The Kitchen Planners v. Friedman

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 1, 2020
Docket2017-001522
StatusPublished

This text of The Kitchen Planners v. Friedman (The Kitchen Planners v. Friedman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Kitchen Planners v. Friedman, (S.C. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

The Kitchen Planners, LLC, Appellant,

v.

Samuel E. Friedman and Jane Breyer Friedman and Branch Banking and Trust, Respondents.

Appellate Case No. 2017-001522

Appeal From Richland County Robert E. Hood, Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 5738 Heard December 10, 2019 – Filed July 1, 2020

AFFIRMED

Jean Perrin Derrick, of Jean Perrin Derrick, LLC, of Lexington, for Appellant.

Charles A. Krawczyk, of Finkel Law Firm, LLC, of Columbia, for Respondents.

LOCKEMY, C.J.: The Kitchen Planners, LLC (Kitchen Planners) appeals the circuit court's order granting summary judgment in favor of Samuel E. and Jane Breyer Friedman (collectively, the Friedmans) as to Kitchen Planners' action for a mechanic's lien and foreclosure. Kitchen Planners argues the circuit court erred by (1) finding there was no genuine issue of material fact as to its claim for a mechanic's lien, (2) denying its motion to strike Mr. Friedman's affidavit, and (3) awarding attorney's fees to the Friedmans. We affirm. FACTS

In 2015, the Friedmans and Kitchen Planners entered into a contract, pursuant to which Kitchen Planners was to provide and install kitchen cabinets in the Friedmans' home in exchange for $49,784.04, plus $2,995 for delivery and installation. The parties agreed the Friedmans would pay the contract price in three installments consisting of one-third at the time of ordering, one-third at the time of shipment, and the final third at the time of delivery. The Friedmans paid two-thirds of the contract price prior to delivery of the cabinets. However, when the cabinets arrived at their home on May 21, 2015, they were dissatisfied with the product and never paid the final one-third of the contract price.

Kitchen Planners filed a mechanic's lien and statement of account on November 12, 2015, pursuant to sections 29-5-10 to -440 of the South Carolina Code (2007 & Supp. 2019). It served the Friedmans on November 17, 2015, and filed its complaint and a lis pendens on January 13, 2015. Kitchen Planners alleged in its complaint that it "furnished materials, supplies, and labor beginning in or around March 16, 2015 and continuing through August 18, 2015." In their answer, the Friedmans asserted several defenses, including failure to properly file a mechanic's lien and violation of section 29-5-100. The Friedmans also asserted counterclaims against Kitchen Planners, including breach of contract, negligent supervision, and negligent misrepresentation. They alleged Kitchen Planners' measurements were incorrect and the cabinets had remained in their garage and were never installed in their home.

Subsequently, on January 19, 2017, the Friedmans filed a motion titled "motion to dismiss mechanic's lien and foreclosure," requesting "dismissal pursuant to [sections] 29-5-10[ and] 29-5-100 and South Carolina Rule[] of Civil Procedure 56(a) [sic]." They sought dismissal of the lien and of Kitchen Planners' causes of action with prejudice, arguing the lien was invalid and "there [wa]s no issue of fact to support" Kitchen Planners' claims.

The Friedmans deposed Patricia Comose, the sole member of Kitchen Planners, on April 7, 2017. Comose testified she held a degree in interior design and a retail license that allowed her to purchase items at wholesale and sell them for retail value. She explained the Friedmans contacted her because they wished to purchase cabinets manufactured by Crystal Cabinets and she was the only dealer for Crystal Cabinets in the Columbia area. Comose stated the Friedmans had incurred water damage in their kitchen and "wanted the kitchen designed" to enable them to replace the cabinets. She recalled some of the elements of the design were the same as the existing designs. Comose stated she visited the Friedmans' home on January 23, 2015, and they signed a "design retainer agreement" and paid a $500 retainer for the planning of the kitchen. The agreement provided that if the Friedmans decided to purchase the cabinets through Kitchen Planners, the $500 fee would be deducted from the purchase price. She stated they discussed the design several times between January 23 and March 16, 2015, and on March 16, Kitchen Planners and the Friedmans entered an agreement "for the ordering of the cabinets." Comose stated she purchased the cabinets for $28,953.58 and her profit margin was thirty-three percent. She acknowledged that prior to delivery of the cabinets, Kitchen Planners had already realized a profit of $4,175 and made additional profit from other items, such as the sink and the cabinet pulls. Comose explained that rather than charging by the hour, she earned profits by purchasing items at wholesale and selling them at retail and did not charge for her time "basically at all."

Comose confirmed that when the cabinets were delivered to the Friedmans' home on May 20, 2015, they had some concerns with the product. Comose stated that when the installer arrived the next day to install the cabinets, Mr. Friedman told her he wanted the cabinets removed from the home and a refund. She recalled she and the installer spent several hours at the home that day, unboxing the cabinets and setting them in place so the Friedmans could see how they would look. Comose stated she offered to reorder any portions of the cabinets they were dissatisfied with. She testified she spent the next two or three days preparing a list of items to reorder. Comose stated that when she began reordering items, the Friedmans removed her from the project. She explained the Friedmans contacted Crystal Cabinets directly and Derrick Tackett, a sales representative, took over the reorder process. Comose stated the Friedmans arranged with Tackett to pay dealer cost for the reorder. Comose stated she did not "have anything more to do with the project" after June 18 when Tackett informed her the Friedmans did not want her to be involved. Comose agreed that on August 18, 2015, she received an email from Tackett informing her the Friedmans had taken him off the job as well. Comose admitted, "I understand that we were not allowed to install [the cabinets]." When asked about a check for $550.61 paid on September 29, 2015, for "a re-order of boxes" for the kitchen island, she explained she reordered drawer boxes after Mrs. Friedman complained the boxes they received "could have been deeper." However, Comose did not know why she wrote this check in September as opposed to an earlier date, and she commented, "And I have those, by the way." On April 13, 2017, the Friedmans served a copy of Mr. Friedman's affidavit upon Kitchen Planners by mail. The Friedmans then filed a memorandum titled "memorandum in support of defendant's motion for summary judgment" on April 20, 2017. On April 24, 2017, Kitchen Planners filed a motion to strike the affidavit, arguing it was improper because (1) the Friedmans filed a motion to dismiss and motions to dismiss must be determined by the pleadings only and (2) the affidavit should have been served concurrently with the Friedmans' motion pursuant to Rule 6, SCRCP. It also served and filed Comose's affidavit in opposition, in which she stated she continued to work with Tackett "through November 2015." Comose stated, "For example, on September 29, 2015, I reordered drawer boxes for the island in the kitchen, and paid $550.61." Additionally, she attested another contractor, Viggiano Remodeling, finished the project and "utilized some of the cabinets [she] furnished." In support of this, she attached the contractor's estimate, which stated, "All useable hardware and drawers from the existing Crystal cabinets will be reflected as a credit in final price."

The circuit court heard the Friedmans' motion on April 25, 2017.

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