Opinion
The City of Los Angeles (City) obtained millions of dollars worth of construction work that it does not want to pay for. It believes it is absolved of any obligation to pay by Public Contract Code section 7107
1
and
Amelco Electric v. City of Thousand Oaks
(2002)
Because prompt pay penalties cannot continue after judgment is entered, we modify the awаrd in favor of DRW to reflect that interest on the prompt pay penalties shall accrue at 7 percent legal interest postjudgment. As modified, the award in favor of DRW is affirmed. The judgment, however, is reversed and remanded for a trial on DRW’s excluded claims. 3
FACTS
After competitive bidding, DRW was awarded a public works contract (C-741 contract) by the City to expand the digester capacity at the Hyperion Wastewater Treatment Plant. The City was permitted to retain up to 10 percent of each progress pаyment (retention) and hold those funds in an interest-bearing escrow account. Additionally, it could deduct liquidated damages for delays from any payments made. During construction, the City issued over 300 change orders containing more than 1,000 changes to the plans and specifications. On rare occasions, the City directed DRW to perform changes on a time and materials basis. In general, the City requested an estimate of the cost of work, told DRW to commence work and agreed the parties would negotiate a lumр-sum payment at a later date. Though the parties agreed on the compensation payable for some of the time and materials change orders and lump-sum change orders, not all the change orders were settled. When DRW completed the project, it asked for an equitable adjustment to compensate it for work performed without a price, and for the expenses and losses incurred due to the City’s interference and delays. The City refused. In addition, the City assessed liquidated damages against DRW for delays and did not release the retention funds from escrow.
DRW sued the City for breach of contract. The City cross-complained. The City’s claim for breach of contract alleged, inter alia, that DRW was liable for
Based on Amelco and section 7105, subdivision (d)(2), 4 the City filed motions in limine to preclude DRW from presenting a total cost claim to the jury, and from proving its damages with engineering estimates. The trial court precluded a total cost theory of damages on the grounds that DRW’s evidence in support of the theory was insufficient, and ruled that a modified total cost theory was not recognized in California. Next, the trial court ruled that general conditions section 38 (GC Section 38) of the C-741 contract required DRW to proceed on a time and materials basis and document actual costs any time the parties did not agree on a lump sum. DRW was precluded from introducing evidence or presenting argument to the jury that it was entitled to recover damages resulting from changes or extra work calculated by any method other than as provided in the C-741 contract. The trial court held a hearing and found that the in limine rulings barred three of DRW’s 10 damages claims: (1) claim No. 3 for the difference between the City’s estimates and DRW’s estimates on lump-sum change orders when the parties did not agree on a price; (2) claim No. 5 for additional payments due from the City because of breaches of the implied warranty of correctness of the plans and for other breaches of contract; 5 and (3) claim No. 6 for the cost of inefficient labor caused by breach of the implied warranty of correctness of the plans.
The case proceeded to trial on DRW’s claims for delay damages, wrongfully withheld retention and prompt pay penalties, and on the City’s cross-complaint. Following the presentation of evidence, the trial court instructed the jury and tasked it with interpreting the C-741 contract.
The jury rendered a general verdict with special interrogatories. The jury found that the City breached the C-741 contract and caused DRW damages.
These timely appeals followed. 7
DISCUSSION
I.
DRW’s Appeal
DRW contends that it is entitled to a reversal of the in limine rulings because the trial court should have submitted the interpretation of GC Section 38(c) to the jury; it is entitled to prove its damages with the best evidence available (which, in this case, is often engineering estimates); and it is entitled to pursue a modified total cost theory of damages. We agree.
A. Standard of review.
When all evidence on a particular claim is excluded based on a motion in limine, the ruling is subject to independent review as though the trial court had granted a motion for judgment on the pleadings or, if evidence was offered, a motion for nonsuit.
(Aas
v.
Superior Court
(2000)
In instances in which an in limine ruling does not preclude an entire claim but instead limits the evidence that will be offered to prove a claim, we review the ruling for an abuse of discretion.
(Katiuzhinsky v. Perry
(2007)
B. GC Section 38(c).
GC Section 38(c)(4) authorized the City’s engineer to request a quotation on a proposed change. DRW was required to submit a quotation on a form entitled “Change Order Cost Quotation Form[/]Estimate Summary for Prime Contractor Total Costs.” The form, which was only one page, appeared as attachment A to the general conditions of the C-741 contract. A quotation request was not “considered authorization to proceed with the changed work prior to the issuance of a formal Change Order, unless direсted otherwise in writing by the [e]ngineer.” With respect to GC Section 38(c)(4) change orders for which the City directed DRW to commence work and negotiate a price at a later date, and for which the City never agreed on a price or paid, DRW proposed to prove at least some of its damages at trial with engineering estimates.
The City, however, argued that when the parties did not mutually determine a lump sum at a later date, DRW could only be paid under GC Section 38(c)(3). That subdivision provided: “[I]f the method or amоunt of payment cannot be agreed upon prior to the beginning of the work, and the [e]ngineer directs in writing that the work be done on a [time and materials] basis,
Confusion arises because GC Section 38(c) stated generally that the cost of changed work was supposed to be formulated in accordance with the provisions of GC Section 38(c)(1) through (12). This could mean, as DRW posited below, that GC Section 38(c)(3) and (4) stand alone as self-contained provisions. Or, assuming without deciding for purposes of this appeal, it could mean that (c)(3) applied to every cost formulation whether the City directed work to be done on a time and matеrials basis or not, i.e., DRW could not get paid under (c)(4) unless it documented its actual costs as required by (c)(3). Other provisions of the C-741 contract do not eliminate the obfuscation. GC Section 38(b)(4) required the City to agree to an equitable adjustment if a change under GC Section 38 caused an increase in DRW’s work, but the terms of GC Section 38(b)(4) did not obligate DRW to document its actual costs. Under GC Section 38(c)(13), DRW was obligated to keep records of the cost of changes and the cost of the base scope of the work. It does not indicate the detail with which those costs were to be tracked. Thus, we conclude that GC Section 38 was reasonably susceptible to more than one meaning and required additional interpretive inquiry.
(Pacific Gas & E. Co.
v.
G. W. Thomas Drayage etc. Co.
(1968)
If a contract is ambiguous, parol evidence is admissible to aid interpretation.
(Employers Reinsurance Co.
v.
Superior Court
(2008)
DRW prеsented or adverted to evidence that the parties proceeded under GC Section 38(c)(4). The City never directed DRW to keep track of the cost of the work as it was being performed. This was because the resolution of the changes was dependent on engineering estimates. For some of the work performed under GC Section 38(c)(4), the parties negotiated lump-sum payments after the changed work was completed. As for other work, the City did not reject DRW’s estimates based on a lack of aсtual documentation of costs. Rather, the City adopted its own engineering estimates and rejected DRW’s estimates as inaccurate. When the City requested an estimate under
As for custom and practice in the public works industry, DRW submitted evidence that time and materials change orders are usually limited to emergency situations or to changes small in cost and scope. For large or complex work, owners prefer using lump-sum change orders because time and materials change orders require them to pay for the additional engineering cost of keeping track of the work in the field. Lump-sum change orders are often negotiated after the work proceeds so the parties can avoid delays or suspension of the work.
This evidence supports DRW because its interpretation is consistent with the parties’ course of dealing as well as custom and practice.
Given the patent ambiguity of GC Section 38 and the extrinsic evidence offered or referenced by DRW in its papers, it was entitled to a trial on contract interpretation. On remand, the trial court must require “the jury to make special findings on the disputed issues and then base . . . interpretation of the contract on those findings”
(Medical Operations Management, Inc. v. National Health Laboratories, Inc.
(1986)
C. Claims Nos. 3, 5 and 6.
According to DRW, GC Section 38 is not a limitation on the method of calculating breach of contract damages, and the law permits it to prove its damages on claims Nos. 3, 5 and 6 with the best evidence available even if that evidence takes the form of engineering estimates. We agree.
Because the C-741 contract is a public contract that was awarded pursuant to competitive bidding, DRW may not sue for abandonment and recover the reasonable value of its services.
(Amelco, supra,
27 Cal.4th at pp. 238-241.) Based on section 7105, subdivision (d)(2), the compensation payable to DRW for amendments and modifications has to be determined as
If, after remand, the trial court or jury interprets the C-741 contract and concludes that GC Section 38 did not require DRW to document actual costs on the change orders issued by the City, and if engineering estimates are the best evidence of damages available, thеn DRW can offer those estimates to prove its claims. Our holding is in line with the common law of contract damages.
(Record etc. Co.
v.
Pageman Hold. Corp.
(1955)
If, on the other hand, the trial court or jury concludes that DRW was оbligated to document its actual costs on change orders issued by the City, then there is an issue as to whether documenting actual costs was a covenant to perform rather than a condition to payment.
9
And if it was a condition,
Despite the foregoing, the City argues that DRW cannot possibly havе a remedy because section 7105 supersedes Record Machine and California Lettuce Growers and thereby proscribes DRW from using any method of calculating damages not spelled out in the C-741 contract. This argument fails.
We conclude that section 7105 and the common law of this state are not in conflict because section 7105 does not expressly abrogate common law, and the two can be harmonized.
10
“As a general rule, ‘[ujnless expressly provided, statutes should not be interpreted to alter the common law, and should be construed to avoid conflict with common law rales. [Citation.] “A statute will be construed in light of common law decisions, unless its language ‘ “clearly and unequivocally discloses an intention to depart from, alter, or abrogate the common-law rule concerning the particular subject matter . . . .” [Citations.]’ [Citation.]” ’ [Citation.] Accordingly, ‘[t]here is a presumption that a statute does not, by implication, repeal the common law. [Citation.] Repeal by implication is recognized only where there is no rational basis for harmonizing two potentiаlly conflicting laws.’ [Citation.]”
(California Assn, of Health Facilities v. Department of Health Services
(1997)
This leads us to breach of the implied warranty of correctness. Souza permitted a contractor to assert this claim against a public entity. (Souza, supra, 57 Cal.2d at pp. 510-511.) Because we are bound by Souza, and so is the trial court, DRW must be permitted to pursue its implied warranty of correctness claims to the extent they are not subsumed within a change order. If DRW recovers, the award will not represent a contract abandonment barred by Amelco, nor will it represent a payment for an amendment barred by section 7107, subdivision (f). Rather, it will simply represent an award of contract damages under long-standing common law.
Our last inquiry is whether DRW should have been permitted to present a modified total cost claim to the jury.
Under the total cost method, “damages are determined by ‘subtracting the contract amount from the total cost of performance.’ [Citations.]”
(Amelco, supra,
Amelco
recognizes that a contractor can recover on a total cost or modified total cost theory. In dоing so, the court cited
State of California ex rel. Dept. of Transportation v. Guy F. Atkinson Co.
(1986)
All other issues are moot. 11
The City’s Cross-appeal *
DISPOSITION
The award is modified to reflect that DRW is entitled to 7 percent interest on the prompt pay penalties. As modified, the award in favor of DRW is affirmed. The judgment is otherwise reversed and remanded for further proceedings on DRW’s excluded contract claims.
DRW and CBI shall recover their costs on appeal.
Boren, P. J., and Doi Todd, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied April 16, 2010, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. The petition of resрondent City of Los Angeles for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 30, 2010, S182187.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Public Contract Code unless otherwise indicated.
Government Code section 12650 et seq.
The pretrial proceedings and trial presented the trial court with difficult legal and logistical issues that were made even more difficult by the inability of trial counsel to adequately define the case and state the law. Given this context, the trial court’s effort to resolve these issues was admirable.
Section 7105, subdivision (d)(2) provides in part: “Contracts of public agencies, excluding the state, required to be let or awarded on the basis of competitive bids pursuant to any statute may be terminated, amended, or modified only if the termination, amendment, or modification is so provided in the contract or is authorized under provision of law other than this subdivision. The compensation payable, if any, for amendments and modifications shall be determined as provided in the contract. The compensation payable, if any, in the event the contract is so terminated shall bе determined as provided in the contract or applicable statutory provision providing for the termination.”
If a contractor makes a misinformed bid because a public entity issued incorrect plans and specifications, precedent establishes that the contractor can sue for breach of the implied warranty that the plans and specifications are correct. The contractor may recover “for extra work or expenses necessitated by the conditions being other than as represented. [Citations.]”
(.Souza & McCue Constr. Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1962)
Facts pertinent to the excluded claims have not been adjudicated. Our statement of those facts is based on argument and offers of proof and, as a result, does not give rise to collateral estoppel. On remand, the parties must litigate the relevant facts. As long as the proper law is applied, this opinion in no way precludes the trier of fact from deciding factual issues in favor of the City.
We received briefs from DRW, CBI, and the City and, as amicus curiae, the League of California Cities. CBI was not only a cross-defendant below, it was the real party in interest with respect to a portion of the $25 million in claims that are the subject of DRW’s appeal.
Section 20162 establishes that if a public contract exceeds $5,000, like the C-741 contract, “it shall be contracted for and let to the lowest responsible bidder after notice.” (§ 20162.) Because there is no conflict between the City’s charter and section 20162 or section 7105, these statutes apply to the City.
(Howard Contracting, Inc. v. G. A. MacDonald Construction Co.
(1998)
“A
covenant
is a
promise
to render some performance. The practical distinction between a condition and a covenant may be illustrated as follows: (1) If B agrees to render some performance to A, provided a condition happens, and the condition does not happen, A’s
duty to perform is excused,
but A
cannot recover damages
from B. (2) On the other hand, if no condition is stated, and B merely makes a promise, his or her breach of covenant will give rise
At oral argument, the City conceded that section 7105 did not abrogate common law.
CBI contends that it is entitled to recover on its pass-through claims even if we affirm the trial court’s in limine rulings. According to CBI, its claims are viable because they are not lump-sum claims, its owner interference claim is not governed by the change order provisions,
See footnote, ante, page 1396.
