Iron Gate Partners 5, Llc, V Tapio Construction

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 22, 2017
Docket47749-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Iron Gate Partners 5, Llc, V Tapio Construction (Iron Gate Partners 5, Llc, V Tapio Construction) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iron Gate Partners 5, Llc, V Tapio Construction, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

February 22, 2017

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II IRON GATE PARTNERS 5, L.L.C., No. 47749-1-II

Appellant,

v.

TAPIO CONSTRUCTION, INC., UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Respondent,

R.T. WHARTON & ASSOCIATES, INC., A&A CONTRACTING, INC.,

Defendants.

JOHANSON, J. — Iron Gate Partners 5 LLC (Iron Gate) appeals the jury’s defense verdict

and award of attorney fees in Iron Gate’s breach of contract action against Tapio Construction Inc.

(Tapio). We reject Iron Gate’s argument that the performance guaranty made Tapio strictly liable

for water intrusion into the facility. Therefore, we hold that the trial court did not err when it

denied Iron Gate’s summary judgment motion, the motion in limine, and the CR 50 motions.

However, based on the plain language of the contract and its execution context, we hold that the

trial court erred when it awarded Tapio its attorney fees. No. 47749-1-II

We affirm the trial court’s denial of Iron Gate’s summary judgment motion, motion in

limine, and CR 50 motions and reverse the trial court’s attorney fee award to Tapio.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

A. CONSTRUCTION OF THE FACILITY

In 2006, Iron Gate contracted with Tapio, R.T. Wharton & Associates Inc. (Wharton), Kiwi

Storage Systems (Kiwi),1 and others to design and build a 481-unit self-storage facility (the

Facility) in Vancouver. Although Tapio holds a general contractor’s license, Tapio functioned as

one of multiple contractors on the project. A master contract (the Contract), drafted by Iron Gate,

governed Tapio’s work. Iron Gate entered into substantially the same contract with the other

contractors.

The Facility’s construction was completed in July 2007. The Facility included two parallel,

two-story buildings, separated by an earthen berm. Atop the berm was a driveway aisle allowing

second-story access to storage units. First-story access was available from the buildings’ outer

sides at ground level. A few months after the facility’s completion, Iron Gate employees noticed

standing water in the first-floor units.

1 A Tapio owner testified that Wharton, a structural engineer, designed the Facility and Kiwi built the Facility’s metal portions.

2 No. 47749-1-II

B. CONTRACT TERMS

Section 15 of the Contract included, relevant to this appeal, the following performance

guaranty:

Contractor warrants and guarantees to Owner . . . the satisfactory performance of the Work for a period of one (1) year from . . . the date of Completion. . . . Contractor agrees to repair or replace any or all Work, together with any other adjacent work, which may be displaced by so doing, to Owner’s satisfaction, that . . . fails to perform for one (1) year from the date of Completion.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 55. “Addendum A” to the Contract defined “Work” as discrete tasks,

including as item 1.3 a “[r]etaining wall package to include”

[l]abor and materials to form concrete footings and walls. Furnish and install rebar package. Concrete pumping, concrete, place and finish. Furnish and install ecoline-r liquid applied membrane waterproofing and “miradrain system” with perforated drain pipe on building “A & B” retaining walls before back filling.

CP at 57. The “Work” also included providing erosion control, a grading and excavation package,

an underground utilities package, a building foundation package, concrete paving, and city street

improvements. The “[b]uilding foundation package,” item 1.5, included furnishing and installing

a “rebar package for cast in place concrete” and concrete on the second-floor deck. CP at 57.

Regarding attorney fees, the Contract provided that “[i]n the event of litigation between

the parties hereto . . . on account of the breach of or to enforce or interpret . . . the Contract . . .,

the losing party shall pay all costs and reasonable attorney[] fees actually incurred by the

prevailing party, including those on appeal.” CP at 55 (emphasis added).

3 No. 47749-1-II

II. BREACH OF CONTRACT ACTION

A. IRON GATE’S SUMMARY JUDGMENT MOTION

In April 2011, Iron Gate sued Tapio for breach of contract.2 Arguing that Tapio had

breached the performance guaranty in section 15 of the Contract, Iron Gate moved for summary

judgment. Iron Gate contended that because the performance guaranty’s language was

unambiguous and Tapio had breached the guaranty, summary judgment was appropriate. Iron

Gate argued that as a matter of law, water intrusion violated the performance guaranty, regardless

of whether Tapio’s work caused the intrusion or the water came through defects created by other

parties. Iron Gate claimed also that undisputed evidence revealed that Tapio had failed to properly

install waterproofing components for the concrete retaining walls so that water intruded into the

storage units. Tapio responded that the performance guaranty was not breached if others’ work

caused the water intrusion and that there were genuine issues of material fact regarding whether

the water intruded as a result of Tapio’s work.

The trial court “appreciated [Iron Gate’s] argument” that regardless of fault, Tapio was

liable under the performance guaranty, but the trial court disagreed with Iron Gate based on the

Contract’s language. 1 Report of Proceedings (RP) at 38. The trial court denied Iron Gate’s

summary judgment motion and ruled that summary judgment was inappropriate because it was

unclear how the moisture had intruded into the storage units.

2 Iron Gate sued both Tapio and Wharton, and Tapio subsequently brought third party claims against A&A Contracting Inc. (A&A), Tapio’s subcontractor. The trial court ultimately dismissed both Wharton and A&A.

4 No. 47749-1-II

B. IRON GATE’S MOTION IN LIMINE

Before trial, Iron Gate moved to exclude evidence of the fault “of any other named or

unnamed parties” except to support Tapio’s failure to mitigate defense. CP at 661. Iron Gate

argued that the performance guaranty made the fault of those other than Tapio irrelevant. In

response, Tapio contended that Iron Gate had to prove that Tapio’s alleged breach of warranty had

caused water to get inside. The trial court denied3 the motion in limine because there were

“questions of causation and [whether] there [was] moisture getting through and what is causing it

to get through.” 2 RP (Apr. 4, 2014) at 68-69.

C. JURY TRIAL

1. WATER INTRUSION EVIDENCE

Iron Gate’s part-owner, Glen Aronson, testified that he noticed standing water, which he

initially attributed to power washing, in the Facility’s interior within four months of the July 2007

completion. An employee saw water intrusion in the first-floor units adjoining the berm beginning

in the fall 2007. The water intruded mostly from the seam between the retaining wall and the floor

and also from cracks in the retaining wall. In April 2009, the Facility’s managers alerted Aronson

that there was an “issue with water intrusion” into the lower level units. 2 RP (Apr. 15, 2014) at

283. During heavy rains, Aronson observed water streaming down the walls from cracks in the

walls’ middles, from tieback holes in the walls, and from the walls’ top edges. The water intrusion

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