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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
MCMP INC., D/B/A MARSICO IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
CONSTRUCTION SERVICES AND LOUIS PENNSYLVANIA
S. MARSICO
v.
BRUCE H. GELMAN, ESQUIRE AND LAW
OFFICES OF BRUCE H. GELMAN, LLC,
AND RICHARD AND TINA-MARIE
COLLIER, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS
HUSBAND AND WIFE
Appellants No. 1386 WDA 2016
Appeal from the Judgment Entered August 15, 2016
In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
Civil Division at No(s): AR 13-003184
BEFORE: BOWES, LAZARUS, AND OTT, JJ.
MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED OCTOBER 26, 2017
Bruce H. Gelman, Esquire and the Law Offices of Bruce H. Gelman,
LLC, and Richard and Tina Marie Collier (collectively “Law Firm”), appeal
from the judgment entered on August 15, 2016, on the non-jury verdict in
favor of MCMP Inc. d/b/a Marsico Construction Services and Louis S. Marsico
(collectively “Marsico”).1 At issue is a contract for expert construction
services for purposes of litigation. The trial court found that Marsico’s
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1 Appellants’ appeal, filed within thirty days of the date when final judgment
was entered on the non-jury verdict, is timely.
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engagement letter was an enforceable agreement between Law Firm and
Marsico, that Law Firm breached the agreement when it refused to pay the
amount of the bill, and that Law Firm owed Marsico $20,000.2 After review,
we affirm.
An insurance dispute gave rise to the instant lawsuit. A tornado
damaged the home of the Colliers. The Colliers maintained that their
homeowner’s carrier had an obligation to pay damages in excess of policy
limits on two theories: that the property was underinsured due to the
negligence of the insurer, and that the insurer acted in bad faith during
negotiations with its insureds. They sought damages under the policy,
damages for bad faith, and treble damages pursuant to the Unfair Trade
Practices and Consumer Protection Law. In order to prove entitlement to
relief in that action, the Colliers’ lawyer, Bruce Gelman, retained Marsico to
evaluate the cost of repairing the Collier home and the cost of rebuilding the
home. Mr. Marsico provided the Law Firm with a report, which the Law Firm
accepted. The Law Firm refused to pay the amount of Marsico’s invoice.
When the parties could not resolve their dispute over the cost of the
report, Marsico demanded that the Law Firm not utilize the report in the
underlying insurance litigation. The Law Firm had given the report to the
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2 The court did not award the full amount sought by Marsico.
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insurer but then withdrew it and did not procure a substitute expert. The
underlying dispute settled at mediation for $1.3 million.3
Marsico filed a complaint for breach of contract on July 25, 2013,
seeking damages of $29,797.05. Marsico sought recovery under the terms
of a written engagement letter, which provided for payment based on the
hourly rate of the employees. The Law Firm did not dispute that it agreed to
pay based upon the hourly rate of Marsico employees. However, the Law
Firm contended that the writing was not fully integrated. It maintained that
there was an oral agreement with Marsico that such services would be in the
ballpark range of $7,500- $10,000, and that the invoice for three times that
upper limit did not reflect the parties’ agreement. It filed a counterclaim
alleging that Marsico agreed to perform the expert services for an amount
ranging from $7,500 to $10,000, and that it did not owe the nearly $30,000.
At trial, the following facts were adduced. Attorney Gelman testified
that he was looking for an expert who could provide a report and, if needed,
testimony, regarding the costs associated with both rebuilding and repairing
the Colliers’ damaged home. He met Mr. Marsico in January 2013, and they
spent approximately one or two hours at the home. He pressed Mr. Marsico
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3The Law Firm maintained that, if it had been permitted to utilize the
Marsico report, its demand would have been $2.5 million instead of $1.9
million. N.T. Vol. I, 5/25/16, at 108.
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for a ballpark figure as to the cost of preparing a report with the required
information, and “He told me $7,500 to $10,000.” N.T. Vol. I, 5/25/16, at
14. Marsico sent him an engagement letter several days later, which set
forth the hourly rates for each employee’s services, and which made no
mention of the ballpark estimate. In response to the engagement letter, the
Law Firm sent documents to Marsico, including the estimates of the
insurance company’s expert and the public adjustor, to assist Marsico in
getting started. The report was due April 1, 2013.
Mr. Marsico maintained that the agreement was always hourly.
Attorney Gelman agreed, admitting that, “I didn’t think it was a flat-fee
agreement. I thought he was going to charge me hourly. He told me his
rate was 235 for sure . . . I expected that he would work as many hours
until he hit between 7,500 and 10 grand . . . He gave me a range.” Id. at
16. According to Mr. Marsico, the bill exceeded the rough estimate because
the scope of work changed after the initial meeting to include construction
plans and estimates of the cost of code upgrades for repairs.
Following a two-day non-jury trial, the court entered a verdict in favor
of Marsico and against the Law Firm in the amount of $20,000, and in favor
of Marsico on the counterclaim. The trial court found the engagement letter
was an enforceable written hourly fee agreement for services. Although the
charges exceeded the original ballpark estimate of $7,500 to $10,000, the
court concluded “the amount awarded is justified by the efforts made by
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Marsico and MCMP Inc. in furtherance of the Colliers’ litigation, and at
Gelman’s direction.” Trial Court Opinion, 12/8/16, at 9. In arriving at its
disposition, the trial court relied upon Mr. Gelman’s acknowledgement that
he “definitely knew” that Marsico and his employees were working on an
hourly basis, and further, his admission that he was prepared to receive a
bill in excess of $10,000, but that he never imagined that the bill would be
double the original estimate. N.T. Vol. I, 5/25/16, at 89-90. The Court
ruled in favor of Marsico on the counterclaim, finding no breach of contract
or misrepresentation on the part of Marsico.
The Law Firm filed a timely motion for post-trial relief, which was
denied on August 11, 2016, after oral argument and briefs. Judgment was
entered on the verdict on August 15, 2016. The Law Firm appealed to this
Court on September 9, 2016, and complied with the trial court’s order to
filed a concise statement of errors complained of on appeal. Upon receipt of
the transcript, the trial court penned its Rule 1925(a) opinion.
Appellants present one issue for our review: “Did the trial court err
when it determined that (i) [the Law Firm] breached the contract, (ii)
[Marsico was] entitled to $20,000 in contract damages, and (iii) [the Law
Firm] failed to meet [its] burden on [its] counterclaims, where the trial
court’s verdict was not supported by sufficient competent evidence adduced
at trial.” Appellants’ brief at 4.
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In reviewing the findings of a trial court sitting as the finder of fact, we
must “determine whether the findings of the trial court are supported by
competent evidence and whether the trial judge committed error in the
application of the law.” Levitt v. Patrick, 976 A.2d 581, 588-89 (Pa.Super.
2009). The findings of the trial judge must be given the same weight and
effect on appeal as the jury verdict. Id. at 589. We will consider the
evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict winner. We may reverse
the denial of a motion for new trial only if the trial court abused its discretion
or committed an error of law. Id.
"It is well-established that three elements are necessary to plead a
cause of action for breach of contract: (1) the existence of a contract,
including its essential terms, (2) a breach of the contract; and, (3) resultant
damages." 412 N. Front St. Assocs. v. Spector Gadon & Rosen, P.C.,
151 A.3d 646, 657 (Pa.Super. 2016) (quoting Meyer, Darragh, Buckler,
Bebenek & Eck, P.L.L.C. v. Law Firm of Malone Middleman, P.C., 137
A.3d 1247, 1258 (Pa. 2016)). Whether a set of facts establishes a contract
is a legal determination. See Refuse Mgmt. Sys., Inc. v. Consol.
Recycling & Transfer Sys., Inc., 671 A.2d 1140, 1146 (Pa.Super. 1996).
The Law Firm acknowledges that there was a contract with Marsico. It
argues that Marsico offered to prepare the expert report for $7,500 to
$10,000, and that it accepted. The Law Firm challenges the court’s finding
that the engagement letter was the sole agreement as it contained no
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integration clause, was not signed by Mr. Gelman, and the terms were
incomplete and ambiguous. The Law Firm contends that the engagement
letter merely filled in an hourly rate for the work, and that Mr. Gelman would
never have agreed to pay almost $30,000 for a report. It contends that
Marsico breached the agreement when it charged well in excess of the
$10,000 estimate for the report.
The record supports the trial court’s finding that the Law Firm accepted
the hourly terms set forth in the engagement letter. Although Attorney
Gelman did not sign the engagement letter, he admitted that the parties
agreed that the services would be billed on an hourly basis. In response to
the engagement letter, the Law Firm forwarded documents for Marsico’s
review. The conduct of the parties established acceptance of the contract
terms. See Beaver Valley Alloy Foundry, Co. v. Therma-Fab, Inc., 814
A.2d 217 (Pa.Super. 2002) (establishing acceptance by the outward and
objective manifestations of assent).
The Law Firm argues that the oral estimate constituted an offer that
was accepted and enforceable. In support of that contention, it relies upon
our decision in Western Newspaper Union v. Shaltz, 64 A.2d 493
(Pa.Super. 1949), where a written estimate was found to be an express
contract. However, the facts in that case are readily distinguishable. Plaintiff
sought relief on a quantum meruit theory; the defense pled that the plaintiff
expressly agreed in writing to furnish the service in dispute for
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"approximately $5.00 per week." Id. at 494. The court found that the latter
writing constituted an express contract, and rejected plaintiff’s attempt to
use quantum meruit to effect a higher recovery. The issue on appeal was
whether the evidence sustained the finding of an express contract, giving
the defendants the benefit of all reasonable inferences from the evidence.
This Court affirmed, finding that whether the written estimate constituted an
offer, or negotiations leading up an offer, did not matter as the parties orally
agreed to all items constituting the estimate. It concluded further that,
there was no intention to reduce the agreement to writing. “When the
plaintiff did not repudiate or withdraw its offer upon the defendants'
acceptance, a valid contract was made, based on the oral proposals.” Id. at
495. We sustained the court's finding that the estimate was an express
contract.
Herein, in contrast to Western Newspaper Union, supra, we have
an off-the-cuff oral estimate proffered “following an hour-long examination
of the site on a cold day in late January.” Trial Court Opinion, 12/8/16, at 7.
The court expressly rejected the Law Firm’s contention that the estimate was
an express contract term. The ballpark figure was followed by a written
engagement letter that specifically outlined an offer to perform expert
consulting services on an hourly fee basis, which the Law Firm admittedly
accepted. Having heard testimony regarding the circumstances surrounding
the cursory estimate, the court concluded that it was not contractually
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binding and rejected the notion that the parties agreed to cap payment at
$10,000. In further support thereof, the court pointed to Mr. Gelman’s
concession that he agreed to pay a higher amount when Marsico advised him
that the bill would exceed the original estimate; he just never imagined that
the bill would be double the original estimate.
It was undisputed that Marsico performed its duties under the
contract. Attorney Gelman testified that Mr. Marsico “did exactly what I
asked him to do, and it looked like a good report to me.” N.T. Vol. II,
5/25/16, at 38. The Law Firm accepted the report, tendered it to opposing
counsel and the insurance company, and then refused to pay Marsico the fee
for the report, which was calculated on an hourly basis per the engagement
letter. On these facts, the court found that the Law Firm breached the
agreement.
The trial court also determined that no relief was due on the Law
Firm’s counterclaim as there was no agreement to provide a report for less
than $10,000. Furthermore, it rejected Law Firm’s contention that the
underlying case settled for a lower amount because it did not have an expert
report. Crediting expert testimony offered by Marsico to the effect that the
court in the underlying case would have granted an extension to enable the
Law Firm to obtain a new expert since the case was not listed for trial, the
court specifically found that the Law Firm had sufficient time to procure
another expert had it attempted to do so. Consequently, the finder of fact
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rejected the Law Firm’s claim that it suffered damages in the nature of a
diminished settlement value due to its inability to utilize Marsico’s report.4
Based on the record before us, we find no abuse of discretion or error
of law that would warrant a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 10/26/2017
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4 Marsico suggested at oral argument that the Law Firm reaped some benefit
from the expert report as it had tendered a copy of the report to the
insurance company prior to the mediation.
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