Stantec Consulting Services Inc. v. Kiewitt Louisiana Co.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 2025
Docket2025 CA 0536
StatusUnknown

This text of Stantec Consulting Services Inc. v. Kiewitt Louisiana Co. (Stantec Consulting Services Inc. v. Kiewitt Louisiana Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stantec Consulting Services Inc. v. Kiewitt Louisiana Co., (La. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

A# ffi W." I 9 il WA

FIRST CIRCUIT

NO. 2025 CA 0536

STANTEC CONSULTING SERVICES INC. V& A CONSULTING ENGINEERS, INC., vis AND PATTERSON PUMP COMPANY

CO VERSUS

KIEWIT LOUISIANA CO., M.R. PITTMAN GROUP, L.L.C., AND TRAYLOR BROS., INC., JOINT VENTURERS OPERATING UNDER THE TRADE NAME PCCP CONSTUCTORS, A JOINT VENTURE

Judgment Rendered:

On Appeal from the 19th Judicial District Court Parish of East Baton Rouge, State of Louisiana Trial Court No. 750670

The Honorable Wilson E. Fields, Judge Presiding

Albert D. Clary Attorneys for Co-Plaintiff/Appellant, J. Weston Clark V& A Consulting Engineers, Inc. Alec B. Keane Baton Rouge, Louisiana

David L. Guerry Attorneys for Co-Plaintiff/Appellant, Baton Rouge, Louisiana Stantec Consulting Services, Inc. Ross D. Ginsberg, Pro Hac Vice Matthew A. Marrone, Pro Hac Vice Atlanta, Georgia

Matthew W. Bailey Attorneys for Co-Plaintiff/Appellant, Katherine M. Cook Patterson Pump Company Baton Rouge, Louisiana Steven W. Usdin Attorneys for Defendants -Appellees, Laura M. Blockman Kiewit Louisiana Co., New Orleans, Louisiana M.R. Pittman Group, L.L.C., and Grant H. Willis, Pro Hac Vice Traylor Bros., Inc., doing business as Washington, DC PCCP Constructors, Joint Venture

BEFORE: LANIER, WOLFE, AND RESTER, JJ.

2 WOLFE, J.

This appeal concerns a trial court judgment sustaining a dilatory exception

pleading the objection of prematurity based on an arbitration agreement and

dismissing, without prejudice, a petition for declaratoryjudgment regarding alleged perempted claims. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In June of 2012, the United States Army Corps of Engineers (" the Army

Corps") solicited proposals to design and construct Permanent Canal Closures and

Pump Stations (the "Project") in and around New Orleans, Louisiana. The Army

Corps awarded the Project contract to PCCP, a Joint Venture, made up of three

individual entities, Kiewit LouisianaCo., M.R. Pittman Group, L.L.C., and Traylor

Bros., Inc. ( collectively " PCCP"). PCCP, in turn, subcontracted and with many

other entities to perform the work on the Project. Three subcontractor entities are

relevant to this appeal: Stantec Consulting Services, Inc., V& A Consulting I Engineers, Inc., and Patterson Pump Company ( collectively " the Plaintiffs").

The Army Corps and PCCP agreed that substantial completion of the Project

occurred in December 2017. Thereafter, in April 2023, the Army Corps asserted

five separate claims against PCCP regarding alleged problems/defects, some of

which implicated work performed by PCCP' s subcontractors, including the

Plaintiffs. While PCCP and the Army Corps discussed solutions to the claims, the

Plaintiffs and PCCP agreed to enter into an Arbitration Agreement to resolve the

respective responsibility of each of the parties for the Army Corps' claims. 2 The

1 PCCP and Stantec entered a subcontract for design on the Project; V& A is an engineering subconsultant to Stantec; and Patterson manufactured and supplied pumps pursuant to another subcontract.

2 Other subcontractors and subconsultants, River City Environmental Services, LLC, Fugro USA Land, Inc., and Infilco Degremont, Inc., now known as Suez Water Technologies, were parties to the Arbitration Agreement as well, but the only relevant parties for purposes of this appeal are PCCP and the Plaintiffs.

3 Arbitration Agreement was executed between PCCP and the Plaintiffs, with an

effective date of July 18, 2023.

PCCP filed an arbitration demand with JAMS Mediation, Arbitration, and

Alternative Dispute Resolution Services (" JAMS"), the arbitral body the parties

agreed upon, on July 20, 2023, but then immediately requested that JAMS stay the

arbitration proceedings so that PCCP could pursue resolution of its disputes with the

Army Corps and to allow the parties to the Arbitration Agreement to work toward

resolution of their disputes regarding their respective liability. During the

negotiations in the course of the stay, an issue arose as to whether the Arbitration

Agreement excluded perempted claims. On May 3, 2024, PCCP notified the

Plaintiffs ofits intention to lift the previously agreed- upon stay and to re-initiate the

arbitration proceedings related to the Project' s alleged defects as asserted by the

Army Corps. On July 12, 2024, the Plaintiffs filed a petition for declaratory

judgment against PCCP in the Nineteenth Judicial District Court, seeking a

declaration that perempted claims were not encompassed in the Arbitration

Agreement, that the Arbitration Agreement was null to the extent that its scope

included p erempted claims, and that p eremption had extinguished PCCP' s claims

against the Plaintiffs relating to their work on the Project. On July 16, 2024, PCCP

submitted a proposed procedure for arbitrator selection to JAMS and requested that

the arbitration move forward.

In response to the Plaintiffs' p etition, PCCP filed a dilatory exception raising

the objection of prematurity on September 11, 2024. PCCP asserted that the

Plaintiffs' petition was premature because of the valid Arbitration Agreement that

existed between the parties, where the parties expressly agreed to arbitrate " Any

Disputes ... relating to the Project[,]" including peremption. PCCP requested that

the trial court dismiss the Plaintiffs' p etition in order to allow the parties to resolve

their disputes through the agreed- upon arbitration process. The Plaintiffs opposed PCCP' s exception ofprematurity. The trial court heard the exception on December

9, 2024, and took the matter under advisement. On January 29, 2025, the trial court

signed a judgment sustaining PCCP' s exception of prematurity and dismissing,

without prejudice, the Plaintiffs' petition for declaratory judgment. The Plaintiffs

appealed asserting that the trial court legally erred in failing to resolve the issue of

peremption before compelling arbitration. 3

LAW AND ANALYSIS

Louisiana Code ofCivil Procedure article 926( A)( 1) provides for the dilatory

exception pleading the objection of prematurity. An action is premature if it is

brought before the right to enforce the obligation sued on has accrued. See La. Code

Civ. P. art. 423. The objection ofprematurity raises the issue ofwhetherthe judicial

cause of action has yet to come into existence because some prerequisite condition

has not been fulfilled. Crosby as Trustee of Aaron Guidry Trust v. Crosby

Enterprises, LLC, 2023- 1338 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 8/ 9/ 24), 395 So. 3d 296, 300.

The defense that the Plaintiffs in this suit are not entitled to judicial relief

because of a valid agreement to submit claims to arbitration may be raised by the

dilatory exception of prematurity. Crosby, 395 So. 3d at 300. Since PCCP raised

the failure to arbitrate by means of the exception of prematurity, PCCP had the

burden of showing the existence of a valid contract to arbitrate, by reason of which

the judicial action is premature. Id. An exception ofprematurity raises a question

of law subject to de novo review. Id.

Arbitration is favored in Louisiana and under federal law. Crosby, 395 So.3d

at 301. Arbitration is a substitute for litigation. National Tea Co. v. Richmond,

548 So. 2d 930, 933 ( La. 1989). The purpose of arbitration is settlement of

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