Santiago v. Hernandez (In Re Hernandez)

452 B.R. 709, 2011 WL 3211071
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 25, 2011
Docket19-02658
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 452 B.R. 709 (Santiago v. Hernandez (In Re Hernandez)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Santiago v. Hernandez (In Re Hernandez), 452 B.R. 709, 2011 WL 3211071 (Ill. 2011).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

SUSAN PIERSON SONDERBY, Bankruptcy Judge.

This matter comes before the court after trial on the Amended Complaint of Pedro Santiago against Defendant, Wilfredo Hernandez, seeking, inter alia, a judgment for actual and punitive damages based on fraud and a finding that the debt is nondis-chargeable pursuant to § 523(a)(2)(A) of the Bankruptcy Code.

The dispute between Plaintiff and Defendant involves a failed home remodeling project. In 2004, Debtor, Wilfredo Hernandez, the defendant in this proceeding, was running a construction business called Heavenly Construction, Inc. (“HCI”). He ran the business out of his home, and he was its manager and only employee. Defendant’s wife, Vilma Hernandez, was the sole shareholder of the company. Defendant had no formal home repair training and prior to incorporating HCI in 2002, he *713 had at most only two years of experience related to the construction trade. He began in the year 2000, working as a carpenter and learning the trade from a gentleman named Freddie Garcia, and then from 2001 to 2002, he worked for himself, doing “handiwork.” HCI was incorporated in April of 2002.

Defendant met the plaintiff in this proceeding, Pedro Santiago (“Santiago Sr.” or “Plaintiff’), prior to the November 16, 2004 dissolution of HCI. In or about April of 2004, they had a meeting at a bank, and Santiago Sr. informed the Defendant that he was looking for a contractor to do some work on his residential building. The building was located at 1530 N. Artesian, in Chicago, and Santiago Sr. had owned the building — a brick two-fiat with a two-car detached garage — for over 30 years.

At the meeting, the parties discussed the work. The meeting took place in the presence of a bank employee named “Elizabeth,” who had introduced Santiago Sr. to the Defendant. During the meeting, Elizabeth made inquiries on behalf of Santiago, Sr.; she was, according to Defendant, “acting as ... his voice.” 1 One of the inquiries made was whether HCI was licensed. Defendant represented to Santiago Sr. that the home repair license that HCI had was adequate for Plaintiffs job. Defendant also represented that with his experience he could do the work.

Defendant prepared a contract, which was executed by Santiago Sr. on July 15, 2004. 2 The contract called for a “[c]om-plete gut-out of both floors” and required Defendant to obtain “[pjermits for all jobs” and “[a]rchitectural plans.” Defendant testified that a “gut rehab” begins with the “tearing down” of all the drywall, the old electrical, the old plumbing, and the furnace, i.e., “all the mechanicals, which is the plumbing, electrical, heating, and air.” These systems had to be demolished before work on the new systems could begin. 3 Defendant further testified that a gut rehab job would require HCI to hire subcontractors.

Santiago Sr. paid a total of $75,000 to Defendant the day after the contract was signed. Plaintiffs son, Pedro Santiago, Jr. (“Santiago Jr.”) testified that his father obtained a $150,000 home equity line of credit from MB Financial Bank and borrowed $75,000 of that amount to make the payment to Defendant on July 16, 2004. 4

Defendant began work on the project in late July of 2004. Santiago Sr. had to relocate at that time, to allow for the demolition to begin, and a tenant residing on the second floor also moved out. Santiago Sr. moved to a building on West Augusta *714 Avenue in Chicago, where he rented an apartment for a little more than one year.

Santiago Jr. testified that he visited the property several times in 2004 and that on his third visit, in late November of 2004, the property was abandoned; there was no sign of work being done. He visited the property several more times after that, and sometime in 2005, he took photographs of many of the problems with the construction that had been performed (Plaintiffs Exhibits Nos. 6 through 34). 5 Santiago Jr. testified concerning these and other problems, 6 including, inter alia, the improperly pitched roof and water accumulating thereon, the re-use of old lumber and failure to replace rotten joists, a burst water pipe, the improper moving of the gas line, the failure to do necessary tuck-pointing, incomplete and improper dry-walling, nails protruding from the garage roof, failure to install seven new windows and failure to install cap moldings on windows that were installed, improper installation of a bathtub spout, failure to pull electrical wires through the conduit, failure to tear down the old back porch and build a new one, failure to obtain delivery of or to install new furnaces and air conditioning units, failure to complete installation of new floors, and failure to build new sidewalks or to install toilets, tubs, vanities, sinks, new kitchen cabinets, new doors, and new light fixtures.

Most of the work contemplated by the contract was not done. Indeed, Defendant acknowledged many of the failures and problems identified with the construction. For example, he noted the burst pipe in Plaintiffs Exhibit No. 6, the improperly placed bathtub spout in Plaintiffs Exhibit No. 7, the failure to obtain and install furnaces and air conditioning units, the failure to install plumbing fixtures, the incomplete tuckpointing, the failure to install switches and light fixtures and to pull the electrical wire through the conduit, the failure to replace windows and to install cappings on those windows that were replaced, the crack in the roofing and accumulating water, the failure to replace doors and frames, the holes in the flooring and the failure to complete the subfloor, and the failure to refurbish the stairs, tear down and rebuild the porches, and remove and replace the sidewalk.

According to Defendant, many of these items were not performed because they constituted what he characterized as “second phase” tasks, and he was not given an opportunity to perform them because he was not let back into the building. He testified that the contract contemplated three phases of construction, and he only got to the first phase. 7 Defendant admitted, however, that the contract does not contain any description of what should occur in each of these purported construction phases:

Q. You talked earlier today — just a few moments ago — about phase one, phase two, and phase three. The contract doesn’t talk about what’s supposed to happen in phase one, phase two, or phase three, does it?
A. No, it doesn’t.
Q. In fact, there’s no written document in this case that says what’s sup *715 posed to happen in any phase, correct?
A. Correct.
Q. So when you’re saying that that was phase 2 — which most of the things appear to be — this is based on what’s in your head, correct?
A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
452 B.R. 709, 2011 WL 3211071, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/santiago-v-hernandez-in-re-hernandez-ilnb-2011.