Prince Payne Enterprises Inc v. Tigua Enterprises Inc

CourtDistrict Court, D. South Carolina
DecidedMarch 26, 2020
Docket2:18-cv-02552
StatusUnknown

This text of Prince Payne Enterprises Inc v. Tigua Enterprises Inc (Prince Payne Enterprises Inc v. Tigua Enterprises Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prince Payne Enterprises Inc v. Tigua Enterprises Inc, (D.S.C. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF SOUTH CAROLINA CHARLESTON DIVISION

PRINCE PAYNE ENTERPRISES, INC., ) United States for the Use and Benefit of ) Prince Payne Enterprises, Inc., ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) No. 2:18-cv-2552-DCN vs. ) ) ORDER TIGUA ENTERPRISES, INC. and ) RESTORATION SPECIALISTS LLC, ) ) Defendants. ) _______________________________________)

The following matter is before the court on defendant Tigua Enterprises, Inc.’s (“Tigua”) motion for summary judgment, ECF No. 50. For the reasons set forth below, the court grants the motion. I. BACKGROUND Tigua entered into a contract with the United States Department of State to perform certain operations and maintenance services to the United States Department of State’s site in North Charleston, South Carolina. ECF No. 50-4, Declaration of Neil Butler (“Butler Decl.”) ¶ 4. Tigua subcontracted with defendant Restoration Specialists LLC (“Restoration Specialists”) to repair the coping cap on Building E (“Building E Project”) and to perform construction and renovation services on Building D (“Building D Project”). Id. Restoration Specialists then subcontracted portions of its work to Prince Payne. Id. There is a joint check agreement dated December __, 20161 that states that Tigua and Restoration Specialists entered a subcontract, that Restoration Specialists and

1 The parties left the day blank on the agreement. Prince Payne entered a subcontract, and that Restoration Specialists and Tigua would pay Prince Payne through joint checks payable to Restoration Specialists and Prince Payne. ECF No. 40-4 at 2. However, the agreement is only signed by Restoration Specialists and Prince Payne, and the space for Tigua’s signature is blank. Id. at 3.

The evidence submitted by the parties is scarce; therefore, the court describes the entirety of the evidence before it. Prince Payne sent what appears to be its first invoice to Restoration Specialists on February 1, 2017 for $2,526.00 for the Building E Project (“February 1, 2017 invoice”). ECF No. 50-5 at 1. Prince Payne sent another invoice for $29,098.00 to Restoration Specialists for the Building E Project on May 31, 2017 (“May 31, 2017 invoice”). ECF No. 40-5 at 2. Prince Payne’s third invoice to Restoration Specialists, dated June 6, 2017, was for “Change Order # 1 DOS Phase 8” and amounted to $25,314.00 (“June 6, 2017 invoice”). ECF No. 62-1 at 5. Prince Payne sent a fourth invoice for $21,135.75 to Restoration Specialists for the Building D Project on September 1, 2017 (“September 1, 2017 invoice”). ECF No. 40-5 at 3. Prince Payne’s final invoice

to Restoration Specialists, dated October 30, 2017, was for the Building D Project and amounted to $2,400.00 (“October 30, 2017 invoice”). ECF No. 62-1 at 2. A change order to increase the sum of the subcontract between Restoration Specialists and Prince Payne was issued on October 3, 2017 (“October 2017 change order”). ECF No. 50-2 at 2. The October 2017 change order includes the original “Subcontract Sum,” the “net change by previously authorized Change Orders,” the “Subcontract Sum prior to this Change Order,” the amount by which the change order increases the Subcontract Sum, and “the new Subcontract Sum including this Change Order.” Id. The October 2017 change order then notes that the “Subcontract Time will be increased by Zero (0) days” and leaves blank the date of Substantial Completion. However, the change order states that it is not valid until it is signed by the subcontractor (Prince Payne), the contractor (Restoration Specialists) and the owner of the project, presumably the Department of State. Id. The October 2017 change order was only

signed by Prince Payne and Restoration Specialists, meaning that it is missing the owner’s signature. On November 17, 2017, Kenneth Prince, the owner of Prince Payne, sent a letter to Sam Hudgins at the Department of State noting that it had issued four invoices to Restoration Specialists for which Prince Payne had not been paid: the May 31, 2017 invoice, the June 6, 2017 invoice, the September 1, 2017 invoice, and the October 30, 2017 invoice.2 ECF No. 62-1 at 4. The letter does not demand payment or request help in obtaining payment from Restoration Specialists. Instead, it states “To Whom It May Concern, Prince Payne Enterprises has issued invoices to be paid on work that has been completed for the Department of State through Restoration Specialist [sic] and have not

[sic] been paid for. The follow are invoices and the amounts that are delinquent.” Id. Mr. Prince lists the four invoices and concludes by saying “Thank You, If you have any questions please feel free to contact Prince Payne Enterprises Roofing and Construction at 843-771-0430.” Id. Then on November 20, 2017, Prince Payne forwarded the letter and four invoices to Neil Butler, the Project Manager for Tigua at the Department of State site, in an email with no text in the body of the email. ECF No. 62-1 at 1. On December 13, 2017, Mr. Butler emailed Mr. Prince stating that “[w]e need to enter into a service agreement in order for me to get you paid. We need to get your

2 The February 1, 2017 invoice was not included in this letter. passed [sic] due money as well as talk about any future Phases and payments.” ECF No. 62-2 at 6. Tigua explains that “Phases” referred to how the Department of State project was divided. Mr. Butler continued, stating that “[t]he first thing we need is COI and W- 9” and provided Tigua’s address for the COI. Id. Mr. Prince responded with a copy of

Prince Payne’s W-9 and let Mr. Butler know that the COI would be sent shortly. Id. at 5. He also told Mr. Butler to “[l]et me know what else I can do to help speed the payment process.” Id. Mr. Butler responded with a “thanks.” Id. Later that day, Mr. Prince followed up to see if Mr. Butler received the COI and W-9. Id. at 4. Mr. Butler appears to have not responded because Mr. Prince followed up again the next day, asking “[d]id you receive the necessary paperwork to be able to process a payment to our office?” Id. Mr. Butler responded, stating that he was “going through your paper work pertaining to phases 10–15.” Id. at 3. He stated that he “would like to keep this total separate from the past amount due in 1–9” and “would like to verify that we are on the same page in terms of $ for the additional phases.” Id. As this email

reflects, and as Tigua explains, Phases 1–9 were complete as of the time of this email, i.e., December 2017, and Phases 10–15 had yet to begin. Mr. Butler further explained that the parties would need to enter into an agreement that reflected the amount that had been quoted and funded and would then need “a separate check and agreement for the past due amounts.” Id. Mr. Butler asked Mr. Prince to review the amounts for phases 10–15. Id. The next email in the chain is from someone named Michelle who appears to work at Prince Payne. Id. at 2. She asked Mr. Butler to send her “the lady in your office name and email address [sic] you want me to CC the estimates and invoices to.” Id. Mr. Butler then emailed someone named Donna and told her that he was working with Mr. Prince to get his vendor set up for Phases 10–15, that Mr. Butler was missing some of Mr. Prince’s quotes, and asking Donna to help capture all of the quotes. Id. The next email in the chain appears to be someone from Prince Payne sending three quotes to Mr. Butler. Id. at 1. All three quotes, dated July 19, 2017, are for Phase 13 of the project. Id.

at 8–10. On February 28, 2018, Mr. Hudgins sent an email addressed to Dennis Schumm and “Mark”, who are presumably the points of contact for Restoration Specialists. ECF No. 40-9 at 2. Mr. Hudgins notes that Prince Payne has not been paid for its work on Buildings D and E and that the government has paid Tigua and Restoration Specialists.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Prince Payne Enterprises Inc v. Tigua Enterprises Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prince-payne-enterprises-inc-v-tigua-enterprises-inc-scd-2020.