Smithgroup JJR, P.L.L.C. v. Forrest General Hospital ( 2016 )


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  •      Case: 16-60134       Document: 00513672246         Page: 1     Date Filed: 09/09/2016
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    No. 16-60134
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    Summary Calendar                        September 9, 2016
    Lyle W. Cayce
    SMITHGROUP JJR, P.L.L.C.,                                                         Clerk
    Plaintiff - Appellant
    v.
    FORREST GENERAL HOSPITAL,
    Defendant - Appellee
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Mississippi
    USDC No. 2:13-CV-150
    Before DAVIS, SOUTHWICK, and HIGGINSON, Circuit Judges.
    STEPHEN A. HIGGINSON, Circuit Judge:*
    SmithGroup JJR, PLLC (“SmithGroup”) appeals the district court’s
    judgment, after a bench trial, rejecting its claim that Forrest General Hospital
    (“FGH”) breached a contractual obligation to pay SmithGroup all of the fees it
    was owed for architectural design services. The sole issue SmithGroup raises
    on appeal is whether the district court erred by considering extrinsic evidence
    * Pursuant to 5th Cir. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5th Cir.
    R. 47.5.4.
    Case: 16-60134    Document: 00513672246     Page: 2    Date Filed: 09/09/2016
    No. 16-60134
    bearing on the meaning of the term “actual construction cost” in the parties’
    agreement. We affirm.
    I.
    FGH hired SmithGroup to design and oversee the construction of a new
    hospital and an adjacent medical office building in Picayune, Mississippi. That
    relationship was memorialized in a contract executed in February 2010—
    several months before construction was to begin.          This contract outlined
    architectural, engineering, and related “Basic Services” that SmithGroup
    would provide at each stage of the project’s planning and construction, for
    which FGH would pay a fixed percentage of the construction cost.             The
    agreement also contemplated the performance of “Additional Services,” which
    would be compensated separately.
    Most of SmithGroup’s work was to be performed and paid for before
    construction or even the bidding process for a general contractor began.
    Accordingly, the contractual terms of how FGH would compensate SmithGroup
    for Basic Services—set forth at paragraph 11.1, and providing the crux of this
    appeal—contained estimated construction costs:
    The Basic Services for the Project shall be compensated at a rate
    of 6.0% of the construction costs. The construction costs shall be
    assumed to be $33 Million ($1,980,000.00 in fees) for the Hospital,
    Administrative Build-Out and Logistics Building and $5.2 Million
    ($312,000 in fees) for the Administrative Building Core-and-Shell
    until the actual construction cost is established. At that time, the
    Basic Services Fees shall be recalculated and locked in as a lump
    sum amount.
    In May 2011—after the chosen contractor signed a contract, and after
    construction had begun—Travis Beatty, who works for a consulting firm hired
    by FGH, emailed SmithGroup a letter about the Basic Services Fees. That
    letter stated that per paragraph 11.1, those fees were to “be at an assumed rate
    of cost until the construction contract was executed. At that point, the fees
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    would be ‘locked in’ as a lump sum amount.” The letter’s purpose was to “serve
    to convey a detailed breakdown of the accepted fees that are now established.”
    A SmithGroup vice president, Paul Tonti, responded asking how fees for design
    services regarding owner-supplied equipment would be handled.              Beatty
    replied that he would revise the letter to address that concern. A few weeks
    later, Beatty sent a revised letter calculating the “Total Construction Contract
    Price” as $38,418,704. We refer to this as the “bid cost.” Six percent of that
    total yields $2,305,122, and that is the amount FGH paid in Basic Services
    Fees. Because of unanticipated design changes, however—some but not all of
    which were due to “errors or contractual violations by SmithGroup”—the total
    cost to complete the buildings was $40,799,669. We call this the “completion
    cost.”
    SmithGroup filed this lawsuit in July 2013. In Count I of its operative
    complaint, SmithGroup alleged that FGH breached the parties’ contract by
    failing to pay six percent of the difference between the completion cost and the
    bid cost, which comes to $155,980.14 plus interest. FGH maintained that it
    properly calculated and paid six percent of the “actual construction cost” based
    on the bid cost. Neither party moved for summary judgment, and the case
    proceeded to a bench trial.
    At trial, both parties presented extrinsic evidence concerning the
    meaning of paragraph 11.1. For example, SmithGroup’s counsel referred Tonti
    to key language in that paragraph and asked, “What did you understand that
    to mean when you read it?” Tonti responded: “My interpretation of this is when
    the project is complete, because I don’t know how you can achieve total actual
    construction costs until the project is complete and all those costs are rolled
    into a final construction number.” SmithGroup also elicited Tonti’s testimony
    that he was not aware of any project with “an interim lock-in period.” The
    district court additionally heard testimony from Beatty, and from FGH’s expert
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    Robert Luke, who testified that paragraph 11.1’s verbiage about locking in a
    lump sum was “rather unique language” that referred to fixing fees “once an
    actual construction amount is known,” which he distinguished from a “final
    construction amount or total construction amount.”               SmithGroup never
    objected during trial to the introduction or consideration of any evidence on
    parol evidence rule grounds.
    After trial, the district court issued detailed written findings of fact and
    conclusions of law. Implicitly deeming the contract ambiguous and relying in
    part on extrinsic evidence, the court concluded “that the fee due SmithGroup
    should be based on the construction cost of $38,418,704.00, and that the proper
    amount has been paid by FGH.” The district court therefore entered judgment
    in favor of FGH on Count I of SmithGroup’s operative complaint. 1 SmithGroup
    timely appealed and now argues that the language “actual construction cost”
    unambiguously refers to the total amount FGH paid to finish the project, which
    could only be determined after all construction ended. Therefore, SmithGroup
    contends, the district court erred by considering evidence beyond the four
    corners of the contract in determining the meaning of paragraph 11.1. 2
    II.
    “The standard of review for a bench trial is well established: findings of
    fact are reviewed for clear error and legal issues are reviewed de novo.”
    Guzman v. Hacienda Records & Recording Studio, Inc., 
    808 F.3d 1031
    , 1036
    (5th Cir. 2014) (quoting One Beacon Ins. Co. v. Crowley Marine Servs., Inc., 
    648 F.3d 258
    , 262 (5th Cir. 2011)). In a diversity case, “[w]e look to state law for
    rules governing contract interpretation.” ACS Constr. Co., Inc. of Miss. v.
    1   The district court entered judgment in SmithGroup’s favor for approximately
    $57,000 on a different breach-of-contract claim, and entered judgment in FGH’s favor for
    approximately $310,000 on two counterclaims. None of these claims is at issue on appeal.
    2 SmithGroup does not argue that even if the district court properly considered
    extrinsic evidence, its factual conclusions were clearly erroneous.
    4
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    CGU, 
    332 F.3d 885
    , 888 (5th Cir. 2003) (quoting FDIC v. Firemen’s Ins. Co. of
    Newark, 
    109 F.3d 1084
    , 1087 (5th Cir. 1997)). Here, that means that we apply
    Mississippi law “as interpreted by the state’s highest court.”        Barfield v.
    Madison County, 
    212 F.3d 269
    , 271–72 (5th Cir. 2000).
    Mississippi courts analyze contracts using “a three-step analysis.”
    Epperson v. SOUTHBank, 
    93 So. 3d 10
    , 16 (Miss. 2012). First, the court “must
    determine whether the contract is ambiguous, and if it is not, then it must be
    enforced as written,” without consideration of parol evidence. 
    Id. Determining whether
    a contract is ambiguous is a question of law. Tupelo Redev. Agency v.
    Abernathy, 
    913 So. 2d 278
    , 283 (Miss. 2005). If the court is unable to discern
    a clear meaning from this “four corners” inquiry, it should then “apply the
    discretionary ‘canons’ of contract construction.” 3 
    Id. at 284.
    “Finally, if the
    contract continues to evade clarity as to the parties’ intent, the court should
    consider extrinsic or parol evidence.” 
    Id. With these
    principles in mind, we
    turn to the case at hand.
    III.
    SmithGroup’s theory on appeal is that the contract at issue is
    unambiguous, so the district court erred by venturing beyond its four corners.
    FGH, though, responds that SmithGroup waived that argument by failing to
    raise it in the trial court and by itself eliciting parol evidence. Our usual rule
    is that “[a]n argument not raised before the district court cannot be asserted
    for the first time on appeal.” XL Specialty Ins. Co. v. Kiewit Offshore Servs.,
    Ltd., 
    513 F.3d 146
    , 153 (5th Cir. 2008); see also Liberty Combustion Co. v.
    Thoreson Sales Co., 
    322 F.2d 790
    , 791 (5th Cir. 1963) (holding that an
    appellant waived a parol evidence rule argument). But in reply, SmithGroup
    3  SmithGroup does not argue that the district court should have applied any
    discretionary canon of construction, so we do not address any.
    5
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    contends that it did raise its argument in the district court and that, in any
    event, under Mississippi law such an argument cannot be waived.
    We treat the latter reply argument first, assuming without deciding that
    SmithGroup is correct that state law controls this waiver issue. 4 In Kelso v.
    McGowan, the Mississippi Supreme Court rejected an argument that the
    appellant “waived the exclusion of parol evidence by failing to raise the issue
    at trial,” stating: “This Court has clearly held . . . that since the parol evidence
    rule is substantive, it prevails even in the absence of objection.” 
    604 So. 2d 726
    , 730 n.4 (Miss. 1992) (citing Edrington v. Stephens, 
    114 So. 387
    (Miss.
    1927)). That statement from Mississippi’s highest court, albeit in a footnote,
    would seem to defeat FGH’s waiver argument.
    More recently, however, the Mississippi Supreme Court reaffirmed “the
    holding in [Service Fire Ins. Co. v. Craft, 
    67 So. 2d 874
    (Miss. 1953)] that a
    party may not raise an objection to evidence on the grounds that it is violative
    of the Parol Evidence Rule for the first time on appeal.” Estate of Parker v.
    Dorchak, 
    673 So. 2d 1379
    , 1384 (Miss. 1996). Although the court did not cite
    Kelso or Edrington, it noted that “the Parol Evidence Rule is a rule of
    substantive law”; for that reason, the court held that “a party should not lose
    the right to claim the benefit of said law merely because he failed to make a
    contemporaneous objection at the time the evidence was offered.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
        Rather, so long as a proper objection is raised “prior to the
    consideration of said evidence by the trier of fact, such evidence should properly
    be disregarded.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    In Dorchak, a bench trial, a motion to
    exclude testimony about contractual intent was filed after the evidence was
    offered, but “prior to the consideration of such testimony by the Chancellor as
    4  Cf. Harville Rose Serv. v. Kellogg Co., 
    448 F.2d 1346
    , 1349 (5th Cir. 1971) (“This
    court is bound in this diversity case to apply the parol evidence rule as the state court
    would.”).
    6
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    trier of fact”—so it was timely. 
    Id. at 1383–84.
    But in the Craft case that
    Dorchak reaffirmed, no objection was ever made in the trial court to testimony
    that the appellant claimed contradicted the written instrument; therefore, that
    “testimony was before the jury for what it was worth,” and the Supreme Court
    made clear that it could “rest [its] decision on that state of the record.” 
    Craft, 67 So. 2d at 876
    .
    More recently still, the Mississippi Supreme Court considered an
    argument raised for the first time on appeal that an “agreement [spoke] for
    itself and that parol evidence of an additional provision should not be
    considered.” Chantey Music Publ’g, Inc. v. Malaco, 
    915 So. 2d 1052
    , 1060 (Miss.
    2005). Citing the principle that a trial court cannot be held to have erred on a
    matter not presented to it, the high court held that the parol evidence issue
    was not properly before it. 
    Id. Thus, the
    more recent cases show that the present state of Mississippi
    law does not allow a parol evidence argument such as SmithGroup’s to be
    raised for the first time on appeal. See Savoie v. Huntington Ingalls, Inc., 
    817 F.3d 457
    , 464 n.5 (5th Cir. 2016) (noting that federal courts are Erie-bound on
    state-law questions by the state supreme court’s most recent authority);
    Broussard v. S. Pac. Transp. Co., 
    625 F.2d 1242
    , 1245 n.3 (5th Cir. 1980)
    (similar).    Bolstering this conclusion, the en banc Court of Appeals of
    Mississippi recently relied on Dorchak in holding that because an appellant
    never raised a parol evidence rule objection in the trial court, he could not do
    so on appeal. DeJean v. DeJean, 
    982 So. 2d 443
    , 448–49 (Miss. Ct. App. 2007)
    (en banc). 5 Thus, SmithGroup waived this argument unless it objected to the
    consideration of parol evidence before the trial court made its decision.
    5 SmithGroup cites Century 21 Deep South Prop., Ltd. v. Keys, 
    652 So. 2d 707
    (Miss.
    1995), for the proposition that an objection to the consideration of parol evidence need not be
    made in the trial court to be preserved for appeal. But Keys does not support that rule.
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    SmithGroup does not dispute that it never objected at trial to the
    admission or consideration of extrinsic evidence, but does argue that it raised
    the issue in its post-trial proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.
    SmithGroup points to its citation of case law for Mississippi principles of
    contract interpretation, including that a court “should first examine the four
    corners of the contract to determine how to interpret it” and “accept the plain
    meaning of a contract as the intent of the parties where no ambiguity exists.”
    SmithGroup’s filing also stated: “If found ambiguous, the subsequent
    interpretation of the contract is a finding of fact. Ambiguity analysis, unlike
    affirmative defense analysis, is by its very nature a necessary step in the
    examination of every contract.”            After these case citations, SmithGroup
    summarily concluded that there was “no doubt as to when total cost for
    construction is achieved,” submitting that it “ha[d] offered evidence and
    testimony in support of its claim for fees which is irrefutable.”
    This was not enough to “properly object[]” to consideration of the parol
    evidence elicited by both parties. See 
    Dorchak, 673 So. 2d at 1384
    . The
    highlighted statements were set forth as boilerplate legal rules in the form of
    case citations, not arguments tied to this dispute. And “[c]iting cases that may
    contain a useful argument is simply inadequate to preserve that argument for
    appeal; ‘to be preserved, an argument must be pressed, and not merely
    intimated.’” Butler Aviation Int’l, Inc. v. Whyte (In re Fairchild Aircraft Corp.),
    Instead, the Keys court rejected an argument that the trial court erred in finding parts of a
    contract to be ambiguous, even though the defendant-appellee had not pleaded as an
    “affirmative defense” that the contract was ambiguous. 
    Id. at 716–17.
    The court reasoned
    that “[t]he clarity of a contract must always be considered before a contract may be enforced,
    whereas the consideration of non-plead affirmative defenses is not required.” 
    Id. at 717.
    Tellingly, neither the Mississippi Supreme Court in Dorchak or Chantey Music, nor the Court
    of Appeals in DeJean, found Keys relevant when deciding more similar issues. Neither do
    we. The same goes for Rotenberry v. Hooker, 
    864 So. 2d 266
    (Miss. 2003), which SmithGroup
    cites essentially for its recapitulation of Keys.
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    6 F.3d 1119
    , 1128 (5th Cir. 1993) (quoting Hays v. Sony Corp., 
    847 F.2d 412
    ,
    420 (7th Cir. 1988)), abrogated on other grounds by Tex. Truck Ins. Agency, Inc.
    v. Cure (In re Dunham), 
    110 F.3d 286
    (5th Cir. 1997). What’s more, those
    citations included the instruction that a fact finder should interpret a contract
    as a factual matter if the contract is held ambiguous—which is what the
    district court did. Nowhere did SmithGroup make an actual argument that
    extrinsic evidence of paragraph 11.1’s meaning should not be considered, or
    even that the provision is unambiguous. Finally, even in the post-trial briefing
    on which it now relies, SmithGroup cited expert testimony in support of its
    argument about paragraph 11.1. 6 Thus, SmithGroup never put the district
    judge on notice of any argument that extrinsic evidence should not be
    considered. See Chantey 
    Music, 915 So. 2d at 1060
    ; see also XL 
    Specialty, 513 F.3d at 153
    . Accordingly, we will not consider that argument on appeal.
    IV.
    SmithGroup failed to preserve for appeal its argument that because the
    relevant contractual term is unambiguous, the district court erred by
    considering extrinsic evidence in determining its meaning.                        Because
    SmithGroup argues no other ground for reversal, we AFFIRM the district
    court’s judgment.
    6We do not mean to suggest that a litigant cannot argue that a contract’s language is
    unambiguous and consideration of parol evidence therefore inappropriate, but rely in the
    alternative on extrinsic evidence. Here, SmithGroup did not present such alternative
    arguments to the district court.
    9