RULING ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Plаintiffs seek compensatory and punitive damages based on defendant’s claimed failure to act with reasonable care or in accordance with its contract with the City of New Haven (“City”) and, based on the same alleged deficiencies, for willful, intentional conduct. Plaintiffs, Associated Construction Company and DeMatteo Construction Company, formed a joint venture (the “JV”) to be the general contractor for a New Haven Sewer Treatment Facility (the “Project”). Three subcontractors, Instrumentation Contractors, Inc. (“ICI”), Holzner Electric Company (“Holzner”) and Cosgrove Construction Company (“Cos-grove”), are the remaining plaintiffs. Defendant, Camp, Dresser & McICee, Inc. (“CDM”), an engineering company, produced the plans and specifications for the Project and supervised the construction for the City. Defendant’s conduct claimed by plaintiffs to be wrongful, arises out of the contract — variоus preparatory surveying work, planning, design, drafting, information, inspection, testing, drawing review, and approval, coordination, progress certification, supervision, reporting obligations and procéssing claims for extra work. Plaintiffs claim economic losses suffered in their performance of the contract, allegedly caused by defendant’s wrongful conduct.
Though plaintiffs ahve not defined the issues with ideal meticulousness, the following seems to be undisputed:
(1) Cоsgrove’s claims here (as compared to those made against the City), having been partially settled (Exhibit 54) or not previously totally claimed, are based on the same facts as the claims presented to the City. Plaintiffs’ Statement of Facts at 119.
(2) Holzner’s claims here (as compared to those made against the City which were paid in whole or in part as arbitration awards or a stipulation and which were claimed for only part of the entire periоd) were not previously specifically claimed as items of damage, though they are based on the same facts as the items which were claimed or were claimed without an award being made. Id. at ¶ 28.
(3) ICI’s claims here (as compared to those made against the City which were paid in whole or in part as arbitration awards or a stipulation — although ICI was not a party to the arbitration, its claims were presented by the JV as per the contract with the City) werе not previously specifically claimed as items of damage, though they were based on the same facts
(4) The JV’s claims here (as compared to those made against the City which were resolved by stipulation during arbitration and an award which, after confirmation by the Connecticut Superior Court, resulted in payment received for all or part of the claims made) arе for additional items of expense based on the contract performance after the original completion date of September 16, 1979, to December 31, 1982.
A meticulous and exhaustive review of the claims originally made, their processing and resolution, has been accomplished by analyzing the record. The examples discussed below confirm the review performed and illustrate the analysis which lead to the conclusions herein. It would serve no useful purpose to discuss and compare each of the claims made against the City, including the factual basis therefor, and those made here. The claims before the court can be categorized as noted for each plaintiff in Paragraphs (1) through (4) above. In short, plaintiffs claim that defendant’s conduct in preparing and publishing the documents on which the Project was bid, the contract awarded and the Project administered, caused and necessitated much extra work and substantial delay in completing the job, obliging plaintiffs to be engaged in the performance of the contract until December 31, 1982, long beyond their estimated date of completion. Based thereon, they made claims against the City for additional payments, which they have since received, been awarded or otherwise agreed to. Now they seek additional amounts for:
(a) claims previously made but either not fully sustаined or not sustained at all;
(b) interest on amounts paid as claimed;
(c) losses not previously specifically claimed but clearly based on the same facts as the previous claims; and
(d) costs of the same nature as previously claimed but for periods other than those for which claims were made.
However, the claims are now made against the engineer rather than the City. As against the City, the claims for extra expenses were based on allegedly uncontemplated facts arising in thе performance of the contract. They were resolved by an arbitration procedure provided for in the contract. Now, against the engineers, consequent losses are claimed on the basis that such extra expense resulted from the engineers’ wrongful conduct in the bid, award and performance of the contract. Defendant has moved for summary judgment on the basis that the resolution of plaintiffs’ claims against the City bars the remaking of those claims here.
Discussion
On February 17, 1976, the JV contracted to construct the Project at a price of $32,-694,800. Exhibit 5. Cosgrove was the site-work subcontractor. Exhibit 22. Holzner was both an electrical subcontractor to the JV, Exhibits 1, 2 and 3, and a sub-subcontractor to ICI, Exhibit 7, the instrumentation and data logger subcontractor to the JV. Exhibit 6. The work was to be done by April 16, 1979. As of March 25, 1980, the work was 99% complete. The instrumentation and data logger systems largely delayed the completion until December 31, 1982 — the еxtended completion date per change orders. Extra work prompted claims for additional compensation, which, after arbitration as provided by the contract, resulted in payments to plaintiffs being increased to $35,612,542. Exhibits 25, 40, 46, 76 and 77.
Four arbitrations occurred:
1. Cosgrove’s claims were resolved by agreement with the City, which included a release by the JV and Cosgrove of all claims arising out of claim numbers 130, 348 and 32 and change order proposals 13, 20, 30 and 31, as presented for arbitration on December 15, 1977. Exhibit 54.
2. Holzner’s claim for extra work through May 31, 1980, Exhibit 21, went to arbitration, resulting in an award against the City, Exhibits 18 and 19, which was affirmed by the Connecticut Superior Court. Exhibits A and 77.
4. The JV asserted claims arising after June 26, 1980, when a general release, Exhibit 54, had been signed. These covered the period from June 26, 1980, to December 7, 1981, and werе settled by payment of $226,226.69 to the JV for four extra work claims and $147,681 for extended performance claims. All of these claims cited, for justification, defendant’s allegedly improper conduct, defective design specifications and deficient contract administration as the agent of the City — essentially the same conduct alleged herein as the basis for and cause of plaintiffs’ extra work and, in turn, the unreasonable delay in completion of plaintiffs’ respective performances.
The instrumentation/data logger problem was claimed to be the result of defendant’s design errors. The City claimed it resulted from installation other than as per contract. This dispute was part of the fourth arbitration. Exhibit 49. The result was an award of $1,028,119 in added payments for extended performance costs from April 16, 1979, to December 31, 1982, for failure in the design of the data logger system and a computer component and for failure of CDM to resolve conflicts between engineers and contractors. The arbitrator also found the JV failed to install the system properly as per contract and awarded the City $521,570.19. These offsetting claims were resolved by the parties and an agreed sum was paid to the JV after the adjusted, net award was confirmed by the Connecticut Superior Court. See Exhibit 46.
Illustrations of the interrelation of the arbitrated claims, discussed in plaintiff’s statement of facts and its memorandum filed on January 13, 1986, 11119, 28, 46 and 68, and its claims here, are as follows:
(a) Cosgrove claimed $127,239.55 for extra work and extra gravel and fill. Exhibits 26-29. It settled and received $45,500. Exhibit 54. With no other factual basis, it now claims that it was “unable to complete its work ... by the completion date on which it based its bid.” Exhibit 24, Supplemental Sheet A. Now it makes claims for costs of equipment, lost work opportunity, site cost overhead, lost profit and the amount claimed for gravel and fill over the $45,500 it recеived in settlement ($127,-239.55 - $45,550 = $81,739.55).
(b) Holzner’s claims for extra work against the City (claims B-l and B-7, Exhibit 16 and 17) did not specifically demand amounts for extended site costs, home office overhead, lost profit, building improvement, equipment and personnel commitment, nor wage escalation costs (items 1, 2, 3, 4 in 11 28, Plaintiff’s Statement of Facts) though some of the costs may, in fact, “have been an element of claim” for which an unallocated award was made. Id.
(c) ICI’s claims are in several respects comparable to those noted in (b). It also now claims interest on the amount retained by the City for which it made claim against the City but achieved no recovery. Item 6, 1146. Id.
(d) The JV’s claims follow the patterns noted in (a), (b) and (c) above.
Defendant moves for judgment on grounds of:
1. the bar of res judicata;
2. the bar of accord and satisfaction; and
3. the bar of release and discharge.
As discussed below, defendant’s position is sustained as to res judicata, accord and satisfaction, and overruled in part as to release and discharge.
I. Controlling Law
Plaintiffs invoked diversity jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. § 1332. The law of Connecticut thus controls.
Klaxon v. Stentor Co.,
The dоctrine of res judicata requires three elements: (1) final determination of the claim in issue; (2) identity of parties or privies between first and second action; and (3) identity of claims or issues between first and second action.
Wade’s Dairy, Inc. v. Fairfield,
A. Finality
Finality is expressed in terms of a final judgment.
Corey v. Avco-Lycoming Division,
B. Identity of Parties
An action which is adjudicated is conclusive on the parties and their privies as to each claim “relating to the cause of action which was actually made or might have been made.”
Corey,
Plaintiffs, as contractual parties, now assert rights to redress for losses and damages caused by defendant’s preparation of the bid documents, the Project plans and specifications and administration of their construction contract with the City. If any duty is owed to them by defendant, it is because their contract performance was impacted by the information and material issued and published by defendant in anticipation of that contract and its administration of that contract for the City.
C. Identity of Claims or Issues
The last еlement of res judicata is that the same cause of action be involved. The arbitration claims, based on defendant’s conduct, were founded on the identical facts relied on here. The fact that different damages may, in part, be asserted here does not give rise to a different cause of action. A single group of facts giving rise to an injury is but one cause of action and, even though it “may give rise to rights for several different kinds of relief, it is still a single cаuse of action.”
Bridgeport Hydraulic Co.,
In support of their claim that the arbitration does not bar this action as the same claims were not there submitted, plaintiffs cite
Hamill v. Neikind,
As plaintiffs’ claims are without merit, defendant’s motion for summary judgment is granted on the basis of res judicata.
III. Accord and Satisfaction
The elements of this defense are (a) agreement to settle a disputed claim; and (b) fulfillment of the agreement’s terms.
Gilreath v. Sentry Ins. Co.,
The defense is one of repose, i.e., the same disputes should not be the subject of successive claims. The risk of duplicative recoveries and inconsistent results warrants the bar. A settlement is but an alternative disposition to adjudication of a claim and thus the same purposes are served by this defense as is the case with res judicata from which it follows that the same breadth of availability of the res judicata defense should be extended tо this defense. The principles underlying res judicata apply equally to the defense of accord and .satisfaction and lead to the conclusion that such defense may be invoked by one in privy with a party to the agreement. Plaintiffs claim that they did not intend resolution of all claims flies in the face of the record. They can no longer make any of these claims against the City — the arbitration proceedings exhausted their ability to obtain redress from thе City. The release executed refers broadly to the claims resolved. What plaintiffs have done is to make claims against the City based on defendant’s conduct, its acts or omissions. On the same basis, they now seek to assert the same claims, though on slightly different theories of damage against defendant. The resolution of their claims against the principal, the City, based on the conduct of the agent, resolves also, by accord and satisfaction, the clаims based on the same conduct against the agent. Defendant is not a joint tortfeasor and Connecticut’s statutory preclusion of a joint tortfeasor benefiting from a release, Conn.Gen.Stat. § 52-572e, is of no avail to plaintiffs. That statute applies to joint tortfeasors separately liable by reason of separate conduct which conjunctively affects another. The resolution of the principal’s vicarious liability for the acts of its agеnt bars further consideration of the identical conduct here asserted against the agent. 3
For the foregoing reasons, defendant’s motion for summary judgment, to the extent it is based on the defense of accord and satisfaction, is granted.
IV. Release and Discharge
Defendant points to two releases as the basis of its defense. One was executed on October 19, 1978, and pertained only to any and all claims made by Cosgrove related to four bases for extra payments. Exhibit 54. The seсond, dated June 26, 1980,
Accordingly, there being no genuine issues of material fact in the record with respect to defendant’s three defenses and it appearing that defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, the motion for summary judgment is granted on the grounds of res judicata and accord and satisfaction and, subject to the noted limitation, on the ground of release and discharge.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The parties were in part finished with their work under the contract at the time of the third arbitration and were all finished by the time of the fourth arbitration in which the award was made on July 13, 1983.
.
United States v. Stull,
. As of the conclusion of their work, plaintiffs’ claims were liquidated, as a matter of law,
W.H. McCune, Inc. v. Revzon,
. A third release is in the record, dated November 16, 1982, and found as Exhibit A to the Marcus affidavit filed by plaintiffs in opposition tо the motion in which rights against other than the City were reserved. The subcontractors were not named, but the JV purported to act on their behalf. Of course, the operation of the law to discharge agents of released principals cannot simply be obviated by an agreement. Defendants do not claim summary judgment as to these claims except by virtue of the defenses of res judicata and accord and satisfaction. It is clear that plaintiffs received the last payment under the contract, thus releasing the City and the engineer. Exhibit 5, Article 25. See Murray Transcript, ¶¶ 9-11.
