Brackenridge Construction Inc. v. Lakeville DPP ( 2020 )


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  • J-A10045-20
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    BRACKENRIDGE CONSTRUCTION                       :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    COMPANY INC.                                    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    Appellant                    :
    :
    :
    v.                                  :
    :
    :   No. 2611 EDA 2019
    LAKEVILLE DPP, LLC,                             :
    Appeal from the Order Entered July 30, 2019
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Wayne County Civil Division at No(s):
    No. 90-MLD-2017
    BEFORE: BOWES, J., SHOGAN, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*
    MEMORANDUM BY PELLEGRINI, J.:                                   FILED JUNE 9, 2020
    Brackenridge Construction Company, Inc. (Brackenridge) appeals from
    the order entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Wayne County (trial court)
    sustaining the preliminary objections of Lakeville DPP, LCC (Lakeville) and
    striking Brackenridge’s mechanics’ lien claim.              The trial court found that
    Brackenridge was precluded from enforcing its lien because it had already
    prevailed at arbitration on claims for unpaid labor. After review, we reverse
    and remand for further proceedings.
    I.
    In April 2016, Brackenridge entered into a master construction contract
    with Dollar Texas Properties XV, LLC c/o GBT Realty Corporation (GBT) to build
    ____________________________________________
    *   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-A10045-20
    two Dollar General Stores in Pennsylvania.       One would be built in Wayne
    County, which is the subject project in this appeal; the other would be built in
    Franklin County. Under the contract, GBT would assign all of its rights to a
    special purpose entity created to finance and own each respective project.
    Lakeville is the assignee of the Wayne County project and owner of the subject
    property.
    The contract also contained dispute resolution provisions requiring all
    disputes to be settled by binding arbitration.     Section 12.4 of the contract
    entitled “BINDING DISPUTE RESOLUTION” provided:
    If the matter is unresolved after submission of the matter to a
    mitigation procedure or to mediation, the Parties shall submit the
    matter to the binding dispute resolution procedures selected
    below.
    ***
    Arbitration using the current Construction Industry Arbitration
    Rules of the AAA [American Arbitration Association] or the Parties
    may mutually agree to select another set of arbitration rules. The
    administration of the arbitration shall be as mutually agreed by
    the Parties.    If the Parties cannot agree, then it shall be
    administered by AAA.
    The dispute resolution provisions also addressed Brackenridge’s lien
    rights under Section 12.6 entitled “LIEN RIGHTS.” That section provided that
    “[n]othing in this article shall limit any rights or remedies not expressly waived
    by the Contractor that the Contractor may have under lien laws.”
    After completing both projects, Brackenridge disputed how much it had
    been paid for its work, claiming that it was still owed $102,480.73 for the
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    Wayne County project and $76,707.49 for the Franklin County project.
    Consequently, in December 2017, Brackenridge timely filed in each county a
    statement of mechanics’ lien claims pursuant to the Mechanics’ Lien Law of
    1963 (Mechanics’ Lien Law), 49 P.S. §§ 1101-1902.1
    As required by the contract, Brackenridge’s unpaid labor claims were
    submitted to arbitration. On March 11, 2019, the Arbitrator issued an award
    in favor of Brackenridge for the full amount of its unpaid labor claims on both
    projects totaling $179,188.21 plus interest.2    That amount, however, was
    ____________________________________________
    1Contractors are required to file a claim within six months after completion of
    work. See 49 P.S. § 1502(a)(1).
    2 An arbitrator’s authority is restricted to the powers the parties have granted
    him [or her] in the arbitration agreement. A common law arbitration award
    “may be corrected if the arbitrator exceeds the scope of his authority.” Com.
    ex rel. Kane v. Philip Morris USA, Inc., 
    114 A.3d 37
    , 56 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015)
    (citations and internal quotation marks omitted.) The Arbitrator listed the six
    separate claims and counterclaims that were submitted to him to decide as:
    1. A claim by Claimant for the unpaid balances due for work
    performed under the Agreement and Amendments.
    2. A claim by Claimant for interest on the unpaid balance
    referenced in claim 1 above.
    3. A claim by Claimant for penalties and legal fees under
    Pennsylvania’s Contractor and Subcontractors Payment Act.
    4. A counterclaim by Respondent that Claimant owes liquidated
    damages to Respondent for failure to complete the work on the
    Projects on time.
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    offset by a $70,000 credit awarded to GBT for paving work on the Franklin
    County project because it was already included in its original bid. Accordingly,
    excluding costs and attorneys’ fees, Brackenridge’s final award was
    $109,188.21      plus    interest.      Both   parties   sought   modification   with
    Brackenridge seeking to decrease the $70,000 offset while GBT wanted
    language added that the award also settled any derivative lien claims arising
    out of the contract. The Arbitrator, however, declined both requests.
    In the weeks after the arbitration, Brackenridge and GBT reached an
    impasse over payment of the award.             GBT claims that it tried to pay but
    Brackenridge rejected any payment that did not also include the $70,000
    offset. Believing that Brackenridge was using its mechanics’ liens as a vehicle
    to recover payment beyond that awarded, GBT refused to pay any part of the
    arbitration award until Brackenridge released its mechanics liens against the
    properties.
    ____________________________________________
    5. A counterclaim by Respondent that Claimant owes Respondent
    money for performing paving work that was in Claimant’s scope
    of work for the Lakeville Project.
    6. A counterclaim by Respondent for punch list work not
    performed by Claimant.
    (Reproduced Record at 141).
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    In May 2019, Brackenridge filed complaints in both counties to enforce
    its mechanics’ lien claims against the properties.3 Lakeville, as owner of the
    Wayne County property, responded in the trial court by filing preliminary
    objections in the nature of a motion to strike. Relying on res judiciata and
    collateral estoppel, Lakeville asserted that the complaint was legally
    insufficient under Pa.R.C.P. 1028(a)(4) because the underlying basis for the
    lien—the unpaid labor claims—had already been litigated and decided at the
    arbitration.4 Brackenridge countered that its lien rights were not submitted in
    the arbitration and were preserved by Section 12.6 of the contract’s dispute
    resolution provisions. On July 30, 2019, the trial court sustained Lakeville’s
    preliminary objections and struck Brackenridge’s complaint with prejudice,
    ____________________________________________
    3 49 P.S. § 1701(a) provides that “[t]he practice and procedure to obtain
    judgment upon a claim filed shall be governed by the Rules of Civil Procedure
    promulgated by the Supreme Court.”
    4 Pa.R.C.P. 1028(a)(6) also provides that preliminary objections may be filed
    based on the “pendency of a prior action or agreement for alternative dispute
    resolution.” We also note that Pa.R.C.P 1030(a) provides that “all affirmative
    defenses including but not limited to the defenses of accord and satisfaction,
    arbitration and award, consent, discharge in bankruptcy, duress, estoppel,
    failure of consideration, fair comment, fraud, illegality, immunity from suit,
    impossibility of performance, justification, laches, license, payment, privilege,
    release, res judicata, statute of frauds, statute of limitations, truth and
    waiver shall be pleaded in a responsive pleading [Answer] under the heading
    ‘New Matter.’ A party may set forth as new matter any other material facts
    which are not merely denials of the averments of the preceding pleading.”
    (Emphasis added).
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    stating that it did not “have the appropriate authority to revisit or reconsider
    the issues decided at the arbitration.”5
    After dismissal of its complaint, Brackenridge filed a notice of appeal.6
    In its court-ordered Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement of errors complained of on
    appeal, Brackenridge contended that the trial court erred in finding that the
    prior arbitration precluded enforcement of its mechanics’ lien.7
    ____________________________________________
    5 Similar preliminary objections were filed in Franklin County. Finding neither
    res judicata nor collateral estoppel precluded enforcement of the mechanics’
    lien, the trial court there overruled the preliminary objections and allowed
    Brackenridge’s complaint to continue.
    6 Though the notice of appeal was filed one day after the expiration of the 30-
    day appeal deadline, Brackenridge has submitted documentation showing that
    its notice of appeal was received by the Prothonotary on August 29, 2019, but
    was not filed until the following day. Nagy v. Best Home Services, Inc.,
    
    829 A.2d 1166
    , 1168 (Pa. Super. 2003) (finding delay in filing appeal
    excusable because of “breakdown in the court’s operations” based on
    Prothonotary’s failure to time-stamp and docket timely notice of appeal).
    7   Our standard of review is as follows:
    Our standard of review of an order of the trial court overruling or
    granting preliminary objections is to determine whether the trial
    court committed an error of law.          When considering the
    appropriateness of a ruling on preliminary objections, the
    appellate court must apply the same standard as the trial court.
    Preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer test the legal
    sufficiency of the complaint.       When considering preliminary
    objections, all material facts set forth in the challenged pleadings
    are admitted as true, as well as all inferences reasonably
    deducible therefrom.
    Khawaja v. RE/MAX Cent., 
    151 A.3d 626
    , 630 (Pa. Super. 2016) (citation
    omitted).
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    II.
    Though Brackenridge has split its argument into three issues, they all
    go to a single question: whether collateral estoppel8 precludes a contractor
    from enforcing a mechanics’ lien claim after there was an arbitration award
    involving the claims between the parties. Brackenridge contends that the trial
    court erred in holding that the arbitration award had a preclusive effect on the
    mechanics’ lien action because Section 12.6 of the contract expressly provides
    that nothing in the dispute resolution provisions limits its right to file a claim
    ____________________________________________
    8Collateral estoppel (issue preclusion) is closely related to res judicata, but
    bears certain distinctions:
    [W]e note that the doctrine of res judicata subsumes the more
    modern doctrine of issue preclusion which forecloses re-litigation
    in a later action, of an issue of fact or law which was actually
    litigated and which was necessary to the original judgment. Clark
    v. Troutman, 
    509 Pa. 336
    , 340, 
    502 A.2d 137
    , 139 (1985).
    Collateral estoppel applies if (1) the issue decided in the prior case
    is identical to one presented in the later case; (2) there was a final
    judgment on the merits; (3) the party against whom the plea is
    asserted was a party or in privity with a party in the prior case;
    (4) the party or person privy to the party against whom the
    doctrine is asserted had a full and fair opportunity to litigate the
    issue in the prior proceeding and (5) the determination in the prior
    proceeding was essential to the judgment. Philadelphia Marine
    Trade Association v. International Longshoreman’s
    Association, 
    453 Pa. 43
    , 
    308 A.2d 98
     (1973); see also Mellon
    Bank v. Rafsky, 
    369 Pa. Super. 585
    , 
    535 A.2d 1090
     (1987).
    City of Pittsburgh v. Zoning Board of Adjustment, 
    559 A.2d 896
    , 901
    (Pa. 1989).
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    under the lien laws. Moreover, it contends that its mechanics’ lien claim differs
    from the unpaid labor claim submitted at arbitration. Whereas its mechanics’
    lien proceeding is an action in rem which attaches to the subject property, its
    unpaid labor claim at the arbitration was an in personam action which attached
    against the generalized assets of the unsuccessful party in the action.
    We agree with Brackenridge that an arbitration award does not preclude
    a mechanics’ lien enforcement proceeding because they protect different,
    though overlapping, interests.          Mechanics’ liens are designed to protect
    persons who improve a piece of property by giving them a lien against that
    property for payment for material and labor independent of contractual
    remedies. Bricklayers of Western Pennsylvania Combined Funds, Inc.
    v. Scott’s Development Co., 
    90 A.3d 682
    , 690 (Pa. 2014).9               However,
    because the type of damages are limited to material and labor, a mechanics’
    lien is not the basis for recovery of unliquidated damages for breach of
    ____________________________________________
    9   Section 301 of the Mechanics Lien Law provides:
    [E]very improvement and the estate or title of the owner in the
    property shall be subject to a lien, to be perfected as herein
    provided, for the payment of all debts due by the owner to the
    contractor or by the contractor to any of his subcontractors for
    labor or materials furnished in the erection or construction, or the
    alteration or repair of the improvement, provided that the amount
    of the claim, other than amounts determined by apportionment
    under section 306(b) of this act, shall exceed five hundred dollars
    ($500).
    49 P.S. § 1301(a).
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    contract because it is not intended to settle the contractual obligations of the
    parties. Wyatt, Inc. v. Citizens Bank of Pennsylvania, 
    976 A.2d 557
    , 570
    (Pa. Super. 2009). As a result, in a mechanics' lien proceeding, the owner
    may not raise a true counterclaim but only the right to setoff that is limited to
    the amount of the lien itself. 49 P.S. § 1701(e).
    Because it is not intended to settle the underlying contractual obligation,
    a mechanics’ lien is “an additional concurrent and cumulative remedy in rem,
    given by statute, and does not derogate from any other available remedies
    such as assumpsit.” Halowich v. Amminiti, 
    154 A.2d 406
    , 407 (Pa. Super.
    1959) (citations omitted). This holding flows directly out of Section 702 of
    the Mechanics Lien Law, 49 P.S. § 1702, which provides that ”[n]othing in this
    act shall alter or affect the right of a claimant to proceed in any other manner
    for the collection of his debt.”
    Consequently, “[a] civil action is not barred by the pendency of an action
    in rem upon a Mechanics' Lien, nor is the Mechanics' Lien claim barred by the
    pendency of the civil action; a plaintiff has the liberty to proceed against the
    property at the same time that he resorts to a personal action against the
    defendant.” Artsmith Development Group v. Updegraff, 
    868 A.2d 495
    ,
    497 n.1 (Pa. Super. 2005). This is true even though the mechanics’ lien action
    or the civil action has concluded.
    In Matternas v. Stehman, 
    642 A.2d 1120
     (Pa. Super. 1994), we
    considered whether an assumpsit action brought by a property owner was
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    barred by either res judiciata or collateral estoppel by a prior mechanics’ lien
    claim that had been settled by consent order. In first holding that res judicata
    was not applicable, we explained that:
    A mechanics’ lien proceeding merely addresses the rights of
    parties vis-a-vis a parcel of property. It does not address the
    rights of parties vis-a-vis each other. In the former mechanics’
    lien action hereunder, [contractor] and [property owner]
    contested their interest in a certain real property; they did not
    litigate, for the purpose of res judicata, their contractual rights as
    against each other. This should be evident from the language of
    the statutory law, which does not allow an owner to assert a
    counterclaim as part of a set-off, nor is any money judgment
    authorized. 49 P.S. § 1701(e). That would inject an in personam
    claim into what is essentially an in rem proceeding.
    Id. at 1123.
    We held that res judicata did not apply based on there being no identity
    in the cause of action because the lien proceeding was not intended to settle
    the contractual obligations of the parties, especially since the Mechanics’ Lien
    Law was merely intended to “protect the prepayment labor and materials that
    a contractor invests in another’s property[.]” Id. at 1124.
    Just because the bringing of a mechanic’s lien action is not precluded
    because another proceeding is pending or concluded does not mean collateral
    estoppel does not apply to issues involved in the mechanic’s lien proceeding.
    Tellingly, in Matternas, we did not foreclose the application of collateral
    estoppel but instead found that the consent order was inadequate to enable
    us to discern whether the parties intended for the consent agreement to also
    settle the assumpsit issue. Id. at 1125-26. If Lakeville’s position is correct
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    that the unpaid labor claim or any setoff was decided in the arbitration
    proceeding, that could have preclusive effect on those issues in this
    proceeding.     Brackenridge could also use collateral estoppel offensively to
    relieve it having to prove its underlying claims.10 Even if the amount awarded
    is the same as awarded in the arbitration award, the net effect is that
    Brackenridge would have a lien against the real property to which it made
    improvements.
    Accordingly, because Brackenridge can maintain a mechanics’ lien
    proceeding even though there is an arbitration award extant, we reverse the
    trial court’s dismissal of that action and remand for further proceedings.
    Jurisdiction relinquished.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 6/09/2020
    ____________________________________________
    10Collateral estoppel is used offensively when the “plaintiff seeks to foreclose
    the defendant from litigating an issue the defendant has previously litigated
    unsuccessfully in an action with another party.” Shaffer v. Smith, 
    673 A.2d 872
    , 874 (Pa. 1996) (citation omitted). Offensive collateral estoppel may only
    be utilized when certain additional considerations are met. See Toy v.
    Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 
    863 A.2d 1
    , 15 (Pa. Super. 2004) (summarizing
    additional elements for offensive collateral estoppel).
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