SKB Industries, Inc. v. Insite

551 S.E.2d 380, 250 Ga. App. 574
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 25, 2001
DocketA01A0322, A01A0323
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 551 S.E.2d 380 (SKB Industries, Inc. v. Insite) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SKB Industries, Inc. v. Insite, 551 S.E.2d 380, 250 Ga. App. 574 (Ga. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Andrews, Presiding Judge.

The appeal and cross-appeal in this case are from jury verdicts rendered in a dispute between a contractor and a subcontractor over work on a construction project placed for bid. The contractor, Insite, a division of Nu-Stone Surfacing, Inc., sued its subcontractor, SKB Industries, Inc., on the basis of promissory estoppel claiming the bid SKB submitted to Insite was incorporated into Insite’s winning bid on the project, and that Insite was damaged when SKB failed to do a substantial part of the work it promised to do in its bid. The jury found for Insite on this claim and awarded $711,573.42 in damages. The jury also found for Insite on its claims that SKB tortiously interfered with Insite’s contractual relationship with the project’s general contractor, causing $82,561.29 in damages, and that Insite was enti *575 tied to $50,000 in litigation expenses pursuant to OCGA § 13-6-11. SKB counterclaimed against Insite for breach of contract claiming Insite failed to pay it for the portion of the work it completed on the project. The jury awarded SKB $47,150 on the counterclaim along with litigation expenses pursuant to OCGA § 13-6-11 in the amount of$l.

In Case No. A01A0322, SKB appeals from the verdicts for Insite and from the award in its favor for $1 in litigation expenses, claiming the amount of expenses awarded was inadequate. We find there was evidence supporting the verdict for Insite on the basis of promissory estoppel, but no evidence to support the verdict for Insite on the tortious interference claim. Although the evidence supported the jury’s award of litigation expenses for Insite, we reverse and remand this award to allow Insite to prove the amount of expenses attributable solely to the claim on which it prevailed. There was also evidence supporting the jury’s award of litigation expenses for SKB in the amount of $1. Despite evidence that SKB paid expenses in excess of the award, the jury was authorized to conclude that the reasonableness and value of those expenses were less than the sums paid. In Insite’s cross-appeal in Case No. A01A0323 from the verdicts for SKB, we find there was evidence supporting the verdict awarding SKB $47,150 for breach of contract and awarding $1 for expenses of litigation.

Case No. A01A0322

1. SKB contends the trial court erred by allowing Insite to pursue its claim based on promissory estoppel.

This claim was based on evidence that Beers Construction Company, a general contractor, was accepting bids for work to build the Georgia International Plaza in preparation for the 1996 Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta. The project comprised two elements: building large structural concrete planting containers across the top of an existing parking deck (hardscaping), and placing soil, plants, and drainage features in the containers to create a landscaped plaza on top of the deck (landscaping). Insite, a hardscaping contractor, was preparing to submit a bid to Beers to do both the hardscaping and landscaping work on the project. For the purpose of submitting a bid for the whole project, Insite received a bid from SKB, a landscaping subcontractor, to do the landscaping portion of the work for $1,085,222.50. Insite included SKB’s bid in its bid to Beers to do the whole project for $3,161,411.

Insite’s bid was significantly lower than the next lowest bid on the project, and Beers suspected that the landscaping portion of the bid from SKB may not have been based on materials specified by the *576 contract documents for the project. When this concern was brought to SKB’s attention, SKB confirmed to Beers and Insite that it had. received all the documents containing the project specifications and that its bid to Insite was based on all the required materials. However, SKB subsequently informed Insite that its bid was not based on the required materials, but rather included lower priced materials not approved in the project specifications. Subsequently, SKB sent Insite a revised bid to do the landscaping work with the required materials for a higher price. Ultimately, a change in the project specifications was negotiated by Beers to allow SKB to use materials less expensive than those originally required, and SKB assured Insite that it would do the landscaping work using these materials. After SKB made these assurances, Beers accepted Insite’s bid, and Insite became contractually obligated to perform the hardscaping and landscaping work on the project for the amount of its bid to Beers.

Insite sent SKB a written subcontract showing a new price for the landscaping portion of the work in the amount of $1,112,222.50 based on the use of the newly approved materials. After receiving the subcontract, SKB sent Insite a notice to contract and requested an initial payment for work making reference to the subcontract amount of $1,112,222.50. However, SKB never signed the subcontract and ultimately refused to do a substantial portion of the landscaping work included in its bid. Because of SKB’s refusal to perform all the work included in its bid and the time constraints of the project, Insite was forced to perform landscaping work in which it had no expertise, and which cost it substantially more to do than the price for this work included in SKB’s bid. Although SKB refused to fully perform the work in its bid, it later entered into a written subcontract with Insite to perform a small portion of the work included in its bid. SKB claimed it refused to perform because of disputes over language in the first subcontract sent to it by Insite, but there was also evidence from which the jury could have concluded that, after SKB assured Insite it would do the bid work, SKB refused to perform because it realized it had mistakenly bid too low on portions of the landscape work.

Even though there was no binding contract between Insite and SKB for the portion of the landscape work at issue, there was evidence supporting Insite’s promissory estoppel claim for the difference between the cost it incurred in performing the landscape work SKB refused to do and the price for this work submitted by SKB in its bid, as revised for the new materials. Insite’s promissory estoppel claim required proof that: (1) SKB made a promise to do the landscape work in the bid it submitted to Insite; (2) SKB should have expected that Insite would rely on the promise; (3) Insite did rely on the promise to its detriment; and (4) injustice can be avoided only by enforce *577 ment of the promise. OCGA § 13-3-44 (a); DPLM, Ltd. v. J. H. Harvey Co., 241 Ga. App. 219, 220-221 (526 SE2d 409) (1999). SKB clearly expected Insite to rely on its bid because it was submitted to Insite for the express purpose of allowing Insite to include it in the bid made by Insite to Beers for the whole project. It was also foreseeable to SKB that Insite would suffer damage if SKB refused to perform the bid work after Insite relied on SKB’s bid as a basis for Insite’s bid to Beers. There was no evidence that SKB’s bid was intended to be revocable at any time before acceptance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
551 S.E.2d 380, 250 Ga. App. 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skb-industries-inc-v-insite-gactapp-2001.