Mr. Hamerle described the work to be performed as the removal of "sucker growth."

12) Instead, as evidenced by two exhibits introduced by Plaintiffs, Defendant trimmed so much growth from the Silver Maple that it only could be described immediately after the work as two bare trunks, totally denuded of any vegetation. Without having photographic evidence of the tree's condition prior to Defendant's work, the Court cannot with any degree of certainty, determine that the Defendant's work caused the condition of the tree as shown on Plaintiff's Exhibit 3A. Based on Mr. Hamerle's testimony as to the tree's condition before his company worked on it, as well as his testimony concerning the rot discovered on the day of the work, the Court finds that the Silver Maple was not a healthy tree when it was topped.

13) Mr. John P. Campanini, Jr., testified as an expert for Plaintiffs. Based upon his educational background, professional experience, and licensure (Mr. Campanini worked for the Providence Parks Division as City Forester for eleven years; as Chief Park's Planner for sixteen *Page 4 years; and he was a member of several professional organizations), the Court finds Mr. Campanini's testimony as to the quality of Defendant's work on the Silver Maple to be credible and trustworthy. He testified that Defendant's work was contrary to industry standards in that Defendant removed more than twenty per cent of the live wood from the tree. He also testified that Defendant failed to adhere to industry standards by pruning or cutting known nodes of the tree, which he found by observing the "cuts" made to the tree by Defendant.

14) As to the work Defendant performed on other trees in Plaintiffs' yard, some of the work appeared improper in that Defendant failed to remove all of the dead wood on one of the trees. The work on that tree, according to Mr. Campanini appeared "unfinished." On a second tree in the back yard, Defendant did not complete the job of thinning out the crown of the tree, in that many branches on the lower canopy were not removed. This, Mr. Campanini described as "sub-par performance." Mr. Campanini supplied no testimony to quantify the damage caused by Defendant's work. For this reason, Mr. Campanini's causation testimony was weak because he was unable to quantify how much of the tree's current condition was caused by prior rot or prior improper pruning performed by someone other than Defendant.

15) To calculate damage to the Silver Maple, Mr. Campanini testified that he used a formula called the "trunk formula," whereby the calculation of loss starts with the circumference of the trunk near the ground, and continues based on certain objective and subjective factors relative to the tree's location and condition. According to Mr. Campanini, this mode of calculation is approved by the International Society of Arboriculture of which he is a member. The result of the calculation is to determine an "appraised" value of the tree before Defendant's work which he determined to be $5100. *Page 5

However, for several reasons, some factual and some legal, the Court cannot accept that amount as the damage caused by Defendant. For instance, the formula fails to quantify the condition of rot in the tree as evidenced by a cement plug, and Mr. Hamerle's advice to Plaintiff that perhaps the tree should simply be removed. Also, based on the photographic evidence of the current condition of the tree, the Court cannot find the Silver Maple was "totally lost" as a result of Defendant's work.

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Bluebook (online)
Sandblom v. Timber Tree Serv., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandblom-v-timber-tree-serv-risuperct-2009.