MEMORANDUM OPINION
The parties entered into a purchase order (“Contract”) for Plaintiff C B Structures, Inc. (“C B Structures”) to construct pole barns, which are “shed-like building[s] with no foundation and siding made of corrugated steel or aluminum,” for Defendant Potomac Electric Power Co. (“Pep-eo”) to use “to house its fleet of trucks” (the “Project”). Jt.'Stmt. l & n. 1, ECF No. 35. The Contract included a “Premium” of $68,220.00, Ex. 1, Jt. Rec. 1, ECF No. 36, and a Proposal Letter that C B. Structures submitted to Pepeo’s engineering consultant stated that “ ‘[f]or a premium of $68,220.00,’ ” C B Structures would “‘substantially complete the buildings by 12-3112,’” Jt. Stmt. 2 (quoting Proposal Ltr.). When Pepeo refused to pay the Premium because C B Structures did not complete the Project by December 31, 2012, C B Structures filed suit for breach of contract, and Pepeo counter-claimed for breach of contract and recoupment. Compl., ECF No. 2; Am. Counter-CL, ECF No.-13. The parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the narrow issue of the meaning of Premium as used in the Contract between the parties. ECF Nos. 31, 32.
I. THE CONTRACT
The Contract provides:
This contract shall be governed by PHI [Pepeo] Standard Terms and Conditions for Service Contracts V.8 with Safety Attachment A .Rev. 5 ■ [“Standard Terms”].
Install New Pole Barns This purchase order is for DoubleTree Structures [“DoubleTree,” a division of C B Structures] to provide structural design, calculations, drawings, seals, submittals, material and construction according to [the] attached -proposal- for Forestville Service 'Center.
Jt. Rec. 1. It then includes an itemized list, with prices for each item, such as “Vehicle Canopy Structure # 1 $124,295.00” and “Conduit, Trenching, Trench repair $13,800.00”; one line item is “Premium $68,220.00.” Id.
The parties do not identify the “attached proposal,” and it does not appear to bé a part of the Joint Record Extract. The record doés include the Standard Terms, which provide: :
Contraed. The Contract shall consist of the Purchase Order, including any documents attached to or identified on the PO, any contract amendments or modifications, and any PHI-approved Contract Change Authorizations.
In the event of & conflict among terms contained in documents attached to, or identified in, the PO, such conflict shall be resolved in the following descending order of precedence:
(i) PHI prepared pre-bid and bid clarification-minutes
(ii) PHI accepted portions of Contractor’s Proposal
(iii) These Terms and Conditions
(iv) Attachments to these Terms and Conditions
Ex. 20, Jt. Rec. 59. None of these documents appearing in the record refers to the Premium or otherwise illuminates its meaning.
The record does include what the parties refer to as a “Proposal Letter,” Ex. 2, Jt. Rec. 5. Yet, the parties refer to it as extrinsic evidence, PL’s Mem. 9; Def.’s Opp’n & Cross-Mot. 19-20, rather than an attachment to the Contract, - suggesting that it is not the “attached proposal” or another document that constituted part of the Contract, as Contract is defined in the Standard Terms. See SG Homes Assocs., LP v. Marinucci,
Per our original proposal and preliminary schedule, C.B. Structures intends to be substantially complete with the Forestville buildings in February and 100% complete by March 31,2013,' at the original price quoted. ■ That is a comfortable schedule that allows for typicalweather delays and normal working hours.
We have more than enough resources available to be able to complete the project by December 31, 2012. However, in an effort to provide the most competitive price possible we did not factor the necessary premium, expenses for early completion into our original price.
For a premium, of $68,220.00, we will substantially complete the buildings by 12-31-12.
This premium will allow us to: authorize all the necessary overtime; bring on temporary staff as needed; cover overtime premiums charged by subs and suppliers; cover costs for temporary heat and/or special materials/mixes.
This completion time is barring any major weather delays or any approval delays from owner/government agencies and excludes any placing of asphalt.
Jt. Rec. 5 (emphasis added).
II. THE PARTIES’ POSITIONS
The parties have completed stage 1 discovery as identified in the Discovery Order that I issued, EOF No. 11-1, and, although they dispute various material facts regarding which they -will seek additional discovery, at this juncture they ask the Court to resolve a single matter.of law: the meaning of Premium as used in the Contract. Jt. Stmt. 10. As C B Structures sees it, the Contract language is unambiguous and “does not condition Pepco’s payment of the ‘Premium’ of $68,220 on completion of C B Structures’ work prior to the end of 2012.” PL’s Mem. 6. Rather, in C B Structures’ view, “the total contract amount to be paid CB Structures as stated in the Purchase Order includes the amount of the $68,220 premium.” Id. at 7. In other words, it is C B Structures’ position that the $68,220 Premium was an increase in the price that C B Structures originally quoted to Pepeo before Pepeo asked that it accelerate the completion date by three months, which would cause C B Structures to incur additional mobilization expenses that it would not incur if it had longer to complete the construction. In a nutshell, the Premium was an addition to the purchase price, not a bonus conditioned upon completion by a date certain. Additionally, C B Structures contends that “[e]ven if the language of the Contract is determined to be ambiguous, the undisputed extrinsic evidence in this case when interpreted according to the rules of contract interpretation,” and construed against Pepeo as the drafter, “proves that C B Structures was not required to complete its work by December 31, 2012 as a condition precedent to payment of the Premium.” Id. at 7-8. Not so, says Pepeo. In its view, the term Premium as used in the Contract is ambiguous, and “parol evidence clearly demonstrates that the Premium was conditioned upon substantial completion of the project by December 31, 2012.” Def.’s Opp’n & Cross-Mot. 10.
III. SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
Summary judgment is proper when the moving party demonstrates, through “particular parts of materials in the record, including depositions, documents, electronically stored information, affidavits or declarations, stipulations ..., admissions, interrogatory answers, or other materials,” that “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.Civ.P, 56(a), (c)(1)(A); see Baldwin v. City of Greensboro,
IV. CONTRACT INTERPRETATION
Maryland law
[c]ourts in Maryland apply the law of objective contract interpretation, which provides that “[t]he written language embodying the terms of an agreement will govern the rights and liabilities of the parties, irrespective of the intent of the parties at the time they entered into the contract, unless the written language is not susceptible of a clear and definite understanding.”
Id. (quoting Slice v. Carozza Properties, Inc.,
When construing an unambiguous contract, “courts focus on the four corners of the agreement^] and ascribe to the contract’s language its customary, ordinary, and accepted meaning.” Dyna-corp Ltd. v. Aramtel Ltd.,
The court also “may construe an ambiguous contract if there is no factual dispute in the evidence,” Pacific Indem. Co.,
“When a writing' is ambiguous, extrinsic evidence is admissible to deter-miné the intentions of the parties to the document.” Point’s Reach Condominium Council of Unit Owners v. Point Homeowners Ass’n, Inc.,
“ ‘It is a basic principle of contract law that, in' construing the language of a contract, ambiguitiés are resolved against the draftsman of the instrument.’ ” John L. Mattingly Const. Co. v. Hartford Underwriters Ins. Co.,
V. DISCUSSION
The parties dispute the meaning of Premium. Although I must “ascribe to the contract’s language its customary, ordinary, and accepted meaning,” Dynacorp Ltd.,
Indeed, the Contract itself — a simple purchase order that refers to a “Premium” of .“$68,220.00” — does nothing to relieve this ambiguity when considered in its entirety. Even considering all documents
The Proposal Letter states that C B Structures would complete the Project “by March 31, 2013, at the original price quoted,” which was “a comfortable schedule that allow[ed] for typical weather delays and normal working hours,” but also that it could “complete the project by December 31, 2012” by incurring “necessary premium expenses” that it “did not factor ... into [its] original price.” Jt. Rec. 5. It then states that, “[f]or á premium of $68,220.00, [C B Structures would] substantially complete the buildings by 12 — 31— 12.” Id. The Proposal Letter explains that the Premium would “allow [C B Structures] to: authorize all the necessary overtime; bring on temporary staff as needed; cover overtime premiums charged by subs and suppliers; cover costs for temporary heat and/or special materials/mixes.” Id. It also cautions that the promised “completion time [was] barring any major weather delays or any approval delays,” id., suggesting that the Premium still applied if C B Structures did not complete the Project by December 31,2012.
Importantly, the Proposal ’Letter uses the word “premium” four times. The first explains that when 'C B Structures bid the original job, it did so with the understanding that it would have until March 31, 2013 to achieve final completion. This time-frame allowed it to offer “the most competitive price possible,” since' it did not have to factor in the “necessary premium, expenses for early completion.” Jt. Rec. ,5 (emphasis added). Clearly, the word “premium” was qualified by the word “expenses” and explained, why C B Structures would have to increase the total cost,to achieve early completion:, because, doing so would, cause it to incur additional expenses. C B Structures further explained the Premium’s relationship to the expenses it would incur as follows: “This premium will allow-us to: authorize. all the necessary overtime; bring on temporary staff as needed; ..cover overtime . premiums charged.by subs and suppliers; cover-costs for temporary heat and/or special materials/mixes.” Id. (emphasis added). C B Structures’ use of the phrase “overtime premiums” to describe payments it would have to make, to its subcontractors in order to meet an earlier completion date further clarifies that the word “premium” was used to mean an incurred expense. Read in context, the repeated use of the word “premium” in the Proposal Letter in connection with a description of additional expenses that C B Structures would have to absorb in order to complete the Project three months earlier than originally planned makes it clear to the reader- that the “Premium” was an increase in the proposed price of the Contract occasioned by the need to incur additional expenses to finish early, and not a bonus or incentive payment, entitlement to which would be contingent upon actually finishing the Project by'December 31,2012. -■ --1’
Considering the Contract in the context of this unambiguous language in the Proposal Letter, I find that the Premium was a payment for costs that C B Structures would incur if it accelerated its schedule, to enable it to complete the Project by December 31, 2012. Jt. Rec. 5. It was not an incentive, only to be paid if C B Structures completed the Project by the end of 2012. Indeed, the Proposal Letter stated that, even with the Premium, C B Structures could not guarantee completion by the end of 2012. See id. Thus, the Premium was part of the total amount due under the Contract.
Construing the Contract in this fashion does not mean that Pepeo is without a remedy if it proves that C B Structures failed to complete the Project by the agreed-upon earlier date due to its own fault, if the Contract afforded Pepeo remedies for C B Structures’ breach. However the Contract used the word Premium, it was paid to enable C B Structures to complete the Project by December 31, 2012, which C B Structures did not do. Thus, C B Structures still may be liable for damages for its failure to meet that deadline, if the evidence supports such a finding.
VI. CONCLUSION
In sum, I find that the term “Premium” as used in the Contract means an advance mobilization cost that was not contingent on completion of the Project by December 31, 2012 and that was part of the total amount due under the Contract. C B Structures’ motion for a declaratory judgment, construed as a motion for summary judgment on the meaning of “Premium,” ECF No. 31, IS GRANTED, and Pepco’s motion for summary judgment on the same issue, ECF No. 32, IS DENIED.
A separate Order will issue.
Notes
. . Plaintiffs motion, styled as a Motion for Declaratory Judgment, shall be treated as a motion for summary judgment, which a party may seek on "[a] part of [a] claim,” such as the narrow issue that the parties identify. See Tauber v. Souza, No. PWG-11-3639, 2013 WL 204509S, at *5 (D.Md. May 13, 2013) (noting that "a declaratory judgment ... is a separate cause of action” and that "[a] motion for summary judgment is not a vehicle for a
. The parties agree that Maryland law applies. See Pl.’s Mem. 6; Def.’s Opp’n & Cross-Mot. 11.
. The online edition of the Oxford English Dictionary appears at the top of Justice Scalia and Bryan Garner’s list of "the most useful and authoritative for the English language generally.” Antonin Scalia & Biyan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 419, 423 (2012),'
