Sundt Corp. v. SD Dept of Transportation

1997 SD 91
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1997
DocketNone
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1997 SD 91 (Sundt Corp. v. SD Dept of Transportation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sundt Corp. v. SD Dept of Transportation, 1997 SD 91 (S.D. 1997).

Opinion

Unified Judicial System

Formatting provided courtesy of State Bar of South Dakota
and South Dakota Continuing Legal Education, Inc.
222 East Capitol Ave.
Pierre, SD 57501-2596


SUNDT CORP.,
with its principal place of business at Tucson, Arizona,
Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
by and through the
SOUTH DAKOTA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION,
a state agency located in Pierre, SD
Defendant and Appellee.
[1997 SD 91, __ NW2d __ ]

South Dakota Supreme Court
Appeal from the Eighth Judicial Circuit, Lawrence County, SD
Hon.Warren G. Johnson, Judge
#19750-Affirmed

Ronald G. Schmidt, Schmidt, Schroyer, Moreno & Dupris, Pierre, SD
Attorneys for plaintiff and appellant.

Barton R. Banks, Banks, Johnson, Colbath & Kerr, Rapid City, SD
Attorneys for defendant and appellee.

Argued Apr 29, 1997; Opinion Filed Jul 16, 1997

GILBERTSON, Justice

 [¶1] Sundt Corporation, a paving construction company, appeals from the trial court’s directed verdict and dismissal of its negligence claim against the South Dakota Department of Transportation (SDDOT) and the trial court’s refusal of its proposed jury instructions. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURE

 [¶2] On July 5, 1991, SDDOT awarded Sundt a paving contract for a portion of U.S. Highway 12 in Corson County between Walker and McLaughlin. The contract required Sundt to provide a gravel cushion for 20 miles of roadway, and to surface the roadway with eight-inch, nonreinforced concrete pavement. Another contractor was hired to grade the roadway prior to Sundt’s phase of the project. Sundt’s contract required that during its portion of the construction, the highway would remain open, and the shoulders of the roadway would carry public traffic and trucks hired by Sundt to haul project materials.

 [¶3] The grading contractor completed its contract in the fall of 1991. The grading contractor was given a change order in fall 1991 which required it to apply oil to the roadway to keep the dust down. The change order specifically provided that no oil was to be applied on the road shoulders. Sundt’s contract required construction to begin in the spring of 1992.

 [¶4] In early spring of 1992, when Sundt’s employees inspected the site prior to commencement of construction, they noticed that the winter runoff from the oiled road and snow bladed off the highway had seeped into the shoulders, making them soft and unstable. Sundt requested that public traffic be detoured off the highway and that its construction trucks be permitted to drive on the roadway, which would avoid the unstable shoulders and cut construction time by a claimed ten weeks. SDDOT refused to permit the rerouting of traffic, but on May 15, 1992, the SDDOT engineer signed an Extra Work Authorization No. 001 which read, in part:

Extra work is hereby agreed to and authorized for repair of unstable shoulders, as encountered, from 15 feet right or left of centerline to the inslope. Shoulders were left unsealed over the winter from the previous grading project, which allowed moisture to penetrate through the existing gravel cushion and into the top foot of subgrade.

Sundt’s subcontractor, which was hired to place the gravel cushion, was paid for making repairs to the shoulders.

 [¶5] A dispute arose over Sundt’s claim that SDDOT should reimburse it for additional time and expense in completing the contract, which Sundt argued was due to the problems with the shoulders. Sundt’s position was that the condition of the road shoulders impeded the efficiency of its operation by slowing optimal truck speeds, bunching trucks, [fn1]  and increasing its costs of truck repairs and maintenance. Sundt requested an additional 14 days to complete its contract and avoid liquidated damages based on lost production due to unstable shoulders. SDDOT claimed the project was slowed not by the shoulders, but because Sundt had overestimated the speed a loaded truck could travel on the shoulders, had problems with its cement plant, and had overestimated the amount of concrete its trucks legally could carry (load limits). The extension of time was denied, and SDDOT assessed liquidated damages against Sundt in the amount of $5,100.

 [¶6] Sundt also experienced difficulty achieving the specified entrained air [fn2]  and slump [fn3]  of the concrete contained in the contract. Sundt claimed the slump problems were due to the quality of the cement from the State Cement Plant, and requested to use another cement supplier. SDDOT claimed the problems were due to too much water in the mix and the distance trucks had to carry the cement from the plant where it was mixed to the site where it was poured. Sundt used additional equipment and changed the formula for its mix of concrete in an attempt to correct the problems. SDDOT deducted penalties of $44,562.74 against Sundt for failure to meet specified standards of entrained air and slump on sections of the poured concrete.

 [¶7] Sundt sued SDDOT under the provisions of SDCL 31-2-34 through -39, the statutes which govern suit on state highway construction contracts. Sundt claimed damages for extra paving costs due to unstable highway shoulders, for return of the penalties and liquidated damages assessed, and for costs of trimming the gravel cushion. It based its claim for damages on theories of negligence, breach of reasonable construction standards, breach of contractual obligations, breach of the implied obligation of good faith and fair dealing, and equitable principles (unjust enrichment). At trial, after both sides rested, the trial court directed a verdict for SDDOT on the negligence count and rejected Sundt’s proposed jury instructions. The jury returned a verdict for Sundt in the amount of $51,839 for the excessive trimming costs; that verdict is not the subject of this appeal.

 [¶8] On appeal, Sundt raises the following issues:

1. Whether the trial court erred in granting SDDOT’s motion for directed verdict on Sundt’s negligence claims.

2. Whether the trial court erred in refusing Sundt’s proposed jury instructions on negligence.

3. Whether the trial court erred in granting SDDOT’s motion to dismiss Sundt’s negligence claims on statute of limitations grounds.

4. Whether the trial court erred in refusing Sundt’s proposed jury instructions on breach of implied warranty.

5. Whether the trial court erred in refusing Sundt’s proposed jury instruction on differing site conditions.

 [¶9] We believe our recent holding in Fisher Sand & Gravel Co. v. SDDOT, 1997 SD 8, 558 NW2d 864, [fn4]  is dispositive of the negligence issues in this appeal. In that case, we held there can be no cause of action sounding in negligence unless there is a legal duty which arises independent of the duties under the contract. Id., 1997 SD 8 at ¶ 16, 558 NW2d at 868. Whether a duty exists is a question of law, which we review de novo. Id., 1997 SD 8 at ¶12, 558 NW2d at 867 (citing Tipton v. Town of Tabor, 538 NW2d 783, 785 (SD 1995); Bland v. Davison County, 507 NW2d 80, 81 (SD 1993)).

 [¶10] In the case at bar, we find no legal duty which existed outside the contract. If there was a duty to maintain the shoulders to support the heavy construction activities of Sundt, it arose solely under the contract; as in Fisher

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