RCR Building Corporation v. Pinnacle Hospitality Partners

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 15, 2012
DocketM2012-00286-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of RCR Building Corporation v. Pinnacle Hospitality Partners (RCR Building Corporation v. Pinnacle Hospitality Partners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RCR Building Corporation v. Pinnacle Hospitality Partners, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE September 18, 2012 Session

RCR BUILDING CORPORATION v. PINNACLE HOSPITALITY PARTNERS, ET AL.

Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 09-1073-II Carol L. McCoy, Chancellor

No. M2012-00286-COA-R3-CV - Filed November 15, 2012

This appeal involves a contract for the construction of a hotel. The project owner refused to make the final payment owed to the general contractor, claiming that it was entitled to withhold $237,000 in liquidated damages because the project was not completed on time, in addition to deducting other “offsets” under the contract. The general contractor claimed that the owner was not entitled to liquidated damages for several reasons, including the fact that the owner had caused delays, and the fact that the owner had failed to make a timely claim for liquidated damages as required by the contract. The trial court granted partial summary judgment to the owner on the issue of liquidated damages, allowing the owner to subtract $237,000 from the final payment it owed under the contract. The court also resolved several other issues between the parties. The trial court declared the owner to be the prevailing party in the litigation and awarded the owner its attorney’s fees. The general contractor appeals. We affirm in part and reverse in part and remand for further proceedings.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part and Remanded

A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D AVID R. F ARMER, J., and J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., joined.

Gregory L. Cashion, S. Joseph Welborn, Craig N. Mangum, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, RCR Building Corporation

Gerald A. Smith, Jr., Brentwood, Tennessee, for the appellee, Pinnacle Hospitality Partners, LLC OPINION

I. F ACTS & P ROCEDURAL H ISTORY

Pinnacle Hospitality Partners, LLC (“Owner”) owned real property in Nashville, Tennessee, located near the Opryland Hotel complex and Opry Mills shopping center. Owner desired to construct the “Hampton Inn & Suites at Opryland” on the property. On June 25, 2007, Owner entered into a contract with a licensed general contractor, RCR Building Corporation (“Contractor”), for the construction of the hotel, with a guaranteed maximum price of approximately $7.5 million. The contract was a standard form American Institute of Architects (“AIA”) contract, Document A111-1997. The contract itself consisted of 18 pages, and the parties heavily modified many provisions. Attached to the contract, and incorporated by reference, was AIA Document A201-1997, which provided an additional 55 pages of “General Conditions of the Contract for Construction.” The parties modified many of these provisions as well.

According to the contract, Contractor was to achieve substantial completion of the work no later than 304 days after receiving a building permit (which signaled the date of commencement of the work). The building permit was received on July 25, 2007, and therefore, Contractor was obligated to reach substantial completion of the project no later than May 24, 2008. However, the project was not substantially completed until October 30, 2008, or 462 days after the date of commencement. Thus, the project was substantially completed 158 days after the scheduled deadline of May 24, 2008.1

The parties’ contract provided that time was of the essence and that Contractor would be liable for and pay to Owner $1,500 for each day of delay in the substantial completion of the work beyond the scheduled deadline. After the May 24, 2008 deadline passed, Owner continued to make progress payments to Contractor over the next several months, totaling approximately $3.8 million, without deducting any amounts for liquidated damages. The project was completed in December 2008. Representatives of Owner and Contractor met on December 10, 2008, to discuss Owner’s final payment, and at that meeting, a final payment of $607,426.02 was agreed upon by the parties. Owner never made that payment, however, and on March 26, 2009, Owner’s attorney sent a letter to Contractor asserting, for the first time, that Contractor owed Owner $237,000 in liquidated damages for failing to complete

1 We note that Owner states, in its brief on appeal, that the work was to be substantially completed by May 23, 2008, rather than May 24. However, when Owner responded to Contractor’s Statement of Undisputed Material Facts in the trial court, Owner admitted that substantial completion was to be obtained by May 24, 2008. Thus, we will refer to the deadline as May 24. In any event, both parties agree that the project was delayed by 158 days.

-2- the project on time.

Contractor filed this lawsuit in the chancery court for Davidson County on June 1, 2009, seeking to recover the agreed upon final payment of $607,426.02, plus interest, costs, and attorney’s fees. In addition, Contractor alleged that the delays and disruptions that occurred at the project were caused by Owner, and as a result, Contractor sought to recover additional consequential damages that it incurred. Finally, the complaint stated that Contractor had previously recorded a notice of mechanics’ and materialmen’s lien with the register of deeds for Davidson County, and it asked that the lien be enforced upon the property in the amount of the trial court’s judgment.2

Owner filed an answer and counterclaim. Owner did not dispute that the $607,426.02 sum sought by Contractor was “mathematically correct,” but Owner claimed that this sum was the amount it owed “prior to contractually mandated adjustments and set-offs.” Specifically, Owner claimed that it was entitled to credits against that sum for $237,000 in liquidated damages3 and for $321,061.78 in payments that it had elected to make directly to subcontractors rather than to Contractor.4 If these two amounts were deducted from the $607,426.02 final payment, the remaining balance would equal $49,364.24, and Owner stated that it anticipated making additional direct payments to subcontractors, of this approximate amount, once it verified the identity of the subcontractors and the precise sums due. Thus, the answer filed by Owner asked that Contractor’s complaint be dismissed with prejudice, and that it be awarded costs and attorney’s fees.

Owner filed a motion for partial summary judgment regarding numerous issues. Regarding Contractor’s claim for consequential damages due to the delays that Owner

2 The complaint filed by Contractor also named as a defendant Community First Bank & Trust. According to the complaint, no monetary relief was sought against the Bank, but it was named as a defendant due to the fact that it had an interest in the property pursuant to a deed of trust. It was undisputed throughout the proceedings below that the Bank’s deed of trust had priority over any lien held by Contractor. However, when the trial court resolved the issues between Owner and Contractor through various motions for partial summary judgment, it failed to enter an order dismissing the “claim” against the Bank. As a result, when Contractor instituted this appeal, we issued an order directing the parties to obtain the entry of a final judgment that resolved all of the issues. The trial court subsequently entered an order of voluntary dismissal as to the claims against defendant Bank. 3 The counterclaim asserted by Owner was for the $237,000 it sought in liquidated damages. The sum of $237,000 is calculated by multiplying 158 days by $1,500 per day. 4 It was undisputed that much of the outstanding balance owed to Contractor was for monies owed to its subcontractors. After Owner was sued by Contractor, Owner negotiated payments directly to the subcontractors rather than paying Contractor.

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Bluebook (online)
RCR Building Corporation v. Pinnacle Hospitality Partners, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rcr-building-corporation-v-pinnacle-hospitality-pa-tennctapp-2012.