Moore v. Chodorow

Citation925 So.2d 457
Decision Date12 April 2006
Docket NumberNo. 4D05-939.,4D05-939.
PartiesTalmadge MOORE d/b/a High Standard Services, Appellant, v. Jeffrey CHODOROW, Linda Chodorow, Richard Latimer, individually, and Latimer Construction Corporation, Appellees.
CourtCourt of Appeal of Florida (US)

Stephen M. Cohen, P.A., and Richard S. Tolbert, West Palm Beach, for appellant.

Lee D. Mackson and Geoffrey L. Travis of Shutts & Bowen LLP, Miami, for appellees.

POLEN, J.

This appeal arises from an Amended Final Judgment, following a three-day bench trial, finding against appellant Talmadge Moore d/b/a High Standard Services (hereinafter "Moore") and in favor of appellees Jeffrey and Linda Chodorow (hereinafter "the Chodorows"), Richard Latimer and Latimer Construction Corporation. We affirm, holding that the trial court did not err in interpreting the contract between the parties and in finding that Moore breached the contract.

Moore sued appellees for breach of contract and unjust enrichment. The Chodorows filed an answer, affirmative defenses, and a counterclaim for fraud and rescission. The Latimer defendants also filed an answer and affirmative defenses. The following evidence was adduced at trial.

The Chodorows own an approximately 8,700 square foot, two floor condominium unit in Aventura, Florida. In July of 2002, the Chodorows discovered a water leak in their condo. They called a contractor, Richard Latimer of Latimer Construction Corp.,1 to fix the leak. When Latimer cut a hole in the ceiling to investigate the source of the leak, he discovered mold under the drywall. Over time, mold was discovered in other areas as well.

As Latimer did not have any professional experience in dealing with mold, they hired Moore to guide them in the issues relating to mold in the Chodorows' home. Latimer told Moore that he did not have any professional experience in dealing with mold. Moore held himself out to be an expert in mold remediation and in the field of dealing with mold problems.2 Moore testified that he was aware that the Chodorows were relying on him to test for mold and to recommend solutions to their mold problem.

Moore visited the Chodorows' home on July 9, 2002, and took some air samples around the home and the outdoor environment, which he sent out to a lab for analysis. Moore also took initial humidity readings showing over 60 percent humidity, which would sustain mold growth. Moore told them that they had a serious mold problem in the house and that if it was his family, he would move out immediately, which they did. Moore also recommended that the Chodorows rent air scrubbers and dehumidifiers from him.

On July 11, 2002, Moore faxed a contract to Latimer for the rental of two air scrubbers and two dehumidifiers at a total cost of $420 a day. The contract, which was prepared by Moore specifically for the Chodorows, states "[t]hese machines are needed to control further damage caused by airborne mold." Moore also orally told both Mr. Chodorow and Latimer that the machines were needed to control an existing airborne mold problem in the Chodorows' condo. Also on July 11, 2002, Moore faxed Latimer a hand-written letter stating that the equipment would be monitored one or two times a day by a Moore employee. Moore also charged the Chodorows a daily charge to change the filters. The Chodorows paid Moore for the first ten days that the equipment was at the condominium.

According to both Moore and the expert witnesses at trial, there is always some level of mold naturally present in the air, but the amount of airborne mold is not problematic inside a home unless the level is higher inside the home than in the outside air. The only way to determine whether there are mold spores in the air is to test the air, as mold spores are too small to be seen by the human eye.

On or about July 16, 2002, Moore received the lab results of the air samples that he took at the Chodorows' home on July 9, 2002. The lab results established that there were approximately 2.5 times more mold spores in the outdoor air than inside the Chodorows' home on July 9, 2002, the day that he had told the Chodorows that they had an airborne mold problem.

Moore did not tell the Chodorows that the lab test results showed that there was less overall airborne mold inside their home than in the outside air. Instead, Moore reinforced his false representation that the Chodorows had unacceptably high levels of airborne toxic molds in their home in his October 10, 2002 report, discussing "the cause of the amplified levels of airborne toxic molds." Moore left the equipment in the Chodorows' home for 300 days, at a charge of $420 per day.

Moore admitted at trial that he did not perform a single test during the 300 days that the equipment was in the Chodorow's home that showed that the level of mold spores inside the home was greater than the level in the outside air. He did not perform a single test that showed that the air scrubbers had any effect on the air quality in the Chodorows' home, or that the contents of the Chodorows' home would have been damaged absent either the air scrubbers or the dehumidifiers. During the entire period that the equipment was in the Chodorows' home, Moore did not perform a single test of the air in the Chodorows' home in comparison to the outside air.

The Chodorows began to doubt Moore's expertise by October of 2002 and initiated attempts to hire a new remediator. Dr. Ronald Huggins of URS Corporation inspected the Chodorows' home in March or April of 2003.3

When Dr. Huggins inspected the Chodorows' home in March or April of 2003, Moore's equipment was still set up in the home. Upon Huggins' first visit to the home, he inquired as to what the equipment was for, as he saw no need for it. On Huggins' second visit to the Chodorows' home in May of 2003, Huggins stated that the equipment should be removed because it was not serving any useful purpose. As a result, the Chodorows told Moore to remove the equipment, which he did on May 7, 2003.

In June of 2003, approximately six weeks after the equipment was removed, Dr. Huggins tested the air inside the Chodorows' home and compared it to the outside air. Those test results established that the air in the Chodorows' home had a lower mold spore count than in the outdoor air, meaning the home did not have an airborne mold problem in June of 2003.

Dr. Huggins also reviewed Moore's July 16, 2002, test results and concluded that the home did not have an airborne mold problem at that time either. Huggins testified that Moore did not perform any tests showing that the equipment was necessary to control airborne mold damage or to protect the Chodorows' furnishings. Huggins testified that the numbers from Moore's July 9, 2002, test results were "really, really low," establishing that the Chodorows did not have an airborne mold problem in their home.

Dr. Huggins also testified that Moore's representation in the contract that the machines were "needed to control further damage caused by airborne mold" and...

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    ...occurred. § 95.031(1), Fla. Stat. (2014). The occurrence of a breach, or breaches, is a question of fact. See Moore v. Chodorow, 925 So.2d 457, 461 (Fla. 4th DCA 2006) (citing Haiman v. Fed. Ins. Co., 798 So.2d 811, 812 (Fla. 4th DCA 2001) ). Here, the application of the statute of limitati......
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    ...contract occurred. § 95.031(1), Fla. Stat. (2014). The occurrence of a breach, or breaches, is a question of fact. See Moore v. Chodorow, 925 So. 2d 457, 461 (Fla. 4th DCA 2006) (citing Haiman v. Fed. Ins. Co., 798 So. 2d 811, 812 (Fla. 4th DCA 2001)). Here, the application of the statute o......
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