Thayer Corp. v. 410 Stillwater, LLC

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 29, 2021
DocketANDcv-19-41
StatusUnpublished

This text of Thayer Corp. v. 410 Stillwater, LLC (Thayer Corp. v. 410 Stillwater, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thayer Corp. v. 410 Stillwater, LLC, (Me. Super. Ct. 2021).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT ANDROSCOGGIN, ss. CIVIL ACTION DOCKET NO. CV-19-41

THAYER CORPORATION

vs. DECISION AND ORDER

410 STILLWATER, LLC

On March 11, 2019, the Plaintiff, Thayer Corporation (hereafter ''Thayer") filed a

complaint against Defendant, 410 Stillwater, LLC (hereafter "Stillwater") setting forth five

counts, to wit: Count I-Account Annexed; Count II-Breach of Contract; Count III-Unjust

Enrichment; Count IV-Quantum Meruit; and Count V- Violation of Prompt Pay Act. Stillwater

timely answered and also brought three counterclaims, to wit: Count I-Breach of Contract; Count

II-Breach of Warranties; and Count III-Accounting. Trial,jury waived, was held October 13,

2021. At trial testimony was received from Daniel Thayer, Andrew Kent, Paul Woods, and

Corey Dow. Plaintiff Exhibits A, B, C, D, E and F (hereafter "P. Ex._") and Defense Exhibits

A, B, C, D, E, F, and G (hereafter "D. Ex._") were all admitted. Based upon the evidence

received at trial, the court makes the following findings.

Findings of Fact and Incorporated Conclusions of Law.

In 2017, Paul Woods (hereafter "Woods), on behalf of Stillwater, asked Thayer to make a

proposal for the installation of an HV AC system for the storage facility Stillwater was building

in Bangor, Maine. Woods met with Andrew Kent (hereafter "Kent") on at least a couple of

1 occasions pursuant to which Kent and Thayer designed the HVAC system that would meet

Stillwater's needs and budget. Thayer ultimately prepared and presented to Stillwater a contract

that set forth the scope of work to be completed, project price of $127,000, and additional terms

and conditions. (P. Ex. A). Paul Woods signed the contract on behalf of Stillwater on December

4, 2017. The contract was never signed by a representative of Thayer.

Of interest to resolution of this case is paragraph 3 of the terms and conditions which

states in part "Twenty-five percent (25%) ofthe project cost is due upon signing

agreement ......Thayer will charge interest on unpaid balances over thirty days old. Thayer will

be entitled to costs and attorneys' fees to collect amounts due." (P. Ex. A, p. 8). Thayer issued

Stillwater an invoice dated December 12, 2017 in the amount of $31,750.00, with a description

of "Project billing for 25% deposit for installation ofHVAC system in the new storage facility."

This invoice was not paid.

Thayer asserts the invoice for 25% of the project cost also included design work Thayer

did in advance of the signing of the contract, and that the invoice was intended to recover the

advance costs associated with design and mobilization. The court disagrees with that assertion,

and finds that the contract provision "Twenty-five percent (25%) of the project cost is due upon

signing agreement" unambiguously provides only a tinting requirement of when the initial 25%

was owed. To the extent that that sentence of the contract is ambiguous, and the court is to look

at evidence outside of the contract, Thayer still does not prevail. Other than providing testimony

generally that the 25% was to recoup costs and time incurred in advance of the execution of the

contract for design and mobilization, Thayer has failed to quantify that cost or expense. And

there is no evidence that Stillwater was ever advised that the invoice for 25% was for advance

work. On the other hand, the invoice for the 25% describes the amount owed as a "deposit".

2 After Woods signed the contract, Thayer completed its design and drawings of the

system, and commenced some limited work on site. By that time the concrete for the building

had been poured and the shell/framing of the building was erected. The roof had also been

installed, but the membrane had not been put on and the building was not completely sealed. It

being December, and concerned the concrete could be damaged, Stillwater needed a temporary

heat source for the building. Woods testified he asked Kent to install a temporary heat source.

Kent does not recall that request.

The scope of work section of the contract includes "Furnaces installed in final location to

provide temporary heat". (See P. Ex. A, p. 5). Stillwater maintains that that provision required

Thayer to install a temporary heating source immediately upon signing of the contract. Thayer

maintains that that provision meant that the furnaces it was installing in their final location could

be used to provide temporary heating. Thayer also explained that the furnaces it was installing

could not be installed until the building and roof were sealed and fully protected from the

elements. Stillwater' s counterclaims focus primarily on the damages it incurred in having to pay

other vendors to provide a temporary heat source. Those counterclaims are not successful.

First of all, the court finds the contract is unambiguous in that the term "Furnaces

installed in final location to provide temporary heat" applies to the furnaces Thayer was

installing pursuant to the contract. And the court finds credible Thayer's explanation that those

furnaces could not be installed until the building and roof were sealed. In addition, the court is

not persuaded that Stillwater made a demand upon Thayer to immediately install a "temporary"

heat source in December. By the time Still water had signed the contract on December 4, 2017,

Still water's need for a temporary heat source to protect the new concrete was already in

existence. If an immediate temporary heat source was contemplated, it would seem to the court

3 that such contract terms would be explicit. Kent and Thayer testified that there was no demand

made upon them for a temporary heat source. The court has also reviewed the emails admitted

into evidence. (See P. Ex. D, and D. Ex's. D and E). In those emails, on behalf of Stillwater,

Woods does write that Thayer's inability to provide a winter heat source was one of the reasons

it lost confidence in Thayer. But there is insufficient clarity in the emails written by either party

to persuade the court to conclude that temporary heating was a contract term, or that a specific

demand was made upon Thayer to install a temporary heat source. The court accepts that

Still water had a need for temporary heating, and it may have even inquired in December, after

the contract was signed, if Thayer could assist. But the court does not find this was a contractual

obligation that Thayer breached. In summary, the court finds that the contract did not require

Thayer to provide a temporary heating source.

As stated, after Woods signed the contract on behalf of Stillwater, Thayer commenced

more detailed work towards the contract. But in late winter of 2018, Stillwater terminated the

contract. Although the parties are not in precise agreement whether it was in March or February,

the testimony from both sides is consistent that Woods went to Thayer's office where he met

with Kent, and Woods told Kent Stillwater was canceling the project, and that he knew Stillwater

owed Thayer money for materials and labor provided to date. Kent told Woods he would have

the billing department send a bill, and both Woods and Kent described the meeting as cordial.

Kent also testified that Woods told him the reason Stillwater was canceling the contract

was because of costs with the project. Woods testified he told Kent the reason was because he

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