Dat Luong DBA LVDH Construction v. Western Surety Co.

CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 2021
DocketS17593
StatusPublished

This text of Dat Luong DBA LVDH Construction v. Western Surety Co. (Dat Luong DBA LVDH Construction v. Western Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dat Luong DBA LVDH Construction v. Western Surety Co., (Ala. 2021).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.us.

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

DAT LUONG, d/b/a LVDH ) CONSTRUCTION, ) Supreme Court No. S-17593 ) Petitioner, ) Superior Court No. 3AN-18-06916 CI ) v. ) OPINION ) WESTERN SURETY COMPANY, ) No. 7519 – April 23, 2021 ) Respondent. ) )

Petition for Hearing from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Michael L. Wolverton, Judge, on appeal from the District Court of the State of Alaska, Anchorage, Douglas Kossler, Judge.

Appearances: Dat Luong, pro se, Fresno, California, Petitioner. Traeger Machetanz, Anne Marie Tavella, and Chad Darcy, Davis Wright Tremaine LLP, Anchorage, for Respondent.

Before: Bolger, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Carney, and Borghesan, Justices.

BOLGER, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION The employee of a subcontractor on a state public works project sued the prime contractor’s surety bond for unpaid labor under Alaska’s Little Miller Act. The trial court ruled the employee failed to give notice to the contractor within the statutorily required 90 days of his last date of labor on the project. The trial court entered a directed verdict against the employee. The employee appealed to the superior court, which denied the appeal, and then petitioned this court for hearing. We granted the petition to decide two issues of first impression: (1) how to define “labor” and (2) whether “notice” is effective on the date of mailing or the date of receipt. Under the Little Miller Act, we define “labor” as work that is “necessary to and forwards” the project secured by the payment bond, and hold the effective date of “notice” to be the date notice is sent via registered mail. We reverse the superior court’s denial of Luong’s appeal, vacate the judgment against him, and remand for further proceedings. II. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY A. Facts Earth Stone, Inc. hired Dat Luong in December 2014 to serve as vice president and estimator. Earth Stone provided finish-concrete work for the prime contractor, Pinnacle Construction, Inc., on a municipal library remodeling project. Western Surety Company provided the surety bond for Pinnacle on the project.1 In early 2015 Luong performed a variety of tasks for Earth Stone on the project, but by April he had stopped receiving consistent payment for his work.2 Many

1 AS 36.25.010(a)(2) requires that, for “contract[s] exceeding $100,000 for the construction, alteration, or repair of a public building or public work,” the contractor must supply “a payment bond with a corporate surety qualified to do business in the state.” 2 A July 2015 letter from Earth Stone’s president and owner, Peggy Mitchell, acknowledged that Earth Stone owed Luong $34,450 and indicated payment would be provided after addressing some “financial difficulties.” Luong alleges he is actually (continued...)

-2- 7519 of Luong’s duties were supervisory, but his work on the project included physical tasks like mixing and pouring concrete. Luong helped with the last concrete pour at the project on October 9, 2015. This is the last date that both parties agree Luong provided labor on the project. On January 6, 2016, 89 days after the last concrete pour, Luong requested $8,379.90 in back wages from Pinnacle in a letter sent by registered and certified mail. As confirmed by a signed receipt, Pinnacle received this letter on January 11, 94 days after the final concrete pour. Western Surety asserts that Luong’s testimony is the only evidence of when the letter was sent. But the letter is dated January 6, and Western Surety presented no evidence the letter was mailed on a different date. On July 26, Luong sent Pinnacle another letter reminding them he had yet to be paid for his work on the project. This letter notified Pinnacle that Luong had received a judgment in California against Earth Stone for work performed, and this judgment had now been “effectuated and recorded in Alaska.” B. Procedural History Luong filed suit in small claims court, requesting $8,945.21 for unpaid labor from Pinnacle’s payment bond with Western Surety under the Little Miller Act.3 The district court granted Western Surety’s request for formal procedures.

2 (...continued) owed $58,000 for his unpaid work with Earth Stone on multiple projects, but decided to pursue his case for less than $9,000 in small claims court to avoid legal expenses after years of fighting for payment. 3 The Little Miller Act requires contractors for public works to furnish payment bonds or sureties. AS 36.25.010. “A person who furnishes labor or material in the prosecution of” such a public work but is not fully paid may sue for payment in full on this bond. AS 36.25.020(a).

-3- 7519 Western Surety moved for summary judgment, arguing that no genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether Luong’s supervisory work qualified as “labor” under the Little Miller Act. The district court judge who initially oversaw the case disagreed, observing a general consensus among courts in various jurisdictions interpreting the term to at least include work performed at the job site. After a transfer to a new district court judge, a bench trial was held over three days in March and April of 2018. Three witnesses testified to the range of tasks Luong performed on the project, including supervisory tasks on and off the project site and physical labor involved with laying concrete at the project site. Luong testified that he undertook these physical tasks — laying concrete, carrying materials, and cleaning up the site — when chronic non-payment by Earth Stone led to a shortage of workers. Earth Stone foreman Willie House specifically testified he and Luong were the only employees left at the job site by October 9, 2015, the date of the last concrete pour. At the close of Luong’s case, Western Surety moved for a directed verdict, arguing Luong had not provided notice until January 11, 2016, and therefore needed to prove he provided “labor” on or after October 13, 2015 in order to meet the 90-day notice deadline for him to sue under the Little Miller Act.4 Western Surety emphasized that it was the last day Luong provided “labor” on the project that was relevant, not the last day he worked for Earth Stone in general. Luong responded that the January 6 letter

4 See AS 36.25.020(b) (for person whose contractual relationships were with subcontractor, making right to sue payment bond dependent on “giving written notice to the contractor within 90 days from the last date on which the person performed labor or furnished material”).

-4- 7519 provided timely notice of his claim. Luong also asserted he performed labor even after the October 9 concrete pour.5 The trial judge interpreted “labor” in the Little Miller Act to include supervisory tasks only if they were performed on the job site. The judge concluded Luong failed to establish he performed labor at the job site within 90 days of the notice he provided to Pinnacle. The court noted that two of Luong’s exhibits indicate his last day of work for Earth Stone at the project was October 9, 2015, more than 90 days before January 11, 2016. The court assumed the operative date of notice was January 11, 2016, the date Pinnacle received the letter from Luong’s attorney. The trial judge granted Western Surety’s motion for directed verdict and awarded attorneys’ fees to Western Surety. Luong appealed to the superior court, which denied his appeal. The superior court did not address Luong’s notice argument.

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Dat Luong DBA LVDH Construction v. Western Surety Co., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dat-luong-dba-lvdh-construction-v-western-surety-co-alaska-2021.