Ewing Concrete LLC v. Rochon Corporation of Iowa, Waukee Community School District, and Travelers Indemnity Co.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 13, 2016
Docket14-1628
StatusPublished

This text of Ewing Concrete LLC v. Rochon Corporation of Iowa, Waukee Community School District, and Travelers Indemnity Co. (Ewing Concrete LLC v. Rochon Corporation of Iowa, Waukee Community School District, and Travelers Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Ewing Concrete LLC v. Rochon Corporation of Iowa, Waukee Community School District, and Travelers Indemnity Co., (iowactapp 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 14-1628 Filed January 13, 2016

EWING CONCRETE LLC, Plaintiff-Appellant,

vs.

ROCHON CORPORATION OF IOWA, WAUKEE COMMUNITY SCHOOL DISTRICT, and TRAVELERS INDEMNITY CO., Defendants-Appellees. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Dallas County, Paul R. Huscher,

Judge.

A subcontractor appeals the court’s dismissal of its claim following an

electronic data monitoring system (EDMS) malfunction. REVERSED AND

REMANDED.

Valerie A. Cramer of Cramer Law, P.L.C., Des Moines, for appellant.

Stephen D. Marso of Whitfield & Eddy, P.L.C., Des Moines, for appellees.

Heard by Vogel, P.J., and Vaitheswaran and Bower, JJ. 2

BOWER, Judge.

This case involves chapter 16, “Rules Pertaining to the use of the

Electronic Document Management System” (EDMS). The district court denied

the plaintiff’s request to have its petition, which was e-filed on May 9, 2014,

deemed to have been e-filed on April 30, 2014 Under the unique and specific

circumstances of this case, fairness requires us to reverse the district court and

deem the petition to have been filed on April 30, 2014.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Waukee Community School District hired Rochon Corporation of Iowa,

Inc. to be the general contractor on its construction project. According to

Rochon, Travelers Casualty and Surety Company of America furnished a bond

for Rochon under Iowa Code chapter 573 (2013).1 Rochon subcontracted with

Ewing Concrete, LLC to perform a portion of the work.

In July 2103 Ewing asserted a chapter 573 claim for approximately

$41,000 for “labor and material on public improvements.” On March 31, 2014,

Rochon personally served Ewing with a thirty-day demand letter under Iowa

Code section 573.16, requiring Ewing “commence action in court, within [thirty]

days of service of this letter, to enforce its Iowa Code chapter 573 claim,” i.e., by

April 30, 2014. Iowa Code section 573.16 and relevant case law interpreting this

section provide that if Ewing fails to timely file its petition, its statutory claim is

time barred. See Nw. Limestone Co. v. State Dep’t of Transp., 499 N.W.2d 8,

11-12 (Iowa 1993) (holding section 573.16 provides a “special statute of

1 Defendants point out Ewing named the wrong Travelers entity in its petition caption— The Travelers Indemnity Company. 3

limitations” barring a subcontractor’s recovery against a school district’s retained

fund or a surety company’s bond and citing approvingly to Perkins Builders

Supply & Fuel Co. v. Indep. Sch. Dist., 221 N.W.2d 793, 795 (Iowa 1928), for the

proposition that after the expiration of the “special statute of limitations,” the late-

filing plaintiffs “still have a right of action as against the contractor until the

expiration of the period of the general statute of limitations”).

On April 30, 2014, at 4:29:48 p.m., Ewing’s attorney submitted an e-

payment for a “Petition in Equity” to EDMS. Minutes thereafter, at 4:35 p.m.,

EDMS responded with an e-mail confirming Ewing’s payment had been received.

However, the record does not contain a similar EDMS confirmation regarding the

petition. Eight days later, on May 8, 2014, the office manager for Ewing’s

attorney forwarded the payment-confirmation e-mail to the EDMS support

provider, who replied: “We are dutifully researching this as I type and will get

back to [you] ASAP once we know more.” Thereafter, EDMS accepted Ewing’s

petition in equity, and the petition is file-stamped May 9, 2014. Count I of

Ewing’s petition asserted a claim under chapter 573, and count II asserted a

breach-of-contract claim. Hereinafter we collectively refer to the three

defendants named in the petition as “the defendants” (Waukee Schools, Rochon,

and Travelers).

In mid-July 2014, Ewing’s new counsel filed an “application to reset filing

date for petition,” alleging the “EDMS system unexpectedly went down at 4:38

p.m. and remained offline until 7:13 p.m.” The application also alleged the

“EDMS system at that point should have process[ed] this petition. However, it 4

was not processed until May 9, 2014, which is outside the deadline.” The

defendants filed a resistance, stating the “ultimate question is whether the EDMS

malfunction excuses” Ewing’s untimely filing. The defendants claimed, however,

the chapter sixteen EDMS rules “do not permit the court to grant the relief sought

by Ewing in its application.”

On the morning of the September 2014 hearing on Ewing’s application,

Ewing filed two exhibits: Rochon’s thirty-day demand letter with proof of service;

and Ewing’s April 30, 2014 “payment-pending” filing, filed at 4:29:48 p.m. The

top section of the April 30 filing provided a filing ID, the date and time submitted,

the case type (civil equity-other), and the court location (Dallas). Thereafter, the

document stated:

Document Name View Document

PETITION Petition in Equity Petition.pdf

EXHIBIT-Proposed Exhibit B – Chapter 573 Claim Chapter 573 Claim.pdf

CIVIL ORIGINAL NOTICE Travelers.pdf

CIVIL ORIGINAL NOTICE Original Notice.pdf

EXHIBIT-Proposed Exhibit A – Subcontract Agreement Subcontract[or].pdf

After an unreported hearing, the district court found the “facts are not in

dispute” and also found:

[Rochon], on March 31, 2014, served on Ewing, a section 573.16 demand, requiring that suit be filed to enforce a claim within thirty days, or retained and unpaid funds would be released. Ewing attempted to file [its] petition on April 30, 2014, the last day of the thirty-day period. On that date, the EDMS system was not 5

functioning, and although Ewing received verification of [its] filing fee payment, the petition was not accepted and filed until May 9, 2014. Ewing seeks to have a determination that because [its] filing was not accepted, the filing should be deemed to have occurred on April 30, 2014.

The district court ruled that deeming Ewing’s filing to have occurred on April 30,

2014, “although perhaps equitable,” was “not the result provided in rule 16.311.”

The court quoted the interim rule:

16.311(1) Date and time of filing, deadlines. a. An electronic filing can be made . . . any time of the day [EDMS] is available. However, the expanded availability of electronic filings shall not affect the provisions for extension of deadlines under the criteria set forth in Iowa Code section 4.1(34) [(providing an extension to the next available filing day when the last day for commencing an action “falls on a Saturday, a Sunday, [or] a day [the clerk’s office] is closed”)]. When a document is filed using [EDMS], the system will generate a notice of electronic filing. The notice of electronic filing will record the date and time of the filing of the document in local time for the State of Iowa. This will be the official filing date and time of the document regardless of when the filer actually transmitted the document. b. A document is timely filed if it is filed before midnight on the date the filing is due. .... d. As [EDMS] may not always be available due to system maintenance or technical difficulties, filers should not wait until the last moment to file documents electronically. 16.311(2) System unavailable. a.

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