03/01/2022
DA 21-0185
Case Number: DA 21-0185
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2022 MT 42
TRUSS WORKS, INC., a Montana corporation,
Plaintiff and Appellee,
v.
OSWOOD CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, a Montana corporation,
Defendant and Appellant,
and
TRAVELER’S CASUALTY AND SURETY COMPANY OF
AMERICA, a Connecticut corporation, VOYAGEUR
APARTMENTS, LP, a Minnesota Limited Partnership,
and HUB INTERNATIONAL MOUNTAIN STATES LIMITED,
a Montana corporation,
Defendants.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Eighth Judicial District,
In and For the County of Cascade, Cause No. DDV-16-405
Honorable John W. Parker, Presiding Judge
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
Maxon R. Davis, Davis, Hatley, Haffeman & Tighe, P.C., Great Falls,
Montana
For Appellee:
Kirk D. Evenson, Marra, Evenson & Levine, P.C., Great Falls, Montana
Submitted on Briefs: January 12, 2022
Decided: March 1, 2022
Filed:
c .,.--.
6-- 4f
__________________________________________
Clerk
Justice Beth Baker delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Oswood Construction Company (Oswood) appeals the Eighth Judicial District
Court’s decision and final judgment in favor of Truss Works, Inc. (Truss Works), to
foreclose a construction lien against Oswood. Oswood contends that the District Court
erred by failing to make findings of fact or to otherwise address Oswood’s counterclaim.
We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶2 Oswood is a commercial building contractor in Great Falls owned and operated by
Douglas (Doug) Oswood and his two sons, Nicholas (Nick) and Troy. In 2015,
Voyageur Apartments, LP, awarded Oswood a contract to construct the
Voyageur Apartments, a senior living apartment building in Great Falls. Owned and
operated by Ron Beeler and his son Greg, Truss Works designs and fabricates trusses.
Truss Works submitted a bid to Oswood for the Voyageur Apartments, and Oswood
selected Truss Works as the truss supplier. The parties entered into a purchase order
contract (Purchase Order) for the design and fabrication of wood trusses totaling $87,548.
¶3 Throughout the course of the project, Oswood and Truss Works had numerous
disagreements regarding Truss Works’s obligations under the contract, including its
submission of truss drawings, its design of the trusses, and its design and supply of truss
hangers. The disputes culminated in January 2016 when Oswood refused to make payment
of $25,831 to Truss Works for the last set of trusses. Oswood further did not pay
Truss Works $6,821 for the balance of the contract and additional change orders due
May 7, 2016.
¶4 Truss Works filed a construction lien against the Voyageur Apartments on
January 14, 2016. Oswood obtained a construction lien release bond through
HUB International Mountain States Limited and Traveler’s Casualty and Surety Company
of America. Truss Works filed an action in the Eighth Judicial District Court to foreclose
on its construction lien, and Oswood counterclaimed, alleging that delays attributable to
Truss Works caused Oswood $118,571 in damages.
¶5 The District Court held a bench trial over four non-consecutive days. Truss Works
presented testimony that it designed and fabricated the roof trusses but was not paid for
them or for the contract balance. Oswood argued that Truss Works was not entitled to the
remaining payments because Truss Works’s failures to submit complete shop drawings, to
timely deliver trusses, and to design and supply the connections for the trusses were
breaches of the Purchase Order and caused Oswood to incur additional costs. Each party
called numerous witnesses and introduced voluminous exhibits.
¶6 The District Court issued its findings of fact and conclusions of law eighteen months
after the trial concluded. The court found that Oswood did not cooperate with Truss Works
during the submission process, resulting in a ripple effect throughout the project’s timeline.
The court acknowledged that Truss Works had improperly designed the second-floor
trusses and had produced the truss designs “on a piecemeal basis”; it concluded, however,
that Oswood’s refusal to pay Truss Works its last installment constituted a “full[ ] breach”
of contract. Following additional proceedings on attorney fees, the District Court entered
judgment in Truss Works’s favor, awarding it $32,662 for the unpaid installment under the
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Purchase Order, the balance of the contract, and the change orders, together with
$39,113.23 in attorney fees.
STANDARDS OF REVIEW
¶7 When a district court sits without a jury, we review the court’s findings of fact for
clear error and its conclusions of law for correctness. Norwood v. Service Distrib., Inc.,
2000 MT 4, ¶¶ 21-22, 297 Mont. 473, 994 P.2d 25 (citing M. R. Civ. P. 52(a)) (other
citations omitted). A finding of fact is clearly erroneous if it is “not supported by
substantial credible evidence,” if the district court “misapprehended the effect of the
evidence,” or if our review of the record convinces us that the district court made a mistake.
Norwood, ¶ 21 (citation omitted). “[I]n determining whether the trial court’s findings are
supported by substantial credible evidence, this Court must view the evidence in the light
most favorable to the prevailing party.” Norwood, ¶ 21 (citation omitted).
DISCUSSION
¶8 Did the District Court make sufficient findings of fact and conclusions of law in
granting judgment to Truss Works without ruling on Oswood’s counterclaim?
¶9 Oswood argues that the District Court’s findings of fact are clearly erroneous
because the court never addressed its counterclaim and failed to mention the
“virtually unchallenged” evidence supporting it. Truss Works asserts that the
District Court implicitly rejected Oswood’s counterclaim when it ruled that Oswood
“fully breached” the contract. Truss Works urges us to apply the doctrine of implied
findings to uphold the District Court’s judgment.
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¶10 Under M. R. Civ. P. 52(a)(1), when a district court acts as the fact-finder in an action
tried without a jury, “the court must find the facts specially and state its conclusions of law
separately.” “The litmus test [under Rule 52(a)(1)] is whether a district court’s order sets
forth reasoning, based upon its findings of fact and conclusions of law, in a manner
sufficient to allow informed appellate review.” State v. Baty, 2017 MT 89, ¶ 13,
387 Mont. 252, 393 P.3d 187 (quoting Snavely v. St. John, 2006 MT 175, ¶ 11,
333 Mont. 16, 140 P.3d 492).
¶11 Oswood is correct that the District Court did not include the word “counterclaim”
or make an explicit ruling on the counterclaim. But the court did address the evidence
Oswood presented at trial in support of its claim for damages. Oswood’s counterclaim
alleged that Truss Works breached the Purchase Order and failed to timely perform its
obligations, causing Oswood $118,571 in damages. At trial, Oswood asserted that
Truss Works breached the Purchase Order by (1) failing to submit full, engineer-stamped
and approved shop drawings, (2) improperly designing and failing to timely deliver trusses,
and (3) failing to provide or design truss hangers as required under the Purchase Order.
Testimony on these three topics comprised most of the trial.
¶12 The first issue, the submission of truss drawings, hinged on two conflicting
provisions in the Purchase Order. Schedule A, Section 2(E) of the Purchase Order
states: “All submittals, shop drawings, samples, and other submittal material must be
transmitted through Contractor’s office for approval. No submittals shall be submitted
directly to the Owner, Architect, Engineers, or Agents without written authorization from
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Contractor.” The contract specifications for “Wood Trusses” referenced in the
Purchase Order state conversely that the “Truss supplier shall submit shop drawings to the
engineer for approval[.]”
¶13 Conflicting testimony at trial shows that the two parties had diametrically different
interpretations of what the Purchase Order required. Ron, the owner of Truss Works, first
testified to what a typical submittal process for truss drawings looks like. He explained
that he generally submits drawings that have not been sealed to the general contractor for
initial approval. The contractor then will approve the drawings or send them back with
changes or requests. Truss Works will make any requested changes, then send the
drawings to its engineer for review, obtain a Montana seal, and submit the sealed drawings
to the contractor. Ron testified that the submittal process with Oswood was unusual
because Oswood refused to accept his designs, required him to have the same date on each
drawing, and demanded that Ron submit only engineer-stamped drawings to Oswood. Ron
explained that a general contractor had never, in his forty-seven years of experience,
required Truss Works to have his drawings stamped by an engineer and all labeled with
the same date to be accepted for initial approval. Referencing the submission term in the
truss specifications, Ron testified that he eventually sent one set of drawings directly to the
project engineer after trying to work with Oswood and not receiving a response.
¶14 Oswood’s witnesses testified to their experience with truss manufacturers and to
their understanding of what the Purchase Order required. Doug explained that he has
always asked for a complete submittal from a truss manufacturer, rather than receiving
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drawings piecemeal. Nick explained that Truss Works was required under the
Purchase Order to provide a full, engineer-stamped submittal for Oswood to review and
send to the project architect because the architect required that the submittals be complete
and stamped by an engineer before reviewing them. He testified that he eventually had
Troy handle the submittal because the project was behind schedule and the submittals were
holding up other subcontractors. On cross-examination, however, Nick admitted that
Oswood had a complete submittal from Truss Works by July or August 2015 yet did not
submit the drawings to the architect until September 9.
¶15 In addressing the submittal issue, the District Court found that the two referenced
submittal provisions in the Purchase Order conflicted. The court held that “Oswood failed
in [its] obligation to cooperate with Truss Works” during the submittal process; it
“conclude[d] that Oswood failed to deal reasonably with Truss Works in resolving
[the conflict in the Purchase Order] and breached [its] obligation to cooperate.” Supporting
this conclusion, the court cited Nicholson v. United Pacific Insurance Company,
219 Mont. 32, 710 P.2d 1342 (1984), opining that the Purchase Order, like the contract in
Nicholson, was a “satisfaction-type contract,” meaning that both parties had “an obligation
to act reasonably if withholding approval” and to “cooperate” with each other. Nicholson,
219 Mont. at 38, 710 P.2d at 1346.
¶16 In Nicholson, a landlord and tenant entered into a lease agreement that specified the
landlord would remodel the building for the tenant in accordance with the tenant’s
specifications. Nicholson, 219 Mont. at 37-38, 710 P.2d at 1346. The lease stated that the
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plans must be “mutually approved by the [t]enant and [l]andlord before work
commences[.]” Nicholson, 219 Mont. at 38, 710 P.2d at 1346. This Court concluded that
this language “imposed . . . an obligation” on the tenant to deal reasonably and cooperate
with the landlord in providing specifications for the remodel. Nicholson, 219 Mont. at 38,
710 P.2d at 1346. Unlike the lease in Nicholson, the Purchase Order was not a
satisfaction-type contract. The Purchase Order did require that Oswood and its architect
approve the submittals, but unlike the lease in Nicholson, there was no obligation for the
parties’ mutual approval of plans yet to be determined. Instead, the job specifications
detailed specific requirements for the building trusses. Nothing in the Purchase Order
obligated Oswood to cooperate with Truss Works in submitting its truss design plans. We
agree with Oswood that the District Court’s reliance on Nicholson was incorrect.
¶17 That notwithstanding, the District Court’s conclusion that the two procedures set
out in the Purchase Order for submitting truss designs were “in conflict” and that Oswood
“failed to deal reasonably with Truss Works in resolving [the] conflict” were not incorrect
and were supported by substantial credible evidence. Ron’s testimony that Nick rejected
his drawings and refused to forward them to the engineer during the submittal process
supports the court’s finding. Further, Nick admitted that Oswood had a full submittal from
Truss Works at the end of August but did not submit the drawings to its engineer until
September 9, 2015. Oswood’s September 9 submittal of the truss drawings to its engineer
supports this testimony. Four drawings—out of hundreds—are dated September 1 and 2.
Despite having the full submittal on September 2, Oswood waited a week to submit them
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to its engineer. E-mails between Ron, Nick, and Troy regarding truss drawings also support
the court’s finding that Oswood did not deal reasonably with Truss Works during the
submittal process. While it appears that neither party communicated clearly with the other,
resulting in many miscommunications, the e-mails document that Oswood requested truss
drawings already in its possession and demanded that Truss Works have drawings
restamped. In one e-mail, Ron explained that he was waiting on measurements from
Oswood before completing the drawings. Oswood contends that the e-mails and the
submittal evidence tend to show that Truss Works produced drawings piecemeal.
¶18 But the District Court did not, as Oswood claims, overlook Truss Works’s partial
responsibility for the delays and its “piecemeal” submission of drawings. The court held
that Truss Works “produced truss designs on a piecemeal basis when a comprehensive set
would be required, for ease of use and to get approval from the City of Great Falls.” The
District Court concluded, however, that the ambiguous nature of the submittal process in
the Purchase Order should be construed against Oswood, as the drafter of the
Purchase Order, and the court attributed most of the delays to Oswood’s lack of
cooperation.
¶19 After reviewing the record and viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to
Truss Works, we conclude that the District Court did not clearly err when it determined
that Oswood caused delays by failing to cooperate during the submittal process to resolve
misunderstandings in light of the conflicting contract requirements. The District Court’s
findings, though sparse, demonstrate that the court credited Truss Works’s accounting of
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events. The court stated as much, finding twice that “Ron Beeler testified credibly”
regarding his submission of shop drawings to Nick, Nick’s rejection of the drawings, and
Nick’s refusal to forward the drawings to the engineer. Though the parties differed sharply
in their testimonies and evidence on this issue, it is the role of the District Court as the trier
of fact to make credibility determinations and weigh the evidence. “It is not this Court’s
function, on appeal, to reweigh conflicting evidence or substitute our evaluation of the
evidence for that of the district court.” State v. Wetzel, 2005 MT 154, ¶ 11, 327 Mont. 413,
114 P.3d 269 (citation omitted); see also M. R. Civ. P. 52(a)(6).
¶20 The District Court’s credibility determination is supported by substantial evidence.
Truss Works called a witness from Quality Foundation Company (Quality), the
subcontractor hired by Oswood to pour the footings and walls for the Voyageur
Apartments. The witness testified that he threatened to file a lien against the apartments
because Oswood would not pay Quality the first installment. He explained further that
Oswood shorted Quality around $4,000 in the last installment payment, back-charging
Quality for items Quality had not bid. This testimony, coupled with the inconsistencies
between Ron’s testimony and that of Doug, Nick, and Troy and the court’s admonishment
of Oswood’s witnesses for not answering questions on cross-examination, is sufficient to
support the court’s discrediting of Oswood.
¶21 Oswood further contended that Truss Works designed a portion of the trusses on the
second floor without the required load factor, resulting in delays and additional costs.
Though the parties disagreed about the reasons for the problem, Truss Works took
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responsibility for the mistake and reengineered the trusses to comply with the additional
load requirement. In addition to replacing the trusses, Truss Works paid $4,100 to Oswood
for labor costs it incurred in replacing the incorrect trusses.
¶22 The District Court acknowledged Truss Works’s mistake in its findings, concluding
that “Truss Works is not blameless[; it] improperly designed a section of trusses (by failing
to account for the load required)[.]” The District Court found that Truss Works accepted
fault for this error, redesigned and manufactured the flawed trusses, and credited Oswood
for the extra labor it incurred. The court’s recognition of Truss Works’s error, along with
its finding that Truss Works fixed the trusses and paid Oswood for its labor, indicates that
the District Court found that this dispute had been resolved.
¶23 Oswood further argued that Truss Works’s failure to design and supply truss
connections resulted in additional costs and delays. Much like the submittal issue,
Oswood’s and Truss Works’s views of what the Purchase Order required were wholly
antithetical. Ron testified at trial that his bid did not include hangers and that the Purchase
Order did not require him to provide hangers. He explained that he told Oswood
Truss Works could provide hangers but that it would need to buy them from a hanger
supplier and mark them up. He testified to a conversation that he had with Nick, where
Nick said “he’d tak[e] care of [the hangers] himself.” James Resch, Truss Works’s
overseer, testified to the same understanding, citing a conversation he had with Nick where
Nick told him that Oswood would “take care of all of these.” Ron further explained that
because he is not a structural engineer, he is not qualified to design hangers, but that he
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told Oswood that he could provide suggestions for which hangers to use, and Oswood could
run those suggestions by the project engineer.
¶24 Nick, Troy, and Doug all testified to their beliefs that Truss Works was obligated
under the Purchase Order to provide hangers and other connections. All three men testified
that Truss Works was required to provide hangers under specification Section 06 1753,
titled “Shop-Fabricated Wood Trusses,” which states that shop drawings must
“[s]how truss configurations, sizes, spacing, size and type of plate connectors, cambers,
framed openings, bearings and anchor details, and bridging and bracing.” The
Purchase Order itself does not contain the term “hanger” and states only that Truss Works
is required to “[d]esign, detail, fabricate, and deliver all wood trusses.”
¶25 Addressing the hanger issue, the District Court found that the parties disputed
whether the Purchase Order required Truss Works to supply hangers and acknowledged
Ron’s testimony that he did not bid the hangers. The court included language from the
specifications that required Truss Works to submit shop drawings showing “bearing and
anchor details, and bridging and bracing[,]” and language from the roof framing plan that
stated the “Truss Designer is responsible for providing detailed shop drawings for approval
prior to fabrication. Shop drawings shall show layout, member sizes, connection plates,
species of lumber, hanger types, and erection details.” The District Court found that
Oswood paid $1,048.34 for the hangers and paid its engineer $1,250 to design them.
¶26 Neither the court’s findings of fact nor its conclusions of law explicitly resolve the
hanger dispute. The District Court did find, however, that the Purchase Order between
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Truss Works and Oswood “was for $87,548 to provide the trusses,” and that
“[t]he [P]urchase [O]rder required Truss Works to provide ‘Shop Fabricated Wood
Trusses: complete,’ and that it was Truss Works’[s] responsibility to ‘[d]esign, detail,
fabricate, and deliver all wood trusses.’” (Emphasis added.) The court further concluded
that “Purchase Order No. 1 required that Plaintiff, ‘[d]esign, detail, fabricate, and deliver
all wood trusses.’” (Emphasis added.)
¶27 Though it is not the job of an appellate court to review the record to make its own
findings, “we have long adhered to the doctrine of implied findings[,] which states that
where a court’s findings are general in terms, any findings not specifically made, but
necessary to the judgment, are deemed to have been implied, if supported by the evidence.”
Baty, ¶ 13 (citing Snavely, ¶ 11) (quotations and other citations omitted). To make an
implied finding determination, “[t]his Court will consult both hearing transcripts and
written findings[.]” Baty, ¶ 11 (citing Brunette v. State, 2016 MT 128, ¶ 36, 383 Mont. 458,
372 P.3d 476).
¶28 Necessary to the District Court’s determination that the Purchase Order required
Truss Works to “[d]esign, detail, fabricate, and deliver all wood trusses” was its implicit
finding that the Purchase Order did not require Truss Works to “[d]esign, detail, fabricate,
and deliver” hangers for the project. Given Ron and James’s testimonies that Nick
communicated he would take care of the hangers and the ambiguous language regarding
the hangers in the Purchase Order and referenced specifications, there is sufficient evidence
to support a finding that Truss Works was not required to supply the hangers. Furthermore,
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the language cited by Oswood as creating an obligation for Truss Works to supply hangers
has not the strength Oswood gives it. The specifications state only that Truss Works’s
drawings must show the hanger types and connection details, not that Truss Works must
supply the hangers. The Purchase Order is ambiguous at best, and it was reasonable for
the District Court to construe it against Oswood as the drafter.
¶29 In addition, Oswood’s April 18, 2017 back-charge to Truss Works states,
“Line Items 24 and 25 are floor deck hangers. While these were not included in Truss
Works’s purchase order, the lack of design prohibited selecting the most effective hanger.
Truss Works told us to purchase the more robust hanger and charge them for them.” This
language indicates that Oswood recognized in April 2017 that Truss Works was not
obligated under the Purchase Order to provide the hangers. Troy testified at trial that the
language in the change order applied only to that specific set of hangers; the court may
have found that testimony not credible, however, considering the ambiguity of the Purchase
Order and Ron and James’s testimonies about their conversations with Nick. Overall, the
hanger issue was a minor part of Oswood’s claimed damages at trial. Even if the court
failed to state a specific finding about who was responsible, we conclude that its omission
on the point is not sufficient to warrant reversal.
¶30 Finally, Oswood argues that the District Court erred in holding that “Oswood fully
breached [its] contract with Truss Works” by not paying the last installment and contract
balance under the Purchase Order. Highlighting that “fully breached” is not a legal term
of art, Oswood posits that the court’s finding actually is a finding that Oswood materially
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breached the Purchase Order. A breach is material if it “touches the fundamental purposes
of the contract and defeats the object of the parties in making the contract.” Norwood, ¶ 29
(citations omitted). A breach that “goes to only part of the consideration” is an incidental,
not a material, breach. Norwood, ¶ 29. The court’s holding that Oswood “fully breached”
is erroneous to the extent that it is a finding of a material breach. Truss Works was paid
the first two installments—approximately 65% of the total contract amount with change
orders—and filed its lien only after Oswood did not pay the third. A breach of partial
consideration “does not warrant a rescission of the contract; the injured party is still bound
to perform his part of the agreement, and his only remedy for the breach consists of the
damages he has suffered therefrom.” Norwood, ¶ 29. Because Oswood’s breach of
contract went only to part of the consideration, it was an incidental breach for which
Truss Works could, and did, seek damages.
¶31 The District Court’s holding is not error, however, to the extent it implies that
alleged damages from the delay were Oswood’s responsibility. As discussed above, the
court’s findings support its conclusion that Oswood largely was responsible for the delays
associated with the submittal process. The court found further that delays in the submittal
process compounded over the course of the project: “Delays in producing accepted truss
designs delayed the fabrication of trusses, which delayed the installation of trusses, which
delayed other subcontractors[.]” This finding, coupled with the court’s determination that
Ron’s testimony was credible and that Oswood contributed more significantly to the design
submittal delays demonstrates that the District Court found Oswood at greater fault. The
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court’s “fully breached” finding implicitly addresses Oswood’s counterclaim as well.
Necessary to its finding that Oswood was more responsible for the delays is an implicit
rejection of its counterclaim. The court’s holding that Oswood “fully breached” is
therefore not erroneous and is supported by substantial evidence.
CONCLUSION
¶32 The District Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law are “sufficient to allow
informed appellate review” of its decision in favor of Truss Works. Baty, ¶ 13. Upon full
review of the record and the parties’ briefs, we conclude that the court’s express and
implied findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence, we are not left with a firm
conviction that it made a mistake, and the court did not commit an error of law. We affirm
the District Court’s judgment.
/S/ BETH BAKER
We Concur:
/S/ MIKE McGRATH
/S/ LAURIE McKINNON
/S/ INGRID GUSTAFSON
/S/ JIM RICE
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