Morsey Constructors LLC v. JMN Rebar LLC

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedMarch 23, 2020
Docket3:18-cv-00758
StatusUnknown

This text of Morsey Constructors LLC v. JMN Rebar LLC (Morsey Constructors LLC v. JMN Rebar LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morsey Constructors LLC v. JMN Rebar LLC, (M.D. Tenn. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE NASHVILLE DIVISION MORSEY CONSTRUCTORS LLC, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Case No. 3:18-00758 ) JMN REBAR LLC, ) ) Defendant. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION This lawsuit arose after JMN Rebar LLC walked off the job at the Chemours Air Separation Plant in New Johnsonville, Tennessee on August 1, 2017. Morsey Constructors LLC, which had contracted with Air Products & Chemicals Inc. to construct the foundation of the plant and subcontracted JMN to perform a portion of that work, sued JMN for breach of contract. It has now filed a Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. No. 25) on that claim in the amount of $287,991.69, plus attorney’s fees. Because the motion raises more questions than it provides answers, summary judgment will be denied. I. In support of its summary judgment motion, and in accordance with this Court’s local rules, Morsey submitted a statement of undisputed fact. Those facts are based largely upon the declaration of Eric McLean. JMN disputes all but one of those 23 paragraphs of facts because “the declaration of Eric McLean was verified upon ‘the best of his knowledge and belief.’” (Doc. No. 335-1, passim). This approach was risky because it presumed – incorrectly as it turns out – that the Court would agree with JMN’s position that McLean’s declaration is “incompetent to establish any fact 1 on summary judgment.” (Id.). Even though McLean indicated that the statements in his declaration were to the “best of his knowledge and belief,” this was prefaced with his averment that he was “personally familiar with the facts and statements made below[.]” (Doc. No. 25-1 at 1). Moreover, McLean’s declaration is

largely devoted to authenticating email communications and correspondence between the parties, and JMN does not claim that the documents McLean references are inauthentic. Nor does JMN assert, as required by Rule 56(c), “that the material cited to support . . . a fact cannot be presented in a form that would be admissible in evidence.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(2). Perhaps this is because “an email can qualify as an admissible record of a regularly conducted business activity as long as the proponent satisfies the requirements of Rule 803(6),” United States v. Daneshvar, 925 F.3d 766, 777 (6th Cir. 2019), or the proponent can simply call the author of the email to authenticate it.

Beyond identifying the emails, the statements made in McLean’s declaration appear to be based on his personal knowledge as Morsey’s Director of Projects.1 As a consequence, the statements made by McLean stand virtually undisputed. Fortunately for JMN, however, those facts, in conjunction with the other facts marshaled by Morsey, do not warrant the entry of summary judgment. II. In an email dated July 25, 2017, Mitch Jacobs at Morsey invited Richard Wallace at JMN,

1 JMN’s reliance on this Court’s recent opinion in Clark v. Clarksville Hous. Auth., No. 3:18-CV- 00678, 2020 WL 134114, at * 3 (M.D. Tenn. Jan. 10, 2020) is entirely misplaced. There, the Court rejected a declaration from the director of a housing authority about when a decision was made because she did not even work for the housing authority at the time, nor did she “claim to have looked at the minutes or other records to see what transpired at the meeting. All she did is ‘verify’ what counsel wrote in the affidavit[.]” Id. at 3. JMN’s perceived deficiencies in McLean’s declaration hardly rise to that level. 2 to submit a quote for the installation of rebar in the foundation of Chemours’ new air separation plant. Attached to the email was a copy of the Construction Specification 600.002, Project Scope of Work for Civil and Underground Construction. The Specification provided that “at least two (2) weeks prior to mobilization, the Contractor shall submit for every person entering the site a letter

confirming” that background checks and negative drug and alcohol test had been secured for each prospective employee. The following two days resulted in the exchange of a flurry of emails between the parties. On July 26, 2017, Roger Struble, JMN’s Vice President of Operations, sent Jacobs a “Proposal Contract” that quoted a price for installation of rebar at the rate of $415.66 per ton. Specifically excluded from that figure was the cost of “moving or double-handling of reinforcing steel and materials from lay-down yard or area.” (Doc. No. 25-4 at 4). The “Proposal Contract” also

contained the following provision: If accepted, the terms and conditions of this Subcontract Proposal, as mutually agreed upon, shall be incorporated into any final contract if one is provided to Subcontractor. Otherwise, Contractor’s notice to proceed, whether by mail, phone, facsimile, or by any other means of communication shall constitute an acceptance of this offer and shall bind the Contractor to the terms and conditions as set forth herein, and not other writing shall be required by Subcontractor. (Id.). Later that same day, Jacobs emailed Struble and attached the following documents that needed to be completed before mobilization: (1) Authorization to Release Criminal Information as a Condition to Access Site form; (2) Applicant’s Disclosure & Authorization for Background Screening form; (3) Informed Consent for Drug/Alcohol Testing form; and (4) Disclosure and Authorization form for obtaining a consumer report. JMN was also informed by phone conversation 3 and a separate email that it needed to provide an EMR (Experience Rating Modification History) letter as a prerequisite to being accepted as a qualified subcontractor on the project, and that it should provide a time and material (“T&M”) rate, as well as a quote for installation of wire mesh. (Doc. No. 25-6 at 12).

In response, JMN provided Morsey a T&M rate of $59 per hour and a price for installation of wire mesh of .15 per square foot. (Doc. No. 25-8 at 2). JMN, through Struble by a separate email, also informed Morsey that it “would need a price of $450 a ton” for the rebar because of the background checks. (Doc. No. 25-9 at 2). This was confirmed in a revised “Proposal Contract” that indicated the cost for rebar installation would be $449.96 per ton. That “Proposal Contract” contained the same language as before regarding the movement of rebar and acceptance of the terms and conditions. (Doc. No. 25-10 at 5). In a response email, Jacobs wrote Struble: “Approved, will

get you a subcontract tomorrow.” (Doc. No. 25-11 at 2). On July 27, 2017, Greg Byant, a representative of Air Products informed Morsey that JMN was approved as a subcontractor for the project. In turn, Jacobs wrote Struble that (1) “Angel [Little] is writing up a subcontract as we speak”; (2) “[t]his is your notice to proceed on this job”; and (3) “[p]lease begin to send background authorization paperwork ASAP so we can get you all on site ASAP.” (Id.). A half-hour later, Little emailed Morsey’s Contractor’s Subcontract No. 174281-06 (“Subcontract”) to Struble. Jean Nachreiner, the owner of JMN, signed the Subcontract on July 27, 2017. She also

provided Morsey a Certificate of Liability Insurance dated July 27, 2017, naming Morsey as the certificate holder and identifying Morsey as an additional insured for the Project. That same day and the next, JMN began submitting authorization forms for the employee drug/alcohol screens. 4 On August 1, 2017, JMN workers mobilized at the construction site and attended an orientation required by Air Products. They then began working. However, a few hours later, JMN workers were pulled of the work site. Nachreiner, by letter, explained that JMN had “decided to pass on the Air Products & Chemicals Inc. Project” because “[t]here were a number of project conditions”

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Bluebook (online)
Morsey Constructors LLC v. JMN Rebar LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morsey-constructors-llc-v-jmn-rebar-llc-tnmd-2020.