Vaccaro Construction Co., Inc. v. Louis L. Schafer and C. Marie Schafer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 28, 2004
DocketW2003-02515-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Vaccaro Construction Co., Inc. v. Louis L. Schafer and C. Marie Schafer (Vaccaro Construction Co., Inc. v. Louis L. Schafer and C. Marie Schafer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vaccaro Construction Co., Inc. v. Louis L. Schafer and C. Marie Schafer, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs June 24, 2004

VACCARO CONSTRUCTION CO., INC. v. LOUIS L. SCHAFER AND C. MARIE SCHAFER

An Appeal from the Chancery Court for Shelby County No. 98-0133-2 Arnold Goldin, Chancellor

No. W2003-02515-COA-R3-CV - Filed October 28, 2004

This is a construction case. The defendant homeowners had an oral contract with the plaintiff contractor to perform renovations on their home. After problems with the renovations arose, including flooding of the home after a rainstorm, the homeowners terminated the contractor. The contractor filed a claim seeking enforcement of a lien on the improved property or payment for the work done on theories of breach of contract, quantum meruit, and unjust enrichment. The homeowners counter-claimed that the contractor owed them for the cost of repairing the contractor’s defective work. After a bench trial, the trial court found that the contractor’s work fell well below the applicable standard and awarded the homeowners damages for the repair of the contractor’s defective work. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court is affirmed

HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S., and ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., joined.

James Stephen King, Memphis, Tennessee, for the Appellant, Vaccaro Construction Co., Inc.

Shea Sisk Wellford, Memphis, Tennessee, for the Appellees, Louis L. Schafer and C. Marie Schafer.

OPINION

In 1997, Defendants/Appellees Louis and Marie Schafer (“the Schafers”) sought a contractor to do extensive renovations on their home. They hired Plaintiff/Appellant Vaccaro Construction Co., Inc. (“Vaccaro”), whose president is Tony Vaccaro (“Mr. Vaccaro”), a licensed contractor. In late spring or early summer 1997, Vaccaro gave the Schafers a fixed-price proposal to do the renovations they wanted. The price exceeded the Schafers’ budget. Vaccaro and the Schafers then reached an oral agreement whereby Vaccaro agreed to do the renovations on its cost plus an agreed-upon percentage for profit, and Mr. Schafer, who had done some construction in the past, would do some of the renovations himself. Vaccaro was to provide the Schafers with a detailed breakdown of its costs, overhead and profit. The parties had no written agreement. Vaccaro began work on the Schafers’ home in late June 1997.

Vaccaro commenced renovations on several areas of the Schafers’ home. Vaccaro’s crew was supervised by Dale Gatlin, the crew foreman. Mr. Vaccaro was seldom present on the job. As the work progressed, Mr. Schafer expressed increasing concern about various aspects of Vaccaro’s work, including undersized headers and liners on the third floor, a third floor deck which sloped in the wrong direction, walls out of plumb, and difficulties in cutting rafters to match the existing roof line. The Schafers had concerns about other issues as well. In one incident, Vaccaro rented a backhoe, used it for a short time, and then let it sit nearly a full day before returning it, thereby incurring needless rental costs. In other incidents, Vaccaro’s crew borrowed Mr. Schafer’s trailer and negligently damaged it, and accidentally cut buried electrical cables because they failed to notify the utility company they would be digging.

The final incident occurred the night of August 8, 1997. Mrs. Schafer was in town,1 but her husband was out of town. A heavy rain fell that night and water rained into the house from various places where Vaccaro had begun the renovations. Most of the Schafers’ home was essentially flooded, with water coming in the upstairs skylight, openings in the roof and through light fixtures and electrical outlets. When Mr. Schafer returned from out of town and saw the water damage, he telephoned Mr. Vaccaro and terminated Vaccaro’s services.

The Schafers then employed a general contracting company, MMR Group, which was owned and operated by Dan Cline and Barry Cummings. MMR Group was hired to remedy the water damage caused by the flooding, rectify Vaccaro’s defective work, and also to finish the renovations.

Within ten days after the flooding incident, Vaccaro sent the Schafers an invoice for $31,965.39 for Vaccaro’s work. A second invoice for $1,316.06 was sent later. The Schafers paid Vaccaro $20,000.

On February 12, 1998, Vaccaro filed the instant lawsuit against the Schafers, alleging that the Schafers owed Vaccaro the remaining $13,282.45 which was invoiced to the Schafers but not paid. The Schafers responded with a counterclaim, seeking damages for the cost of rectifying Vaccaro’s defective work and for remedying problems caused by Vaccaro, including the water damage from the August 8, 1997 flooding. A bench trial was held on August 25, 2003.

At trial, Mr. Vaccaro testified on behalf of Vaccaro. In response, both Mr. and Mrs. Schafer testified, as well as Dan Cline and Barry Cummings, both owners of MMR Group, and Richard Threlkeld, a framing contractor employed by MMR Group to work on the Schafers’ home.

1 The Schafers had rented another place to live during the renovations.

-2- Mr. Vaccaro testified that when he began work on the Schafers’ home, he was working on other projects as well. Mr. Vaccaro described generally the renovations that were to be done, from the original plans and drawings. Mr. Vaccaro said that, up to the date he was terminated, he built in accordance with the plans. He noted that one of the Schafers was at the job site nearly every day, and that Mr. Schafer pulled the building permit on the job. Mr. Vaccaro asserted that the original construction on the Schafers’ home was poorly done, and that this created problems for him in doing the renovations.

Mr. Vaccaro was asked on direct examination about various problems with the construction that had been identified in the Schafers’ discovery responses. As to a joist in the dining room that was purportedly running in the wrong direction, Mr. Vaccaro said the joists were running in a “certain” direction, and if one joist was not running in the correct direction, it “was probably used for bracing purposes.” Mr. Vaccaro acknowledged that the liners on the windows in the study area were “incorrect” and implied that this was due to a change in the “code.” He asserted that required earthquake straps were on the job site but had not yet been installed. In response to the assertion that the garage door header was incorrect in that it had “two by twelves instead of a beam,” Mr. Vaccaro said to his knowledge this was not a violation of the code, but indicated that “just” the headers were “wrong.”

Mr. Vaccaro was asked about the slope on the deck causing water to flow toward the house instead of away from the house. He said that they “were calling out a waterproofer” to address it, but the waterproofer had not yet arrived as of the date he was terminated. When asked about the Schafers’ assertion that “the workshop and exterior band on the tin band was incorrectly applied causing the deck to bow up,” Mr. Vaccaro responded that he was unsure about it. When questioned about whether window heights were set wrong, Mr. Vaccaro replied that he was “not aware of that, but the windows had to be tore out anyway because of the liner situation” that he had previously admitted. Mr. Vaccaro was asked about the Schafers’ allegation that in the office and master bedroom the roof was framed incorrectly and the pitch of the roof was different on all four sides. His response was that the room size was enlarged “which threw everything off just a little bit.” Mr. Vaccaro was unsure about an allegation that a beam was improperly notched, saying that the beam “was probably notched for a reason.”

Mr.

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Vaccaro Construction Co., Inc. v. Louis L. Schafer and C. Marie Schafer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaccaro-construction-co-inc-v-louis-l-schafer-and--tennctapp-2004.