Fortney & Weygandt, Inc. v. Lewiston DMEP IX, LLC

2019 ME 175
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 30, 2019
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2019 ME 175 (Fortney & Weygandt, Inc. v. Lewiston DMEP IX, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fortney & Weygandt, Inc. v. Lewiston DMEP IX, LLC, 2019 ME 175 (Me. 2019).

Opinion

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions Decision: 2019 ME 175 Docket: BCD-18-358 Argued: October 7, 2019 Decided: December 30, 2019

Panel: SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, HJELM, and HUMPHREY, JJ.

FORTNEY & WEYGANDT, INC.

v.

LEWISTON DMEP IX, LLC, et al.

HJELM, J.

[¶1] In three cases arising from a set of commercial construction

projects, Lewiston DMEP IX, LLC, et al. (collectively, GBT),1 a group of real estate

developers, appeal from a combined judgment entered in the Business and

Consumer Docket (Murphy, J.) after a consolidated jury-waived trial. In the

judgment, the trial court determined that, in addition to damages for breach of

contract, the general contractor, Fortney & Weygandt, Inc. (F&W), was entitled

to remedies, including attorney fees, pursuant to Maine’s prompt payment

statutes, 10 M.R.S. §§ 1111-1120 (2018); that F&W was also entitled to attorney

1 Adopting the practice of the trial court and the parties, we refer to the nine appellants in this

matter collectively as GBT. The appellants are Lewiston DMEP IX, LLC; Auburn DMEP IX, LLC; Turner DMEP X, LLC; West Paris DMEP X, LLC; Oakland DMEP IX, LLC; Dollar Texas Properties IX, LLC; Dollar Texas Properties X, LLC; Dollar Properties East, LLC; and GBT Realty Corporation. 2

fees pursuant to the terms of the parties’ contract; and, addressing GBT’s

counterclaims, that GBT was estopped from seeking to enforce a contractual

right to liquidated damages against F&W. We affirm the judgment with respect

to GBT’s counterclaims for liquidated damages. As to the prompt payment

remedies allowed to F&W, we affirm in part but vacate in part and remand for

reconsideration of damages. Finally, although F&W is entitled to an award of

attorney fees and costs pursuant to the prompt payment statutes, we vacate the

portion of the judgment allowing F&W any separate recovery of attorney fees

pursuant to the parties’ contract.

I. BACKGROUND

[¶2] We draw the following account of this case from the procedural

record and from the facts as found by the trial court, which are supported by

competent evidence in the record. See Vt. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Ben-Ami, 2018 ME 125,

¶ 2, 193 A.3d 178.

[¶3] In 2014, GBT, a commercial real estate developer based in

Tennessee, entered into a contract with F&W, a general contractor based in

Ohio, for F&W to construct five retail-store buildings in Maine. The terms of the

parties’ agreement included a date by which each building project would reach

“substantial completion,” a term defined in the agreement as “sufficiently 3

complete in accordance with the Contract Documents so that the Owner may

occupy or utilize the Project . . . for the use for which it is intended, without

unscheduled disruption.” According to the contract documents, if a project had

not reached substantial completion by the contracted date, F&W would owe

GBT liquidated damages calculated at a specific rate.

[¶4] For a number of reasons, including unusually harsh winter weather

conditions and delays caused by GBT’s own conduct, none of the five projects

reached substantial completion by the contracted dates. As delays arose, F&W

employees notified GBT and requested extensions of the substantial

completion dates. At the same time, throughout the construction process, F&W

employees also submitted a succession of revised schedules to GBT for each

project, often indicating substantial completion dates that were later than the

contracted dates. Frequently, GBT did not respond to these notifications and

updated schedules.2 In some of its communications with F&W, however, GBT

signaled its acknowledgement that the substantial completion dates had been

2 Even beyond the absence of any complaints by GBT about schedule changes, the timeline for one of the projects—Lewiston—was extended pursuant to GBT’s express request. When F&W sent an updated schedule in response to that request, a GBT representative indicated agreement with the extended completion date and cautioned F&W not to “finish early.” When F&W asked GBT to issue a change order to update the substantial completion date that GBT itself requested, GBT agreed to do so but never actually issued the change order. 4

extended.3 In addition, several times, GBT’s vice president of construction told

F&W representatives that time extensions would be addressed after the

projects were complete, with GBT to issue a final, no-cost change order that

would extend the contracted substantial completion dates for all five projects.4

[¶5] Even after the contracted substantial completion dates had passed

and continuing as late as August of 2015, GBT issued dozens of change orders

for the projects, expanding the scope of F&W’s work for a number of reasons,

including unforeseen site issues, weather conditions, and changes to

landscaping plans.

[¶6] Previously, GBT had entered into contracts for F&W to construct

nine stores in Pennsylvania and Ohio, which would be used by the same

third-party retailer that was to occupy the Maine stores. The contract

documents for those out-of-state projects were the same as the ones used for

the Maine projects. Although most of the Pennsylvania and Ohio projects

For example, on January 30, 2015, the third of the five contracted dates, a GBT employee sent 3

an email to a F&W employee purportedly setting “new dates” for four of the five projects. F&W employees understood these “new dates” to be updated substantial completion dates.

4A contracted date of substantial completion could be amended only through a change order. The change order form, which only GBT could create, edit, or issue, included a space to indicate the number of days by which the project time would need to be extended. Several times, after GBT issued a change order indicating that the project time would be changed by zero days, F&W employees manually crossed out the zero and wrote numbers in an attempt to document time extensions that it believed GBT had agreed to. GBT gave no response to these manual entries. 5

reached substantial completion after the contracted dates had passed, GBT did

not seek liquidated damages in any of those instances.

[¶7] As the result of GBT’s apparent acquiescence to time extensions as

manifested by a combination of its statements, conduct, and silence, F&W

employees believed that GBT had agreed to the updated timelines and that GBT

would not seek liquidated damages if the projects reached substantial

completion after the originally-contracted dates. Because F&W relied on its

belief that GBT was agreeing to these extensions, F&W continued to work until

August of 2015 even though GBT had stopped making progress payments in

June. For the same reason, F&W did not insist that GBT issue change orders

extending the contracted substantial completion dates as delays arose. The

court concluded that, given the totality of the circumstances, F&W’s belief that

GBT had agreed to the extended dates was reasonable and justified, as was

F&W’s reliance on those changes.

[¶8] Although GBT stopped paying F&W in June, it actually had decided

to discontinue payments two months earlier. GBT did not, however, notify F&W

of its decision at that time. When F&W’s president contacted GBT and asked

why the payments had stopped and whether they would resume, he received

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2019 ME 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fortney-weygandt-inc-v-lewiston-dmep-ix-llc-me-2019.