Singer v. Etherington

789 P.2d 108, 57 Wash. App. 542
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 10, 1990
Docket22875-7-I
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 789 P.2d 108 (Singer v. Etherington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Singer v. Etherington, 789 P.2d 108, 57 Wash. App. 542 (Wash. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Forrest, J.

Ralph Singer (Singer), d/b/a Star Construction Company, Inc., appeals from the trial court's judgment in favor of Donn Etherington (Etherington), d/b/a D.E. Construction, Inc., and from the denial of his CR 60 motion to vacate the judgment.

Donn Etherington was the general contractor on a Seattle construction project. Etherington orally contracted with Ralph Singer to perform certain sewer and electrical installation work for $12,749. Etherington began work on the project in June 1984. He scheduled Singer to begin work on July 5, 1984, and confirmed this date with Singer. Singer failed to begin on the anticipated date. Etherington was unable to contact him or to find a replacement contractor, causing a 2-week delay.

Because the sewer work was performed out of schedule, the project was later delayed an additional 2 weeks. Upon completion of his work, Singer billed Etherington $13,743.96. By June 14, 1985, Etherington had paid $4,753.17. He withheld the balance, claiming Singer's delays had made completion of the project more costly. After Singer filed suit against Etherington, the matter was referred to mandatory arbitration. Etherington offered $2,500 in settlement pursuant to RCW 4.84.280 prior to arbitration. It was rejected. The arbitrator found for Singer *544 in the sum of $9,115.70 and against Etherington on his counterclaim. Etherington appealed.

After a trial de novo, the trial court held that Singer had breached his oral contract by causing delays which totaled 4 weeks. The court concluded the delays caused by Singer resulted in additional construction financing interest costs totaling $9,136.61. It relied upon the testimony of Donn Etherington and upon exhibit 9, which was admitted into evidence over the objection of plaintiff's counsel, to establish the interest to be paid by Singer. The court found that Etherington still owed Singer $9,115.70. The net amount awarded Etherington was $20.91. Based on Etherington's offer of settlement pursuant to RCW 4.84.280, the court awarded reasonable attorney fees of $3,000, for a total judgment amount of $3,020.91.

Singer subsequently obtained new legal counsel. In his motion to vacate, Singer noted that exhibit 9 had been prepared by Karen Freeman of Seattle Mortgage Company, whose deposition had recently been taken. He alleged fraud by Etherington in responses to questions about exhibit 9 as the basis for vacating the judgment. His motion was denied. This appeal followed.

Measure of Damage

The controlling issue on appeal is the appropriate measure of damages resulting from delays caused by Singer. The 4-week cumulative delay in completion found by the trial court (findings of fact 4, 5) is fully supported by the record. Finding of fact 6, 1 which concludes that the measure of damages resulting from such delay is 1 month's interest on the construction loan, is not. No evidence *545 establishes that if Singer had performed in a timely fashion, Etherington would have been able to pay off the total loan by the hypothetical completion date of December 31.

It was contemplated that the construction loan would be paid off with proceeds from the sale of the condominiums being built and that was exactly what was done. The fact that the "construction loan" was satisfied when converted by Etherington to a "permanent financing loan", which in turn was paid off as the condominiums were sold, is immaterial. If construction had been completed as scheduled, presumably the "construction loan" would have been satisfied a month earlier and the "financing loan" put in place a month earlier. Etherington would have continued to owe money and pay interest on the new loan. The designation on the bank's books of the money owed as the "construction loan" for an additional month caused no damages. Instead, damages were caused by the delay in securing funds from condominium sales, not from delay in substituting one loan for another.

Singer recognizes in his brief that his late performance may have caused delay in closing some sales, which would then cost Etherington additional interest. The findings do not establish the amount of delay in receiving funds from sales attributable to Singer's tardy performance. Without such findings, the interest expense cannot be computed properly. Upon remand, the trial court may take such testimony as it deems appropriate to calculate any additional interest that Etherington had to pay because of delay in closing sales caused by Singer's late performance. Such amount will be an offset to the $9,115.70 the court found owed to Singer on the contract.

The admission of exhibit 9 without proper foundation was error, but in view of the deposition testimony of Karen Freeman, it will clearly be admissible in further proceedings. Singer's CR 60 motion is now moot.

*546 Attorney Fees

Singer urges the court to hold that when an offer of settlement is made by a defendant prior to arbitration and the plaintiff prevails, the offer "lapses" for purposes of awarding attorney fees pursuant to RCW 4.84.270 2 upon trial de novo if the defendant then prevails. We disagree.

A trial de novo in superior court is actually an appeal, making RCW 4.84.290 3 applicable. In Valley v. Hand, 4 for example, the plaintiff had prevailed in both small claims court and on trial de novo. The Court of Appeals reversed the Superior Court's denial of attorney fees to the plaintiff, holding that "the proceedings in the Superior Court constituted an appeal within the meaning of RCW 4.84.290, even though [the] scope of review is trial de novo." Valley, at 172. 5

A mandatory arbitration proceeding is treated as the original trial when applying RCW 4.84.290. The trial de novo is the appeal. The first paragraph of the statute directs the court to apply RCW 4.84.250 (which requires *547 reference to RCW 4.84.260 and .270) to determine the prevailing party.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
789 P.2d 108, 57 Wash. App. 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singer-v-etherington-washctapp-1990.