v.
Mahmoud Shahrezaei
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE F.P.H. CONSTRUCTION, INC., No. 76024-6- a Washington corporation,
Respondent, v. MAHMOUD SHAHREZAEI and ESHMAIL SHAHREZAEI, husband and wife; and C&SH ENTERPRISES, LLC, a Washington limited liability company, UNPUBLISHED OPINION Appellant. FILED: January 17, 2017 Verellen, C.J. — Eshmail Shahrezaei appeals from the judgment entered against him in favor of F.P.H. Construction, Inc. He contends the trial court abused its discretion when it allowed F.P.H. to amend its complaint before trial de novo to correct mistakes in its initial complaint and to plead a quantum meruit theory. It was within the discretion of the trial court to conclude F.P.H.'s delay was not inexcusable. And because the initial complaint identified Eshmail as a defendant and referred to unjust enrichment, there was no unfair surprise. Eshmail does not establish any genuine issue of material fact precluding summary judgment on quantum meruit. We affirm the trial court's order. No. 76024-6-1/2 FACTS F.P.H. alleges it had an agreement with Mahmoud Shahrezaei and Eshmail Shahrezaei1 to perform work at a nightclub and bar located in Silverdale, Washington known as the Old Town Bistro. The work consisted of three phases. The first phase for work, between June 2006 and April 2009, was paid in full. The final two phases were undertaken in late 2009 through March 2010. These final two phases were memorialized in two written contracts. The first contract for a fire suppression system had a fixed price of $82,921.00. The second contract for a grease trap and associated work had a fixed price of $19,320.00. F.P.H. billed approximately $120,000.00 for this work and approximately $50,000.00 remains unpaid. In November 2012, F.P.H. sued C&SH Enterprises LLC, Mahmoud and Eshmail, but the complaint alleged Mahmoud and Eshmail were "husband and wife."2 The complaint sought a judgment against them individually "and their marital community" in the amount of $38,652.24.3 In Eshmail's answer, he alleged he "is not spouse of Mahmoud Shahrezaei" and "is not and never been officer of corporation or managing partner."4 The matter proceeded to mandatory arbitration on July 29, 2013.5 The No. 76024-6-1/9
[*8]name the action is called."34 "Furthermore, initial pleadings which may be unclear may be clarified during the course of summary judgment proceedings."35
Quantum meruit is a remedy to recover "a reasonable amount for work done."36 Itfalls within the broader category of "unjust enrichment."37 Though it is not a legal obligation like contract or quasi-contract, the remedy of quantum meruit applies in a variety of situations.[38] The elements of an implied in fact contract are: (i) the defendant requests work, (ii) the plaintiff expects payment for the work, and (iii) the defendant knows or should know the plaintiff expects payment for the work.[39] Eshmail argues the only claim in F.P.H.'s amended complaint was for monies owed "on two written contracts" and F.P.H. "did not ask for relief of the reasonable value of the work done, which is the cornerstone of the theory of quantum meruit."40
When read liberally under our notice pleading standard, the amended complaint adequately alleges that Eshmail requested work, F.P.H. expected to be paid for the No. 76024-6-1/11
[*10]statement that he did not benefit from any of the work was not offered with any context or explanation. Because it is conclusory and lacks factual support, we do not consider it on de novo review. Eshmail's declaration consisted of four short sentences and did not dispute that he was a co-owner of the business, did not disclose the existence of a limited liability company, and did not deny that the Old Town Bistro benefited from the fire suppression system and grease trap installed by F.P.H.. Eshmail failed to establish any genuine issue of material fact.
We affirm the trial court's order.
WE CONCUR: £n> •^-vj £-
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