MCI Constructors v. Spotsylvania County

62 Va. Cir. 375, 2003 Va. Cir. LEXIS 115
CourtSpotsylvania County Circuit Court
DecidedAugust 4, 2003
DocketCase No. CL01-342
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 62 Va. Cir. 375 (MCI Constructors v. Spotsylvania County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Spotsylvania County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MCI Constructors v. Spotsylvania County, 62 Va. Cir. 375, 2003 Va. Cir. LEXIS 115 (Va. Super. Ct. 2003).

Opinion

By Judge William H. Ledbetter, Jr.

In this construction case, the court is called upon to decide whether the contractor’s claims are barred because it failed to comply with notice provisions required by law and the parties’ contract and because it did not submit its claims to the owner in a proper manner.

Summary of Facts

In March of 1997, Spotsylvania County and MCI entered into a fixed-price contract for construction of a water treatment facility at Motts Run Reservoir. The contract price was $22,316,500.00. In July of that year, the county notified MCI to proceed, with an agreed “substantial completion” date of September 1, 1999.

The contract documents, about which there appears to be no dispute, include a basic agreement with five addenda, general requirements, plans and specifications, and a host of change orders.

The facility was designed for the County by the engineering firm of Gannett-Fleming, Inc. That firm also represented the County on-site, administering the project.

[376]*376As work progressed, disputes arose. Delays occurred. Extra work was required. Various “proposed” change orders were submitted from time to time by MCI. Some were rejected. Fifty-six change orders were approved and signed by everyone.

On February 8, 2001, MCI submitted a “Request for Equitable Adjustment” to the County, requesting additional payment of $9,265,511.00 and a time extension of245 days. The County did not act on MCI’s “Request for Equitable Adjustment”; thus, MCI instituted this action in August of2001.

The parties engaged in discovery and appeared before the court for hearings on various motions. On May 15, 2003, the court conducted a day-long evidentiary hearing on the County’s plea in bar. Thereafter, by agreement, the court took the case under advisement so that counsel could submit additional written arguments. This opinion addresses the issues raised in the plea in bar.

The Issues

The County contends that MCI failed to give timely notices with respect to 93 of its 106 claims asserted in this litigation, thereby barring those claims from consideration.

The County further argues that the “Request for Equitable Adjustment” submitted to the County by MCI at the conclusion of the project is not a “claim” as defined by law or by the parties’ contract. For that reason, the County says, MCI cannot proceed with its lawsuit.

Finally, the County contends that many of MCI’s claim's, even if properly submitted, are barred because the change orders upon which the claims are based contain language by which MCI expressly waived additional compensation.

The Statutes

Generally, the procedure for filing claims against counties in Virginia is set forth in Virginia Code § 15.2-1243 etseq. The Public Procurement Act, § 2.2-4300 et seq., has its own requirements for submitting claims and maintaining actions on procurement contracts, including construction contracts. Because the Procurement Act is more specific, its provisions prevail over the more general claims provisions found in § 15.2-1243 et seq.

The Procurement Act contains a two-step procedure for submitting contractual claims. First, a contractor must provide written notice of his [377]*377intention to file a claim “at the time of the occurrence or beginning of the work upon which the claim is based.” Then, a written claim must be filed “no later than sixty days after final payment.” Section 2.2-4363(A).

The Procurement Act also provides that every public contract shall include “a procedure for consideration of contractual claims.” Section 2.2-4363(B).

A county may opt out of the Procurement Act, with some exceptions not pertinent here, if it adopts its own procurement policy generally applicable to procurement of goods and services. Section 2.2-4343(10). Spotsylvania County has adopted its own procurement policy, and that policy was in effect during the period of this contract.

Spotsylvania County Procurement Policy

The provision of the County’s procurement policy that governs claims contains the same language as § 2.2-43 63(A) except the County extends a ten-day grace period for giving notice of intention to submit a claim.

The Contract

The contract between the County and MCI contains typical language establishing a “change order process” for changes and extra work. If the contractor claims that any change involves extra cost, he must notify the engineer “within seven days after being advised of such change” and “before proceeding to execute the work.” No claim asserted by the contractor shall be valid unless made in the manner provided and approved by the owner and engineer. General Conditions, Section II, § 2.30.

The contract contains a separate section involving “presentation of the contractor’s claims.” The contractor can make no claim against the owner either during the prosecution of the work or upon completion of the project unless it has given the owner notice of intention to present such claims “within ten days from the happening of the event, thing, or occurrence giving rise to the alleged claim.” General Conditions Section II § 2.32.

Issue No. 1: Notice of Intention to Submit Claims

According to the County, an “occurrence” that triggers the notice-of-claim requirement is “when the contractor encounters a circumstance that would mean a change in contract compensation or contract schedule.” Therefore, says the County, the contractor must give the notice at an early point, even [378]*378before a dispute arises and before or at the time the contractor begins the extra work.

Conversely, MCI argues that there can be no “occurrence” giving rise to a claim “until an actual dispute comes into existence...Further, MCI asserts, two other factors must converge: the contractor “must know that its work has been impacted by a specific condition or action attributable to the owner,” and the contractor must know “it has a good faith basis to assert a claim. . . .”

The court declines the parties’ invitations to craft a universal definition for the phrase “the occurrence or beginning of the work upon which the claim is based” or to pronounce a one-size-fits-all rule for applying the phrase to public construction disputes. As the Virginia Supreme Court observed in Flory Small Business Dev. Ctr. v. Commonwealth, 261 Va. 230 (2001), “By identifying more than one event that triggers the filing of an intent to file a claim, the [procurement] statute acknowledges that not all claims will arise under the same circumstances. ... Thus, the timing and form of an alleged notice of intent pursuant to Va. Code § 11-69(A) [now §2.2-4363] requires an examination of the circumstances of each case.” Although the Court was addressing the Public Procurement Act in Flory, its observation is just as applicable to this case because the County’s procurement policy and the parties’ contract contain almost identical language, except that the latter includes a ten-day grace period.

Turning, then, to the circumstances of this case, it is apparent from the parties’ contract that they put in place (1) a typical, workable “change order” process, and (2) a claim-filing process consistent with state and county procurement laws.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 Va. Cir. 375, 2003 Va. Cir. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mci-constructors-v-spotsylvania-county-vaccspotsylvani-2003.