S K Peightal Engineers, Ltd. v. Mid Valley Real Estate Solutions V, LLC

2015 CO 7, 342 P.3d 868, 2015 Colo. LEXIS 68, 2015 WL 525771
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedFebruary 9, 2015
DocketSupreme Court Case 13SC728
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 2015 CO 7 (S K Peightal Engineers, Ltd. v. Mid Valley Real Estate Solutions V, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S K Peightal Engineers, Ltd. v. Mid Valley Real Estate Solutions V, LLC, 2015 CO 7, 342 P.3d 868, 2015 Colo. LEXIS 68, 2015 WL 525771 (Colo. 2015).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE RICE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

1 Petitioners have requested that we review two issues arising from the court of appeals' opinion issued on interlocutory appeal under C.A.R. 4.2. We must decide: (1) whether entities that did not exist at the time the relevant contracts were completed can still be subject to the economic loss rule through the interrelated contracts doctrine; and (2) whether commercial entities situated similarly to Respondent, which was a third-party beneficiary to a contract that interrelated to the contract by which the home at issue was built, are among the class of plaintiffs entitled to the protections of the independent tort duty to act without negligence owed by construction professionals to subsequent homeowners when constructing residential homes. 1 We hold that (1) the fact that an entity was nonexistent at the time the relevant contracts were completed does not alter our analysis under the interrelated contracts doctrine, and (2) the independent duty at issue does not apply here because, as a third-party beneficiary of a commercially negotiated contract that interrelates to the contract under which the home was built, Respondent cannot properly be considered a subsequent homeowner.

I. Facts and Procedural History

T2 This case arises out of a series of contracts surrounding the construction of a "spec" home. Petitioners are soil engineer *871 ing corporations that subcontracted with developer Sun Mountain Enterprises LLC ("Sun Mountain") to perform soil analysis and soil engineering for the construction of a home. Petitioner S K Peightal Engineers LTD ("S K Peightal") entered an oral contract with general contractor Shannon Custom Homes; 2 whether this contract contained an explicit duty of care is disputed. Meanwhile, Petitioner Hepworth-Pawlak Geotechnical Inc. ("H-P Geotech") 3 entered into a written contract with Sun Mountain containing a duty provision requiring H-P Geotech to conduct all services "in a manner consistent with that level of care and skill ordinarily exercised by members of the profession currently practicing under similar conditions in the same locale."

3 Sun Mountain planned on constructing the home and selling it on the open market, and it secured financing for the project through three intertwined construction loan agreements with Alpine Bank, the most central of which was executed in April of 2007 (the "Construction Loan Contract"). Before the home reached the market, the Great Recession struck. The home sat unsold until the Construction Loan Contract matured and came due, at which point Sun Mountain and Alpine Bank entered into a contract titled "Agreement for Deed-in-Lieu of Foreclosure" ("Deed-in-Lieu"). This contract released Sun Mountain's personal guarantors from liability under the Construction Loan Contract in exchange for Alpine Bank receiving the deed to the house and a lump-sum payment of the difference between the home's appraised value and the remaining indebtedness due on the Construction Loan Contract. Alpine Bank did not take title to the home directly but rather created a wholly owned subsidiary-Respondent Mid Valley Real Estate Solutions V, LLC ("Mid Valley")-to take title to the property under the Deed-in-Lieu. 4

T4 After Mid Valley took possession under the Deed-in-Lieu and placed the home on the market, large cracks formed in the walls of the home as a result of settling soil beneath the home's foundation. Mid Valley sued Petitioners 5 for purely economic damages under a negligence theory for "breach[ing] their duties and applicable standard of care in providing soils and other engineering services and/or design services for the Home." Petitioners moved for summary judgment under the economic loss rule, asserting that Mid Valley was contractually interrelated through the Deed-in-Lieu and the Construction Loan Contract to the duty provisions contained in Petitioners' contracts with Sun Mountain, and thus that Mid Valley was barred from asserting a tort claim for its economic loss. The trial court rejected Petitioners' summary judgment motion, finding that Mid Valley did not have a contract with anyone involved in the construction project. Petitioners then requested interlocutory review by the court of appeals under C.A.R. 4.2, which was granted.

' T5 The court of appeals affirmed the trial court's denial of summary judgment on different grounds. Mid Valley Real Estate Solutions V, LLC v. Hepworth-Pawlak Geotechnical, Inc., 2013 COA 119, ¶ 3, 343 P.3d 987. Largely avoiding the question of whether the contracts were interrelated, it held that Petitioners as subcontractors owed the same independent duty in the construction of a residential home to Mid Valley as they would to any natural home buyer, and thus that the economic loss rule did not apply to bar Mid Valley from suing Petitioners in tort. Id. We then granted certiorari to *872 determine whether (1) the independent duty in construction of a residential home applies to a commercial homeowner in Mid Valley's position, and (2) the contracts could be interrelated despite Mid Valley not existing at the time Petitioners' contracts were formed.

II. Standard of Review

¶ 6 We review the court of appeals' affirmation of the trial court's denial of a motion for summary judgment de novo. Pierson v. Black Canyon Aggregates, Inc., 48 P.3d 1215, 1218 (Colo. 2002). Summary judgment is only appropriate when the pleadings and supporting documents confirm that no issues of material fact exist and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. A.C. Excavating v. Yacht Club II Homeowners Ass'n, 114 P.3d 862, 865 (Colo. 2005). All doubts regarding the existence of a triable issue of fact must be resolved against the moving party, and the nonmoving party is entitled to all favorable inferences that may be drawn from the undisputed facts. Id.

TII Analysis

¶ 7 Petitioners assert that the court of appeals erred in upholding the trial court's denial of their motions for summary judgment on Mid Valley's tort claims based on the economic loss rule. The economic loss rule was adopted "to maintain the boundary between contract law and tort law," Town of Alma v. AZCO Constr., Inc., 10 P.3d 1256, 1259 (Colo. 2000), and focuses on the source of the duty that the defendant allegedly breached, id. at 1262. "A breach of a duty which arises under the provisions of a contract between the parties must be redressed under contract, and a tort action will not lie." Id. If, however, the duty breached arises "independently of any contract duties between the parties," then a tort action premised on that breach remains viable. Id. This rule applies not only in the context of a single contract, but also "when the claimant seeks to remedy only an economic loss that arises from interrelated contracts." BRW, Inc. v.

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2015 CO 7, 342 P.3d 868, 2015 Colo. LEXIS 68, 2015 WL 525771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-k-peightal-engineers-ltd-v-mid-valley-real-estate-solutions-v-llc-colo-2015.