Skripac v. Kephart, Unpublished Decision (3-19-2002)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 2002
DocketCase No. 01 CA 30.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Skripac v. Kephart, Unpublished Decision (3-19-2002) (Skripac v. Kephart, Unpublished Decision (3-19-2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skripac v. Kephart, Unpublished Decision (3-19-2002), (Ohio Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION
Defendant-appellant John Kephart, dba Alpine Excavating, appeals the decision of the Mahoning County Common Pleas Court which entered judgment in favor of plaintiff-appellee Michael Skripac for $15,000. The issues before us concern whether the damage award was supported by sufficient evidence and whether it was error to allow plaintiff to amend, by increasing, his $5,000 prayer for relief the day before trial. For the following reasons, the trial court's judgment is affirmed.

STATEMENT OF FACTS
Plaintiff wished to have a fishing pond constructed on his property in North Lima, Ohio. He thus called on defendant who ran an excavating company. On October 4, 1996, the parties signed a work contract which called for defendant to excavate a two-acre pond and install a conventional overflow system. (This contract originally called for a 1.5 acre pond, but the parties agree that the handwritten change to two acres was done prior to signing.) Plaintiff paid the $10,000 contract price to defendant up front. In the upper right-hand margin, above the title of the contract, the following handwritten notations exist: "1/2 8' DEEP" and "1/4 10' DEEP."

Defendant began work on the pond on the day the contract was signed. In June 1997, plaintiff hired Patierno Contracting, Inc. to perform work on the pond. Plaintiff paid Patierno almost $5,000 over the next year for this work. On March 4, 1998, plaintiff filed a breach of contract action against defendant. The complaint alleged that defendant failed to complete the work under the contract and that plaintiff was forced to hire another contractor to do the work. Plaintiff asked for $5,000 in damages. Defendant filed a counterclaim seeking $2,982, which he claimed represented grading work done for plaintiff outside of the contract.

The case was ordered into arbitration. On October 19, 1998, the arbitrator filed a report which awarded plaintiff $4,185 in damages and dismissed defendant's counterclaim. Defendant appealed to the trial court. The January 2000 trial date was later continued to December 12, 2000 at plaintiff's request.

The day before trial, plaintiff filed a "Motion to Amend Prayer" which asked to amend the prayer for damages to conform with the evidence, demanding "an amount less than $25,000.00, the exact amount which will be proven at trial." At the start of trial, the court immediately noted that it was just handed the motion prior to entering the courtroom. Defendant's attorney acknowledged that he was aware of the motion. The court noted that it wished to rule on the motion after the evidence was presented. Defendant's attorney responded, "That's fine, Your Honor." (Tr. 5). The case then proceeded through the bench trial.

As witnesses, plaintiff presented the testimony of himself and Vito Patierno, owner of the replacement excavating company. Plaintiff's evidence established that the pond was only 1.08 acres when defendant left the job. (Tr. 31). Plaintiff testified that defendant should have run a buried pipe through a ditch to direct inlet water from the neighbor's pond overflow. (Tr. 45-46). Patierno testified that he connected the inlet to the pond with buried pipe. (Tr. 101, 113-114). Plaintiff also complained that the dam was not high or wide enough, had an improper slope, and lacked erosion-preventing rocks. (Tr. 34-36, 41). Patierno built up the dam and, in doing so, increased the pond area to approximately 1.5 acres. (Tr. 32, 78).

Plaintiff also protested defendant's installation of a temporary four-inch overflow pipe which could not handle the overflow. (Tr. 39). Patierno installed a twelve-inch overflow pipe with a seepage collar and valves that allow plaintiff to adjust the water level. (Tr. 78, 103).

Plaintiff stated that according to the notations in the upper right-hand margin of the contract, defendant was required to dig half of the two acre pond at least eight feet deep with one quarter of that measuring ten feet deep. Plaintiff submitted evidence demonstrating that when defendant left the job, the pond depth mostly ranged from half an inch to four feet, with a .08 acre square in the middle containing depths between five and six feet. (Tr. 20). Patierno testified that by raising the dam, he increased the water level by about three feet. (Tr. 99, 105-108).

Plaintiff testified that he paid Patierno to salvage and improve the pond but that it was still not close to contract specifications. (Tr. 24). He noted that it is more expensive to fix a pond than to build one from scratch. (Tr. 33). Patierno stated that plaintiff paid him almost $5,000 for past work on the pond, but that in order to bring the pond up to the specifications of the contract, it would cost plaintiff approximately another $10,000. He stated that the pond would have to be drained to increase the depth and area. (Tr. 112).

Defendant admits that he did not excavate a two-acre pond due to the existence of a gas line on one side, a property boundary on one side, and a tree line on one side, but he did not explain why the fourth side could not compensate for the acreage. (Tr. 139). He states that the pond was almost 1.5 acres when he left and that he did other grading work for plaintiff in exchange for the missing half an acre. (Tr. 140, 149-150). He notes that the inlet pipe is not part of the contract and that its installation and burial is purely cosmetic. (Tr. 157).

Defendant states that he never installed the overflow system because plaintiff insisted on an adjustable system which he opined costs thousands more than the contracted for conventional system. He notes that his employee installed the four-inch pipe as a temporary system at plaintiff's insistence and that he was going to replace it with an adjustable system that plaintiff finally agreed to purchase on his own but which plaintiff never bought. (Tr. 135-137). Defendant states that he owes plaintiff around $450 for the lack of an overflow system. (Tr. 254).

As for the depth, defendant states that the notations in the upper right-hand corner were reference points, or plaintiff's preferences, written after the contract was signed. (Tr. 132, 243). Defendant states that he dug a square "bench," for winter fish-spawning; he testified that he used a transit laser to calculate that this bench should have been eight to ten feet deep after the pond filled. (Tr. 151, 180-182). He states that the notations referred to half of the benched area rather than half of the entire pond. He also opined that erosion after he completed his work caused much of the depth problems and blamed plaintiff's lack of landscaping on this erosion. (Tr. 214).

After hearing the testimony, plaintiff's attorney presented an argument on his motion to amend the prayer for relief. He noted that he was not the original attorney and that he recently realized that damages were more than the amount that has been paid to Patierno so far. (Tr. 280). Defendant's attorney asked that the motion be denied on two grounds. First, he stated that this increased damage amount was never disclosed in discovery in response to an interrogatory asking for a summary of the agreement with the contractor hired to correct defendant's work and any amount paid. Second, he alleged that Patierno's testimony on the amount it would cost to bring the pond up to contract specifications had no substance.

On December 18, 2000, the court granted plaintiff's motion to amend the prayer for relief. On December 20, 2000, the parties submitted closing arguments. On January 29, 2001, the court entered judgment for plaintiff in the amount of $15,000.

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Bluebook (online)
Skripac v. Kephart, Unpublished Decision (3-19-2002), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skripac-v-kephart-unpublished-decision-3-19-2002-ohioctapp-2002.