G4S TECHNOLOGY LLC vs. MASSACHUSETTS TECHNOLOGY PARK CORPORATION.
SJC-12397
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
June 13, 2018
Suffolk. March 5, 2018. - June 13, 2018.
Present: Gants, C.J., Gaziano, Lowy, Budd, Cypher, & Kafker, JJ.
NOTICE: All slip opinions and orders are subject to formal revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound volumes of the Official Reports. If you find a typographical error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1 Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA, 02108-1750; (617) 557-1030; SJCReporter@sjc.state.ma.us
Contract, Public works, Construction contract, Performance and breach, Subcontractor, Damages. Public Works, Delay, Extra work. Damages, Breach of contract, Quantum meruit, Fraud. Practice, Civil, Summary judgment, Damages. Fraud.
Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on September 22, 2014.
The case was heard by Janet L. Sanders, J., on motions for summary judgment, and entry of separate and final judgment was ordered by her.
The Supreme Judicial Court granted an application for direct appellate review.
Christopher Weld, Jr. (Megan C. Deluhery & Joel Lewin also present) for the plaintiff.
Robert J. Kaler (Edwin L. Hall also present) for the defendant.
Carol Chandler, Brendan Carter, David E. Wilson, Shannon A. Reilly, & Mark Keough Molloy, for Associated Builders and Contractors, Massachusetts Chapter, & others, amici curiae, submitted a brief.
Maura Healey, Attorney General, & James A. Sweeney & Cassandra H. Arriaza, Assistant Attorneys General, for the Attorney General, amicus curiae, submitted
KAFKER, J. At issue is a construction contract dispute between G4S Technology LLC (G4S) and Massachusetts Technology Park Corporation (MTPC) arising out of a State- and federally funded project to design and build a fiber optic network in western and north central Massachusetts. On summary judgment, a judge in the Superior Court concluded that G4S was barred from seeking recovery on the contract or under quantum meruit because it intentionally filed false certifications of timely payments to subcontractors. The judge also concluded that MTPC could not maintain a fraud action against G4S, in which it sought damages in addition to the $4 million payment MTPC already had withheld from G4S, because any recovery would be duplicative.
On appeal, G4S argues that MTPC was not damaged by the false certifications, and that the Commonwealth should replace the common-law rule that “in relation to building contracts, . . . a contractor cannot recover on the contract itself without showing complete and strict performance of all its terms,” Andre v. Maguire, 305 Mass. 515, 516 (1940), with a materiality rule as provided in the Restatement (Second) of Contracts §§ 237, 241
We conclude that complete and strict performance is still required for all construction contract terms relating to the design and construction itself. We also conclude, however, that ordinary contract principles, including the traditional Massachusetts materiality rule, apply for breaches of other provisions, such as the one at issue governing payment certifications. We hold that G4S‘s numerous false certifications and intentional subcontractor payment delays constitute a material breach of the contract and, standing alone, preclude recovery for breach of contract.
Summary judgment was not, however, properly granted on G4S‘s quantum meruit theory of recovery. A party seeking to recover under quantum meruit must prove both substantial performance and good faith. Substantial performance is not at issue here, as the project was completed as specified, albeit delayed. The issue is whether a party that has intentionally committed a breach of a provision in the contract can still have acted in good faith for quantum meruit purposes and whether there has been a windfall for the other party. Overruling an older line of cases, we now hold that good faith applies to the contract as a whole, and that the intentional commission of breaches of individual contract provisions must be considered in the over-all context, including the value of the uncompensated work, the damage caused by the breach, the total performance of both parties, and the balancing of equities to accomplish a just result. Here, there are material disputed facts regarding which party caused the delays, whether G4S performed $10 million of uncompensated work, and whether there is any causal connection between the intentional misrepresentations regarding payments to subcontractors and the damages assessed against G4S. We thus reverse the award of summary judgment on the quantum meruit claim for further fact finding.
We further conclude that the dismissal of MTPC‘s fraud claim against G4S was error. The undisputed facts establish fraudulent certifications. The motion judge dismissed the count as duplicative, concluding that the fraudulent certifications provided the basis for damages under all the different claims presented and
1. Background. MTPC is a State development agency created and organized under
Time was of the essence with respect to the dates for substantial completion and final completion of the project.2 According to the initial procurement documents, the Recovery Act award placed
MTPC put the project out to public bid, and a design-build contract with G4S was executed on June 30, 2011. After adjustments, the total contract value was $45.5 million. G4S agreed to the mandatory milestones and acknowledged that if “any Date for a Mandatory Milestone, after adjustment for any extensions of time . . . is not attained as a result of any failure of [G4S] to perform, then [G4S] shall pay [MTPC], as part of compensatory delay damages . . . for each Day . . . that achievement of the Mandatory Milestone” is not met as damages are “difficult to determine and specify accurately.”3
Damages for failure to attain substantial completion by April 15, 2013, was $7,500 per day and escalated to $9,500 per day after June 30, 2013. Failure to attain final completion by June 30, 2013, was $3,000 per day; daily rates additive for any periods of overlap. The contract, however, also contemplated a remedy should there be excused delays to the project. Articles 8.2.1 and 8.2.2 provided that, “[i]f [G4S] is delayed in the performance of the Work due to acts, omissions, conditions, events, or circumstances beyond its control and due to no fault of its own, . . . the Contract Time(s) for performance shall be reasonably extended by Change Order . . . [and G4S] shall also be entitled to an
MTPC‘s contract with G4S set forth additional provisions, at issue here. They included (1) procedures for obtaining a change order to adjust the contract price and time in the event of delay to the work; (2) MTPC‘s right to stop and suspend the work and terminate G4S for cause should G4S, among other reasons, fail to “timely pay, without cause . . . subcontractors“; (3) MTPC‘s obligation to facilitate timely and efficient performance of the work, submit conduit and pole attachment applications for licenses and leases, and perform any “Make-Ready work” necessary to permit G4S to perform its construction and installation work; and (4) G4S‘s right to, within ten working days of awareness of excused work delay, request an equitable adjustment to the contract price or an equitable extension of time for the reasonable costs of excused delays or differing site conditions.
Following the June 30, 2011, execution of the design-build contract and the subsequent notice to proceed, G4S commenced the work. On September 21, 2012, MTPC notified G4S of nonconforming work and requested corrective action.4 On December 10, 2012, MTPC notified G4S a second time of nonconforming work and gave notice that G4S had failed to cure the prior nonconforming work.5 At various times, change orders were executed throughout the performance of the work. The dates to achieve substantial and final completion of the project were adjusted to July 31, 2013, and October 31, 2013, respectively. The parties reserved their respective rights, stating that “[n]othing in . . . Change Order[s] shall be taken as a waiver of any rights or defense of [MTPC] and [G4S] with respect to any other request for change, equitable adjustment or other claim.”
On March 7, 2014, over seven months past the contractual
On September 10, 2014, G4S submitted an amended REA to MTPC for approximately $10 million. G4S asserted that, because of MTPC‘s “failure to timely complete the necessary predecessor Make-Ready work,” G4S incurred substantial additional time and costs in completing the project. It explained, “The failure of [MTPC] to timely complete the predecessor activities to G4S installation work resulted in the work often being performed with different crew configurations, out-of-sequence, in smaller non-contiguous distances, utilizing premium time/extended work days, and often in different climatic conditions than what was contemplated under the baseline schedule.” The amended REA referenced provisions in the contract that permitted G4S to recover increased costs due to circumstances that were no fault of the design-builder. G4S also stated that it had filed the necessary change orders required by article 8.2.1 and that the parties had reserved their rights regarding those change orders.8 Contending that MTPC‘s failure was thus the “root cause of delays and impacts to the Project,” G4S also requested another adjustment to the dates to achieve substantial and final completion of the
On January 20, 2015, MTPC issued a Certificate of Final Completion of the Work, over one year after the contractual final completion date. On February 11, 2015, MTPC issued a recalculated and updated “Notice of Withholding” of approximately $4 million, to account for subsequent delays, costs, and expenses.
G4S brought an action in the Superior Court against MTPC for breach of contract, breach of warranty, and quantum meruit. G4S asserted that MTPC‘s withholding of $4 million was improper and contended that MTPC wrongfully denied its $10 million REA. MTPC, in turn, brought counterclaims against G4S alleging fraud and violations of
During discovery, evidence revealed that, unbeknownst to MTPC, G4S engaged in a pattern of submitting inaccurate “progress payment releases” (certifications) when sending its applications for payment.9 As previously explained, the contract expressly stated that subcontractors were to be paid on time and that a failure to do so, without cause, was grounds for terminating the contract with G4S. G4S certified to MTPC that it had timely paid its subcontractors, but this was not true. Spanning more than one year, G4S, a publicly traded company, repeatedly and continuously delayed payments to its subcontractors until after its fiscal quarters closed, so it could show a more favorable cash flow in its quarterly reports.10
In sum, G4S received $38.6 million in progress payments
The delayed payments did not go unnoticed by the subcontractors. At various times, subcontractors strongly objected and threatened to shut down work or remove crews from the project if G4S continued to withhold payments, even as G4S was getting paid by MTPC.11 Despite such protests, there was no indication from the submitted record that any of the subcontractors demanded direct payment of balances due from MTPC, as was the subcontractors’ statutory right under
MTPC moved for summary judgment, and in March, 2016, the judge granted summary judgment to MTPC as to G4S‘s complaint. The judge concluded that G4S intentionally committed a breach of the contract and thus, without complete and strict performance of all of the contract‘s terms, could not recover on the contract. The judge, relying on an older line of cases that we overrule today, also concluded that G4S could not recover under a theory of quantum meruit because an intentional violation of a contract provision was inconsistent with a finding of good faith and barred all such recovery unless the violation was deemed “so trifling as to fall within the rule de minimis.” See Andre, 305 Mass. at 516. G4S‘s payment delays and false certifications were inconsistent with the good faith requirement. In January, 2017, in a subsequent decision, the judge dismissed MTPC‘s counterclaims of fraud and
2. Discussion. “Our review of a motion judge‘s decision on summary judgment is de novo, because we examine the same record and decide the same questions of law.” Kiribati Seafood Co. v. Dechert LLP, 478 Mass. 111, 116 (2017). “The standard of review of a grant of summary judgment is whether, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, all material facts have been established and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law” (citation omitted). Casseus v. Eastern Bus Co., 478 Mass. 786, 792 (2018). Here, we affirm the decision to grant summary judgment on the contract claim, but conclude that there are material disputed facts precluding summary judgment on the quantum meruit and fraud claims.
a. Complete and strict performance of all construction contract terms. “The law has long been settled in this Commonwealth, in relation to building contracts, that a contractor cannot recover on the contract itself without showing complete and strict performance of all its terms . . . .” Andre, 305 Mass. at 516. See Peabody N.E., Inc. v. Marshfield, 426 Mass. 436, 441 (1998); United States Steel v. M. DeMatteo Constr. Co., 315 F.3d 43, 50 (1st Cir. 2002). G4S claims that the complete and strict performance requirement is outdated and asks us to adopt instead the “materiality rule” set forth in Restatement (Second) of Contracts, supra at §§ 237, 241.13 We decline this invitation. We do, however,
Our construction law cases have emphasized the importance and need for strict compliance with construction law contracts to ensure that the construction itself is done safely and correctly according to design specifications. See, e.g., Russo v. Charles I. Hosmer, Inc., 312 Mass. 231, 233-234 (1942) (failure to follow design requirements in guard rails posed public safety problems). This is particularly true as defects are difficult to identify and expensive to fix in a finished project. See id. at 233 (deviation from number of steel rods cast in concrete to provide support for highway guard rail unknown to owner); Bowen v. Kimbell, 203 Mass. 364, 368 (1909) (cost to cure deviation from building specification after building‘s construction disproportionately high). Thus, we have not tolerated any breaches that relate to whether the construction was completed according to design specifications. See Peabody N.E., Inc., 426 Mass. at 437, 441 (failure to substantially complete construction of septage and grease waste facility by terms of agreement not complete and strict performance); J.A. Sullivan Corp. v. Commonwealth, 397 Mass. 789, 790 (1986) (failure to complete itemized list of finish work, corrections, repairs, and services for construction of public college building not complete and strict performance); Albre Marble & Tile Co. v. Governman, 353 Mass. 546, 549-550 (1968) (failure to ensure satisfactory surfaces before tile installation not complete and strict performance); Russo, supra (failure to install highway guard rail in accordance with terms specifying number of steel rods not complete and strict performance); Andre, 305 Mass. at 516-517 (failure to comply with plans and specifications of house construction not complete and strict performance); Bowen, supra (failure to use correct ratio as provided in specifications for making plaster not complete and strict performance); Hayward v. Leonard, 7 Pick. 181, 185 (1828) (failure to build
In the instant case, design and construction provisions that would require strict and complete performance would include, for example, the following:
“The fiber optic cable and infrastructure system shall be designed and installed for a minimum life expectancy of 30 years[.]”
“All fiber strands and buffer tubes shall be color coded with highly distinguishable, vibrant colors[.]”
“The fiber cable shall have a circular cross section so that aerial installation can be done with standard sheaves and tensioning equipment[.]”
“The . . . Fiber Optic Network will consist of a core fiber backbone with extensions to two (2) major . . . regional network centers located at One Summer Street in Boston, MA and One Federal Street in Springfield, MA.”
We recognize, however, that construction contracts can be thousands of pages long, containing all types of different provisions.14 We have not considered in our cases the consequences of breaches of construction contract provisions that are subsidiary to or supportive of the design and construction, but do not directly involve the design and construction itself. We clarify today that the complete and strict performance requirements in construction contracts apply only to the design and construction work itself. Other provisions should be analyzed pursuant to ordinary contract principles, including the materiality standard applied under Massachusetts contract law. See EventMonitor, Inc. v. Leness, 473 Mass. 540, 546 (2016), quoting Anthony‘s Pier Four, Inc. v. HBC Assocs., 411 Mass. 451, 470 (1991); Buchholz v. Green Bros., 272 Mass. 49, 52 (1930), S.C., 290 Mass. 350 (1935).15
The question then becomes what is the legal status of the contractual violations here. The construction contract at issue was to “design, furnish, build and equip a complete fiber optic network system . . . for a fully implemented, functional and tested system” in accordance with the project construction schedule. The “Work” was defined broadly as comprising
“all Design-Builder‘s design, construction and other services required by the Contract Documents, including procuring and furnishing all materials, equipment, services and labor specified by or reasonably inferable from the Contract Documents, to develop, install, and test the Network, and including the submission and delivery of all documents and other things as required or reasonably inferable from the Contract Documents.”
The contractual violations at issue did not concern the actual
design and construction of the project. Instead, they were about the timing of payments to subcontractors and the documentation concerning those payments.16 G4S delayed payments and filed false certifications to allow it, a public company, to report inflated revenues for its quarterly reports. We thus analyze these violations under a materiality standard, not complete and strict performance.
In the Commonwealth, a material breach of a contract occurs
There can be little doubt that paying subcontractors on time was an essential and inducing feature of the contract between MTPC and G4S. See Buchholz, 272 Mass. at 52 (in contract to paint and maintain signs, payment of wage “essential and inducing feature“). The “[p]rompt payment of subcontractors on public works is a consistent legislative purpose.” Manganaro Drywall, Inc. v. White Constr. Co., 372 Mass. 661, 664 (1977). This is particularly true here, where a significant portion of the project funding came from the Recovery Act, the purpose of which was to “maximize[] job creation and economic benefit” and “provide a one-time injection of funds for the purpose of stimulating the American economy.”
The contract itself also stressed the importance of timely payments to subcontractors. As provided in article 10.2 of the contract‘s general conditions, MTPC could walk away from the contract and no longer be bound by its terms if G4S failed to timely pay subcontractors. G4S‘s repeated instances of intentionally failing to timely pay subcontractors in accordance with the agreed-upon contract was therefore a material breach of the contract, barring G4S from recovering breach of contract damages. See Buchholz, 272 Mass. at 55.17
G4S not only delayed the payments but also falsely certified that it had made the payments, thereby magnifying and multiplying the number of material breaches. The contract here independently required proper certification of payments. Those provisions were intentionally violated. Intentional misrepresentations to the government for financial gain are significant breaches of contract in and of themselves and can be serious civil and
b. Recovery under quantum meruit.
G4S contends that even if it is not entitled to pursue its contract claim, it should be allowed to recover under a quantum meruit theory. We conclude that there are genuine issues of material fact in dispute on the quantum meruit claim. To recover under quantum meruit in a construction case, a contractor must prove both substantial performance of the contract and an endeavor in good faith to perform the work fully. J.A. Sullivan Corp., 397 Mass. at 796; Albre Marble & Tile Co., 353 Mass. at 550; Andre, 305 Mass. at 516. “The underlying basis for [recovery under quantum meruit] is derived from principles of equity and fairness, to prevent unjust enrichment of one party . . . at the expense of another . . . .” Malonis v. Harrington, 442 Mass. 692, 697 (2004). Although “clean hands” are important in determining equitable relief, we also have recognized that this is not an absolute proposition, as the purpose of the doctrine is to allow courts to produce a just result. Walsh v. Atlantic Research Assocs., 321 Mass. 57, 62 (1947). The proper focus is on the value of the benefit conferred. In a construction contract, “[t]he amount of recovery on a claim based in quantum meruit is the fair and reasonable value of material and labor supplied to the benefiting party.” J.A. Sullivan Corp., supra at 797. “It is not the policy of our law to award damages which would put [the nonbreaching party] in a better position than if the [breaching party] had carried out [its] contract.” Ficara v. Belleau, 331 Mass. 80, 82 (1954). The nonbreaching party is “entitled to be made whole and no more.” Id. See J.A. Sullivan Corp., supra at
In the instant case there was, without dispute, substantial performance by the contractor. A critical and complex project providing a fiber optic network for western and north central Massachusetts has been completed according to its design. The project was, however, delayed. The cause of those delays is bitterly disputed in the record. G4S has raised a genuine issue of material fact that MTPC is responsible for those delays due to its failure to complete the make-ready work on time.
More complicated is the good faith requirement. The motion judge concluded that it was undisputed that G4S did not act in good faith given its numerous delayed payments to contractors and false certifications. She held that intentional violation of these contract provisions precluded a finding of good faith fully to perform. Support for this holding and the short-circuiting of the rest of the equitable analysis certainly exists, in a line of older cases that the judge properly cited. For example, in J.A. Sullivan Corp., 397 Mass. at 797, quoting Andre, 305 Mass. at 516, we reiterated that “[g]enerally, ‘[i]n the absence of special exculpating circumstances an intentional departure from the precise requirements of the contract is not consistent with good faith in the endeavor fully to perform it, and unless such departure is so trifling as to fall within the rule de minimis, it bars all recovery.” The simplicity and severity of this approach, which dates back to Sipley v. Stickney, 190 Mass. 43, 46 (1906), and Homer v. Shaw, 177 Mass. 1, 5 (1900), has, however, been criticized in leading treatises on contract law. See 8 C.M.A. McCauliff, Corbin on Contracts § 36.8, at 354 (J.M. Perillo ed., rev. ed. 1999); S. Williston, Contracts § 842, at 2364 n.4 (rev. ed. 1936). This rule also has been questioned, and even distinguished by this court, but this older line of cases has not been overruled. See Walsh, 321 Mass. at 62 (describing Sipley doctrine as rigid rule of law that has been criticized as “too severe“). We expressly overrule this line of cases and rearticulate the doctrine of quantum meruit today.
We conclude that intentional breaches, even those involving material breaches, alone are not dispositive of the right to equitable relief, at least when such breaches do not relate to the construction work itself. Good faith is a requirement for recovery under quantum meruit, but ruling in equity, this requirement is not one that is “too rigid and unyielding for the practical accomplishment
Here, G4S completed the project as specified, albeit with delays. MTPC deducted $4 million, of which a significant sum was damages for delay. Whether one party or the other or both were responsible for the delays remains disputed on this record. Resolution of this issue has an impact on the over-all balancing of the equities in the instant case. If MTPC was responsible for some or all of those delays and nevertheless withheld the amount, MTPC‘s own contractual violations would need to be considered in the equitable analysis. If those violations were intentional, that would also be a factor in the balancing of equities. Furthermore, G4S has introduced evidence to support its claim that it has performed $10 million in uncompensated work because of MTPC‘s failure to perform make-ready work. If G4S‘s $10 million REA has merit, this represents a significant amount of value supplied to MTPC without cost and may constitute a windfall. See J.A. Sullivan Corp., 397 Mass. at 794; Ficara, 331 Mass. at 82. It would thus “work great hardship to deprive” G4S of compensation for extra work conferred over the three-year project given that the design and construction of the network was satisfactory. See Walsh, 321 Mass. at 66.
We conclude that resolution of these disputed factual questions is necessary to determine whether equitable relief is appropriate in the instant case. The responsibility for the delay, the amount of extra uncompensated work, and the presence or absence of any causal connection between the intentional breaches and any damage to MTPC are all relevant to a just resolution of the quantum meruit claim. If the delays were caused by MTPC, G4S has performed and paid for $10 million in extra work to complete the project, and the payment delays to subcontractors and false certifications had no impact on the project‘s construction or completion date, it would be inequitable for MTPC to withhold compensation from G4S for the reasonable value of its labor and materials in excess of the amounts already paid to G4S. Meehan, 404 Mass. at 447. See Harness Tracks Sec., Inc. v. Bay State Raceway, Inc., 374 Mass. 362, 367-368 (1978).
c. Fraud.
MTPC contends that its counterclaim against G4S for fraud was improperly dismissed. The motion judge sua sponte dismissed MTPC‘s fraud claim against G4S. She relied on Szalla v. Locke, 421 Mass. 448, 454 (1995), in which this court held: “Where the same acts cause the same injury under more than one theory, duplicative damage recoveries will not be permitted.” Applying Szalla, the motion judge reasoned that “the conduct that forms the basis of MTPC‘s fraud claim is precisely the same as
We agree that summary judgment on the fraud claim may be appropriate only under a duplicative damages analysis. However, “where the acts complained of . . . are factually separable and distinguishable . . . , there is no error in permitting separate recoveries for separable injuries.” Calimlim v. Foreign Car Ctr., Inc., 392 Mass. 228, 236 (1984). “Permitting awards under several counts where claims and injuries are factually distinguishable, but disallowing such recovery where they are not, will serve to avoid over or under compensation.” Id.
Here, there may be separable and distinguishable acts forming the basis of recovery under the breach of contract and fraud claims. A fact finder could determine that the delayed completion of the project could be the basis for the breach of contract claim and the false certifications that subcontractors were timely paid could be the basis for the fraud claim. MTPC withheld $4 million as separable recovery for the breach of contract because of the delay, using the liquidated damages provision to calculate the amount of the withholding.20 MTPC additionally claims that the false certifications caused it to pay G4S prematurely, resulting in the loss of $1.67 million, which it asserts is another injury for which it thus is entitled to separable recovery.21 Whether this claim has merit and whether such calculations of damages are correct require further fact finding, but some recovery, at least for the loss of the time value of money, may be justified.
Whether the monetary loss for MTPC due to fraud is less than
3. Conclusion.
For the reasons discussed, we affirm the summary judgment decision on the breach of contract claim and reverse the summary judgment decision on the quantum meruit and fraud claims. We remand the matter to the Superior Court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
