Judge Orders Iowa Contractor to Repay Customers

A Polk County, Iowa, judge ordered a West Des Moines contracting company to reimburse dozens of customers more than $160,000, barred the company and its owners from future residential contracting business, and restricted their commercial contracting business, after Attorney General Tom Miller alleged that the defendants violated Iowa consumer fraud and door-to-door sales laws.

Polk County District Court Judge Brad McCall last week issued the court order, called a consent judgment, against IQ Renovation, LLC, and owners Megan Troyer Marlow (formerly Megan Troyer) and Timothy Marlow. Marlow also operated under the company name of “Energy Savers,” and has previously listed company addresses in West Des Moines and Clive.

Miller sought the court order after dozens of Iowa consumers filed consumer protection complaints against IQ Renovation, Marlow and Troyer. After investigating the complaints, Miller filed a lawsuit against the defendants on June 2, 2011. In the consent judgment, which resolves the lawsuit, the Consumer Protection Division alleged that the defendants:

In 2004, Marlow signed an Assurance of Voluntary Compliance (AVC) as the owner and operator of “Epic Homes, LLC,” which was not registered with the state, as required, as a construction contractor. In that case, more than three dozen consumers filed complaints with the Consumer Protection Division. Consumers alleged that Marlow entered into contracts with consumers and accepted funds, but provided partial work or no work to the consumers. In that AVC, Marlow agreed not to request and accept advance payments for materials, labor or other expenses before the contract was completed, agreed to deliver materials within five days purchased with consumers’ payments, and agreed to comply with Iowa’s Door-to-Door Sales Act. Miller alleged that Marlow violated this agreement.

In 2007, Marlow was a managing agent, but not an owner, of Central Iowa Construction (C.I.C.), LLC, when the Consumer Protection Division received complaints from consumers who alleged the company accepted consumer payments to provide home repair or contractor services but failed to provide all, or in some cases, any, services under the contracts. Miller later obtained a $114,616 judgment against the company for consumer reimbursement, in addition to a court injunction controlling the company’s future business conduct.

Source: Iowa Attorney General