APCO CONSTR., INC. VS. ZITTING BROS. CONSTR., INC.

2020 NV 64
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 2020
Docket75197
StatusPublished

This text of 2020 NV 64 (APCO CONSTR., INC. VS. ZITTING BROS. CONSTR., INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
APCO CONSTR., INC. VS. ZITTING BROS. CONSTR., INC., 2020 NV 64 (Neb. 2020).

Opinion

136 Nev., Advance Opinion 64 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

APCO CONSTRUCTION, INC., A No. 75197 NEVADA CORPORATION, Appellant, vs. FILE ZITTING BROTHERS CONSTRUCTION, INC., Respondent. ELI— CLE BY— C -PIT DEPUTY CLERK

Appeal from a district court summary judgment and attorney fees and costs award, certified as final under NRCP 54(b), in a contract action. Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County; Mark R. Denton, Judge. Affirmed.

Marquis Aurbach Coffing and Kathleen A. Wilde, Jack Chen Min Juan, and Cody S. Mounteer, Las Vegas; Fennemore Craig, P.C., and John Randall Jefferies and Christopher H. Byrd, Las Vegas, for Appellant.

Wilson, Elser, Moskowitz, Edelman & Dicker, LLP, and Jorge A. Ramirez and I-Che Lai, Las Vegas, for Respondent.

BEFORE GIBBONS, STIGLICH and SILVER, JJ.

OPINION

By the Court, STIGLICH, J.: In Lehrer McGovern Bovis, Inc. v. Bullock Insulation, Inc., we concluded that pay-if-paid provisions in construction contracts, whereby a

. 31473 44.• Al!.Atelf.PA;;;•.14;:it subcontractor gets paid only if the general contractor is paid by the project owner for that work, are generally unenforceable because they violate public policy. 124 Nev. 1102, 1117-18, 197 P.3d 1032, 1042 (2008). At the same time, we recognized that, due to statutory amendments, such provisions could be enforceable in limited circumstances, subject to the restrictions laid out in NRS 624.624-.626 of Nevada's Prompt Payment Act. Id. at 1117 & n.50, 197 P.3d at 1042 & n.50. We take this opportunity to clarify that pay-if-paid provisions are not per se void and unenforceable in Nevada. However, such provisions are unenforceable if they require subcontractors to waive or limit rights provided under NRS 624.624-.630, relieve general contractors of their obligations or liabilities under NRS 624.624-.630, or require subcontractors to waive their rights to damages, as further outlined under NRS 624.628(3). Because provisions in the subcontract considered here condition payment on the general contractor receiving payment first and require the respondent subcontractor to forgo its right to prompt payment under NRS 624.624 when payment would otherwise be due, such provisions are void under NRS 624.628(3) and cannot be relied upon by appellant general contractor for its nonpayment to respondent for work performed. Furthermore, because appellant's evidence in support of its other conditions-precedent defenses is precluded and the plain language of NRS 108.239(12) permits a subcontractor to sue a contractor for unpaid lien amounts, we affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment and award of attorney fees and costs in favor of respondent. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Appellant APCO Construction, Inc., served as general contractor on the Manhattan West mixed-used development project in Las

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 2 (0) 1947A atliP10

;Ir., .•,4::1,4,ikir•C'r Vegas owned by Gemstone Development West, Inc. In 2007, APCO entered into a subcontract agreement with respondent Zitting Brothers Construction, Inc., to perform woodframing, sheathing, and shimming work on the project. The subcontract required APCO to pay Zitting for 100 percent of work completed during the prior month, minus 10 percent for retention, within 15 days of APCO receiving payment from Gemstone for Zitting's competed work. Payment to Zitting was conditioned upon APCO's receipt of payment from Gemstone—known colloquially as a "pay-if-paid" provision. The subcontract also conditioned APCO's payment to Zitting of the retention amount on the following conditions precedent: (1) completion of each building, (2) Gemstone's approval of Zitting's work, (3) APCO's receipt of final payment from Gemstone, (4) Zitting's delivery to APCO of all as- built drawings for its work and other close-out documents, and (5) Zitting's delivery to APCO of a release and waiver of claims. The subcontract further conditioned APCO's payment to Zitting for change orders on Gemstone paying APCO, except where APCO executed and approved the change order in writing and Zitting completed those changes. Moreover, if the prime contract were terminated, APCO would pay Zitting for completed work after Gemstone paid APCO. The contract also contained a severability clause and provided that the prevailing party in litigation would be entitled to costs, attorney fees, and any other reasonable expenses. Zitting performed work under APCO until the prime contract between APCO and Gemstone terminated in August 2008. Camco Pacific Construction Company subsequently became general contractor, and Zitting continued to work for Camco until the project shut down in December 2008. As a result of the project's failure, APCO, Zitting, and other

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 3 07) I947A 44001.

.44 ;7,itt .1 it; subcontractors went unpaid and filed multiple lawsuits and mechanics' liens. Relevant to this appeal, Zitting in 2009 sued APCO and Gemstone for breach of contract, foreclosure of a mechanics lien, and various other claims. Zitting sought $750,807.16 for work completed prior to APCO's deparhire, including $403,365.49 in unpaid retention amounts for Buildings 8 and 9 and $347,441.67 in unpaid change orders. APCO raised various affirmative defenses in its answer, including that Zitting failed to meet conditions precedent and that Gemstone never paid APCO to thereby compel payment under the pay-if-paid provisions. But in 2010, when Zitting sent interrogatories to APCO seeking the facts supporting APCO's defenses, APCO only mentioned the pay-if-paid provisions to defend its nonpayment. Zitting served APCO again in April 2017 with the same set of interrogatories, and APCO responded with similar responses raising its pay-if-paid defense.' Zitting deposed two of APCO's NRCP 30(13)(6) witnesses. Discovery closed in June 2017, and Zitting moved for summary judgment on its breach of contract and foreclosure of mechanics' lien claims.

'The underlying litigation was stayed for six years to resolve the lien priority between APCO's mechanics' liens and the construction loan deed of trust held by the project's lender, Scott Financial Corporation. We ultimately concluded that Scott Financial's deed of trust had priority. In re Manhattan W. Mechanic's Lien Litig. v. Eighth Judicial Dist. Court, 131 Nev. 702, 712, 359 P.3d 125, 1.31 (2015). Scott Financial thus received the net proceeds of the project's sale, leaving contractors and subcontractors unpaid. A special master was appointed in June 2016 to coordinate discovery on the remaining claims. SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 4 10) 1447A sallItto

5:1i=4;14.ittz•ii. APCO opposed summary judgment, raising arguments in support of its additional conditions-precedent defenses other than the pay- if-paid provisions for the first time. Without ruling on summary judgment, the district court reopened discovery on a limited basis.

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2020 NV 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/apco-constr-inc-vs-zitting-bros-constr-inc-nev-2020.