Kleinfelder, Inc., f/k/a Century Eng'g, Inc., d/b/a NXL Constr. v. Allegheny Constr. Co. Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 16, 2025
Docket0143253
StatusPublished

This text of Kleinfelder, Inc., f/k/a Century Eng'g, Inc., d/b/a NXL Constr. v. Allegheny Constr. Co. Inc. (Kleinfelder, Inc., f/k/a Century Eng'g, Inc., d/b/a NXL Constr. v. Allegheny Constr. Co. Inc.) 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.

Bluebook
Kleinfelder, Inc., f/k/a Century Eng'g, Inc., d/b/a NXL Constr. v. Allegheny Constr. Co. Inc., (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Raphael, Lorish and Bernhard PUBLISHED

Argued at Christiansburg, Virginia

ALLEGHENY CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC.

v. Record No. 0134-25-3

TOWN OF CHRISTIANSBURG, VIRGINIA, ET AL.

MCCORMICK TAYLOR, INC. OPINION BY JUDGE DAVID BERNHARD v. Record No. 0141-25-3 DECEMBER 16, 2025

KLEINFELDER, INC., F/K/A CENTURY ENGINEERING, INC., D/B/A NXL CONSTRUCTION SERVICES

v. Record No. 0143-25-3

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY K. Mike Fleenor, Jr., Judge

D. Stan Barnhill (Woods, Rogers, Vandeventer, Black, PLC, on briefs), for Allegheny Construction Company, Inc.

Christopher K. Jones (N. Reid Broughton; R. Webb Moore; L. Lee Byrd; Sands Anderson PC, on brief), for appellees Town of Christiansburg, Virginia and Justin St. Clair.

Joseph W. Cooch (Law Office of Joseph W. Cooch, PLLC, on briefs), for appellant McCormick Taylor, Inc. and appellee Sam A. Styers.

Kenneth D. Smith (Ronan A. Geronimo; O’Hagan Meyer PLLC, on briefs), for appellant Kleinfelder, Inc. and appellee Daniel W. Rich. These consolidated interlocutory appeals present a narrow yet significant question in

public construction contracting: whether a contractor may maintain tort claims against

consultants or municipal employees, who acting as agents of a municipality, allegedly advised

the municipality to deny the contractor’s requests for additional payment.

These appeals arise from a single public works project. Allegheny Construction

Company, Inc. (“Allegheny”) contracted with the Town of Christiansburg (the “Town”), to

perform roadway improvements. The Town separately retained McCormick Taylor, Inc. (“MT”)

as design engineer and NXL Construction Services (“NXL,” now Kleinfelder, Inc., d/b/a NXL)

for construction engineering and inspection services. In its amended complaint, Allegheny

alleged that MT, NXL, their respective employees, and the Town’s project manager (1)

tortiously interfered with the contract between Allegheny and the Town and (2) conspired to

deprive Allegheny of additional compensation it was due.

The amended complaint and attachments thereto detail the roles of each consultant and

the Town’s employee were defined entirely by contract, and each acted as the Town’s agent in

performing assigned professional duties. Under established Virginia law, a principal and its

agents are regarded as a single legal entity when the alleged conduct of the agents arises solely

from, or breaches only, contractual duties owed under the employment relationship. Because

Allegheny alleged no conduct by NXL, MT, their agents, or any Town employee outside the

scope of their agency, its claims sound solely in contract. As a matter of law, agents acting

solely within the scope of their agency cannot be liable for tortious interference with their

principal’s contract or for conspiring with the principal or with each other.

Accordingly, the circuit court erred in overruling the demurrers of NXL and MT but

properly dismissed the claims against the individual employees, albeit reaching the right result

for the wrong reason. The judgment of the circuit court is therefore affirmed in part, reversed in

-2- part, and remanded with direction to dismiss the interference and conspiracy counts against these

defendants.

BACKGROUND

On November 8, 2021, Allegheny filed its initial complaint against the Town under Code

§ 2.2-4335(D) of the Virginia Public Procurement Act. The Town responded on November 29,

2021, with a demurrer, answer, counterclaim, and a third-party complaint against MT for

indemnification and breach of contract. After initial discovery, on August 4, 2023, Allegheny

filed an amended complaint directly naming MT, one of MT’s employees, NXL, one of NXL’s

employees, the Town, and a Town employee. Count I alleged breach of contract against the

Town. Counts II, III, and IV asserted tortious interference, business conspiracy, and common

law conspiracy against all defendants.

On May 20, 2019, Allegheny entered into a contract with the Town (the “Allegheny

Contract”) to serve as the general contractor for a public road improvement project at the

intersection of Cambria Street and North Franklin Street (the “Project”). The Town had

previously contracted separately with NXL for construction engineering and inspection services

and with MT for project design services. MT assigned its employee, Sam A. Styers, as project

representative, and NXL assigned its employee, Daniel W. Rich, as field engineer and scheduler.

The Town designated Justin St. Clair, a municipal employee, as its project manager and liaison

with Allegheny.

The Allegheny Contract required Allegheny to construct the work described in the

“Contract Documents,” which included the drawings prepared by MT but did not include the MT

design contract. The Allegheny Contract expressly stated there were no Contract Documents

other than those listed. The Allegheny Contract incorporated “General Conditions” that

identified MT as the Project’s designer and NXL as the “Engineer” and “Owner’s

-3- representative.” These conditions vested NXL with authority to reject defective work, stated

NXL’s authority was limited to the role assigned by contract, and expressly disclaimed any duty

“in contract, tort, or otherwise” owed by the Engineer to the contractor.

The Allegheny Contract placed certain obligations on Allegheny, including warranting it

had carefully studied the Contract Documents, inspected the site, and confirmed the documents

were generally sufficient for performance. The documents were subject to professional

interpretation, and the contract acknowledged plans might omit details, require inference, or lack

dimensional precision.

The Allegheny Contract provided Allegheny may be entitled to additional compensation

if the Town, MT, or NXL caused delays, disruptions, or differing site conditions. Evaluation of

such claims required engineering judgment, and the contract specifically vested the “Engineer”

with authority to render decisions on requirements of the Contract Documents and acceptability

of work. Any contractual claims by Allegheny were to be submitted to the Town and NXL, with

the Town retaining its authority as the sole conclusive decision-maker.

The Town’s March 1, 2017 design contract with MT authorized MT to prepare

preliminary and final design documents, perform surveys, locate utilities, conduct traffic

analyses, and produce roadway plans and quantity summaries. MT was also required to perform

a constructability review, attend pre-advertisement meetings, and assist the Town in preparing

bid documents. The design contract additionally obligated MT to provide construction-phase

support, specifically to “address any requests for information . . . on an as-needed basis” and to

“attend on-site progress meetings during construction.” Although Allegheny later alleged MT’s

role did not extend to advising the Town regarding contractor claims, nothing in the design

contract prohibited MT from performing additional services, and the contract between MT and

the Town expressly allowed the Town and MT to modify its scope without requiring Allegheny’s

-4- consent. MT’s contract further required it to meet the standard of professional care “ordinarily

exercised by members of its profession” and to be “fully responsible to the Town for all

negligent acts and omissions” of its employees and agents.

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Kleinfelder, Inc., f/k/a Century Eng'g, Inc., d/b/a NXL Constr. v. Allegheny Constr. Co. Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kleinfelder-inc-fka-century-engg-inc-dba-nxl-constr-v-vactapp-2025.