UNITED STATES of America, for the Use and Benefit of GLOBAL
BUILDING SUPPLY, INCORPORATED, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
WNH LIMITED PARTNERSHIP; Thomas P. Harkins, Incorporated;
Harkins Builders, Incorporated; the Federal
Insurance Company, Defendants-Appellees,
and
Toledo Drywall, Incorporated, Defendant.
UNITED STATES of America, for the Use and Benefit of
SUPERIOR SUPPLY ASSOCIATES, INCORPORATED,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
WNH LIMITED PARTNERSHIP; Thomas P. Harkins, Incorporated;
Harkins Builders, Incorporated; Toledo Drywall,
Inсorporated; Today Contractors, Incorporated; the Federal
Insurance Company, Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 92-1467, 92-1775.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued March 4, 1993.
Decided June 9, 1993.
Robert Keith Richardson, Odin, Feldman & Pittleman, P.C., Fairfax, VA, argued, for plaintiff-appellant.
David Charles Hjortsberg, Reese & Carney, Columbia, MD, argued, for defendants-appellees.
Before PHILLIPS and NIEMEYER, Circuit Judges, and RESTANI, Judge, United States Court of International Trade, sitting by designation.
OPINION
PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge:
The Miller Act, 40 U.S.C. § 270a et seq., requires persons awarded substantial public works contracts with the United States to post a payment bond protecting some of those supplying the contract's labor and materials from defaults in payment. In this case we consider whether two materials suppliers victimized by such a default can lay claim to the bond or whether they are too distant from the party contracting with the government to do so. The district court took the latter view, and we affirm its summary judgment rejecting their claims.I
In September of 1989, Thomas P. Harkins, Inc. (Harkins Inc.) contracted with the United States Navy to construсt and lease a large apartment complex. Harkins Inc. had been organized in 1965. At the time of contracting, its shareholders were its president, J.P. Blase Cooke, and its chairman, Thomas P. Harkins (Harkins).
Harkins and Cooke later formed another entity to execute the project, WNH Limited Partnership. They installed Harbor Land Company--a corporate shell wholly owned by Harkins--as the general partner and themselves as limited partners. Harbor Land Company held only one percent of the partnership; Harkins and Cooke owned the remainder. On May 10, 1990, WNH assumed Harkins Inc.'s obligations under the lease/construction contract with the Navy pursuant to agreements among WNH, Harkins Inc., and the United States; Harkins Inc. remained involved in the contract solely as guarantor of performance for WNH.
That same day WNH also сontracted with another entity, Harkins Builders, Inc.1 (Builders), to construct the complex, thereby subcontracting a substantial portion of WNH's total contractual obligation to the Navy. Organized in 1974, Builders is wholly owned by its chairman, Harkins, and its president, Cooke.
A week later WNH posted the payment bond required by the Miller Act, with Federal Insurance Company as surety. Federal had conditioned its agreement to serve as surety оn execution of an indemnity agreement by all members of the Harkins Group, which included Harkins Inc., WNH, Builders, and two other corporate entities not otherwise relevant here. Shortly thereafter Builders commenced construction. In late 1990 and early 1991 it retained Today Contractors, Inc. and Toledo Drywall, Inc. to furnish and install drywall on the project. Global Building Supply, Inc., one of the plaintiffs-appellants herе, supplied materials to Toledo. Superior Supply Associates, Inc., the other plaintiff-appellant, supplied materials to Toledo and Today.
Neither supplier was paid. Consequently, both sued. Global sought relief against Toledo on the supply contract and also brought a use-suit against Harkins Inc., WNH, Builders, and Federal (as surety) on the Miller Act payment bond; Superior filed a similar claim on amounts owed it by both Toledo and Today. Following submission of stipulated exhibits, memoranda, and oral argument in the Global suit, the district court entered a default judgment for Global on its contract claim against Toledo but also granted summary judgment for Harkins Inc., WNH, Builders, and Federal on the Miller Act claim, holding that Global's relationship to WNH was of too remote a degree to permit recovery under the Miller Act. Superior agreed to rest on Global's exhibits and arguments and submitted its case on the briefs. The district court granted summary judgment for Superior on its contract claims against Toledo and Today but once again, and for identical reasons, granted summary judgment for Harkins Inc. and its associates on the Miller Act claim.
Both Global and Superior appealed the grants of summary judgment for Harkins Inc., WNH, Builders, and Federal on the Miller Act payment bond. Global also appealed the district court's denial of its own motion for summary judgment on the Miller Act claim, but Superior filed no equivalent motion. We consolidated the two appeals at the request of all parties.
II
* In reviewing the district court's decision, we apply the same standard it did, viewing all facts and inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmovant to determine whether summary judgment wаs appropriately granted. Moore v. Winebrenner,
The statute doesn't apply to everyone who supplies labor or materials toward the completion of the federal public works contract, however; it's limited to those who "deal directly with the prime contractor" and those who "have [a] direct contractual relationship with a subcontractor."3 Clifford F. MacEvoy Co. v. United States ex rel. Calvin Tomkins Co.,
Bateson, however, essentially limited statutory "subcontractors" to first-tier subcontractors, i.e. those having direct contractual relations with the prime contractor.
Not surprisingly, Global and Superior seek to avoid this harsh result by taking a different tack. They argue for a functional, rather than formal, definition of "prime contractor" that, given the inbred nature of the contractual relationships here and the alleged virtual identity of WNH and Builders, would collapse those two entities into one prime contractor. That would bring Global and Superior within reach of the payment bond by transforming Toledo and Today into first-tier subcontractors, leaving Global and Superior in the position of second-, rather than third-, tier subcontractors. We reject this approach, for the reasons that follow.
B
Global and Superior correctly assert that the Miller Act's remedial purposes require liberal construction and application. MacEvoy,
Taken together, MacEvoy, Rich, and Bateson present a functional approach to distinguishing first-tier "subcontractors" from other entities contracting with the prime contractor circumscribed by bright-line rules barring recovery by second-tier entities contracting with nonsubcontractors and by all entities beyond the second-tier. Global and Superior seek to undermine the latter restriction by relying on Riсh's functional approach to collapse a putative general contractor and a putative first-tier subcontractor into a single entity. But the Supreme Court's application of a functional test to determine whether one entity was a subcontractor of another rather than a mere supplier certainly doesn't compel a similar approach to the question whether two distinct corporations should be treated as a unitary "contractor" under the Miller Act. See United States ex rel. Gold Bond Bldg. Prods. v. Blake Constr. Co.,
In the context of the Miller Act, the Supreme Court has repeatedly warned that the "salutary policy [of liberal construction of remedial statutes] does not justify ignoring plain words of limitation and imposing wholesale liability on payment bonds." Bateson,
We think that's appropriate only where ordinary principles of corporate law pеrmit the courts to disregard corporate forms. The aging pre-Bateson cases on which Global and Superior rely, Glens Falls Ins. Co. v. Newton Lumber and Mfg. Co.,
C
Having established the rule to be applied where a party seeks to collapse two entities into a single prime contractor under the Miller Act, we now apply it.5 Corporate forms exist to limit liability, and courts are reluctаnt to set them aside simply because they've done so. Decisions to "pierce the corporate veil" turn on a case-by-case factual inquiry in which the presence of the following factors suggests with varied force the appropriateness of disregarding the corporate forms distinguishing two business entities: gross undercapitalization of the subservient corporation, failure to observe corporate formalities, nonpayment of dividends, siphoning of the subservient corporation's funds, nonfunctioning officers and directors, a lack of corporate records, and the fact that the corporation is merely a facade for the operation of the dominant stockholder or stockholders. Keffer v. H.K. Porter Co.,
The general absence of these factors herе suggests that disregarding corporate forms would be inappropriate. Global and Superior presented no evidence that Builders was undercapitalized, lacked corporate records separate from WNH's, or was a victim of siphoning by WNH. They argue, in essence, that both WNH and Builders are mere facades for Harkins and Cooke, occasionally suggesting in addition that corporate forms haven't been observed and that WNH's and Builder's officers and directors really have no role. We disagree.
The record shows that Builders is a fully functional general contractor operating independently of WNH. The fact that Harkins Inc. was marketing the collective expertise of the Harkins Group when it bid on the contract doesn't render WNH and Builders the same corporation. Harkins and Cooke installed WNH rather than Builders as the government contractor for a variety of sound business reasons, not simply to deprive remote subcontractors of a statutory remedy. WNH was a single-project development partnership whose role was to acquire the property, build the project, and lease it to the government for twenty years. Its limited partnership form provided well known tax advantages not available to a corporation like Builders. Builders, by contrast, was a general contractor of long standing with a number of other clients whose role was to perform the actual construction. Separating the two entities kept WNH's mortgage creditors out of Builders's coffers and Builders's other construction creditors away from WNH's funds.
The evidence doesn't support the intimation by Global and Superior that WNH and Builders failed to observe corporate forms. Their relations were governed by a valid and enforceable contract. WNH breached its contractual obligation to the government by inadvertently omitting certain provisions in that contract, but this doesn't make WNH and Builders the same corporation. Nor does the fact that WNH's standard form contract with Builders refers to the former as the prоject "owner" and the latter as the "contractor."
The claim that WNH and Builders had nonfunctional officers is likewise unsustainable. Harkins and Cooke controlled both corporations and served as their chief officers, so it's unsurprising that they resolved disputes between them. Richard Lombardo, Vice President of Harbor Land Company, WNH's general partner, administered the project for WNH. James Tobin, a Vice President of Builders, ran the job for that corporation. The fact that Harkins and Cooke resolved disputes between the two corporations doesn't change that; they were, after all, the chief officers of WNH's general partner and of Builders.
Global and Superior rely heavily on this commonality of ownership and control between WNH and Builders, but that without more doesn't justify setting aside corporatе forms, and nothing more exists. Global and Superior point to a host of facts alleged to be material, but they've failed to establish that any party had difficulty determining whether it was dealing with WNH or Builders. Under the circumstances, disregarding corporate forms would be inappropriate.
IV
Viewing the parties' contentions in the light most favorable to the nonmovants Global and Superior, it's nonetheless apparent that application of our construction of the Miller Act to the facts presented here leaves Global and Superior in the position identified as theirs by the district court--third-tier subcontractors for whom WNH's Miller Act payment bond was beyond reach. We therefore affirm that court's challenged orders granting summary judgment for Harkins Inc., WNH, Builders, and Federal on the Miller Act claims brought by Global and Superior and denying summаry judgment for Global on the same.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
At the time it was called Harkins CM, Inc
Because WNH owns the project here and merely leases the complex to the government, it appears that those remedies were actually available to Global and Superior in this case. See Va.Code Ann. § 43-1 et seq
Claims by the latter group also require provision of timely notice of claim to the prime contractor, 40 U.S.C. § 270b(a), but that's not contestеd here
Moreover, all who have direct contractual relations with the prime contractor aren't "subcontractors"; the term includes only those who "perform[ ] for and take[ ] from the prime contractor a specific part of the labor or material requirements of the original contract." MacEvoy,
It's not clear whether federal or state corporate law supplies the rule governing our decision whether to disregard the corporate forms distinguishing WNH from Builders, compare Kamen v. Kemper Fin. Sеrvs., Inc., --- U.S. ----, ---- - ----,
