¶ 2. In the summer of 2007, contractor and homeowners agreed that contractor would perform services relating to the heating and hot water systems of home owners’ residential vacation property. Contractоr wrote np a proposal for homeowners’ review. Homeowners signed off on the proposal, and work began in August 2007. The total cost of the job as proposed was about $28,000. After a final walk-through of the property in late fall 2007, contractor billed homeowners for a final balance of $7,113.40. Homeowners did not pay this balance because it was for work they claimed was not performed correctly and completely in accordance with their agreement.
¶ 3. Between November 2007 and February 2008, homeowners experienced a number of problems with the home that they attributed to contractor’s work, such as pipes freezing and furnaces shutting down and leaking. Homeowners were concerned about whether contractor had installed the boiler vents with sufficient clearance distance from the ground. They were also displeased with the aesthetics of contractor’s work, especially the placement of wires and pipes on the exterior of walls.
¶ 4. Contractor brought an initial action for breach of contract and violation of the Prompt Payment Act, 9 V.S.A. §§ 4001-4009, seeking the balance due plus the cost of collection. Homeowners counterclaimed for breach of contract, negligence, intentiоnal misrepresentation, negligent misrepresentation, fraudulent misrepresentation, and consumer fraud. They sought actual and punitive damages, as well as litigation costs.
¶ 5. At trial, contractor introduced evidence of the contract, the work cоmpleted, and homeowners’ failure to pay the final invoice. Homeowners did not challenge the existence of the contract or the amount of the unpaid invoice. Instead, they disputed the quality of contractor’s work. They described the multiрle problems that had required additional corrective work but did not offer expert testimony regarding the quality of the work or the problems’ potential causes. Contractor also admitted on the record that the placement of certain vents could be a health hazard and that certain wires and pipes were attached to the walls’ exterior, rather than placed within walls.
¶ 6. The trial court read its decision into the record. It ultimately decided that contractor could not recоver from homeowners and homeowners could not recover from contractor, and each party would bear its own costs and fees. The court found that homeowners were not liable to contractor for anything beyond what they had alreаdy paid because the work “was not well done,” there were many problems with the work, and the problems were not resolved until another plumber came to fix them. The court thus found homeowners
¶ 7. On appeal, contractor argues that the trial court committed reversible error by: (1) improperly placing the burden of proof on cоntractor with respect to homeowners’ defenses and counterclaims and making insufficient findings to support this aspect of its decision; and (2) applying the wrong legal standard with respect to a determination of the “substantially prevailing party” under the Prоmpt Payment Act. Homeowners argue on appeal that the trial court erred in finding that they were not qualified to submit evidence and testify as to damages in connection with the corrective work done.
¶ 8. Contractor first argues that the trial court imprоperly allocated the burden of proof on homeowners’ defenses to contractor. Contractor contends that he made out a prima facie case with respect to his claims of breach of contract and Prompt Payment Act violation, but the trial court essentially required him to prove that his work was not substandard. Relatedly, contractor argues that the trial court made insufficient findings to support a judgment in favor of homeowners on contractor’s claims. We disagree.
V 9. It is true that contractor made out a prima facie case under the Prompt Payment Act, but homeowners responded by disputing the quality of contractor’s work. See 9 V.S.A. § 4007(a) (“Nothing in this chapter shall prevent an owner . . . from withholding payment in whole or in part under a construction contract in an amount equalling the value of any good faith claims against an invoicing contractor ... , including claims arising from unsatisfactory job progress, defective construction, [or] disputed work . . . .”); see also
Electric Man, Inc. v. Charos,
¶ 10. Contractor argues, however, that the triаl court made insufficient
¶ 11. Contractor nonetheless faults the trial court for failing to make more specific findings, given that thе parties submitted proposed findings. Contractor relies on our aside in
Naylor
that “greater specificity in a trial court’s order may be required where the parties submit proposed findings of itemized facts.”
V 12. Contractor argues that the trial court’s judgment in favor of homeowners on contractor’s claims “cannot be squared” with the trial court’s express finding that homeowners failed to prove eаch and all of their claims. Contractor misconstrues the trial court’s findings. The trial court dismissed homeowners’ counterclaims only because they failed to produce the experts who did the work, and the trial court deemed their own testimony insufficient evidence as to the exact corrective work done and reasonableness of the amounts paid. This is not inconsistent with its findings that contractor performed substandard work or that, in withholding the unpaid balance, homeowners withheld the value of their good faith claims against contractor.
¶ 13. Next, contractor contends that the trial court misapplied the standard for determining substantially prevailing party status under the Prompt
V14. Homeowners argue that the trial court erred in finding thаt they were not qualified to submit evidence and testify as to damages in connection with the corrective work done. The trial court committed no error in this regard. The trial court was within its discretion to conclude that homeowners did not have the requisite knowledge, skill, experience, training or education needed to qualify as experts to testify about the problems requiring correction and whether the amounts paid were fair and reasonable for the corrections made. See V.R.E. 702;
State v.
Griswold,
Affirmed.
