Approved Paving v. Paul Heinen and Assocs., Inc. ( 2021 )


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  •                           NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
    No. 123,222
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    APPROVED PAVING, LLC,
    Appellant,
    v.
    PAUL HEINEN AND ASSOCIATES, INC., et al,
    Appellees.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Appeal from Jefferson District Court; GARY L. NAFZIGER, judge. Opinion filed December 10,
    2021. Affirmed.
    John W. Fresh, of Farris, Fresh & Werring Law Offices, of Atchison, for appellant.
    Cynthia J. Sheppeard and Arthur E. Palmer, of Goodell, Stratton, Edmonds & Palmer, LLP, of
    Topeka, for appellees.
    Before ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J., ATCHESON and HURST, JJ.
    PER CURIAM: The Jefferson County District Court rejected claims of Approved
    Paving, LLC, for unjust enrichment and to enforce a lien against the owners of a
    commercial parking lot for resurfacing work the company did as a subcontractor. Based
    on the limited—and distinctly odd—summary judgment record, the district court found
    that Approved Paving failed to timely perfect a statutory mechanic's lien and that the
    undisputed facts could not reasonably support equitable relief based on unjust
    enrichment. The district court, therefore, entered summary judgment for the parking lot
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    owners. On Approved Paving's appeal, we see no reversible error and affirm the district
    court.
    In reviewing a district court's entry of summary judgment, we must consider the
    undisputed facts in the best light for the losing party, here Approved Paving, and give
    that party the benefit of any reasonable inferences drawn from those facts. A district court
    properly grants summary judgment if there are no disputed material facts and the moving
    party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on that factual record. Bouton v. Byers, 
    50 Kan. App. 2d 34
    , 36-37, 
    321 P.3d 780
     (2014).
    Paul Heinen and Associates, Inc., and five individuals own properties in Valley
    Falls that share a private parking lot. When the parking lot needed resurfacing, the
    property owners authorized Paul Heinen, the namesake of the corporation, to engage an
    appropriate vendor to handle the project. In August 2017, Heinen communicated with
    Omni Property Services. The company submitted a proposal, and Heinen, through his
    company, tendered a $3,153.60 deposit, reflecting about a third of the agreed price for the
    project. The parking lot didn't get resurfaced. Nothing happened for months.
    The summary judgment record shows that the following April, Arcadia Realty
    Corporation, a company headquartered in Wilmington, Delaware, communicated with
    Approved Paving about resurfacing the parking lot. Arcadia Realty and Approved Paving
    entered into an agreement for the job on May 8, 2018, using a bid form that stated the
    price of $12,427.50 and abbreviated work specifications. They never had a more detailed
    written contract. Approved Paving resurfaced and striped the parking lot, completing the
    work on May 16. Approved Paving promptly billed Arcadia Realty. The company didn't
    get paid. Nothing happened for months.
    In the meantime, however, the parking lot owners paid Omni Property Services for
    the resurfacing consistent with the agreement Heinen made with that company.
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    The summary judgment record shows Heinen had no communication with Arcadia
    Realty or Approved Paving and Approved Paving had no communication with Omni
    Property Services. Nothing in the record indicates Arcadia Realty and Omni Property
    Services communicated with each other. How Arcadia Realty knew about the resurfacing
    project to then invite a bid from Approved Paving is simply a void. We can neither infer
    nonexistent facts nor draw inferences lacking some factual anchor to fill such an
    evidentiary hole. See Williamson v. City of Hays, 
    275 Kan. 300
    , 307, 
    64 P.3d 364
     (2003)
    (party opposing summary judgment must offer "specific facts" showing genuine issue for
    trial); Unified Gov't of Wyandotte County v. Trans World Transp. Svcs., 
    43 Kan. App. 2d 487
    , 490, 
    227 P.3d 992
     (2010) ("mere speculation" insufficient to resist properly
    supported motion for summary judgment).
    Stymied in its efforts to get paid, Approved Paving filed an extension with the
    clerk of the district court on September 14, 2018, to file a mechanic's lien for the
    resurfacing work. The company filed a mechanic's lien on October 16.
    Still stymied, Approved Paving filed an action against Paul Heinen and Associates
    and the other owners of the parking lot to enforce the lien. The company later filed an
    amended petition adding the claim for unjust enrichment. The parties undertook
    apparently limited discovery—no depositions are cited in the record—reflecting an
    understandable approach given the base amount of the claim. As we have indicated, the
    district court filed a short letter ruling on July 14, 2020, granting summary judgment to
    the defendants. Approved Paving has appealed.
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    LEGAL ANALYSIS
    Lien Claim
    On appeal, the parties presume Approved Paving could file a statutory lien as
    either a contractor or a subcontractor for the resurfacing work it performed. See K.S.A.
    60-1101 (contractor's lien); K.S.A. 60-1103 (subcontractor's lien). We accept their
    assumption and decide the issue accordingly. But the facts at least arguably suggest
    Approved Paving never contracted with the owners or with a party that did, since there is
    no factual support in the record for any agreement between the owners and Arcadia
    Realty or between Omni Property Services and Arcadia Realty. Under K.S.A. 60-1101, a
    party must contract with the property owner to have lien rights. And under K.S.A. 60-
    1103(a), a subcontractor must have "an agreement with the contractor, subcontractor or
    owner contractor" to have lien rights.
    The district court held Approved Paving was a subcontractor because the company
    communicated with only Arcadia Realty and never with the parking lot owners. A
    subcontractor must file a statutory lien within three months after supplying labor or
    materials used on the property. K.S.A. 60-1103(a)(1). But a subcontractor may extend
    that time to five months if it files an extension within the original three-month period.
    K.S.A. 60-1103(e).
    Here, Approved Paving failed to comply with that schedule. The company filed
    the extension more than three months after it completed the resurfacing, rendering the
    request untimely and ineffective. In turn, the lien itself was also untimely filed. The
    Kansas appellate courts regularly recognize that parties asserting statutory construction
    liens must strictly comply with the filing requirements. See Owen Lumber Co. v.
    Chartrand, 
    283 Kan. 911
    , 914-15, 
    157 P.3d 1109
     (2007) (recognizing as "well known"
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    the Kansas rule of strict compliance to obtain enforceable lien); In re Lien Against the
    District at City Center, 
    57 Kan. App. 2d 884
    , 887-88, 
    462 P.3d 181
     (2020).
    Approved Paving tries to avert that result by pointing to allegations in its petition
    and amended petition that Arcadia Realty acted as the agent for the parking lot owners,
    thereby establishing a contract with the owners. In turn, Approved Paving would be a
    contractor rather than a subcontractor, and its extension and lien would have been timely.
    A contractor may file for a one-month extension to file a lien up to four months after
    completing the work. See K.S.A. 60-1102(a) (contractor must file lien within four months
    after work); (c) (one-month extension to file lien permitted if requested within four-
    month period). But Approved Paving cannot rely on the assertions in its pleadings to
    resist a summary judgment motion, since they are mere claims rather than facts supported
    in admissible evidentiary materials such as affidavits, interrogatories, or deposition
    testimony. See K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 60-256(e)(2); Lambert v. Peterson, 
    309 Kan. 594
    , 598-
    99, 
    439 P.3d 317
     (2019); MetLife Home Loans v. Hansen, 
    48 Kan. App. 2d 213
    , 218, 
    286 P.3d 1150
     (2012) ("[A] party opposing summary judgment may not rely merely
    on allegations or denials in its own pleadings.").
    Given those principles governing the determination of summary judgment motions
    and the record evidence, the district court correctly held that Approved Paving did not
    have a statutory lien that could be enforced against the owners of the parking lot.
    Unjust Enrichment
    Unjust enrichment—sometimes termed quantum meruit or quasi-contract—is an
    especially flexible equitable doctrine that permits a party to recover the value of a benefit
    conferred on a second party when the second party retains the benefit under
    circumstances that either commonly would call for payment or would otherwise make
    retention of the benefit without compensation patently unfair. Haz-Mat Response, Inc. v.
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    Certified Waste Services Ltd., 
    259 Kan. 166
    , Syl. ¶ 6, 
    910 P.2d 839
     (1996) ("The basic
    elements of a claim based on a theory of unjust enrichment are: [1] a benefit conferred
    upon the defendant by the plaintiff; [2] an appreciation or knowledge of the benefit by the
    defendant; and [3] the acceptance or retention by the defendant of the benefit under such
    circumstances as to make it inequitable for the defendant to retain the benefit without
    payment of its value."); City of Neodesha v. BP Corporation, 
    50 Kan. App. 2d 731
    , 780,
    
    334 P.3d 830
     (2014) (necessary conditions for unjust enrichment include inequity of
    retaining benefit "without payment of its value"). Its application tends to be particularly
    fact-driven, although the doctrine seems to presume some contact between the party
    conferring the benefit and the recipient.
    In Haz-Mat Response, the court specifically considered unjust enrichment in the
    context of a subcontractor seeking compensation from a property owner and held the
    doctrine typically would not be appropriate. 
    259 Kan. at 177-78
    . The property owner
    commonly would expect a subcontractor to be paid by the general contractor, cutting
    against any equitable relief. The court recognized what it characterized as an "indeed
    limited" exception to that usual bar if the owner "misled the subcontractor to [its]
    detriment," induced a detrimental change in the subcontractor's position, or acted
    "fraud[ulently] . . . against the subcontractor." 
    259 Kan. at 178
    . The rule in Haz-Mat
    Response remains the controlling law on unjust enrichment claims a subcontractor brings
    against a property owner. See Decker Electric, Inc. v. Pratt Regional Medical Center
    Corporation, No. 119,542, 
    2019 WL 6973645
    , at *6 (Kan. App. 2019) (unpublished
    opinion) (relying on Haz-Mat Response to affirm summary judgment for property owner
    on subcontractor's unjust enrichment claim), rev. denied 
    312 Kan. 891
     (2020).
    The summary judgment record here fails to establish the parking lot owners
    directed the sort of misleading or deceptive conduct described in Haz-Mat Response
    toward Approved Paving. To the contrary, the owners had no communication or
    interaction with Approved Paving at all. Moreover, the owners did pay for the resurfacing
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    work, but the money never made its way to Approved Paving. Here, through a strange
    and largely unexplained circumstance, the payment went elsewhere. That the owners
    reasonably paid under their agreement with Omni Property Services weighs against
    imposing an equitable remedy against them that would, in effect, require them to pay
    twice. See Haz-Mat Response, 
    259 Kan. at 179
     ("of critical importance" to invoking
    unjust enrichment that defendant "'retain the benefit without payment of its value'")
    (quoting J.W. Thompson Co. v. Welles Products Corp., 
    243 Kan. 503
    , 512, 
    758 P.3d 738
    [1988]). Similarly, Approved Paving presumably could have sued Arcadia Realty for
    breach of their agreement regarding the resurfacing project. For those reasons, the district
    court correctly held Approved Paving could not prevail against the parking lot owners on
    an equitable unjust enrichment claim.
    Approved Paving has been taken advantage of. But the district court correctly
    determined on the record evidence that as a matter of law the company had neither a valid
    lien nor a viable claim for unjust enrichment against the parking lot owners.
    Affirmed.
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