Court Opinion

ID: 6498664
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-08 14:05:36.669836+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:51:07.193922
License: Public Domain

RENDERED: JULY 1, 2022; 10:00 A.M.
                          TO BE PUBLISHED

                Commonwealth of Kentucky
                          Court of Appeals

                             NO. 2020-CA-0919-MR

D.W. WILBURN, INC.                                               APPELLANT

                APPEAL FROM FAYETTE CIRCUIT COURT
v.              HONORABLE LUCY A. VANMETER, JUDGE
                       ACTION NO. 10-CI-05707

H&H PAINTING, LLC                                                  APPELLEE

                                   OPINION
                                  AFFIRMING

                                  ** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: COMBS, JONES, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.

JONES, JUDGE: D.W. Wilburn, Inc. (“Wilburn”), a general contractor, appeals

an opinion and order of the Fayette Circuit Court which awarded damages in a

bench trial to Wilburn’s former subcontractor, H&H Painting, LLC (“H&H”).

After a thorough review of the record and the law, we affirm.
                                     I. BACKGROUND

                This dispute has a lengthy background and procedural history, and

this is the third time the matter has been appealed to this Court. From

approximately 2005 until 2010, H&H contracted with Wilburn to provide

commercial painting services on several projects for which Wilburn served as the

general contractor. Relevant to the current dispute, H&H provided painting

services for three Wilburn projects: Leestown Middle School (“Leestown”),

Morehead State University Center for Health, Education, and Research

(“Morehead”), and the Caudill Middle School (“Caudill”). At some point in 2009,

the working relationship between H&H and Wilburn became contentious. H&H

stopped its work on the Leestown and Morehead projects on March 5, 2010,

allegedly because Wilburn had not paid for the work it performed. Hoover v. D.W.

Wilburn, Inc. (“Wilburn I”), Nos. 2013-CA-000835-MR, 2013-CA-000884-MR,

2014 WL 5064459, at *1 (Ky. App. Oct. 10, 2014), as modified (Jan. 9, 2015).

                H&H subsequently filed suit against Wilburn in Fayette Circuit Court,

asserting breach of contract, intentional infliction of emotional distress, intentional

interference with a contractual relationship, and restraint of trade pursuant to KRS1

367.175. Wilburn I, 2014 WL 5064459, at *1. When the matter went to trial in

January 2013, the trial court granted a directed verdict to Wilburn on all counts of

1
    Kentucky Revised Statutes.

                                          -2-
the complaint except for the breach of contract claim. Id. After finding that H&H

had substantially performed on two of the three contracts, the jury returned a

verdict in H&H’s favor regarding the Morehead and Leestown projects, awarding

$83,086.00 and $38,800.00 on each project respectively. Id. The jury declined to

award damages on the Caudill project after it determined that neither party

substantially performed its duties. (Record (“R.”) at 576, 581.)

             After the jury’s verdict, Wilburn moved the trial court for judgment

notwithstanding the verdict, asserting H&H had failed to submit sufficient proof of

its damages. The trial court granted the motion and set aside the jury’s verdict.

Wilburn I, 2014 WL 5064459, at *1. In the first appeal, we held that the trial court

erred when it vacated the verdict in toto where the jury found that the contract was

breached, and that instead of disallowing all the damages, the trial court should

have held a new trial to determine the amount of damages owed to H&H. Id. at *7.

             Upon remand, the trial court conducted a second jury trial on

December 18-19, 2017. Only two witnesses testified: James Hoover, one of the

members of H&H, and Kimberly Blethen, an accountant employed by Wilburn. At

the conclusion of the trial, the jury determined that H&H was entitled to no

damages, and the trial court entered its judgment to that effect. Unfortunately, the

trial court had “erroneously instructed the jury to determine whether H&H was

entitled to damages.” H&H Painting, LLC v. D.W. Wilburn, Inc. (“Wilburn II”),

                                         -3-
No. 2018-CA-000283-MR, 2019 WL 2070458, at *2 (Ky. App. May 10, 2019).

Upon appeal, we held the instruction violated the law-of-the-case doctrine, as the

issue of whether H&H was entitled to damages had already been determined at

trial and upheld in the first appeal. Id. We reversed and remanded for a new trial,

again specifying that the trial should be upon the sole issue of the amount of

damages owed to H&H “for its work on the Leestown and Morehead projects.” Id.

at *3.

             By the time the case returned to the trial court for its third attempt at a

resolution, the judicial landscape had shifted. The former presiding judge had

retired, and the case now fell to Judge Lucy A. VanMeter. In its pretrial order

entered on February 13, 2020, the trial court ordered the parties to submit

simultaneous memoranda addressing the following items:

             a. Plaintiff shall set forth the claims to be tried, an
                itemization of damages and set forth its theory of
                liability;

             b. Defendant shall set forth its theory of the defense;

             c. Each party shall identify the witnesses they intend to
                call at the trial of the case;

             d. Each party shall set out any issues of law or evidence
                to be addressed by the Court prior to trial;

             e. Each party shall tender proposed jury instructions;

             f. Each party shall state whether they consent to a bench
                trial or wish to have the case tried by a jury;

                                          -4-
             g. Any other matters affecting the trial of the case[.]

(R. at 1083.) The trial court also directed each party to submit a response to the

opposing party’s memorandum. In its memorandum, H&H asserted it was owed

$97,758.89 for its work on the Morehead project, and $32,780.00 for the Leestown

project. (R. at 1085.) For proof of these damages, H&H attached copies of pay

requests it had submitted to Wilburn. (Id.) H&H also asserted that these damages

were liquidated; therefore, it was entitled to both prejudgment and postjudgment

interest from a date of the trial court’s discretion. (R. at 1085, 1092-95.)

             In the context of the matter currently before this Court, Wilburn’s

memorandum and response warrant our special attention. Wilburn’s memorandum

stated, “H&H has yet to prove its damages resulting from the breach. That is the

nature of Wilburn’s defense.” (R. at 1155.) The Wilburn memorandum further

explained that the nature of its proof was to show that Wilburn “introduced proof

as to what Wilburn was required to spend to complete H&H’s work, not for the

purpose of attempting to recover any part of those expenditures, but instead to

prove that H&H was not as far along as it contended.” (Id.) Additionally, the

Wilburn memorandum asserted that it could identify “no other legal issues other

than a ruling on Wilburn’s entitlement to setoff any overpayments made to H&H

on the Caudill project.” (R. at 1156.) In its response to H&H’s memorandum,

Wilburn contended H&H had not, thus far, proven it was entitled to any damages,

                                          -5-
and so these damages could not be liquidated. (R. at 1162.) Wilburn then

reiterated its argument that the costs to complete the projects were not submitted as

a set-off, but rather to show that H&H had not completed as much work as it

claimed. (R. at 1163.) Wilburn again definitively stated that “it should be entitled

to a setoff for the amounts overpaid on Caudill. This is the only setoff claim

Wilburn has made.” (Id.)

             Following submission of the memoranda and responses, the parties

agreed to a bench trial wherein the trial court would render judgment based on the

evidence and testimony presented during the December 2017 jury trial. On May 8,

2020, the trial court issued its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and judgment.

(R. at 1287.) The trial court noted the extensive history of the case and confined

itself to considering only the amounts H&H should be compensated for Wilburn’s

breach of the Leestown and Morehead contracts. (R. at 1289.) Of the two

witnesses presented during the trial, the trial court specifically noted that Mr.

Hoover was present at the job sites and was able to testify from personal

knowledge about the amount of labor and materials H&H provided, the weekly

payroll and pay requests he sent to Wilburn, and the percentage of work H&H

completed. In contrast, Ms. Blethen admitted she was not at the job sites, had no

knowledge regarding the percentage of work H&H completed, and had no direct

knowledge regarding the quality of H&H’s work. (R. at 1290.)

                                          -6-
                Ultimately, the trial court concluded “the best evidence of the work

completed by H&H is documented in the pay requests contemporaneously

submitted by H&H.” (R. at 1293.) Using these records, as well as testimony from

Mr. Hoover regarding typical weekly payroll, the trial court undertook a quantum

meruit analysis of the value of H&H’s labor. For the Leestown project, the trial

court calculated that the claimed value of work through February 17, 2010, was

$32,600.00. Using Mr. Hoover’s testimony regarding the value of his average

payroll on the Leestown project, the trial court calculated that the value of labor for

the two weeks H&H worked between February 17 and March 5, 2010, for which

no pay requests had been submitted, was $8,990.40. The trial court added these

amounts together and subtracted the amounts already paid by Wilburn for labor

and concluded Wilburn owed H&H for $19,090.40 for the Leestown project. (R.

at 1292-93.) Using the same methodology, the trial court concluded Wilburn owed

H&H $97,758.89 for the Morehead project. (R. at 1293-95.) The court also

ordered Wilburn to pay H&H prejudgment interest on these amounts at eight

percent, compounded annually from March 5, 2010, as well as postjudgment

interest of six percent. (R. at 1297.)

                Wilburn subsequently moved the court to alter, amend, or vacate the

judgment pursuant to CR2 59.05. Wilburn contended the trial court erroneously

2
    Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure.

                                           -7-
gave weight to the bills submitted by H&H without proof of the amount of work

which was completed at the time H&H left the job. (R. at 1299.) Wilburn also

argued that the costs to complete the painting work after H&H’s departure should

be construed as proof that H&H did not perform the work it claimed it did while it

was on the job. Wilburn also argued that H&H’s contract obliged H&H to pay for

materials, specifically paint, and that the trial court did not account for the amounts

paid for paint by Wilburn and subsequent subcontractors in its award to H&H. (R.

at 1299, 1302.) Finally, Wilburn argued the amount claimed by H&H and awarded

by the trial court on the Morehead project exceeded that which H&H claimed it

was due in its answers to interrogatories; therefore, the award must be reduced to

the amount stated in H&H’s last answer pursuant to CR 8.01(2) and Fratzke v.

Murphy, 12 S.W.3d 269 (Ky. 1999).

             The trial court subsequently conducted a hearing on Wilburn’s motion

to alter, amend, or vacate. After hearing arguments, the trial court found that Mr.

Hoover provided the only testimony regarding the amount of work H&H

completed on the projects. Ms. Blethen was not on the job sites, and so her

testimony as to the quantity of work completed or its quality was speculative.

Furthermore, the trial court did not deduct for the value of paint because the

damages granted to H&H were based on the value of its labor, as evidenced by Mr.

Hoover’s pay requests. Finally, the trial court took the Fratzke issue under

                                          -8-
advisement because it wished to consider whether the law of the case would

prevent Wilburn from making the argument; the trial court believed Wilburn

should have filed cross-appeals arguing Fratzke in previous proceedings. On June

22, 2020, the trial court entered a written order denying Wilburn’s motion, part of

which specifically concluded “the Fratzke argument is waived and/or barred by the

law of the case doctrine.” This appeal followed.

                                     II. ANALYSIS

             Before considering the substance of the arguments on appeal, we must

first begin by discussing the preservation statements in the appellant’s brief. H&H

contends Wilburn’s brief fails to give proper preservation statements in compliance

with CR 76.12. As an extension of this argument, H&H also argues that Wilburn,

despite the assertions made in its preservation statements, failed to properly

preserve several of its arguments on appeal. “Compliance with CR 76.12 is

mandatory.” Smothers v. Baptist Hospital East, 468 S.W.3d 878, 881 (Ky. App.

2015). CR 76.12(4)(c)(v) requires that each argument in the appellant’s brief

“shall contain at the beginning of the argument a statement with reference to the

record showing whether the issue was properly preserved for review and, if so, in

what manner.” The purpose of this rule is to ensure “that we, the reviewing Court,

can be confident the issue was properly presented to the trial court and therefore, is

appropriate for our consideration.” Oakley v. Oakley, 391 S.W.3d 377, 380 (Ky.

                                         -9-
App. 2012). “An appellate court is without authority to review issues not raised in

or decided by the trial court.” Fischer v. Fischer, 197 S.W.3d 98, 102 (Ky. 2006)

(internal quotation marks and citations omitted).

             In the matter before us, Wilburn has presented the same, generic

preservation statement for each of its five arguments on appeal. This preservation

statement reads as follows: “Wilburn preserved this issue for appellate review

pursuant to CR 76.12(4)(c)(v) by raising it before the trial court in its pretrial

compliance (R. at 1155-64) as well as in its Motion to Alter, Amend of [sic]

Vacate. R. at 1298-1305 [sic].” Upon examination of Wilburn’s pretrial

compliance, it is immediately apparent that several of the specific issues which

Wilburn now argues on appeal are not present in that document.

             In addition, referencing a motion to alter, amend, or vacate in support

of proper preservation, as Wilburn does here, is problematic because “a party

cannot invoke CR 59.05 to raise arguments and to introduce evidence that should

have been presented during the proceedings before the entry of judgment.”

Rumpel v. Rumpel, 438 S.W.3d 354, 365-66 (Ky. 2014) (internal quotation marks

and citations omitted). We will not consider any arguments which were only

raised in an appellant’s CR 59.05 motion; see Ford v. Ford, 578 S.W.3d 356, 366

(Ky. App. 2019). Although H&H asks that we strike Wilburn’s brief or the

offending portions thereof, pursuant to Petrie v. Brackett, 590 S.W.3d 830, 835

                                          -10-
(Ky. App. 2019), we decline to do so. Instead, we will consider each of Wilburn’s

arguments to the extent it is preserved and review otherwise unpreserved issues, at

least those which do not solely appear in Wilburn’s CR 59.05 motion, “for

manifest injustice only.” Id.; Ford v. Commonwealth, 628 S.W.3d 147, 155 (Ky.

2021) (citations omitted).

             The standard of review for a bench trial is as follows: “In all actions

tried upon the facts without a jury or with an advisory jury, the court shall find the

facts specifically and state separately its conclusions of law thereon and render an

appropriate judgment . . . . Findings of fact, shall not be set aside unless clearly

erroneous, and due regard shall be given to the opportunity of the trial court to

judge the credibility of the witnesses.” CR 52.01; see also Moore v. Asente, 110

S.W.3d 336, 353-54 (Ky. 2003). Factual findings are not clearly erroneous if

supported by substantial evidence. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. v. Golightly,

976 S.W.2d 409, 414 (Ky. 1998). “Substantial evidence has been conclusively

defined by Kentucky courts as that which, when taken alone or in light of all the

evidence, has sufficient probative value to induce conviction in the mind of a

reasonable person.” Bowling v. Natural Res. and Env’t Prot. Cabinet, 891 S.W.2d

406, 409 (Ky. App. 1994) (citations omitted).

             Wilburn presents five arguments on appeal. First, it argues H&H

failed to present evidence upon which its damages could be determined with

                                         -11-
reasonable certainty. Second, Wilburn argues the trial court should not have

awarded damages related to payroll. Third, Wilburn argues the trial court

erroneously failed to deduct the costs of materials, specifically paint, from H&H’s

award. Fourth, Wilburn argues the trial court’s award of damages exceeded the

amounts H&H claimed in its responses to interrogatories, violating CR 8.01(2) and

Fratzke, supra. Fifth, and finally, Wilburn argues the trial court abused its

discretion when it awarded H&H prejudgment interest. We will consider each

argument in turn.

             Because Wilburn’s first two arguments are similar attacks on the

sufficiency of the evidence, we will consider them together. We begin by

acknowledging these arguments are considered preserved for our review. “In

actions tried by the court without a jury, the sufficiency of evidence to support the

findings of fact may be raised on appeal without regard to whether there was an

objection to such findings or whether there was a post-judgment motion.” Eiland

v. Ferrell, 937 S.W.2d 713, 715 (Ky. 1997) (citing CR 52.03). In its first

argument, Wilburn contends H&H failed to present evidence upon which damages

could be determined with reasonable certainty. Specifically, Wilburn argues the

pay requests used by the trial court to calculate the value of H&H’s performance

were “guess work and speculation” as they “were admitted to be Mr. Hoover’s

estimates and routinely were overstated as reflected by the fact that the architects

                                         -12-
routinely adjusted them down to reflect the actual work performed.” (Appellant’s

Brief at 8.) For its second argument, Wilburn asserts the trial court should not

have awarded damages for the two weeks of estimated payroll between the last pay

requests and when H&H ceased work on March 5, 2010. Wilburn argues H&H

was to be paid a fixed price based on the contract, and so the payroll estimate was

not relevant. Further, Wilburn argues “Mr. Hoover’s testimony was not

sufficiently reliable or detailed” to permit the trial court to calculate damages.

(Appellant’s Brief at 9.)

             Firstly, despite Wilburn’s assertions to the contrary, the perceived

uncertainty of the amounts on the pay requests will not operate to thwart an award

of damages to H&H. “If it is established with reasonable certainty that damage has

resulted from a breach of duty or a wrongful act of defendant, mere uncertainty as

to the amount will not preclude recovery.” Roadway Exp., Inc. v. Don Stohlman &

Associates, Inc., 436 S.W.2d 63, 65 (Ky. 1968). Here, it is the law of the case that

Wilburn breached its contracts with H&H as to the Leestown and Morehead

projects. The trial court sifted through a voluminous record and concluded that the

best evidence of the value of H&H’s labor was found in the contemporaneous pay

requests submitted by Mr. Hoover, and this evidence was supported by Mr.

Hoover’s testimony at trial. It is also worth noting, as the trial court did, that Mr.

Hoover’s trial testimony was the only testimony directly relating to the value of

                                          -13-
H&H’s performance on these contracts. Despite any speculative adjustment which

an architect may have imposed upon them, these pay requests, considered in

conjunction with Mr. Hoover’s testimony, constitute substantial evidence

supporting the trial court’s award of damages.

               Secondly, it is uncontroverted that H&H performed work on

Wilburn’s projects between the last submitted pay request and March 5, 2010,

when it left the job sites. Wilburn argues the estimated weekly pay was not

relevant because the contract had a fixed price for H&H’s labor. However,

because Wilburn breached its contracts, the trial court was permitted to calculate

the value of damages based on a quantum meruit analysis, and Wilburn itself even

quotes this point of law in another portion of its brief: “When one party breaches a

contract, ‘the other may by election rescind and recover the value of any

performance rendered, or stand by the contract and recover damages sustained by

its breach as if he had performed.’” (Appellant’s Brief at 7) (emphasis added)

(quoting Columbian Fuel Corp. v. Skidmore, 308 Ky. 447, 453, 214 S.W.2d 761,

765 (1948)).

               Ultimately, we will not second-guess the trial court’s decision to

credit Mr. Hoover’s testimony. “It has long been held that the trier of fact has the

right to believe the evidence presented by one litigant in preference to another[]”

and “[t]he trier of fact may believe any witness in whole or in part.”

                                          -14-
Commonwealth v. Anderson, 934 S.W.2d 276, 278 (Ky. 1996) (citations omitted).

Given the great deference we afford the trial court’s findings under CR 52.01,

particularly with regard to the credibility of witnesses, we cannot say the trial court

clearly erred in using documented pay requests and payroll estimates elicited

through Mr. Hoover’s testimony to generate an award for H&H.

             In its third argument on appeal, Wilburn argues the trial court

erroneously failed to deduct the costs of paint from H&H’s award. To the best of

our ability to determine, Wilburn did not present this argument to the trial court

until Wilburn’s CR 59.05 motion to alter, amend, or vacate the judgment. As

mentioned previously, “[a] party cannot invoke CR 59.05 to raise arguments . . .

that should have been presented during the proceedings before the entry of the

judgment.” Wayne County Hospital, Inc. v. WellCare Health Insurance Company

of Kentucky, Inc., 576 S.W.3d 161, 165 (Ky. App. 2018). Indeed, both of

Wilburn’s pretrial documents, its memorandum and its response to H&H,

explicitly disclaim any form of set-off other than the amounts purportedly overpaid

on the Caudill contract – an argument which Wilburn has abandoned on appeal.

Accordingly, we need not consider this argument further; see Ford, 578 S.W.3d at

366. However, even if we were to consider this argument on its merits, we discern

no manifest injustice in the trial court’s method. The amounts awarded to H&H

                                         -15-
were based on the trial court’s calculation of the value of its labor, not the amounts

allotted to H&H to purchase paint or other materials under the contract.

             For its fourth argument, Wilburn contends the trial court erroneously

awarded damages which exceeded the amount claimed for damages in H&H’s last

response to interrogatories, thus violating CR 8.01(2) and Fratzke, 12 S.W.3d 269.

CR 8.01(2), in pertinent part, states the following:

             When a claim is made against a party for unliquidated
             damages, that party may obtain information as to the
             amount claimed by interrogatories. If this is done, the
             amount claimed shall not exceed the last amount stated in
             answer to interrogatories; provided, however, that the
             trial court has discretion to allow a supplement to the
             answer to interrogatories at any time where there has
             been no prejudice to the defendant.

Fratzke held “that CR 8.01(2) is to be strictly construed so as to put the burden on

the claimant . . . because ‘the purpose of the rule is to allow a party to discover the

amount an opposing party is seeking for unliquidated damage claims.’” Tennill v.

Talai, 277 S.W.3d 248, 250 (Ky. 2009) (quoting Fratzke, 12 S.W.3d at 273)

(emphasis in original). However, a claimant’s strict compliance with CR 8.01(2)

pursuant to the holding in Fratzke may be waived by the conduct of the opposing

party. Id. at 251.

             The trial court determined that Wilburn’s Fratzke argument was

“waived and/or barred by the law of the case doctrine” because Wilburn did not

preserve the Fratzke issue by means of a protective cross-appeal in either of the

                                         -16-
two previous appeals to this Court. H&H’s last response to interrogatories stated

Wilburn owed $30,500.00 for the contract claim on the Morehead project, and this

trial court awarded $97,758.89. (R. at 58, 1293-95.) However, the jury in the first

trial was not limited by instructions incorporating Fratzke when it awarded H&H

$83,086.00, and Wilburn did not appeal this violation of Fratzke after the trial

court granted Wilburn judgment notwithstanding the verdict. During the second

trial, Wilburn asked the trial court about Fratzke during a bench conference on the

instructions. The trial court ruled that the damages should be based on the

testimony presented to the jury, and the $30,500.00 figure was not presented to the

jury. Wilburn countered by asserting the Fratzke issue was one for the court, not

the jury. However, when it received a favorable verdict, Wilburn once again did

not cross-appeal the Fratzke issue to this Court.

             When faced with this history, the present trial court ruled that

Wilburn’s lack of previous action to enforce Fratzke barred its application here. In

coming to this conclusion, the trial court relied heavily on Brown v.

Commonwealth, 313 S.W.3d 577 (Ky. 2010), and quoted significant portions of

that opinion in its order denying Wilburn’s CR 59.05 motion:

                    “Law of the case” refers to a handful of related
             rules giving substance to the general principle that a court
             addressing later phases of a lawsuit should not reopen
             questions decided by that court or by a higher court
             during earlier phases of the litigation.

                                        -17-
                ....

                       Although in general the law-of-the-case doctrine
                applies only to matters the merits of which an appellate
                court has decided, an extension of the core law-of-the-
                case doctrine is the rule that precludes an appellate court
                from reviewing not just prior appellate rulings, but
                decisions of the trial court which could have been but
                were not challenged in a prior appeal. . . . [T]his Court
                held that an appellate court “has no power on a second
                appeal to correct an error in the original judgment which
                either was, or might have been relied upon in the first
                appeal.” . . . Unlike the core law-of-the-case doctrine,
                however, this extension barring issues not raised in a
                prior appeal is more accurately understood as a type of
                waiver. This is so because the extension hinges not on a
                previous appellate decision on the barred issue
                establishing the law of the case, but instead on the party’s
                inaction in failing to raise the issue in a manner
                consistent with the court’s general policy against
                piecemeal appeals.

313 S.W.3d at 610-11 (citations omitted). The trial court reasoned that Wilburn

had “twice failed to appeal the trial court’s failure to enforce the rule of Fratzke.”

(R. at 1353.)

                We discern no error in the trial court’s reasoning. In two previous

trials, Wilburn apparently acquiesced when the trial court allowed the jury to

consider damages beyond the limits of what Fratzke would allow. Wilburn then

repeatedly declined to argue Fratzke in its previous appeals, only to finally assert it

in a post-judgment motion in the third trial and in this appeal. This pattern runs

                                           -18-
counter to the “court’s general policy against piecemeal appeals.” Brown, 313

S.W.3d at 610-11.

               Furthermore, and as an independent rationale to affirm, this issue was

not properly preserved.3 “By definition, an assignment of error cannot be regarded

as ‘preserved’ if its significance was never brought to the trial judge’s attention.”

Smith v. Commonwealth, 410 S.W.3d 160, 167 (Ky. 2013). Wilburn failed to bring

its Fratzke argument to the attention of the trial court prior to entry of the judgment

– despite the trial court’s pretrial order requiring the parties to “set out any issues

of law or evidence to be addressed by the Court prior to trial[.]” (R. at 1083.)

Wilburn does not mention Fratzke or CR 8.01(2) in its pretrial memorandum, and

it only obliquely references the relevant facts, as part of the history of this case, in

its response to H&H.4 It was only after the trial court rendered

its judgment that Wilburn argued Fratzke as part of its CR 59.05 motion. As

discussed previously, new arguments may not be presented in a CR 59.05 motion.

Wayne County Hospital, Inc., 576 S.W.3d at 165. Thus, we cannot say the trial

court erred or committed a manifest injustice when it determined Wilburn waived

its arguments under Fratzke and CR 8.01(2).

3
  “[I]t is well-settled that an appellate court may affirm a lower court for any reason supported
by the record.” McCloud v. Commonwealth, 286 S.W.3d 780, 786 n.19 (Ky. 2009).
4
   Wilburn mentions “[t]he jury awarded H&H $83,086.00 for the [Morehead] project[]” in the
first trial, and “[i]n response to Interrogatory No. 4, H&H said it sought $30,500.00 for their
contract on the [Morehead] project.” (R. at 1161.) However, Wilburn does not follow through
on these facts to actually argue for a limitation on damages pursuant to Fratzke or CR 8.01(2).

                                               -19-
             For its fifth and final issue on appeal, Wilburn contends the trial court

erroneously awarded prejudgment interest for the unliquidated damages awarded to

H&H. Wilburn argued against prejudgment interest in its response to H&H’s

pretrial memorandum, so we will consider this argument as preserved. Citing

Nucor Corporation v. General Electric Company, 812 S.W.2d 136 (Ky. 1991), for

the proposition that prejudgment interest is a matter of equity, the trial court

concluded that the amount Wilburn owed H&H was “sufficiently definite such that

Wilburn had reason to know the approximate amount owed . . . through March 5,

2010.” (R. at 1297.) Furthermore, the trial court concluded that prejudgment

interest was required as a matter of justice because “[i]t has been a decade since

H&H completed its painting work” and “[d]uring that time, H&H has endured two

jury trial[s] and two trips to the Court of Appeals.” (R. at 1297.) The trial court

then awarded prejudgment interest from March 5, 2010.

             Wilburn now argues the trial court abused its discretion when it

awarded the prejudgment interest. Specifically, Wilburn argues the “as justice

requires” aspect of the trial court’s order “presumes [the] fault of the appellant.”

(Appellant’s Brief at 15.) Wilburn contends there was a reasonable dispute as to

whether H&H was at fault when it walked off the job on March 5, 2010, and the

question of whether H&H was owed anything was likewise reasonably disputed.

Wilburn also asserts that the trial court was incorrect when it referred to the

                                         -20-
amounts owed as “sufficiently definite,” arguing that H&H’s proof of damages

was so uncertain that this Court called them “incomplete, contradictory and

confusing” in Wilburn I.

             “The longstanding rule in this state is that prejudgment interest is

awarded as a matter of right on a liquidated demand, and is a matter within the

discretion of the trial court or jury on unliquidated demands.” 3D Enterprises

Contracting Corp. v. Louisville and Jefferson County Metropolitan Sewer Dist.,

174 S.W.3d 440, 450 (Ky. 2005) (citing Nucor, 812 S.W.2d at 141). “A damages

claim is liquidated if it is ‘of such a nature that the amount is capable of

ascertainment by mere computation, can be established with reasonable certainty,

can be ascertained in accordance with fixed rules of evidence and known standards

of value, or can be determined by reference to well-established market values.’”

Ford Contracting, Inc. v. Kentucky Transp. Cabinet, 429 S.W.3d 397, 414 (Ky.

App. 2014) (quoting 3D Enterprises, 174 S.W.3d at 450 (citation omitted)).

             The trial court considered H&H’s damages to be liquidated, writing

that they were “sufficiently definite” because Wilburn “had personnel on the

jobsite[s] and was on notice of the quantity of painting work performed by H&H.

Wilburn was also on notice of the amounts claimed by H&H through the pay

requests.” (R. at 1296.) We are not as convinced as the trial court that H&H’s

damages should be considered liquidated. Wilburn was correct in saying that, in

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Wilburn I, we held the evidence of H&H’s damages was confusing and

contradictory. Furthermore, the trial court in this matter calculated damages based

on the “best evidence” available, i.e., the contemporaneous pay requests submitted

by H&H. (R. at 1293.) In short, we do not believe the quality of the evidence and

the calculation method are so readily ascertainable as to allow us to view the

damages as liquidated.

             However, even when damages are unliquidated, the trial court has the

discretion to award prejudgment interest as a matter of equity. Nucor, 812 S.W.2d

at 143. It is clear that the trial court was disturbed by Wilburn’s failure to pay

H&H what it was owed for painting work more than a decade previously, and that

it viewed Wilburn as being on notice for the unpaid amounts in H&H’s payroll

requests. It is also uncontroverted that H&H worked through March 5, 2010, two

weeks from the last submitted payroll requests, and Wilburn avoided paying

anything on those amounts until this judgment. An award of prejudgment interest

is not punitive; “[r]ather, it is an equitable means of recognizing the economic

reality that [Wilburn] has enjoyed a long opportunity to earn interest on the money

that it wrongfully withheld[.]” Reliable Mechanical, Inc. v. Naylor Indus.

Services, Inc., 125 S.W.3d 856, 858 (Ky. App. 2003). Viewed from this

perspective, we cannot say the trial court abused its discretion in awarding

prejudgment interest to H&H.

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                                    III. CONCLUSION

               For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the order and judgment of the

trial court.

               ALL CONCUR.

BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT:                     BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:

David J. Guarnieri                        John F. Lackey
T. Neal Morris                            Richmond, Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky

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