Carrothers Const Co v. Dallas Tx City of ( 1996 )


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  •                       UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    _______________________
    No. 95-10723
    _______________________
    CARROTHERS CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    versus
    DALLAS TX CITY OF; NAT’L PROJECTS, INC.,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Texas
    (3:90-CV-70-BD)
    _________________________________________________________________
    October 11, 1996
    Before KING, JONES, and SMITH, Circuit Judges.
    EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:*
    This case concerns claims by Carrothers Construction
    Company ("Carrothers") against the City of Dallas ("the City") and
    National Projects, Inc. ("NPI") for the breach of two construction
    contracts.    After a three week trial, the jury found that NPI and
    the   City   had    breached    both    contracts   and     awarded    Carrothers
    $1,914,030     in    damages.      The     trial    court    entered    judgment
    *
    Pursuant to Local Rule 47.5, the court has determined that this
    opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited
    circumstances set forth in Local Rule 47.5.4.
    accordingly and assessed an additional $1,517,402 in pre-judgment
    interest against NPI and the City.               The court also awarded against
    NPI only attorney's fees of $629,120 for the trial and up to
    $70,000 for the appeal.           NPI and the City now appeal.             We affirm
    the trial court's judgment.
    I.    BACKGROUND
    In    1984,    the     U.S.    Environmental      Protection        Agency
    determined that the City was not in compliance with federal clean
    water standards.          To comply with the EPA's mandate, the City
    entered    into    a   $104      million       contract   with    Blount      Brothers
    Construction Company to enlarge its Southside Wastewater Treatment
    Plant.    This enlargement consisted of the construction of nine new
    buildings which would be connected by an underground piping system.
    One    year     after       hiring     Blount,       the   City    became
    dissatisfied with its performance and terminated the contract.                      In
    its place, the City hired NPI to manage the completion of the
    construction begun by Blount.             NPI devised a plan whereby the City
    would re-bid the project, utilizing, 14 prime contracts to finish
    the enlargement. NPI would coordinate the bids and advise the City
    on awarding the contracts.             NPI and the City also agreed that the
    City would assign its contracts with the prime contractors to NPI,
    NPI would manage the project, and the City would pay the prime
    contractors.
    2
    Carrothers bid on several of the prime contracts.                        In
    July 1987, the City awarded Carrothers Contract 87-712, in the
    amount of $880,000, for the construction of the flow splitter and
    grit buildings, and Contract 87-730, in the amount of $1,525,000,
    for the construction of the filter building.                        Carrothers was
    responsible      for   completing       the   concrete     and   resteel      of    the
    buildings;    other    contractors       would    complete    their     mechanical,
    electrical, and piping systems.
    Carrothers entered into contracts with the City for both
    projects, and the City assigned the contracts to NPI.                   Because of
    the EPA's     order,    the    contracts      recognized     that    "time    was    of
    essence" in completing the wastewater treatment plant enlargement.
    Contract 712 required Carrothers to start work on the flow splitter
    and grit buildings by July 27, 1987 and to complete performance by
    January 15, 1988.       Contract 730 required Carrothers to start work
    on July 20, 1987 and to complete work by April 3, 1988.
    In    turn,      the   contracts      provided       that   NPI    would
    "coordinate the work at the project site"; "manage the construction
    of the project and the performance of the construction work"; be
    responsible      for   the    project    Master    Schedule,        coordinate      the
    construction, and administer the contract; "furnish as indicated in
    the contract documents and not later than the date when needed by
    the contractor, the lands upon which the work is to be done";
    promptly investigate any complaint that a contractor was failing to
    3
    coordinate its work with other contractors; and inspect all work
    performed.
    To    carry      out   these   responsibilities,     the    contracts
    provided that NPI had the right "to request any contractor or
    subcontractor cease work at a particular location" and move to
    another location; to suspend temporarily the work of one contractor
    to coordinate or expedite the work of other contractors; and to
    withhold payments to a contractor for unsatisfactory progress.
    Carrothers's work necessarily intermingled with the work of other
    contractors.
    Immediately after the contracts were executed, problems
    erupted.        Carrothers contends that NPI and the City failed to
    disclose information necessary for its work; failed to respond
    timely     to    Carrothers's       requests   for    information;      concealed
    deficiencies      at   the    construction     site   and   in   work   by   other
    contractors, causing Carrothers’s work to be delayed; insisted
    Carrothers begin work when it knew that the site was not ready; and
    generally failed to manage the project properly.                   In the end,
    Contract 712, which was originally scheduled to take 172 days, took
    an additional 274 days to be completed, for a total of 446 days.
    Contract 730, which was scheduled to take 258 days, took an
    additional 243 days to be completed, for a total of 501 days.
    Although NPI and Carrothers resolved a few of their disputes with
    change orders, which gave Carrothers additional time to complete
    4
    its work and absolved NPI pro tanto of any monetary damages,
    Carrothers and NPI and the City remained at odds over many aspects
    of the contract work.
    Carrothers filed the instant diversity action against NPI
    and the City for breach of the two contracts and sought to recover
    the extra costs it incurred because of the delay in completing its
    work. The jury found that NPI and the City had actively interfered
    with Carrothers's performance of its contracts and that Carrothers
    had   suffered   substantial   damages    as    above   noted.    From   the
    judgment, including attorneys’ fees and prejudgment interest, the
    City and NPI timely appealed.
    II.   DISCUSSION
    NPI and the City raise seven challenges to the trial
    court's judgment. They contend that (a) the "no damages for delay"
    provisions in the contracts preclude Carrothers from recovering
    monetary damages against them; (b) Carrothers failed to segregate
    the costs due to its own delay from the costs due to external
    delays in calculating damages; (c) the contracts provided that
    Carrothers waived pre-judgment interest and attorneys' fees; (d)
    the trial court erred in instructing the jury on calculating
    damages; (e) the damage calculations erroneously included costs by
    Carrothers's corporate parent, Pemco, Inc.; (f) the trial court
    erred   in   determining   that   NPI   was    liable   for   damages   as   a
    5
    contractual assignee; and (g) the damage awards were grossly
    excessive.    Each of these will be discussed in turn.1
    A.    No Damages for Delay Clause
    NPI and the City first contend that Contracts 712 and 730
    precluded Carrothers from obtaining monetary damages against them.
    The contracts contain "no damages for delay" provisions, which
    state:
    ... and no adjustment shall be made to the
    contract price and the contractor shall not be
    entitled to claim or receive any additional
    compensation as a result of or arising out of
    any delay resulting in adjustment to the
    working time hereunder, including delays
    caused by the act or negligence of the owner.
    * * *
    If the work of a contractor is delayed because
    of any act or omission of any other
    contractor, contractor shall have no claim
    against owner or construction manager on that
    account other than an extension of time.
    * * *
    Contractor shall accept the risk of any delay
    in delivery of equipment or materials procured
    by owner, and if the work is delayed, he shall
    have no claim for damages or contract
    adjustment other than an extension of time and
    the waiving of liquidated damages caused by
    the delay.
    1
    This court applies its customary standards of review. "A motion for
    judgment as a matter of law in an action tried by a jury is a challenge to the
    legal sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury's verdict." Texas Farm
    Bureau v. U.S., 
    53 F.3d 120
    , 123 (5th Cir. 1995). We review the district court's
    ruling on a motion for judgment as a matter of law de novo. Conkling v. Turner,
    
    18 F.3d 1285
    , 1300 (5th Cir. 1994). Such a motion should be granted only if,
    "after considering all the evidence in the light and with all reasonable
    inferences most favorable to the [non-movant], the facts and inferences point so
    strongly and overwhelmingly in favor of one party that ... reasonable persons
    could not arrive at a contrary verdict." Texas Farm 
    Bureau, 53 F.3d at 123
    (internal citations omitted).
    We review the denial of a motion for a new trial for an abuse of
    discretion. Calcasieu Marine Nat'l Bank v. Grant, 
    943 F.2d 1453
    (5th Cir. 1991).
    6
    While Texas courts generally uphold provisions preventing
    damages for delay, the provisions are not absolute.                     Texas courts
    have held that no damages for delay clauses do not preclude a
    contractor from recovering damages when the delay (a) is not
    contemplated    by   the    parties;   (b)    is    so    long     as    to    justify
    abandonment of the contract; (c) is caused by the owner's fraud or
    bad faith; or (d) is caused by the owner's active interference with
    the contractor's     performance.          City    of    Houston    v.     R.F.   Ball
    Construction Company, Inc., 
    570 S.W.2d 75
    , 77 & n.1 (Tex.Civ.App.
    --Houston[14th Dist.] 1978, writ ref'd n.r.e.).
    The leading Texas decision on the exceptions to no damage
    for delay clauses, Housing Authority of Dallas v. Hubbell, 
    325 S.W.2d 880
      (Tex.Civ.App.     --Dallas     1959,       writ     ref'd      n.r.e.),
    addressed a situation not unlike the instant case.                       The Housing
    Authority had contracted with several principal contractors for the
    construction of a then-$15 million dollar housing project.                      One of
    the contractors sued to recover damages it incurred because of
    delays in its work.        Its contract contained a no damages for delay
    provision.     However, the court upheld damages against the Housing
    Authority because it had engaged in eleven acts and omissions which
    substantially interfered with the contractor's performance.                        The
    court explained that these acts and omissions included:
    (1)   Failure   to    plan   development   and
    construction of the whole project; (2) Failure
    to furnish master progress schedule; (3)
    Failure to coordinate work of various prime
    contractors; (4) Failure to proceed with
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    underground utilities contract until August 1,
    1952; (5) Failure to proceed with the sidewalk
    contract until July 1, 1953; (6) Failure to
    expedite flow of information; (7) Failure to
    decide on type of water heater; (8) Failure to
    deliver water heaters; (9) Arbitrary and
    capricious requirements of Architects; (10)
    Instructions to asphalt tile sub-contractors;
    (11) Refusal to accept the buildings within a
    reasonable time after August 25, 1953.
    
    Id. at 889.
        The court explained that "[t]he 'no damages for
    delays' provision did not give the Owner a license to cause delays
    'willfully,' by 'unreasoning action,' 'without due consideration,'
    and in 'disregard for the rights of other parties,' nor did the
    provision grant Owner immunity from damages if delays were caused
    by Owner under such circumstances."     
    Id. at 890.
    In the instant case, the evidence was sufficient for a
    reasonable jury to find that NPI and the City actively interfered
    with Carrothers's completion of the contracts.             The evidence
    supports   Carrothers's   contentions   that   NPI   and   the   City   (1)
    generally failed to coordinate the work of the contractors; (2)
    failed to disclose the Master Schedule, despite repeated requests
    from Carrothers and other contractors; (3) failed to disclose that
    NPI and the City knew before awarding Carrothers's contracts that
    some form of corrosion protection system (cathodic protection)
    would have to be installed before Carrothers could begin work on
    the filter building, even though NPI and the City knew that this
    system would substantially delay Carrothers's work; (4) issued a
    notice to proceed to Carrothers when they knew the site was not
    8
    ready; (5) failed to disclose that NPI and the City had granted the
    piping contractor a 42-day extension, which substantially delayed
    Carrothers's work, even though NPI and the City had granted the
    extension before awarding the contracts to Carrothers; (6) failed
    to disclose that Carrothers would have to perform remedial work,
    such as installing pier drillers in the filter building, before it
    could begin construction there; (7) failed to arrange for remedial
    work on the 66-inch pipeline connecting the ends of the filter
    building; (8) failed to disclose that defective work had to be
    remedied on the filter building, even though NPI and the City knew
    at the time the contracts were awarded that work had to be done;
    (9) failed to inform Carrothers that NPI and the City had not
    acquired a pump for the filter building; (10) failed to respond
    timely to requests for information on the grit building; and (11)
    failed to supply appropriate pre-cast panels for the grit building.
    Further, there was sufficient evidence to find that these
    actions and omissions by NPI and the City substantially hindered
    Carrothers's performance.    Numerous witnesses testified about how
    each of appellants’ actions and omissions delayed Carrothers's
    work.    Carrothers   also   maintained   extensive   contemporaneous
    documentation of the delays it encountered during construction and
    the costs it incurred because of NPI’s and the City's interference.
    These costs included extra days of labor, extra days’ rent on
    equipment, increased insurance and bonding costs, efficiency losses
    because Carrothers had to re-sequence its work, productivity losses
    9
    because the contract site was crowded, costs incurred because work
    had to be performed in the winter rather than in the summer and
    fall, and losses from lower worker productivity as the project
    dragged on.
    NPI and the City contend, however, that they did not
    actively interfere with Carrothers's work.                  First, they point out
    that Carrothers       requested     the     notice    to    proceed    on    the    flow
    splitter,   and   thus    they      should      not   be    responsible       for    the
    construction   site’s     not      being    ready.         We   do   not    find    this
    contention persuasive.       Carrothers requested the notice based on
    appellants’ representations about the state of the project.                          Had
    Carrothers been fully informed that its work could not begin, it is
    highly unlikely appellee would have requested the notice.                      NPI and
    the City should have informed it that the construction site was not
    ready.
    Second,    NPI   and    the     City   contend      that   they    had    no
    contractual duty to disclose the Master Schedule. That fact is not
    dispositive. NPI and the City had a contractual duty to coordinate
    the contractors' work schedules and to respond to requests for
    information about scheduling difficulties.                 Given those duties and
    the ensuing problems, NPI had a responsibility either to disclose
    the Master Schedule so the contractors could schedule their work
    around each other or to ensure otherwise that their work was
    coordinated.   The evidence supported Carrothers's contentions that
    NPI and the City did neither.
    10
    Third, NPI and the City contend that they had no duty to
    disclose that they had granted the piping contractor a 42-day
    extension, even though the extension had been approved at the time
    the contracts were awarded to Carrothers.           To the contrary, it is
    undisputed that Carrothers could not begin its work until after the
    piping contractor had finished.            That NPI and the City required
    Carrothers to mobilize at the site, knowing that Carrothers could
    not begin work at that point, constituted active interference. See
    U.S. Steel Corp. v. Missouri-Pacific R.R. Co., 
    668 F.2d 435
    , 438-39
    (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 
    459 U.S. 836
    (1982).
    Fourth, NPI and the City contend that they had not made
    a decision about the cathodic protection until after Carrothers had
    been awarded the contracts. The evidence showed, however, that NPI
    and the City knew they would have to install some type of cathodic
    protection    when   they   awarded    the    contracts;    that   they   were
    evaluating different types of cathodic protection when they awarded
    the contracts; that they knew they would install some type of
    cathodic protection when they awarded the contracts; and that they
    knew installing that protection would delay Carrothers's work.
    Fifth, NPI and the City contend that Carrothers was not
    delayed as a result of the remedial work done on the 66-inch
    pipeline, and that Carrothers had itself caused a 45-day delay by
    its installation of the 36-inch pipe.           But numerous witnesses --
    including    appellants’    expert--    testified    that   Carrothers     was
    delayed because of remedial work on the 66-inch pipeline. Further,
    11
    the evidence showed that Carrothers was delayed in installing the
    36-inch pipeline because NPI and the City failed to respond timely
    to Carrothers's requests for information.
    Sixth, NPI and the City contend that they took steps to
    coordinate all the prime contractors, such as holding weekly
    meetings and placing employees at the site. However, those actions
    do not relieve NPI and the City of their duties to disclose
    material information affecting Carrothers's work and to represent
    accurately the state of the project.
    Generally, NPI and the City contend that they did not
    actively interfere with Carrothers's work, but merely failed to
    take various actions, their oversights amounting to negligence
    rather than to the intentional conduct that is not covered by a no
    damages for delay provision.    This distinction ignores the jury
    findings, supported by the evidence and based on unobjected-to
    instructions that they could only hold appellants liable for delay
    caused by (a) active interference; (b) misrepresentations or bad
    faith; or (c) delay of an unreasonable length of time.
    B.   Carrothers's Calculation of Damages
    Next, NPI and the City challenge the jury's finding that
    Carrothers suffered $1,914,030 in damages.         They contend that
    Carrothers failed to segregate the damages it incurred because of
    its own actions from the damages caused by NPI and the City's
    interference.   Specifically,   NPI    and   the   City   contend   that
    12
    Carrothers's calculations erroneously included damages incurred
    because of (a) Carrothers's own 45-day delay in installing the 36-
    inch pipe; (b) 14 days’ charges that had been resolved by a change
    order; (c) delays after the pier drillers had been installed, even
    though no external forces then prevented Carrothers from completing
    the flow splitter; and (d) Carrothers’s inability to fulfill its
    own unrealistic work schedule.
    Our careful review of the evidence before the jury shows
    that it does not compel a finding for appellants.                Numerous
    witnesses testified that Carrothers was not responsible for any of
    the delays.     In addition to Carrothers's personnel and experts,
    Carrothers's superintendent on the site, who at the time of trial
    was employed by NPI's corporate parent Morrison-Knudsen, Inc.,
    testified that none of the delays were caused by Carrothers.
    Similarly, NPI's construction coordinator at the site testified
    that he could not recall any instance in which Carrothers delayed
    its own work.     Indeed, the only person testifying that Carrothers
    caused any delays was appellants’ expert witness, whom the jury was
    not required to believe.
    Further, Carrothers extensively documented its damage
    calculations. Carrothers presented lengthy testimony setting forth
    the target dates for certain items of work, the dates on which the
    work was actually performed, and the interferences that extended
    the   time   required   by   Carrothers   to   complete   the   work,   and
    explaining its damage calculations.            Carrothers separated its
    13
    calculations into two time periods --the time covered by the change
    orders and the time after the change orders-- and into several
    categories --extended equipment rentals, additional labor, extended
    field office overhead, additional materials costs, additional home
    office costs, and additional bond and insurance costs.                 These
    calculations were sufficient to prove Carrothers's damages to a
    reasonable certainty.
    C.     Pre-Judgment Interest and Attorney's Fees
    NPI   and   the   City   next   argue   that   their   contracts
    precluded   Carrothers    from   recovering    pre-judgment    interest   or
    attorney's fees. The contracts contain an addendum providing that:
    Unless otherwise authorized by the Dallas City
    Council, at the request of the City Manager,
    no contractor of the City of Dallas shall be
    entitled to interest on any delayed, disputed,
    or delinquent payment, or attorney's fees in
    any dispute to collect such payment.
    This addendum appears in the contract section concerning
    payment of monthly and final progress payments.            The addendum was
    probably intended to limit a contractor's right to recover against
    the City under TEX. CIV. STAT. ART. 601f (1992) (now repealed), which
    created a right for contractors to recover against a governmental
    entity that failed to pay timely for the contractor's goods or
    services.    The instant case does not involve whether the City
    timely paid for Carrothers's work: the City has paid Carrothers the
    original contract amounts.           Moreover, Carrothers's suit sought
    damages beyond the contract amounts --costs incurred for extra days
    14
    of labor, extra days of equipment rental, and the like.                            The
    addendum does not appear to exclude interest or attorneys’ fees on
    contract damages of these types.
    NPI and the City's cited cases, stating the general
    proposition that parties to a contract may waive or limit damages,
    are factually inapposite.           In Computer-Link Corp. v. Recognition
    Equipment, Inc., 
    670 F. Supp. 455
    (D.Mass. 1987), aff'd without
    published opinion, 
    860 F.2d 1072
    (1st Cir. 1988), the District of
    Massachusetts addressed whether a contractual clause stating that
    "neither party shall be liable for any indirect, special, or
    consequential damages arising out of this agreement," precluded the
    contractor from recovering damages.                  No such clause exists in the
    instant    contracts.           Cantrell        v.   Broadnax,     
    306 S.W.2d 429
    (Tex.Civ.App. --Dallas 1957, no writ) concerned the forfeiture of
    improvements on real estate because of the owner’s default in
    making    payments.       Temple    Eastex,          Inc.   v.   Old   Orchard    Creek
    Partners, Ltd., 
    848 S.W.2d 724
    , 729 (Tex.App. --Dallas 1992, writ
    denied) concerned a waiver for damages covered by insurance.
    D.     Jury Instructions on Damages
    Next, NPI and the City contend that the trial court did
    not clearly instruct the jury that they should only award damages
    which     were   caused    by     appellants’         active     interference      with
    Carrothers's work.        We reject this contention.              Taken as a whole,
    the charge so informed the jury:
    15
    What sum of money, if paid now in cash,
    would    fairly   and   reasonably   compensate
    Carrothers    Construction   Company   for  the
    damages, if any, caused by the defendant's
    breach of Contract 87-712 [and 87-730]?
    Do not include any damages from delays
    unless you find that: (a) the defendants
    actively interfered with Carrothers's work;
    (b)    the     damages    were     caused    by
    misrepresentation or other bad faith; or (c)
    the damages were caused by delay which has
    extended such an unreasonable length of time
    that the party delayed would have been
    justified   in    abandoning   the    contract.
    (emphasis added)
    You are instructed that the term "active
    interference" means that the City of Dallas
    would have to have committed some affirmative,
    willful act, in bad faith, to unreasonably
    interfere with Carrothers's compliance of the
    terms of the construction contract.
    This instruction does not create a substantial doubt as to whether
    the jury was properly instructed.      The instruction states that the
    jury can only calculate damages that resulted from NPI and the
    City's active interference.      Moreover, the evidence, including
    testimony from one of Morrison-Knudsen's employees, suggested that
    all of Carrothers's delays were caused by appellants’ active
    interference, a situation that would render any instructional error
    harmless.
    E.     Pemco's Costs
    NPI and the City contend that the trial court erred in
    allowing Carrothers to include in its damages calculations overhead
    and home office costs incurred by its corporate parent, Pemco, Inc.
    16
    They contend that Carrothers should not be able to collect those
    costs because Pemco was not in privity of contract with NPI and the
    City.   We disagree.   Substantial evidence demonstrated the closely
    related nature of Carrothers as a wholly owned subsidiary of Pemco.
    Carrothers’s damages were Pemco’s damages, and vice versa. Just as
    a contractor under Texas law may recover damages for third parties
    who are acting on its behalf, see, e.g., North Harris Cty. Junior
    College Dist. v. Fleetwood Const. Co., 
    604 S.W.2d 2467
    , 255 (Tex.
    Civ. App. -- Houston [14th Dist.] 1980, writ ref. n.r.e.), so it
    would follow that Carrothers’s damages should include the very
    important expenses of contract performance borne by Pemco.
    F.     NPI's Liability as an Assignee
    NPI and the City contend that the district court erred in
    entering judgment against NPI.            They contend that, because NPI
    acted as an agent on behalf of a known principal, it cannot be held
    liable.     Appellants     waived   any    objections   to   NPI’s   separate
    liability   by   failing    to   object    to   the   court's   instructions
    accompanying Jury Questions 1 and 3, which state that "[f]or the
    purposes of this case, NPI and the City of Dallas are both bound by
    the provisions of the contract and the implied duties arising
    thereunder."
    G.     The Damage Awards
    17
    NPI and the City contend that the damage awards were
    grossly    excessive   and   that   $434,000     is    the   maximum   amount
    Carrothers should be awarded.        We disagree.      The $435,000 figure
    apparently was obtained from Carrothers/Pemco's accountants and
    represents the amount necessary for Carrothers to recover in order
    to continue bidding on public projects.               That figure does not
    represent the amount of damages actually incurred because of the
    delays in the instant contracts.          Further, as discussed above,
    Carrothers presented extensive documentation of its calculation of
    damages.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the trial court's
    judgment.
    18