|
|
Vol. 73, No. 4, April 2000 |
Letters
The Wisconsin Lawyer publishes as many letters in each
issue as space permits. Please limit letters to 500 words; letters
may be edited for length and clarity. Letters should address
the issues, and not be a personal attack on others. Letters endorsing
political candidates cannot be accepted.
Please mail letters
to "Letters to the Editor," Wisconsin Lawyer,
P.O. Box 7158, Madison, WI 53707-7158, fax them to (608) 257-5502,
or email them.
Wisconsin Administrative Code governs home improvement trade
practices
The February Wisconsin Lawyer contains an excellent
article by Mark Hinkston titled "Written
Contract Alternatives." I have a significant concern
about an example used to illustrate the various remedies that
are the subject of the article.
The example involved a homeowner and landscaping contractor
who orally agreed that the contractor would perform extensive
lawn care and landscaping services while the homeowner was gone
on a lengthy overseas trip. According to the article, the contractor
performed the services when the homeowner was gone but the homeowner
refused to pay for the services when he returned.
Before discussing the possibility that the contractor would
have a claim for breach of oral contract, quantum meruit,
unjust enrichment, or promissory estoppel, the author observed
the contractor "imprudently" failed to get a retainer
before undertaking the job. While I agree that a retainer would
have ensured payment, it opens a can of worms that the contractor
probably would not have considered and the author failed to point
out.
The Wisconsin Administrative Code contains rules governing
home improvement trade practices.1 The Code
contains a definition of "home improvement" that probably
includes the landscaping work described in the article.2
Prominent among numerous other requirements is a Code provision
that contracts "requiring any payment of money ... prior
to the completion of the seller's obligation under the contract"
be in writing and signed.3
The contractor's failure to conform his business practices
to what the Code requires can result in drastic consequences
that could be far more severe than the prospect of not getting
paid for the services. The Legislature felt it was so important
for contractors to do what the Code requires that Wisconsin law
provides that even unintentional violation of any Code provision
is a crime.4 Thus taking a retainer without
a signed, written contract in this situation could expose the
contractor to the risk of a criminal record and the possibility
of a fine or jail sentence.
In addition, a contract that omits elements required by the
Code is void and cannot be the basis for contractual recovery.5 This would prevent an attempt to assert an
oral contract, which was the first option explored in the article.
While violations of the Code will not usually prevent a contractor
from recovering under the equitable remedies described in the
article, it certainly could deprive the contractor of the profit
portion of the bill.6 There also is a real
possibility that where the contractor is attempting to be paid
for disputed extra charges, recovery (even in quantum meruit)
may be limited to the amount originally agreed upon.7
While the most obvious potential Code violation suggested
in the article was the possibility that a contractor might take
a retainer without getting a written agreement signed, it is
not the only concern. Once a contract is obligated to be in writing,
the Code requires that the writing contain numerous provisions,
including but not limited to, a description of the work to be
done, a beginning and completion date, total price (or method
of computing the same), and so on.8 Moreover,
the Code requires home improvement contractors subject to the
Code to avoid a list of "prohibited trade practices"
whether or not the contract is required to be in writing.9
Finally, if a homeowner suffers pecuniary loss due to a contractor's
violation of the Code, a lawsuit on the homeowner's behalf
can recover twice that pecuniary loss and, in addition, reasonable
attorney fees.10
The Administrative Code rules governing home improvement trade
practices pose very severe consequences to contractors who are,
by and large, ignorant of the fact that it applies to them, or
what it requires of them. It is prudent for attorneys who have
clients in home improvement businesses to be aware of the Code
and it's requirements. Advance warning about the Code requirements
could save a contractor client considerable expense, risk, and
embarrassment.
1 Wis. Admin. Code - ATCP
110, titled "Home Improvement Trade Practices."
2 "Home improvement" ... includes
but is not limited to ... landscaping ... and other changes,
repairs or improvements in or on ... residential or non-commercial
property ..." ATCP
§ 110.01(2).
3 ATCP §
110.05(1)(a) and (2).
4 See Wis. Stat. §
100.26(3), and State v. Stepniewski, 105 Wis. 2d 261
(1982).
5 See Perma-Stone Corp. v. Merkel, 255 Wis.
255 (1949), and Huff & Morse Inc. v. Riordon, 118
Wis. 2d 1 (Ct. App. 1984).
6 W.H. Fuller Co.
v. Seater, 226 Wis. 2d 381 (Ct. App. 1999).
7 See Huff & Morse Inc. v. Riordon, 118 Wis. 2d
1 (Ct. App. 1984).
8 ATCP
§ 110.05(2).
9 ATCP
§ 110.02.
10 Wis. Stat. §
100.20(5).
James L. Kroner Jr.
La Crosse
I appreciate Mr. Kroner's footnote to my article,
apparently triggered by the word "imprudently" in the
initial scenario.
Assuming arguendo that the services performed in my example
fit within the Home Improvement Trade Practices Code's broad
definition of "home improvement," I did not intend
to condone criminal indifference to the Code or any other applicable
law. The scenario was intended to illustrate that while written
contracts are certainly encouraged, orally contracting parties
may nevertheless have a remedy.
Implicit in this is the recognition that contractors, whether
in home improvement or other trades, should comply with the universe
of laws that apply to them. Even if, under Mr. Kroner's
analysis, it turns out that the contractor's failure to
get prepayment in an oral contract setting was in hindsight actually
"prudent," his failure to execute a written contract
would not preclude him from suing for breach since he neither
"solicited" the homeowner to have the work done nor
asked for payment prior to commencing work (the two categories
under the Code where a written contract is required).
Mark Hinkston
What Has Been the Most Important, Most Satisfying Use of
Your Legal Training?
Think about all the important things you've been able
to do with your legal training. What was your most personally
satisfying and rewarding experience?
It may be that you averted a client's financial disaster.
Maybe you helped to keep a business in a family or an estate
solvent for minor children. Perhaps you caught a technical mistake
in a law which led to its correction, or you fought for a change
in voting requirements and election laws. Maybe you opened the
door to justice for someone else, maybe the way you explained
the "system" made it understandable, or you helped
to keep a matter civil, not criminal. Maybe you saved a life.
The Wisconsin Lawyer is considering an article on experiences
lawyers find the most personally rewarding. Please send your
experiences to Joyce Hastings, editor, at the State Bar by email or by letter to
the State Bar of Wisconsin, P.O. Box 7158, Madison, WI 53707-7158.
|