Leiden Corp. v. A.F. Lusi Construction Inc. (In re Leiden Corp.)

69 B.R. 387, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 136
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 16, 1987
DocketBankruptcy No. 8300699; Adv. No. 840061
StatusPublished

This text of 69 B.R. 387 (Leiden Corp. v. A.F. Lusi Construction Inc. (In re Leiden Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leiden Corp. v. A.F. Lusi Construction Inc. (In re Leiden Corp.), 69 B.R. 387, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 136 (D.R.I. 1987).

Opinion

DECISION

ARTHUR N. VOTOLATO, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

Heard on February 19, 1986 on Leiden Corporation’s complaint alleging breach of contract by A.F. Lusi Construction, Inc. (Lusi). Leiden initially sought $92,728.55 for work, labor and materials, $10,000 for loss of profit, and interest and attorneys’ fees. See Complaint at 2. Leiden later reduced its main request to $90,665.95, based on what it now considers to be the correct amount due under the contract, subtracting direct payments to Leiden or its suppliers, and adding a “reasonable profit” on the work remaining. See infra, at 5-6. Lusi disputes Leiden’s figures, and counterclaims for $40,000.

DISCUSSION

The following few facts are the only ones not in dispute:1 On February 28, 1983, Leiden entered into a sub-contract2 with Lusi, the general contractor, to perform site work (utility, sub-base, etc.) at the Launcher Laboratory Building, Naval Underwater Systems Center, in Newport, Rhode Island. See Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1.

[390]*390The contract price was calculated as follows:

$259,690 Original contract price
17,533 Change order
1,080 Extra excavation
$278,303 Total contract price

See Joint Pre-trial Order.

Work at the site began, and between April and December 1983, Leiden received payments from Lusi totalling $153,721. Lusi also paid $31,877 directly to certain of Leiden's suppliers. So much for what is agreed to.

Following are the disputed issues of fact and law, as to which the parties are in sharp disagreement:

1. The reasonable value of work and materials Leiden provided to Lusi.
2. The amount Lusi paid to other subcontractors after Leiden’s stoppage, and which of those backcharges are recoverable by Lusi.
3. The amounts and reasonableness of payments made by Lusi to Leiden employees.
4. Does Lusi owe Leiden $446.25 for providing an operator for Lusi’s forklift?
5. Does Lusi owe Leiden $1,434.90 for the premium paid by Leiden on a performance bond?
6. Did Lusi breach the contract in question, and if so, is it nevertheless entitled to recover money expended to complete Leiden’s part of the job?
7. Did Leiden breach the subcontract, and if so, the legal consequences of such breach.
8. Is Lusi entitled to overhead and profit on monies paid by it to suppliers and employees of Leiden?
9. Is Leiden entitled to interest on progress payments due when work stopped, and if so, at what rate?

10. Whether Leiden is entitled to lost profits on the balance of the contract not completed, and if so, in what amount?

The reason(s) for Leiden’s work stoppage in February or March 1984, before it completed all of its obligations under the subcontract, is one of the many items in dispute. Leiden argues that it “did not complete the job because of Lusi’s failure to make timely progress payments pursuant to [Article 12.4.1] of the contract.” Plaintiff’s Post-trial Memorandum of Law at 1. Although, the testimony and exhibits support Leiden’s allegation that Lusi did not comply with the payment schedule in Article 12.4.1, see Plaintiff’s Exhibits 2-13, 18, based on the credible testimony and the documentary evidence of record, Lusi’s decision to withhold progress payments was justified and reasonable. We conclude that Leiden’s failure to complete work on the Launcher Laboratory project resulted from its own financial and other difficulties which predated, and which were not related to the subcontract with Lusi, and which led to the filing of the Chapter 11 petition on October 5, 1983.3

In that regard, Armand Lusi, president and general manager of defendant A.F. Lusi Construction, Inc., testified that prior to the execution of the subcontract (but unknown to him until March 1983), Leiden was delinquent as to union fringe benefit payments. See Defendant's Exhibits R, T, HH. Even Hugo Key, II, vice-president and treasurer of Leiden Corporation, admitted that Leiden was in arrears of payments for union benefits due on jobs performed prior to the subject contract, but he argued that Armand Lusi, because of his membership on the Board of Trustees of Local 271, was aware of that fact before this subcontract was negotiated and executed. Lusi testified convincingly, however, that he knew nothing of Leiden’s union difficulties until after Leiden began work on the Launcher Lab project, when he began receiving letters and telephone calls from union representatives threatening to stop the job. See Defendant’s Exhibits T, R. Leiden’s failure to pay required union benefits is a violation of Article 15.2 of the subcontract, and placed it in breach ab initio, which breach was never remedied. Leiden also materially defaulted on the subcon[391]*391tract by failing to segregate and pay withholding taxes as required by Article 11.32. See Defendant’s Exhibit S.

Leiden’s financial problems worsened, and in the spring of 1983 Westport Sand and Gravel, Inc., Pine Hill Sand & Gravel, Inc., and several other vendors and suppliers contacted Lusi to complain that Leiden was not making payments when due. See Defendant’s Exhibits O, P. These complaints continued, with Armand Lusi receiving weekly telephone calls from suppliers, and despite Hugo Key’s repeated assurances that those difficulties would be taken care of, as would the payment of delinquent taxes and union fringe benefits.

The evidence also establishes that in September 1983, Lusi notified Leiden of its dissatisfaction with the quality of Leiden’s work, and that the work was behind schedule. See Defendant’s Exhibit U. Lusi testified, and we find as a fact, that Leiden’s tardiness in completing certain work called for under the subcontract, such as installation of hydrants, held up other subcontractors, and placed the entire job behind schedule. In October 1983 Lusi began taking over and performing work which was Leiden’s obligation under the subcontract, and eventually Leiden stopped work on the project altogether, in March 1984.

On the facts before us, we must conclude that Leiden Corporation substantively breached the subcontract, both as to its financial obligations and as to performance, while Lusi was, at most, in technical breach because of its failure to make timely progress payments. More importantly, however, we also conclude that neither Leiden nor Lusi’s respective breaches excused performance by the other, where the parties elected (by their conduct) to ignore significant contract provisions and the other’s default, and continued to treat the contract as a continuing obligation. See Cities Service Helex, Inc. v. United States, 543 F.2d 1306, 1315-1316, 211 Ct.Cl. 222 (1976); Western Casualty and Surety Co. v. Herman, 318 F.2d 50, 55 (8th Cir.1963); National Landscaping Co. v. Continental Casualty Co.,

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69 B.R. 387, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leiden-corp-v-af-lusi-construction-inc-in-re-leiden-corp-rid-1987.