T.M.C.S., Inc. v. Marco Contr'rs

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 1, 2015
Docket15-354
StatusPublished

This text of T.M.C.S., Inc. v. Marco Contr'rs (T.M.C.S., Inc. v. Marco Contr'rs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T.M.C.S., Inc. v. Marco Contr'rs, (N.C. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA15-354

Filed: 1 December 2015

Forsyth County, No. 13 CVS 6669

T.M.C.S., INC. d/b/a TM CONSTRUCTION, INC., Plaintiff,

v.

MARCO CONTRACTORS, INC., Defendant.

Appeal by defendant from order entered 1 October 2014 by Judge Richard L.

Doughton in Forsyth County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 23

September 2015.

Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard, L.L.P., by Clint S. Morse, for plaintiff-appellee.

Cafardi Ferguson Wyrick Weis & Stanger, LLC, by Christopher A. Cafardi; and Bell, Davis & Pitt, P.A., by D. Anderson Carmen, for defendant-appellant.

CALABRIA, Judge.

Defendant Marco Contractors, Inc. (“Marco”) appeals from an order denying its

motion to compel arbitration. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

Background

This case arises from a construction contract for the renovation of a Wal-Mart,

Inc. (“Wal-Mart”) retail store. Marco, a construction management company based in

Pennsylvania, regularly performs construction work for Wal-Mart. Plaintiff TM

Construction, Inc. (“TM”) is a licensed North Carolina general contractor. On 18 April TM CONSTRUCTION, INC. V. MARCO CONTRACTORS, INC.

Opinion of the Court

2013, John Yenges (“Yenges”) of Marco contacted TM’s president, Thomas Malone

(“Malone”), regarding construction at a Wal-Mart store in Winston-Salem, North

Carolina. Since it was an urgent job, Malone and Yenges met at the jobsite later that

day to discuss the scope and estimated cost of the work. TM promptly provided

Yenges with two written quotations—$35,250.00 for carpentry work and $44,388.00

for painting (“quotations”)—both of which specified that Marco would be primarily

responsible for providing the necessary materials. According to Malone, after Yenges

made slight revisions to the carpentry work, the two reached an agreement that TM

“would provide the services and limited specified materials based upon the terms of

the quotations” provided to Marco. Subsequently, Yenges arranged for delivery of the

necessary carpentry materials and painting supplies to the Wal-Mart jobsite.

On or about 23 April 2013, Yenges approached Malone with a written contract

(“the contract”)1 to be executed between Marco and TM. While reviewing the contract,

Malone noticed that the total amount, $79,638.00, matched the total recited in the

quotations for labor and equipment, but the contract obligated TM to provide all

necessary materials for the construction project. After Malone pointed out this

discrepancy in the scope of work, Yenges agreed that some of the new terms were

incorrect and indicated that the contract was Marco’s standard form agreement.

1 For the sake of convenience, we refer to the document that Yenges delivered to Malone as “the contract.” However, as discussed below, TM claims it is not bound by the terms of this document and the trial court did not decide whether a valid and enforceable agreement existed between the parties.

-2- TM CONSTRUCTION, INC. V. MARCO CONTRACTORS, INC.

Significantly, the contract contained an arbitration provision, which stated that any

disputes would be arbitrated in Pennsylvania at the option of Marco. The arbitration

provision also included a 30-day time limit on submitting a demand for arbitration.

Both men edited the contract provisions to match the quotations, but Yenges

eventually concluded that such efforts were unnecessary and indicated that he only

needed Malone to sign a draft for Marco’s files. According to Malone, Yenges

represented that he would change the contract’s terms to mirror those of the

quotations. Apparently reassured, Malone signed a signature page of the contract—

which listed TM’s proposed subcontractors for the job—under the impression that the

terms would not be enforceable until Yenges made the appropriate changes. TM

continued the project work with the impression that it was performing under the

terms of the quotations.

About six weeks later, in a letter dated 3 June 2013, James Good (“Good”) of

Marco demanded that TM cease work on the project, claiming that Marco had no

signed construction contract from TM on file. After Malone explained that Yenges

had not finished the previously agreed-upon revisions, Good asked Malone to send

Marco a signed copy of the contract that was to be amended. Since Good indicated

the quotations’ terms would be incorporated into the agreement, Malone signed and

initialed the contract and back-dated it to 24 April 2013, the approximate date Yenges

-3- TM CONSTRUCTION, INC. V. MARCO CONTRACTORS, INC.

and Malone identified and discussed the discrepancies. Malone then faxed the

document to Good, who signed for Marco on 10 June 2013.

Subsequently, Marco employee Mary Crawford asked TM to provide a

quotation for additional work on the Wal-Mart’s nursery area, and Malone complied

with the request. In a separate communication, Good called Malone and asserted

that Marco would hold TM to the original terms of the contract, which did not conform

to the quotations. Although Malone responded that TM would not work under those

terms, Marco accepted TM’s proposal for the nursery job as additional work that was

not included in the original quotations. TM completed the original project as well as

the additional nursery work, and last furnished labor or materials on 14 August 2013.

Both during and after TM’s performance, Marco issued several “change orders”

which reflected additions to and deductions from the contract price. Most of the

change orders reduced the contract price, that is, the amount Marco would pay for

TM’s services. For example, Marco issued three change orders reducing the scope of

TM’s work and two change orders reflecting deductions for paint and other materials

Marco had provided. In July and August 2013, TM sent Marco three invoices totaling

$101,780.00, but Marco agreed to pay only $38,833.94, the “revised contract total” as

determined by the change orders.

On 4 September 2013, TM filed a claim of lien on the real property in Forsyth

County and served Marco with a claim of lien on funds. TM then filed a complaint in

-4- TM CONSTRUCTION, INC. V. MARCO CONTRACTORS, INC.

Forsyth County Superior Court seeking judgment on its claim of lien in the amount

of $101,780.00. TM’s complaint also alleged that the quotations represented the

parties’ contract and that Marco was in breach of it. Marco filed an answer in

December 2013. After court-ordered mediation proceedings failed to produce a

settlement, TM served Marco with discovery requests on 8 January 2014. The parties

then engaged in a protracted battle over discovery issues, which resulted in one order

granting TM’s motion to compel discovery and another order granting sanctions

against Marco.

When TM filed a second motion for sanctions, Marco responded by filing a

motion for summary judgment. As an alternative form of relief, Marco also filed a

motion to compel arbitration proceedings in Pennsylvania. After conducting a

hearing in Forsyth County, the trial court entered an October 2014 order denying

both of Marco’s motions. The trial court denied Marco’s summary judgment motion

because “genuine issues as to material facts” remained. As for the motion to compel

arbitration, the trial court expressly declined “to decide the issue of whether the . . .

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