Commonwealth of Virginia and Department of Transportation v. AMEC Civil, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 22, 2012
Docket2134112
StatusUnpublished

This text of Commonwealth of Virginia and Department of Transportation v. AMEC Civil, LLC (Commonwealth of Virginia and Department of Transportation v. AMEC Civil, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Commonwealth of Virginia and Department of Transportation v. AMEC Civil, LLC, (Va. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Elder, Alston and Senior Judge Coleman Argued at Richmond, Virginia

COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA AND DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY v. Record No. 2134-11-2 JUDGE LARRY G. ELDER MAY 22, 2012 AMEC CIVIL, LLC

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF MECKLENBURG COUNTY Charles E. Poston, Judge Designate

Stephen G. Test (Sarah K. McConaughy; Richard Tyler McGrath, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Williams Mullen; Office of the Attorney General, on briefs), for appellants.

J. Tracy Walker, IV (Anne Marie Whittemore; Richard C. Beaulieu; Gregory S. Martin; McGuireWoods LLP; Gregory S. Martin & Associates, PA, on brief), for appellee.

This case involves a contract dispute between the Commonwealth and the Department of

Transportation (hereinafter collectively VDOT) and AMEC Civil, LLC (hereinafter AMEC),

over the construction of the Route 58 Clarksville Bypass in Mecklenburg County. The contract

price was just under $72.5 million. When completion of the project was delayed by a year and

seven months, AMEC submitted an administrative claim to VDOT for additional compensation

of over $24 million. VDOT denied the claim.

AMEC challenged the denial in a civil suit as permitted by statute. The circuit court

awarded AMEC approximately $21 million. Both parties appealed to this Court, which affirmed

in part, reversed in part, and remanded. VDOT v. AMEC, 54 Va. App. 240, 677 S.E.2d 633

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. (2009). Both parties then appealed to the Virginia Supreme Court, which also affirmed in part,

reversed in part, and remanded to the circuit court “to recalculate damages awarded to AMEC.”

VDOT v. AMEC, 280 Va. 396, 403, 699 S.E.2d 499, 503 (2010). After the circuit court made a

revised award of approximately $12 million, VDOT noted the instant appeal.

In this appeal, VDOT assigns error to numerous aspects of the circuit court’s revised

calculation of damages. VDOT contends the court should have applied judicial estoppel, see

infra Part II.A., or law-of-the-case principles, see infra Part II.B., to hold on remand that AMEC

was bound by the testimony of its sole damages expert, Theodore NeSmith, that its damages

were as reflected in NeSmith’s exhibits and that the court erred in relying on the testimony of

AMEC’s assistant project manager Bryon Breese and the document he prepared for purposes of

the administrative claim. VDOT contends further that the circuit court erred in accepting and

relying on opinion testimony from Breese over VDOT’s objection, see infra Part II.C., and in

accepting estimates of costs rather than actual costs as proof of damages on remand, see infra

Part II.D. Next, it contends the circuit court erred in awarding forty days of damages for delays

caused by an unexpected site condition, boulders, contending AMEC failed to prove its

entitlement to more than eight days of damages. See infra Part II.E.1. Further, it contends the

circuit court erroneously awarded damages to AMEC for requiring it to work through the winter

of 2003 to 2004 when AMEC failed to provide prima facie evidence of the actual weather and

the extent of its impact on critical activities for specific days and failed to keep daily records and

provide an itemized list of equipment, labor, and materials as required by the contract. See infra

Part II.E.2. Finally, it challenges the way in which the circuit court calculated various

components of the damages award, including delay damages for the boulders, the first winter and

high water periods, see infra Part II.E.1 to E.3., as well as some of the acceleration damages and

extra work required due to an error in the plans, see infra Part II.E.4 to E.5. In an assignment of

-2- cross-error, AMEC contends the circuit court erred in denying its claim for post-judgment

interest. See infra Part II.F.

We hold the circuit court did not err in concluding it was free to use Breese’s rather than

NeSmith’s data and calculations on remand. We hold further the court did not err in concluding

AMEC was entitled to recover for the entire 121-day period of winter work for the 2003-2004

winter season. However, we hold the circuit court erred in awarding AMEC damages for forty

days of delay due to boulders when the evidence established only eight days of delay. Finally,

we hold the circuit court erred in interpreting the meaning of actual costs for purposes of proving

damages and that this error requires the recalculation of several components of its damages

award. As to AMEC’s cross-assignment of error challenging the circuit court’s refusal to award

post-judgment interest, we hold AMEC waived that claim by failing to raise it in the first appeal.

Thus, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for a recalculation of damages consistent

with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

VDOT awarded AMEC this approximately $72.5 million project in May 2000. The

central element of the project was a bridge (bridge 616) spanning the John H. Kerr Reservoir

(Kerr Lake), which required work to be performed from equipment floating on the lake. The

project also included ten smaller bridges (including bridge 640) and about four miles of roadway.

The time allotted for the project was forty-one months, with a projected completion date of

November 1, 2003. However, the project was not substantially complete until June 2005,

approximately nineteen months after the original completion date. Delays arose primarily from

sustained elevated lake water levels and difficulties with the construction of concrete-filled

drilled shafts that formed the foundation of bridge 616, which pushed construction into two

additional winter periods. AMEC sought to recover for these delays.

-3- In 2006, AMEC submitted an administrative claim to VDOT for $24,792,823.43. That

claim was prepared mostly by Bryon Breese, AMEC’s assistant project manager at the site.

After VDOT denied the administrative claim, AMEC filed the instant contract action. At trial,

AMEC introduced the administrative claim and offered testimony from Breese about its

contents. VDOT objected to portions of Breese’s testimony on the ground that the testimony

involved opinion and AMEC had not identified Breese as an expert in advance of trial. The

circuit court held that Breese, as the author of the document containing facts, was qualified to

testify about those facts and that it “[did not] see this [as] an expert testimony issue.”

Breese’s testimony established that he served as assistant project manager from October

2002 through project completion in 2005. In addition to quality problems with structural steel

work performed by subcontractor Mitsubishi, the project began to face elevated lake levels in

early 2003, which had “a significant impact” on AMEC’s ability to proceed with bridge 616.

The project, which was scheduled to be completed by November 1, 2003, was not substantially

completed until June 2005.

Breese’s duties included managing the project’s schedule and budget, including the

purchasing of materials, and overseeing data entry into the software program for managing those

items. He testified about AMEC’s cost accounting system and software and how the data was

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