The Weitz Co. v. MacKenzie House, et al., No. 10-3713 (8th Cir. 2011)
Annotate this CaseThe Weitz Company sued MacKenzie House and MH Metropolitan for breach of construction contract. Arrowhead and Concorde were third-party defendants. MH Metropolitan counterclaimed for breach of the same contract, seeking liquidated damages and the cost to complete the project. Arrowhead also counterclaimed. The jury returned a verdict for MH Metropolitan, Arrowhead, and Concorde on Weitz's claim. The district court denied post-judgment motions and Weitz appealed. The court held that there was a legally sufficient evidentiary basis for the jury's verdict; the district court properly exercised its discretion in excluding the evidence of other projects; the district court correctly decided that the issue of liquidated damages and completion costs were issues of fact that were properly submitted to the jury; there was a legally sufficient evidentiary basis for the district court to deny judgment as a matter of law for Weitz's breach-of-contract claims against Arrowhead; the district court did no err in refusing to enter a default judgment against Concorde when it failed to appear at trial, or in the alternative, refusing to grant Weitz judgment as a matter of law on its claims against Concorde; and because the district court properly found against Weitz on all issues, there was no reason to consider the issue of vicarious liability.
Court Description: Civil cases - Contracts. There was a legally sufficient basis for the jury's finding that plaintiff breached the contract in question; evidentiary challenges rejected; if the Missouri Supreme Court were to address the issue today, it would allow liquidated damages for a reasonable time after abandonment by the contractor or termination by the owner, and the district court's award of liquidated damages is affirmed; evidence was legally sufficient for the jury to find for defendant Arrowhead on plaintiff's breach-of-contract claim; district court did not err in denying plaintiff's motions for a default judgment or judgment as a matter of law against defendant Concorde.
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