Lewis Jorge Construction Management, Inc. v. Pomona Unified School District

102 P.3d 257, 22 Cal. Rptr. 3d 340, 34 Cal. 4th 960, 2004 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 11267, 2004 Daily Journal DAR 15217, 2004 Cal. LEXIS 12220
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 2004
DocketS112624
StatusPublished
Cited by87 cases

This text of 102 P.3d 257 (Lewis Jorge Construction Management, Inc. v. Pomona Unified School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis Jorge Construction Management, Inc. v. Pomona Unified School District, 102 P.3d 257, 22 Cal. Rptr. 3d 340, 34 Cal. 4th 960, 2004 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 11267, 2004 Daily Journal DAR 15217, 2004 Cal. LEXIS 12220 (Cal. 2004).

Opinion

Opinion

KENNARD, J.

A school district terminates a construction contract when the contractor, four and a half months after the promised due date, still has not finished the project. The contractor’s bonding company then hires another firm to complete the project, but it suspends then later reduces the amount of bonding for the contractor. The latter successfully sues the school district for breach of contract, recovering in damages some $3 million for potentially lost profits, which the contractor claimed it would have earned on prospective construction contracts it never won because of its impaired bonding capacity. The Court of Appeal concluded that those potential profits were a proper item of general damages in this action for breach of contract. We disagree.

I.

In 1994, the Pomona Unified School District (District) solicited bids for building improvements at Vejar Elementary School. The District awarded the contract to Lewis Jorge Construction Management, Inc. (Lewis Jorge), the low bidder at $6,029,000. Although the contract originally provided for completion in December of 1995, heavy rains delayed work, and the parties agreed to a revised completion date of January 22, 1996. That date came and went, but the project remained unfinished.

*966 The District withheld payments to Lewis Jorge for work completed in April and May, 1996. On June 5, the District terminated the contract with Lewis Jorge and made a demand on the contractor’s surety to finish the project under the performance bond the surety had provided for Lewis Jorge. The surety then hired another contractor to complete the school project for $164,000. That contractor completed the project between early July and mid-September, 1996.

Lewis Jorge sued the District, alleging it breached the contract by declaring Lewis Jorge in default and terminating it from the construction project. The complaint sought damages and alleged six causes of action. The first, alleging breach of contract, and the second, alleging breach of an implied warranty of sufficiency of the plans and specifications for the project, are both contractual claims naming the District as a defendant. Causes of action three through five—alleging nondisclosure of material facts, inducing breach of contract, and negligence—named a district employee as a defendant. The sixth cause of action sought equitable indemnity against both the District and the employee for claims against Lewis Jorge by its surety and its unpaid subcontractors. Lewis Jorge did not plead as special damages the profits it claimed to have lost on future contracts.

Lewis Jorge, in turn, was sued by a number of its subcontractors for nonpayment of their past due bills.

At trial, Lewis Jorge presented evidence from its bonding agent that in June 1996 it had a bonding limit of $10 million per project, with an aggregate limit of $30 million for all work in progress. By mid-1997, the only sureties willing to provide Lewis Jorge with bonding imposed a limit of $5 million per project, with an aggregate limit of $15 million, a reduction of its bonding capacity to the level its surety had imposed in the early 1990’s. Sometime in 1998, Lewis Jorge ceased bidding altogether and eventually closed down.

Lewis Jorge sought to prove the extent of its lost future profits on unidentified construction projects, using as the relevant period the date of the District’s breach to the date of trial, and relying on its profitability during the four years preceding the breach. Robert Knudsen, a financial analyst who specialized in calculating lost profits claims, projected that Lewis Jorge had lost $95 million in gross revenue for future contracts that, based on its past history, it would likely have been awarded. Historically, Lewis Jorge had realized a profit of about 6 percent of revenue. Knudsen calculated lost profits on unidentified projects at $4,500,000, which discounted to present value came to $3,148,107.

*967 The jury returned special verdicts in favor of Lewis Jorge, finding the District liable for $362,671 owed on the school construction contract, of which $143,755 was attributable to the District’s “breach of warranty as to the fitness of its plans or specification” (the complaint’s second cause of action). It awarded $3,148,197 1 in profits Lewis Jorge did not realize “due to the loss or reduction of its bonding capacity.” Having found the District’s employee negligent, the jury found him and the District jointly and severally liable for $3,510,868.

The District and its employee appealed. Lewis Jorge also appealed, raising issues that are not material here and were rejected by the Court of Appeal. Although the Court of Appeal reversed the judgment against the District’s employee, and reversed awards against the District for prejudgment interest and contractual attorney fees (Civ. Code, § 1717), it rejected the District’s claim that the award to Lewis Jorge of $3,148,197 for potential profits on future projects was an improper component of general damages for breach of contract. The Court of Appeal granted the District’s petition for rehearing on that question; after receiving additional briefing, it concluded that “the lost profit damages sought by Lewis Jorge were in the nature of general damages, [] not special damages as claimed by the District.”

We granted the District’s petition for review to resolve whether general damages for breach of a construction contract include potential profits lost on future contracts that a contractor does not win when, as a consequence of the property owner’s breach, the contractor’s surety reduces the contractor’s bonding capacity. 2 We later solicited and received briefing from the parties on the related issue of whether an award of lost potential profits would have been proper here as special damages.

II.

Damages awarded to an injured party for breach of contract “seek to approximate the agreed-upon performance.” (Applied Equipment Corp. v. Litton Saudi Arabia Ltd. (1994) 7 Cal.4th 503, 515 [28 Cal.Rptr.2d 475, 869 P.2d 454] (Applied).) The goal is to put the plaintiff “in as good a position as he or she would have occupied” if the defendant had not breached the contract. (24 Williston on Contracts (4th ed. 2002) §64:1, p. 7.) In other *968 words, the plaintiff is entitled to damages that are equivalent to the benefit of the plaintiff’s contractual bargain. (Id. at pp. 9-10; 1 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1987) Contracts, § 813, pp. 732-733; Peterson v. Larquier (1927) 84 Cal.App. 174, 179 [257 P. 873] [breach of lease permits injured party to recover difference between rental value at date of breach and rent specified in lease for its term].)

The injured party’s damages cannot, however, exceed what it would have received if the contract had been fully performed on both sides. (Civ.

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102 P.3d 257, 22 Cal. Rptr. 3d 340, 34 Cal. 4th 960, 2004 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 11267, 2004 Daily Journal DAR 15217, 2004 Cal. LEXIS 12220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-jorge-construction-management-inc-v-pomona-unified-school-district-cal-2004.