J-Way Leasing, Ltd. v. American Bridge Company , 500 F. App'x 365 ( 2012 )


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  •                 NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 12a1007n.06
    No. 10-3342
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                                FILED
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT                                 Sep 12, 2012
    DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
    J-Way Leasing, Ltd., dba J-Way Leasing &                  )
    Marine, LLC,                                              )
    )        ON APPEAL FROM THE
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                                )        UNITED STATES DISTRICT
    )        COURT     FOR     THE
    v.                                                        )        NORTHERN DISTRICT OF
    )        OHIO
    American Bridge Company, and American                     )
    Bridge/McLean Pier 11 Constructors, a Joint               )                           OPINION
    Venture,                                                  )
    )
    Defendants-Appellants.
    BEFORE: BOGGS, McKEAGUE, Circuit Judges, and WATSON, District Judge.*
    McKeague, Circuit Judge. This case arises out of a Navy Contract that was awarded to a
    joint venture comprised of American Bridge and McLean Pier 11 Constructors. The Plaintiff, J-
    Way, orally agreed to perform dredging work as a subcontractor to American Bridge. After the work
    was completed, J-Way sued both American Bridge and the joint venture, alleging that Defendants
    owed J-Way money under both a breach of contract and a quantum meruit theory. After the trial,
    the jury was tasked with answering seven interrogatories and rendering two general verdicts; the trial
    court also expressly instructed the jury that it could consider the quantum meruit theory only if it
    *
    The Honorable Michael H. Watson, U.S. District Judge for the Southern District of Ohio,
    sitting by designation.
    No. 10-3342
    J-Way Leasing, Ltd. v. American Bridge Company, et al.
    found there was no contract. Exhibiting some confusion, the jury determined that there was an oral
    contract between J-Way and American Bridge and that American Bridge breached the oral contract.
    It then went on to award damages for J-Way under the quantum meruit theory. Defendants appeal
    the district court’s denial of their motions for judgment as a matter of law and a new trial.
    I. BACKGROUND
    In 2004, Defendants American Bridge Company (“American Bridge”) and McLean Pier 11
    Constructors formed a joint venture (the “Joint Venture”) to bid on a Navy contract for the
    demolition and construction of a pier at the Norfolk Naval Base (the “Project”). According to the
    terms of the Joint Venture Agreement, McLean was responsible for all the demolition work on the
    Project, including demolition of the existing piers/breakwater, and removal of all debris down to the
    top of the dredge elevation. This required the Joint Venture, through McLean, to demolish and
    dispose of the existing concrete pier structure in its entirety.
    American Bridge was only responsible for the bucket-dredging part of the Project. The Navy
    anticipated that bucket dredging for this Project would involve removing “dredge material” such as
    dirt, mud, or sand on the floor of the river bed. In addition, the Navy also made clear that bucket
    dredging may involve removing “perhaps incidental light shipyard trash such as metal bands, pallets,
    pieces of broken cable, rope, fire hoses, and broken pile which may have fallen off Pier 11 over the
    years.” Based on these specifications, the Joint Venture bid to fulfill the bucket-dredging portion
    of the work for $8.89 per cubic meter of dredge material.
    The Navy awarded the Project to the Joint Venture for $91,552,100. American Bridge
    subsequently decided to subcontract part of its responsibility for the bucket dredging work.
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    J-Way Leasing, Ltd. v. American Bridge Company, et al.
    Accordingly, American Bridge provided multiple companies, including J-Way Leasing, Ltd. (“J-
    Way”) and Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. (“Great Lakes”), with the Navy’s specifications for the
    work and invited them to submit a proposal to complete the dredging work as a subcontractor.
    American Bridge rejected all of the initial bids for the work because the subcontractors’ estimates
    were substantially higher than the Joint Venture’s committed price of $8.89 per cubic meter. J-Way
    submitted a revised written proposal to perform only the bucket dredging portion of the project at
    a rate of $9.25 per cubic meter along with payment of $325,000 for mobilization costs and $170,000
    for debris and piling removal. J-Way’s pricing offer did “not include the removal of any large or
    extraordinary debris.” (R. 176, Tr. 10/07/09, p. 156; R. 183, Tr. 10/15/09, p. 53.) American Bridge
    also rejected J-Way’s second proposal.
    American Bridge and J-Way held a meeting on February 11, 2006, to continue their
    negotiations (the “February 11th meeting”). At the February 11th meeting, the parties orally agreed
    that J-Way would perform the bucket dredging work for $8.83 per cubic meter. (R. 101, Joint
    Statement of Stipulated Facts.) The parties also agree that they discussed at the February 11th
    meeting “the size of the concrete debris” to be bucket dredged, but the stipulated facts do not indicate
    what the parties’ agreed-upon parameters were for the size of the debris, if any. (Id.) According to
    J-Way, the parties determined at the February 11th meeting that J-Way would only remove “debris”
    that was “basketball size or smaller.” (Appellee’s Br. 15.)
    According to American Bridge, however, the February 11th meeting did not result in a
    binding contract. Accordingly, shortly after the parties reached an oral agreement, American Bridge
    sent J-Way a formal written subcontract along with a cover letter. Among other things, the cover
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    J-Way Leasing, Ltd. v. American Bridge Company, et al.
    letter “advised that if American Bridge failed to hear from J-Way and J-Way began to perform,
    American Bridge would assume that J-Way had accepted all the terms included in the written
    subcontract.” (Appellant’s Br. 21.) Although J-Way informed American Bridge that it was
    “marking up” the contract, American Bridge did not receive the marked-up version until after the
    bucket-dredging work was completed, (R. 101, Joint Statement of Stipulated Facts), and J-Way
    admits that it never signed or executed a mutually acceptable version of the written subcontract
    agreement. (Appellee’s Br. 16.)
    Despite these differences, J-Way began dredging operations on April 24th. (R. 178, p. 319.)
    Two days later, J-Way subcontracted with Great Lakes to perform part of its duties for the Project.
    (R. 101, Joint Statement of Stipulated Facts.) The Agreement “called for Great Lakes to be paid
    $43,500 per day. In exchange, Great Lakes provided the Dredge 51 Vessel and crew for bucket
    dredging services under the direction of J-Way, along with two material dump scows, a tugboat, and
    a survey launch boat.” (Id.) The subcontract between J-Way and Great Lakes was arranged by
    American Bridge; American Bridge declined to hire Great Lakes directly because J-Way was owned
    by a woman, thereby satisfying the Joint Venture’s contractual obligation to the Navy to include a
    minority/woman business participant in the Project. (Appellant’s Br. 25; Appellee Br. 17.)
    J-Way completed the bucket-dredging work on July 21, 2006 and demobilized its operations
    on the Project. (R. 101, Joint Statement of Stipulated Facts.) According to the Navy’s pre- and post-
    dredge surveys, J-Way bucket dredged 165,262 cubic meters. (Id.) The Joint Venture paid J-Way
    for dredging 160,661 cubic meters at $8.83 per cubic meter, plus $175,000 in mobilization costs, for
    a total payment of $1,593,636.63. (Id.)
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    J-Way Leasing, Ltd. v. American Bridge Company, et al.
    J-Way was unsatisfied with this remuneration for three reasons. First, even according to the
    Navy’s own surveys, J-Way was not paid for 4,601 cubic meters worth of dredging that it conducted
    ($40,626.83). Second, J-Way complains that it was forced to remove demolition debris outside the
    scope of its agreement. Specifically, J-Way asserts that “[t]he Joint Venture, through its partner
    McLean, dumped large amounts of Pier 11 demolition debris back in the water instead of removing
    it, which was confirmed by American Bridge’s own monitors . . . as well as the dredgers that were
    on-site.” (Appellee’s Br. 18.) According to J-Way, its “entire dredging operation was negatively
    impacted and slowed by the out-of-scope demolition debris it was forced to remove in order to
    complete its required dredging.” (Id.) Third, J-Way “encountered unforeseen layers of subsurface
    hard material during its dredging operations that were not included in its scope of work and differed
    materially from what was shown on the Navy plans.” (Appellee’s Br. 21.)
    In December 2006, J-Way wrote to American Bridge seeking additional money because of
    these circumstances. (R. 101, Joint Statement of Stipulated Facts.) In support of its request, J-Way
    included a November 15, 2006 geotechnical report that was prepared on J-Way’s behalf. (Id.) In
    March of 2007, J-Way submitted additional invoices for work it considered beyond the scope of its
    original agreement. (Id.) American Bridge sought $1,020,946 in additional compensation from the
    Navy on the basis of the sand being harder than expected, but the Navy denied this request. (Id.)
    American Bridge refused to award any additional compensation to J-Way. Meanwhile, Great
    Lakes invoiced J-Way a total of $ 3,448,835 for its services and equipment on the Project, and J-Way
    has paid Great Lakes only $1,349,650. (Id.) J-Way sued both American Bridge and the Joint
    Venture for the difference, claiming that the amount of work performed was beyond the scope of the
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    J-Way Leasing, Ltd. v. American Bridge Company, et al.
    agreement. In the alternative, J-Way requested quantum meruit damages. Defendants countersued
    for breach of contract.
    At trial, to establish the amount of damages under the breach-of-contract claim, J-Way
    submitted the testimony of its bucket-dredging expert, Jim Thomas, who calculated damages using
    the “total cost” method. The “total cost” method is a technique used to determine breach-of-contract
    damages where extra costs were incurred and unique job-site circumstances make it difficult for a
    contractor to prove its actual losses directly. Cleveland Constr., Inc. v. Ohio Pub. Emps. Ret. Sys.,
    
    2008-Ohio-1630
     (Ct. App. 2008).
    At the end of the jury trial, the court instructed the jury that it could find quantum meruit
    damages only if it found no contract between J-Way and American Bridge: “[If] the plaintiff doesn’t
    prove that there was an oral contract on February 11, 2006 you then and only then may consider
    whether there was an agreement that’s based on the quantum meruit theory . . . .” (R. 189, Tr.
    10/21/2009.) This instruction was repeated again just before the jury was released for deliberation:
    “So the only time you get to quantum meruit is if you find there was no written contract or no oral
    contract.” (R. 189, Tr. 10/21/2010.)
    The jury returned the following answers to the Interrogatories and Verdicts:
    Interrogatory Number 1
    Did Plaintiff prove by a preponderance of the evidence that there was an oral contract
    between Plaintiff and Defendant American Bridge Company entered on February 11,
    2006?
    Yes (insert in ink “YES” or “NO” according to your findings)
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    Interrogatory Number 2
    If your answer to Interrogatory No. 1 was “yes,” did Plaintiff prove by a
    preponderance of the evidence that Defendant American Bridge Company breached
    the contract?
    Yes (insert in ink “YES” or “NO” according to your findings)
    Interrogatory Number 3
    Did Defendants prove by a preponderance of the evidence that there was a written
    contract between Plaintiff and Defendants?
    No (insert in ink “YES” or “NO” according to your findings)
    Interrogatory Number 4
    If your answer to Interrogatory No. 3 was “yes,” did Defendants prove by a
    preponderance of the evidence that Plaintiff breached the contract?
    (insert in ink “YES” or “NO” according to your findings)
    [The jury left Interrogatory No. 4 blank]
    Interrogatory Number 5
    If you found that there was no contract between the parties, did Plaintiff prove by a
    preponderance of the evidence that Plaintiff conferred a benefit directly on
    Defendants American Bridge and the Joint Venture?
    Yes (insert in ink “YES” or “NO” according to your findings)
    Interrogatory Number 6
    If your answer to Interrogatory No. 5 is “yes,” did Plaintiff prove by a preponderance
    of the evidence that Defendants American Bridge and the Joint Venture knew they
    received, and retained, the benefit?
    Yes (insert in ink “YES” or “NO” according to your findings)
    Interrogatory Number 7
    If your answer to Interrogatory No. 6 is “yes,” did Plaintiff prove by a preponderance
    of the evidence that Defendants American Bridge and the Joint Venture’s retention
    of the benefit would be unjust without compensating Plaintiff?
    Yes (insert in ink “YES” or “NO” according to your findings)
    Verdict for Plaintiff against Defendants on Defendants’ Breach of Contract
    Counterclaim
    We the jury, being duly impaneled and sworn, find by a preponderance of the
    evidence in favor of the Plaintiff and against Defendants American Bridge/McLean
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    J-Way Leasing, Ltd. v. American Bridge Company, et al.
    Pier 11 Contractors, a Joint Venture on Defendants’ Counterclaim for breach of
    contract.
    Verdict for Plaintiff against Defendants American Bridge/McLean Pier 11
    Contractors, A Joint Venture on Plaintiff’s Quantum Meruit Claim
    We the jury, being duly impaneled and sworn, find by a preponderance of the
    evidence in favor of the Plaintiff on its quantum meruit claim and against Defendants
    American Bridge/McLean Pier 11 Contractors, a Joint Venture and award damages
    in the amount of $2,921,710.90 (Insert in ink an amount from $0 to whatever the
    evidence requires.)
    The district court read, and all ten jurors individually affirmed aloud, the jury’s findings on each
    interrogatory and verdict. (Page ID # 7860-63) (R.190, Tr. 10/22/09.) The district court asked both
    parties for their consent before formally discharging the jury:
    The Court: Thank you. All right. Each of the jurors have answered in the affirmative
    that I have read the verdict forms and the interrogatories. They are correct in form
    and substance so I’ll accept each of those. Is there anything further on behalf of the
    plaintiff?
    Counsel for J-Way: No, Your Honor. We’ll have post judgment issues, but we can
    address that later. Other than that, we’d like to thank the jurors for their jury service.
    The Court: Anything further on behalf of the defense?
    Counsel for Appellants: Judge, we’d also like to thank the jurors for their service.
    We are going to have some post trial motions.
    The Court: All right. Folks, that concludes your service. I want to give you thanks
    of the parties and the Court for the time and effort you have spent . . . . you have
    returned interrogatories consistent with the evidence and the law. So you are excused
    from any further services in the case with the thanks of the Court.
    (R.190, Tr. 10/22/09.) Defendants subsequently brought motions under Fed. R. Civ. P. 49(b), 50,
    and 59(a)(1). The district court denied all of these motions. J-Way also brought post-trial motions
    requesting prejudgment interest on the quantum meruit award and seeking to amend the judgment
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    J-Way Leasing, Ltd. v. American Bridge Company, et al.
    to include American Bridge individually. The district court approved J-Way’s request for the interest
    but denied their motion to amend the judgment. Finally, Plaintiff sought an award for costs, which
    the trial court awarded in the amount of $62,618.63. (Id.) Defendants now appeal the district court’s
    denial of their post-trial motions.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A. Standards of Review
    On appeal, a district court’s interpretation of a verdict rendered pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P
    49 is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.1 Radvansky v. City of Olmsted Falls, 
    496 F.3d 609
    , 618
    (6th Cir. 2007) (internal citations and quotations omitted). The rule provides:
    (2) Verdict and Answers Consistent. When the general verdict and the answers are
    consistent, the court must approve, for entry under Rule 58, an appropriate judgment
    on the verdict and answers.
    (3) Answers Inconsistent with the Verdict. When the answers are consistent with each
    other but one or more is inconsistent with the general verdict, the court may:
    (A) approve, for entry under Rule 58, an appropriate judgment
    according to the answers, notwithstanding the general verdict;
    (B) direct the jury to further consider its answers and verdict; or
    (C) order a new trial.
    (4) Answers Inconsistent with Each Other and the Verdict. When the answers are
    inconsistent with each other and one or more is also inconsistent with the general
    verdict, judgment must not be entered; instead, the court must direct the jury to
    further consider its answers and verdict, or must order a new trial.
    1
    American Bridge cites Hopkins v. Coen, 
    431 F.2d 1055
     (6th Cir. 1970) for the proposition
    that relief is mandatory and not discretionary because the verdicts conflict. (Appellant’s Br. 30.)
    However, as J-Way points out, the alleged conflict here is between the verdict and interrogatory 1,
    not between multiple verdicts. (Appellee’s Br. 24.) Therefore, American Bridge’s argument is
    misplaced.
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    Fed. R. Civ. P. 49(b). The district court’s determination of whether to admit or exclude expert
    testimony is reviewed for abuse of discretion as well. In re Scrap Metal Antitrust Litig., 
    527 F.3d 517
    , 528 (6th Cir. 2008).
    B. The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion
    Defendants argue that the district court abused its discretion in entering a judgment because
    the jury’s award of quantum meruit damages is untenable given the jury’s finding that an oral
    contract existed between J-Way and American Bridge. Because Defendants waived this argument,
    we affirm the district court.
    Defendants further argue that it was an abuse of discretion for the district court as gatekeeper
    not to exclude Jim Thomas’s expert testimony as unreliable. This argument is also untenable because
    it conflates the determination of the reliability of the testimony with its credibility, the weighing of
    which was properly left to the jury.
    1. Waiver
    Defendants waived their Rule 49(b) argument because any objection to an inconsistency
    between interrogatories must be made prior to the jury’s dismissal. Indeed:
    our court and others sensibly have held that a party must make its Rule 49(b)
    objection prior to the district court discharging the jury. . . . [I]f, after answers to
    special interrogatories are read, a party does not object to the discharge of the jury or
    raise any issue with respect to the jury's responses, that party should be deemed to
    have waived any objection as to inconsistency, ambiguity, or lack of clarity in the
    answers.
    Radvansky, 
    496 F.3d at 618-19
     (quoting Cent. On Line Data Sys., Inc., v. Filenet Corp, No.95-1016,
    95-1054, 
    1996 WL 483031
    , at *11 (6th Cir. Aug. 23, 1996) ); see also Nolfi v. Ohio Kentucky Oil
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    J-Way Leasing, Ltd. v. American Bridge Company, et al.
    Corp., 
    675 F.3d 538
    , 551-52 (6th Cir. 2012) (“Our precedent requires a party to bring a Rule 49(b)
    motion when there is an inconsistency, which plaintiffs failed to do. A party that fails to do so has
    waived its right to object.”); Tennessee Consol. Coal Co. v. United Mine Workers of Am., 
    416 F.2d 1192
    , 1200-01 (6th Cir. 1969). Where a party has waived its right to object under Rule 49(b), the
    district court should not be held liable for an abuse of discretion on that front. Nolfi, 
    675 F.3d at 552
    .
    Defendants complain that “there was nothing for the jury to reconcile after it read its
    inconsistent answers to the interrogatories.” (Reply Br. 10.) Defendants further assert that asking
    the jury for clarification may have resulted in “unfind[ing]” the contract. (Reply Br. 11.) This is
    simply wrong.
    Both the Sixth Circuit’s waiver rule and the Federal Rules themselves anticipate resubmitting
    questions to the jury when, as here, the interrogatories are inconsistent with either each other or the
    verdict. Fed. R. Civ. P. 49(b).2 Furthermore, the single case American Bridge cites in support of its
    argument, Riley v. K Mart Corp., 
    864 F.2d 1049
     (3d Cir. 1988), merely supports the ability of the
    trial court to send inconsistent answers back to the jury for more clarification. Id. at 1054. In Riley,
    it was the trial court’s acceptance of a second set of answers that were completely different than the
    2
    American Bridge argues that resubmission to the jury for clarification—which is
    specifically permitted under the Federal Rules—would have been improper. Instead, it requests a
    judgment notwithstanding the verdict. When interrogatories conflict with each other (as opposed
    to merely conflicting with the verdict), as they allegedly do here, the only remedies are resubmission
    to the jury or a new trial. Fed. R. Civ. P. 49(b)(4). Accordingly, it would have been reversible error
    for the trial court to have entered a judgment in favor of American Bridge under these circumstances.
    Bahamas Agr. Indus. Ltd. v. Riley Stoker Corp., 
    526 F.2d 1174
    , 1182 (6th Cir. 1975).
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    first that warranted the reversal. 
    Id.
     Because the jury in this case was never asked to clarify its
    answers, Riley is inapposite.
    Accordingly, Defendants’ waiver resolves this issue. Under Nolfi, the failure to give the trial
    judge the opportunity to resubmit the questions to the jury for clarification should prevent this panel
    from finding an abuse of discretion here. See Nolfi, 
    675 F.3d at 552
     (“The district court's reading
    of Rule 49(b) and application of the waiver rule was a correct application of the law and based on
    the indisputable fact that plaintiffs did not object; therefore, the district court did not abuse its
    discretion.”)
    2. Expert Testimony
    Defendants argue that the only evidence proffered by J-Way to establish the first element of
    the “total cost” method of calculating damages derived solely from the testimony of J-Way’s
    damages expert, Jim Thomas. They state that this testimony lacked verification and, consequently,
    should have been excluded as unreliable. Defendants contend it was an abuse of discretion by the
    district court to have allowed the unreliable testimony to be submitted to the jury.
    The district court did not abuse its discretion in allowing Thomas to testify on the elements
    of the “total cost” method because the question was more one of credibility rather than reliability,
    and the weighing of credibility is a task rightly left to the jury. The district court correctly submitted
    Thomas’s testimony to the jury to determine if J-Way had established the elements of the “total cost”
    method by a preponderance of the evidence, as was dictated in the jury instructions.
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court.
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