Berkley Insurance Company v. Suffolk Construction Company, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedNovember 1, 2024
Docket1:19-cv-23059
StatusUnknown

This text of Berkley Insurance Company v. Suffolk Construction Company, Inc. (Berkley Insurance Company v. Suffolk Construction Company, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berkley Insurance Company v. Suffolk Construction Company, Inc., (S.D. Fla. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA

Case No. 19-23059-CIV-WILLIAMS/TORRES

BERKLEY INSURANCE COMPANY, a foreign corporation,

Plaintiff,

v.

SUFFOLK CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC., a foreign corporation,

Defendant.

________________________________________/

AMENDED REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION ON MOTION FOR INTEREST

Following extensive litigation and a bench trial before the Court, the Court entered Judgment in the amount of $4,110,155.08 in favor of Berkley Insurance Company (“Plaintiff”). [D.E. 242]. Plaintiff then timely filed the pending motion [D.E. 243] to amend the Judgment to award pre-judgment interest on the damages awarded by the Court (that was referred for disposition on July 29, 2024). The motion included a Rule 7.1 certification that counsel for Defendant Suffolk Construction Company (“Defendant”) objected to the award or calculation of prejudgment interest on the Judgment. But no timely response was filed in opposition to the motion to amend or to the proposed calculation of prejudgment interest on the award. Accordingly, the pending motion was ripe for adjudication and could be granted by default under S.D. Fla. Local R. 7.1. Additionally the motion could also be granted on the merits under Florida law. The motion was referred for adjudication. On August 14, 2045, the Court entered its Report and Recommendation on the

motion, which determined that prejudgment interest was due on the Court’s judgment under Florida law and found that the amount of interest due was $1,227,745.40 in interest awardable through “August 14, 2022.” [D.E. 245 at 6]. The Report also did not recommend that prejudgment interest would continue to accrue until such time as an amended judgment was entered. Defendant did not timely object to the Report and Recommendation, thus waiving any challenge or appeal to the Court’s findings of fact and law on the

prejudgment interest issue. Plaintiff, however, filed limited objections that focused on two errors in the calculation of the interest amount due in the Report and Recommendation. [D.E. 250]. Specifically, Plaintiff first argued that the $1,227,745.40 in interest was incorrectly calculated only through “August 14, 2022” when, in fact, the interest should have been found to run through July 22, 2024 and beyond. And, second, Plaintiff objected to the Report fixing the amount of

prejudgment interest through that corrected date while not requiring that the prejudgment interest amount would continue accruing after July 22, 2024, at the Florida per diem rate ($1,020.8022258239) through the date the Amended Judgment was ultimately entered. Plaintiff maintained that the final amount of prejudgment interest could thus not be finally determined until the Amended Final Judgment was actually entered. To the extent the Report suggested otherwise, Plaintiff objected to the Report’s calculation that the total amount due was only $1,227,745.40. Upon review of the objections, the District Judge treated the objections as a

motion for reconsideration and referred that motion back to the undersigned for review and disposition. Suffolk did not file a response in opposition to the motion/objections. Thus this motion, like the original motion for an award of prejudgment interest, could be granted by default under Local Rule 7.1. Moreover, the points raised in the motion/objections are well taken. An Amended Report and Recommendation is due to be entered to clarify the award of prejudgment interest that should be entered in the case. And as there appears to be no dispute with respect

to this matter, an expedited objection period will be entered to bring closure to this issue. I. BACKGROUND

This case involves a dispute between Defendant Suffolk, a general contractor, and a drywall subcontractor, Titus Construction Group, Inc. (“Titus”) and its surety, Plaintiff Berkley, over work at a mixed-use real estate development project located at 300 Southeast Third Street, Miami, Florida 33131 known as Met Square. Defendant was retained as the general contractor for the three-part Project and it in turn engaged Titus to provide framing, drywall, and interior metal framing (together with related labor, services, and materials) for each portion of the Project through three separate subcontracts. Berkley issued subcontract performance bonds on behalf of Titus, as principal, with Suffolk, as obligee, as to the three subcontracts. This litigation then arose out of a series of construction issues and disputes with respect to one of the bonds. After a bench trial the Court found its Order and Findings of Fact [D.E. 241]

that Defendant breached its subcontract with Titus in multiple ways, which resulted in unnecessary and unreasonable delays in Titus’s performance of its subcontract, which in turn resulted in consequential and delay damages due under the subcontract, as well as damages for work that Titus performed for which it was never paid. The Court also rejected Defendant’s demands for setoffs for monies owed to Titus as well as other defenses raised at trial. The Court thus awarded $2,520,923.08 for work that Titus completed but was not compensated for, $1,589,232.00 for lost

productivity damages, plus $425,899.94 in delay damages. [Id. at 17-18]. In terms of fixing the date of injuries for purposes of prejudgment interest calculations, the Court’s findings show: Titus completed its work during June of 2019, [id. at18], that Titus had not been compensated for work it performed over several months, id., and that Michael Bennink’s lost productivity calculations, which the Court awarded in full, ran through June 2019, id. Hence all of Titus’s non-payment

and productivity losses had, by definition, accrued as of July 1, 2019. To the extent any interest is owed, therefore, that date is the latest point at which interest can be fixed. II. ANALYSIS

The Eleventh Circuit requires that we are bound by Florida law in making an award of prejudgment interest mandatory upon the filing of a motion to award prejudgment interest:

In a diversity case, a federal court applies the substantive law of the forum state, unless federal constitutional or statutory law is contrary. Salve Regina College v. Russell, 499 U.S. 225, 111 S.Ct. 1217, 1218, 113 L.Ed.2d 190 (1991). . . . In applying state law, a federal court must “adhere to decisions of the state’s intermediate appellate courts absent some persuasive indication that the state’s highest court would decide the issue otherwise.” Silverberg v. Paine, Webber, Jackson & Curtis, Inc., 710 F.2d 678, 690 (11th Cir. 1983). . . . In Florida, prejudgment interest is an element of compensatory damages and, “when a verdict liquidates damages on a plaintiff's out-of-pocket, pecuniary losses, plaintiff is entitled, as a matter of law, to prejudgment interest at the statutory rate from the date of that loss.” Argonaut Ins. Co. v. May Plumbing Co., 474 So. 2d 212, 215 (Fla.1985); Air Prods. & Chemicals, Inc. v. Louisiana Land & Exploration Co., 867 F.2d 1376, 1380 (11th Cir. 1989) (per curiam). In Argonaut, Florida adopted a “loss theory” of prejudgment interest, defining the loss as the wrongful deprivation of property. Argonaut, 474 So. 2d at 215; Crockett v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co., 849 F.2d 1369, 1372 (11th Cir. 1988).

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