Mike M. Johnson, Inc. v. County of Spokane

78 P.3d 161
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 2003
Docket72900-0
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 78 P.3d 161 (Mike M. Johnson, Inc. v. County of Spokane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mike M. Johnson, Inc. v. County of Spokane, 78 P.3d 161 (Wash. 2003).

Opinion

78 P.3d 161 (2003)
150 Wash.2d 375

MIKE M. JOHNSON, INC., Respondent,
v.
The COUNTY OF SPOKANE, a Washington State Municipal Corporation, Petitioner,
US West Communications, Inc., Defendant.

No. 72900-0.

Supreme Court of Washington, En Banc.

Argued June 10, 2003.
Decided October 23, 2003.

*162 Richard W. Kuhling, Spokane, for defendant.

Patrick Mark Risken, Mark Anthiny Wheeler, Spokane, for petitioner Spokane County.

Patrick Arthur Sullivan, John Henry Guin, Carl Edward Hueber, Winston & Cashatt Lawyers, Spokane, for respondent.

Paul Russell Cressman, John P. Ahlers, Bruce Andrew Cohen, Seattle, amicus curiae on behalf of Utility Contractors Ass'n, Smacna-Western Wash. Inc., Cascade & Puget Sound Chapters of, Associated Gen. Contractors.

Herbert Peter Sorg, Stanton Phillip Beck, Lane, Powell, Spears, Lubersky, LLP, Seattle, amicus curiae on behalf of State Dept. of General Administration.

Richard Ottesen Prentke, Graehm Christopher Wallace, Katrina Robertson Kelly, Seattle, amicus curiae on behalf of State School Const.

MADSEN, J.

The trial court below granted summary judgment dismissal of Mike M. Johnson, Inc.'s (hereinafter MMJ) claims for additional compensation arising out of two separate sewer installation contracts with Spokane County. The Court of Appeals reversed, finding that issues of material fact exist regarding whether Spokane County's "actual notice" of MMJ's claims excused MMJ from complying with the contractual claim procedures, as well as whether the county waived compliance as evidenced by its conduct.

We hold that "actual notice" is not an exception to compliance with mandatory contractual protest and claim provisions. Further, since the record does not contain any conduct by Spokane County evidencing its intent to waive MMJ's compliance with the protest and claim procedures, we hold that no question of material fact exists regarding waiver. We reverse the Court of Appeals.

FACTS

In April 1998, Spokane County awarded MMJ bids to construct two sewer projects for the county: the Apple Valley Sewer project and the Wolfland project. MMJ and Spokane County entered into contracts for both projects, which incorporated the Washington State Department of Transportation's 1996 Standard Specification for Road, Bridge, and Municipal Construction, as modified by the special provisions contained in the project manuals for each project. Both the county and MMJ anticipated that MMJ would perform the projects in sequence. Construction on Apple Valley was to begin on May 27, 1998, and be completed in 88 working days; and construction on Wolfland was to begin on June 29, 1998, and last 70 working days. MMJ planned to utilize two crews, moving one crew to the Wolfland project once construction was underway on Apple Valley.

At the preconstruction conference on April 23, 1998, the county informed MMJ that a road improvement district project was in progress to redesign Seventh Avenue — a roadway in the Apple Valley project. The redesign would not affect the sewer installation but would widen the road and revise the storm drain system. MMJ began construction on the Apple Valley project, starting on Fourth Avenue with a plan to follow with Sixth Avenue and then Seventh Avenue.

The contracts authorized the county to change MMJ's work within the general scope of the contract at any time through a change order. On June 4, 1998, the county submitted the revised design of Seventh Avenue to *163 MMJ and issued proposed change order number 3. Change order number 3 required MMJ to widen Seventh Avenue and change the elevation and grade, and the order included a proposal to increase MMJ's compensation by $69,319 and add eight working days to the project.[1] MMJ made no objection or protest to the design change, proposed compensation, or altered schedule and began the work under change order number 3. Thereafter, it encountered buried U.S. West telephone lines during construction on Seventh Avenue.[2] MMJ's work on Seventh Avenue came to a halt while the county and U.S. West worked out the utility conflict.

Both the Apple Valley and Wolfland contracts required MMJ to use mandatory notice, protest, and formal claim procedures for claims of additional compensation, time extensions, and changed conditions. Specifically, the contracts required MMJ to give a signed written notice of protest of work required by a change order, other written order, or oral order from the engineer before doing any work. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 116-17 (Standard Specification Section 1-04.5). The contracts required MMJ thereafter to:

Supplement the written protest within 15 calendar days with a written statement providing the following:

a. The date of the protested order;

b. The nature and circumstances which caused the protest;

c. The contract provisions that support the protest;

d. The estimated dollar cost, if any, of the protested work and how that estimate was determined; and

e. An analysis of the progress schedule showing the schedule change or disruption if the Contractor is asserting a schedule change or disruption.

Id. at 116. The contracts further provided that MMJ accept all requirements of a change order by endorsing it, writing a separate acceptance, or not protesting it as required by section 1-04.5. Id. MMJ's failure to protest constituted "full payment and final settlement of all claims for contract time and for all costs of any kind, including costs of delays, related to any work either covered or affected by the change." Id. Additionally, the contracts stated that "[b]y failing to follow the procedures of this section and Section 1-09.11, the Contractor completely waives any claims for protested work." Id. at 117.

Section 1-09.11 provided a mandatory formal claim procedure if the protest procedures of section 1-04.5 failed to provide MMJ with a satisfactory resolution. CP at 119-22 (Standard Specification Section 1-09.11). The formal claim procedures required MMJ to submit a claim to the project engineer in sufficient detail to enable the engineer to ascertain the basis and amount of the claim. CP at 119. At a minimum, MMJ was required to submit 10 items of specific information to support a claim, including a notarized statement to the project engineer swearing to the truth and veracity of the submitted claim (the "Final Contract Voucher Certification"). Id. Under the contracts, MMJ's failure to submit the required information with a final contract voucher certification was "a waiver of the claims by the Contractor." Id. Furthermore, the contracts explicitly stated that "[f]ull compliance by the Contractor with the provisions of this section is a contractual condition precedent to the Contractor's right to seek judicial relief." CP at 122.

*164 Instead of following the contract requirements, MMJ sent the county a letter on June 26, 1998, addressing seven concerns in bullet point form, only one of which discussed the Seventh Avenue delay:

Our work on 7th Avenue is being delayed by U.S. West. Their phone lines are too shallow and must be relocated to accomodate [sic] the revised Change Order No. 3 plan. Their impacts are causing additional delays and costs to our work, and we are finding it increasingly difficult to accommodate their deficiencies.

CP at 226. MMJ did not file a written protest statement as required under section 1-04.5 at this time or anytime thereafter.

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Bluebook (online)
78 P.3d 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mike-m-johnson-inc-v-county-of-spokane-wash-2003.