Prestress Services Industries of TN, LLC v. W. G. Yates & Sons Construction Co.

280 F. Supp. 3d 908
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedNovember 16, 2017
DocketCIVIL ACTION NO. 3:15-CV-080-MPM-RDP
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 280 F. Supp. 3d 908 (Prestress Services Industries of TN, LLC v. W. G. Yates & Sons Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prestress Services Industries of TN, LLC v. W. G. Yates & Sons Construction Co., 280 F. Supp. 3d 908 (N.D. Miss. 2017).

Opinion

ORDER

Michael P. Mills, UNITED STATES' DISTRICT COURT, NORTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI

This court presently has before it three motions for partial summary judgment filed in the above-entitled action. Having considered the memoranda and submissions of the parties, it is now prepared to rule.

This action arises out of the construction of the Parking Garage adjacent to the Pavilion on the 0⅛ Miss Campus, a project which saw numerous delays and cost overruns which spawned the instant litigation. The factual and procedural history of this case is, unfortunately, quite complex, and this court will not attempt-to recount in full the many failures, by many parties, which are alleged to have contributed to the project’s delays. Indeed, many of these alleged failures are no longer directly relevant to this case, since several settlement agreements have been reached which significantly limit the scope of this action.

Broadly, however, this court notes that in 2014, the Ole Miss Athletic Foundation (“the Foundation”) entered into agreements with Prestress Services Industries of TN, LLC (“PSI”) for the purchase of precast components for the Garage. PSI, in turn, contracted with Hoch Associates (“Hoch”) to design these components. Hoch, a Texas engineering firm, found it necessary to engage the services of Nangia Engineering of Texas, Ltd. (“Nangia”) since the latter, firm had on staff the required engineer licensed to practice in Mississippi. In his deposition, however, Robert Nangia testified that he made no actual marks on Hoeh’s drawings sent to him to review, and he appeared to describe his role as simply rubber-stamping the work done by Hoch. .The Foundation entered into a separate contract with W. G. Yates & Sons Construction Company to construct the Garage, and AECOM Design (“AECOM”) served as the architect of record on the project. .

PSI was the original plaintiff in this case, and,,,in its complaint, it assigned a considerable amount of blame to the architect AECOM, which has since settled the claims .against it. Specifically, PSI maintained that AECOM’s design for the garage made it exceedingly difficult to build it with the seven-foot clearance between floors which is required by applicable building standards. As discussed below, now that AECOM and PSI have each settled, Yates, as the assignee of PSI’s claims, seeks to hold Hoch (and by extension Nan-gia) liable for their- part in what the parties refer to as the “minimum clearance design bust.”1 Consideration of the minimum clearance issue is complicated, however, by the fact that it was far from the only difficulty experienced by the project. To the contrary, there is quite substantial evidence that Yates and Hoch each contributed to the delays suffered by the project with their own' errors, discussed below, which are unrelated to the minimum clearance issue.

In light of the above facts, it is unsux--prising that sorting out the relative fault and liability of the large number of contractors involved in the project has proven quite difficult. Nevertheless, several settlements and assignments havé been entered into among the parties, and they have served to re-arrange the order of battle in this lawsuit to a very significant degree. For example,' it appears that Yates, formerly a defendant, now essentially has the status of a plaintiff asserting- claims against Hoch, which has itself asserted third party claims against Nangia. For the purposes of this order, however, Hoch and Nangia. assert common defenses, to the claims asserted by Yates, ,and they have joined each others’ motions. Thus, for the sake of simplicity, this order will sometimes refer to Yates as “plaintiff’ and' Hoch and Nangia as “defendants,” even though Nangia is, once again, more accurately regarded as a third party defendant.

In light of the aforementioned settlements, the remaining claims asserted by Yates are twofold. The first of these claims is partly conceded, namely that Hoch failed to design certain, precast concrete parts in accordance with relevant seismic standards. Contemporaneous emails from Hoch conceded that it made errors in this regard, and, as discussed below, it now appears to limit its defense on this issue to that of causation, rather than breach of duty. More specifically, Hoch (and Nangia) each contend that, whatever acts of negligence they may have committed in failing to account for seismic standards, these failures did not cause the delays suffered by the project. That is, defendants argue that the project would have been delayed an even greater period of time- by Yates’ own errors in building (and, at times, tearing down and .re-building) certain portions of the garage, regardless of any seismic design errors. And, indeed, the record does contain findings from .independent engineers hired by the Foundation suggesting that Yates may have made errors in this regard.

Sorting out the “concurrent delay” causation issues arising from potential acts of professional negligence by both of the remaining sides to this litigation seems likely to be a tall order at trial. The consideration of these issues will likely be made even more complex by the existence of Yates’ second claim, which involves the aforementioned minimum clearance design issue. While AECOM paid a rather large sum to settle the claims asserted against it on this issue, Yates maintains that Hoch (and by extension Nangia) must still account for their portion of the blame in this context. In asserting liability in this regard, the complaint clearly alleges that Hoch failed to warn of AECOM’s design errors, and, as discussed below, Hoch presently seeks dismissal of that failure to warn claim. In- its summary judgment briefing, however, Yates insists that the complaint asserts not only a failure to warn claim against Hoch, but also a design defect claim as well. Hoch disputes that the complaint asserts any such design defect claim and it argues that, even if it does,' Yates failed to adequately support it with expert testimony.

With the foregoing in mind, this court now turns'to the three motions for partial summary judgment presently before' it, two of which are mentioned above. This court first addresses Nangia’s summary judgment motion (joined by Hoch) on the concurrent delay issue. As noted previously, Nangia and Hoch each contend that Yates committed its own errors in building and rebuilding the garage and that, in light of the serious delays caused by those errors, the overall project suffered no additional delays resulting from the corrections required to the seismic work performed by Hoch and Nangia.

'Specifically, defendants argue that:

[I]n seeking delay damages from Nan-gia, Yates wholly disregards its own concurrent and unrelated delay which exceeded the completion date for the seismic issue by two months. Yates fails to mention in that delay claim that they had other remediation obligations to the Owner, Ole Miss Athletics Foundation (“Ole Miss”), in repairing the P4 level ■topping slab that took multiple pours and repairs to complete. Yates’ P4 remediation was in fact not completed and accepted until June 10, 2015. In contrast, the seismic remediation was completed on March 26, 2015, and accepted by Hoch on April 9,2015.
The P4 topping slab remediation was required, under the contract documents, to be completed before substantial completion would be declared.

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Bluebook (online)
280 F. Supp. 3d 908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prestress-services-industries-of-tn-llc-v-w-g-yates-sons-construction-msnd-2017.