Court Opinion

ID: 901955
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-06-13 01:02:20.627566+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:14:38.825522
License: Public Domain

#25272-a-JKM

2010 SD 65

                             IN THE SUPREME COURT
                                     OF THE
                            STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

                                   * * * *

THOMAS and JENNIFER ORTMAN,                     Plaintiffs and Appellants,

v.

RICK DEJAGER, CAROLYN DEJAGER
and DEJAGER CONSTRUCTION & LOG
HOMES, INC.,                                    Defendants and Appellees.

                                   * * * *

                    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT
                     OF THE FIRST JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
                    YANKTON COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

                                   * * * *

                      HONORABLE ARTHUR L. RUSCH
                                Judge

                                   * * * *

MICHAEL D. BORNITZ of
Cutler & Donahoe, LLP                           Attorneys for plaintiffs
Sioux Falls, South Dakota                       and appellants.

SHAWN M. NICHOLS of
Cadwell, Sanford, Deibert & Garry, LLP          Attorneys for defendants
Sioux Falls, South Dakota                       and appellees.

                                   * * * *
                                             CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS
                                             ON MARCH 22, 2010

                                             OPINION FILED 08/04/10
#25272

MEIERHENRY, Justice

[¶1.]        Thomas and Jennifer Ortman hired Rick DeJager, Carolyn DeJager,

and DeJager Construction & Log Homes, Inc. (collectively DeJager) to build a

house. Disputes arose between the parties during construction. Ortmans

eventually sued DeJager claiming damages for breach of contract, conversion, and

fraud. Ortmans specifically sought $116,837 in damages for their conversion claim.

A jury found against Ortmans on the conversion and fraud claims but awarded

Ortmans $234,632.53 in damages for breach of contract. DeJager asked the trial

court for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, remittitur, or a new trial on

grounds that the jury miscalculated the damages. DeJager argued that the jury

erroneously included $116,837 for conversion damages in the breach of contract

award. The trial court agreed, granted remittitur, and entered an order reducing

the jury’s award. The order also provided for a new trial on breach of contract

damages if Ortmans declined the remittitur, which they eventually did. Ortmans

ask us to reverse the trial court and allow the verdict to stand. The question is

whether the trial court abused its discretion by granting a new trial based on its

perception that the jury incorrectly included conversion damages in the breach of

contract award. We affirm the trial court.

[¶2.]        Ortmans hired DeJager to build a luxury log house near Lewis & Clark

Lake outside Yankton, South Dakota. The agreed contract price for the 9,400

square-foot house was $667,280. During construction, conflicts arose concerning

allegations that Ortmans were “dealing directly with subcontractors and suppliers”

and were making “substantial changes to the plans and specifications.” Other

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allegations included that DeJager “demanded more money for the project because of

cost overruns he purposely caused and because of his financial difficulties.”

Deteriorated communication between the parties eventually necessitated the use of

third parties to exchange the details for completing the project. Although the

house’s scheduled completion date was May 1, 2007, it remained unfinished when a

fire destroyed it in December 2007.

[¶3.]        At the time of the fire, Ortmans had paid DeJager $736,644. Because

DeJager had failed to pay some of the subcontractors, the subcontractors filed

mechanic’s liens against the house for $116,837. Before trial, the parties disagreed

on how to present the mechanic’s liens to the jury since DeJager’s insurance had

paid the subcontractors and satisfied the liens. The trial court’s pre-trial order

allowed Ortmans to introduce evidence of the mechanic’s liens, but disallowed

evidence of insurance satisfying the liens. The issue resurfaced during trial when

DeJager renewed his objection. The trial court again prohibited any reference to

insurance paying the liens but reserved the right to offset a verdict on the

conversion claim by the amount paid by insurance. As a result of the trial court’s

ruling, Mr. Ortman was allowed to tell the jury that he sustained damages of

$116,837 as a result of the mechanic’s liens.

[¶4.]        At trial, Ortmans combined their breach of contract and conversion

damages in Exhibit 18. The damages were presented in Exhibit 18 as follows:

                                       Damages

        Contract Price           $667,281            Base cost for a completed house
        Change Orders            $18,765
        Invoices                 $1,694
        Total Due DeJager        $687,740            Final cost for a completed house

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      Total Payments             $736,644

      Overpayment                $48,904             Total Payments minus Total
                                                     Due DeJager
      Mechanic’s Liens           $116,837            Amounts owed to subs/suppliers

      Work Not Done              $94,743             Credit for completed house but
                                                     not done
      TOTAL Damages              $260,484

After the jury returned a verdict of $234,632.53 on the breach of contract claim,

DeJager filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Alternatively,

DeJager sought remittitur or a new trial on damages. DeJager claimed that the

jury’s verdict mistakenly included the mechanic’s liens in the breach of contract

award. The trial court agreed with DeJager and granted the remittitur based on (1)

Ortmans’ general statement of damages in Exhibit 18, (2) a question from the jury

during deliberations regarding the mechanic’s liens, and (3) the way Ortmans

argued their case. 1 The trial court reduced the damages by $116,837. Ortmans

declined the remittitur, and the trial court granted DeJager’s motion for a new trial.

1.    The trial court made the following comments on the record at the
      motion hearing:

             You know, it appears to the court, from the jury – or that – from
             Exhibit Number [18], that [ ] requested mechanic’s lien – as well
             as the question sent out by the jury – that those requested
             mechanic’s liens were fully encompassed in the damages, in the
             general statement of the damages, that were argued by Ortmans
             in this case. And, you know, that was done at the request of the
             [Ortmans], to argue those mechanic’s liens, even though they
             knew they had been fully paid at that time.

             The question and the answer that was – that was sent out like
             five to ten minutes before the jury reached a verdict clearly
             indicates that the jury was told that the mechanic’s liens would
             be – or the payments that had been made would be taken into
                                                                  (continued . . .)
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#25272

[¶5.]        We review the granting of a new trial under an abuse of discretion

standard. Reinfeld v. Hutcheson, 2010 SD 42, ¶5, 783 NW2d 284, 286-87 (citing

Morrison v. Mineral Palace Ltd. P’ship, 1998 SD 33, ¶7, 576 NW2d 869, 870

(citations omitted)). We “will not overturn the [trial] court’s ruling unless it appears

affirmatively from the record [that] there has been an abuse of discretion.” Id.

(quoting Morrison, 1998 SD 33, ¶7, 576 NW2d at 870). “If the trial court finds an

injustice has been done by the jury’s verdict, the remedy lies in granting a new

trial.” Id. (quoting Waldner v. Berglund, 2008 SD 75, ¶11, 754 NW2d 832, 835

________________________
(. . . continued)
               consideration in the mechanic’s liens issue. You know, I don’t
               see any indication that the jury was so confused that they didn’t
               know what they were doing in this matter, other than through
               the fact that [Ortmans] chose to argue a claim that they knew
               had been paid, and the court – and also argued that the court
               should not tell the jury that that had been paid and that it had
               been paid by [DeJager] in this matter.

             So, you know, based upon Exhibit [18], it’s the court’s belief –
             suspicion, I guess I should say, that the jury included the
             $116,837 in the verdict in this matter. Do I know that for sure?
             I don’t know that for sure, because of the way that the court
             allowed counsel to present the case and didn’t fully inform the
             jury of the facts, acting under the assumption that we would be
             able to straighten that out after the verdict.

             The jury clearly resolved the issues of the mechanic’s liens.
             And, you know, it may be that the reason that they resolved the
             mechanic’s liens and the other claims in the way they did is
             because they didn’t want to provide a double recovery. That –
             You know, if they knew the $116,837 was included in the breach
             of contract, they certainly didn’t want to award another sum, an
             equal sum, for $116,837 in the mechanic’s liens portion.

             You know, the court – the only way that it appears to the court
             that this can be resolved would be granting a new trial subject . .
             . to [Ortmans] agreeing to a remittitur of the $116,837.

                                          -4-
#25272

(citations omitted)). Because a new trial was granted, “more deference is given to

the trial court[.]” Id. (quoting Tunender v. Minnaert, 1997 SD 62, ¶9, 563 NW2d

849, 851). “This is because orders allowing new trials ‘are not conclusive or decisive

of any rights or issues. They merely open the way for a reinvestigation of the entire

case upon its facts and merits.’” Id. (quoting Jensen v. Miller, 80 SD 384, 389, 124

NW2d 394, 396 (1963)).

[¶6.]        Based on the record, we find no abuse of discretion in granting a new

trial on damages. A trial court can grant a new trial under SDCL 15-6-59(a)(1)

when there is an “[i]rregularity in the proceedings . . . by which either party was

prevented from having a fair trial.” The trial court noted that there was an

irregularity in the verdict concerning the mechanic’s liens. Ortmans claimed

$116,837 in mechanic’s liens as conversion damages, not as breach of contract

damages. Yet, the jury appeared to have included the mechanic’s liens in the

amount of damages awarded for breach of contract. The trial court surmised that

the jury mistakenly included the mechanic’s liens in the general verdict award.

This was because Ortmans’ Exhibit 18 included the mechanic’s liens in the total

damage claim. It appeared to the trial court that in order for the jury to arrive at

the verdict amount of $234,632.53, the jury must have included the mechanic’s

liens. The trial court intended to apply an offset if the jury awarded damages for

conversion. Instead, the trial court applied the offset against the breach of contract

award in the form of remittitur. While the judge acknowledged that he was not

absolutely sure what the jury had done, he determined that either remittitur or a

new trial on contract damages was justified. On review, we defer to the trial court.

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#25272

The record supports the trial court’s rationale. Because Ortmans declined the

remittitur, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by granting a new trial on

damages.

[¶7.]        The order for a new trial on damages is affirmed.

[¶8.]        GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, and KONENKAMP, ZINTER, and

SEVERSON, Justices, concur.

                                          -6-