Project Management Firm Not Liable for Subcontractor’s Injuries

Friday, May 15, 2015

The Suffolk (MA) Superior Court, in Rodrigues, et al. v. Tribeca Builders Corp., et al. (Civil Action No. 13-00730-C), recently granted summary judgment to a project management firm retained by a property’s landlord/owner, who was sued after the Plaintiff was injured at a construction site.  The Plaintiff was injured when a handicap chair-lift he was helping to move at the construction site fell on him.  The Plaintiff was employed by a subcontractor hired by the general contractor.  The Plaintiff brought claims against the general contractor, another subcontractor, and the project management firm hired by the landlord to provide project management services on its behalf.

The Court held that the project management firm owed no duty to the Plaintiff, and thus the Plaintiff could not assert a negligence claim against it.  In reviewing the contract between the landlord and project management firm, the Court found that the project management firm was to carry out a variety of logistical, managerial and administrative functions related to the construction, most of which involved monitoring the project’s adherence to its agreed budget and schedule.  The Court described the firm’s role as that of a conventional “Clerk of the Works,” functioning as they eyes and ears of the owner in respect to the administration of the project.  Nothing in the contract between the owner/landlord and the project management firm remotely suggested that the firm’s administrative functions extended in any way to matters of construction safety.  The Court also noted that the firm had no contractual relationship with the Plaintiff, the general contractor, or any subcontractors.

The Court also pointed out that even if the project management firm could somehow be deemed to owe a duty of care to the Plaintiff, the undisputed evidence was clear that the firm had nothing at all to do with the accident that injured Plaintiff.  The firm did not attend or participate in safety meetings, did not direct or instruct anyone regarding how their work should be performed, and had no knowledge of, involvement in, or communications regarding the handicap chair-lift that injured the Plaintiff, or the equipment used to move it. 

In sum, the Court noted that while the project management firm played a significant administrative role in coordinating the scheduling and other logistical aspects of the construction project, there is no evidence that it was in “control” of the job-site, directed the work of any subcontractors, or had any connection whatsoever to the operations or movement of the chair-lift that caused the Plaintiff’s injury.

Preti Attorneys Secure Significant Win for NH Construction Industry – NH Superior Court Rejects Bid to Expand Scope of Nullum Tempus

Wednesday, April 15, 2015


In City of Rochester v. Marcel A. Payeur, Inc. et al., the City of Rochester sued multiple parties after a water tower that it had built in 1985 sprung a leak.  New Hampshire has adopted the doctrine of Nullum Tempus, which means that statutes of limitations do not apply against the State.  The question for this case was whether cities and towns are immune from statutes of limitation.  Preti Flaherty attorneys Ken Rubinstein and Nathan Fennessy represented an ENR 50 Contractor who was named as a defendant in the litigation.

Although the NH Supreme Court has previously held that Nullum Tempus applies to claims brought by the State, the Superior Court soundly criticized the doctrine, and refused to allow municipalities to exercise the same rights.  This decision should help to limit the scope of liability for design professionals, contractors and subcontractors working on municipal projects, by allowing the statute of limitations to establish an outside date within which claims can be presented.

Maine Legislature Considers a Bill that Would Limit Indemnification Provisions in Construction Contracts

Monday, April 6, 2015


The Maine legislature is considering a bill that, if passed, would have a significant impact on Maine contractors and subcontractors.  LD-587 would make void and unenforceable any provision in a construction contract requiring the parties or their sureties or insurers to indemnify a promisee against liability arising from the negligence or willful misconduct of the promisee.  The bill has been referred to the Committee on Labor, Commerce, Research and Economic Development.

If passed, neither contractors nor subcontractors could be held liable for the actions of other parties to their contracts.  While there are currently some limits to what passes as an acceptable indemnity agreement in Maine, this law would significantly alter the risks of liability in many construction contracts, since owners frequently contract for broad indemnity agreements with their contractors.

The bill was introduced by Assistant Senate Majority Leader, Senator Andre Cushing (R-Hampden) at the request of the Associated Builders and Contractors of Maine.  While it is somewhat unusual for ABC Maine to support a bill limiting contractors’ rights to contract for indemnity from their subcontractors, ABC Maine states that it supports this bill because it holds parties responsible for their own actions, regardless of their leverage in contract negotiations. 

 A public hearing on the bill was held on March 17, 2015.  In oral testimony and written submissions, representatives of Maine contractors and subcontractors explained that they support this bill because they are frequently compelled to submit to onerous contract requirements given Maine’s competitive construction industry.  Opponents argued that the bill is vague, unnecessary, shifts risk from contractors to owners, and puts undue constraints on the free market.  They further argued that contractors should assume responsibility for workplace injuries since they should have primary control over the worksite and procure insurance for accepting that responsibility.

The bill currently remains pending in committee.  Similar bills have been brought before the Maine legislature several times in the past 20 years and have failed to pass. 

NH Supreme Court Limits Applicability of Consumer Protection Act to Construction Defect Cases

Wednesday, April 1, 2015


The New Hampshire Supreme Court confirmed in Murray v. McNamara, No. 2013-630 (N.H. March 20, 2015) that contractors are exempt from liability under New Hampshire’s Consumer Protection Act (RSA 358-A) for transactions occurring more than three years prior to the plaintiff learning of the alleged violation of the statute (though they may still have liability under other causes of action).  This issue arose in the context of a construct defect claim based on defendants’ purported breach of the implied warranty of workmanlike quality.  The defendants, owners of a construction business, constructed the house for the original owner in 2004.  Four years later, the plaintiffs purchased the home. After living in the house for several months, the plaintiffs discovered mold in in the house that was so widespread it forced them to vacate the property while they attempted to remedy the problem. 

The Defendants argued that the transaction was exempt from liability under the CPA because it was brought more than three years after construction was completed.  RSA 358-A:3, IV-a provides that “[t]ransactions entered into more than 3 years prior to the time the plaintiff knew, or reasonably should have known, of the conduct alleged to be in violation of [the CPA]” are exempt from the CPA.”  The federal courts in New Hampshire had interpreted this provision as being different from a statute of limitation because it “focuses on the plaintiff’s knowledge of the defendant’s wrongful conduct” to determine whether a transaction is exempt from the CPA rather than “the plaintiff’s knowledge of his injury and its [causal] relationship to the defendants’ conduct.”  The NH Supreme Court had not yet considered the issue since the provision was amended in 1996, but concluded in Murray that it agreed with the federal court’s interpretation finding that


To determine whether a claim is exempt from the CPA, we look back from the time that the plaintiffs “knew or reasonably should have known” of the alleged violation. If the transaction at issue occurred more than three years before that time, then it is exempt. The person claiming the exemption bears the burden of proving that the transaction is exempt. See RSA 358-A:3, V (2009).


The Court found there was no dispute that the transaction at issue - defendants’ alleged construction of the house with latent structural defects -  was completed in 2004 and that plaintiffs purchased the home four years later.  Because the allegedly wrongful transaction occurred more than three years before the plaintiffs “knew or reasonably should have known” of it, the construction of the house was an exempt transaction pursuant to RSA 358-A:3, IV-a.  The Court therefore reversed the trial court’s ruling on the CPA  claim, but left in place the jury award on the warranty claim against the contractor.
 
CPA claims are regularly included in complaints by plaintiffs against contractors because they provide an opportunity to recover attorneys’ fees and double or treble damages.  This decision should help limit the potential exposure of contractors for past construction defect claims by removing the plaintiffs’ ability to recover damages under the CPA for projects completed more than three years before the plaintiff knew of the conduct giving rise to the claim.  Contractors, however, will continue to have potential exposure to liability under other causes of action such as breach of warranty or breach of contract.

Equitable Adjustment Not Available to Remedy “Wholly Artificial” Bids

Monday, March 30, 2015

The Massachusetts Appeals Court has declined to award an equitable adjustment to a contractor who bid $0.01 to excavate a cubic yard of rock from a project site. See Celco Construction Corp. v. Town of Avon, 87 Mass. App. Ct. 132 (March 2, 2014).  The contractor constructed its bid based on its belief that the amount of rock on the site would be considerably less than the unverified estimate indicated in the contract bid documents, so that its low unit price would give it a competitive advantage when compared to the other bidders who assigned a unit price to rock removal that more closely approximated the actual cost.  When the amount of rock turned out to be 2524 cubic yards, and not 1000 cubic yards, as estimated, the contractor sought an equitable adjustment.  Initially, the contractor sought to increase the contract from $0.01 per cubic yard to $220 per cubic yard, and eventually dropped the request to $190 per cubic yard.

Massachusetts General Laws, c. 30, § 39N, which governs equitable adjustments in public construction contracts, provides that in all public construction contracts (such as the one at issue here), there must be a provision allowing either party to request an equitable adjustment in the contract price “if, during the progress of the work, the contractor or the awarding authority discovers that the actual subsurface or latent physical conditions encountered at the site differ substantially or materially from those shown on the plans or indicated in the contract documents.”  The contractor argued that the approximately 1500 more cubic yards of rock presented an appropriate occasion for an equitable adjustment to compensate it for the increased costs it incurred to remove the additional rock.

The Court disagreed, noting that there was nothing to suggest that the nature of the rock itself, and the means to remove it, differ in any way from what was anticipated in the contract.  The Court decided that in a contract in which the contract price is comprised of the aggregate of line items for various elements of the work, which in turn are based on unit prices for the quantities involved in each line item, no equitable adjustment is warranted by reason of a variation in the estimated quantities, standing alone, as compared to a deviation in the condition or character of the physical condition.  The Court confirmed that an equitable adjustment is required only when the contractor encounters a material difference in the “actual subsurface or latent physical conditions . . . at the site . . . of such a nature as to cause an increase or decrease in the cost . . . of the work.” 

The Court included in its opinion advice for all contractors in bidding on public construction jobs (and on all jobs in general): “Had [the contractor] in its bid assigned to rock removal a unit price reasonably approximating its estimated cost for such removal, instead of assigning the wholly artificial and unrealistic value of one penny, it would be in no need of adjustment to the contract price.  Put another way, [the equitable adjustment statute] is designed to protect contractors from unknown and unforeseen subsurface conditions, not from the consequences of their decisions to bid a unit price for the performance of work that is wholly unrelated to their anticipated cost to perform the work.  In such circumstances, it defies logic to invoke ‘equity’ as a basis for adjustment to the contract price.”

An Alternative to Bid Protests – California Court Allows Second Low Bidder to Sue Low Bidder Directly

Friday, March 13, 2015

In Roy Allan Slurry Seal, et al. v American Asphalt South, Inc. (2/20/2015), the court held that if a low bidder is only able to secure the bid by paying its workers less than the required prevailing wage, then second low bidder is entitled to bring a direct law suit against the low bidder.

The broader facts are as follows.  From 2009 to 2012, American Asphalt outbid Roy Allan Slurry Seal and Doug Martin Contractor on 23 public works projects valued at more than $14.6 million.  The disappointed contractors, Allan and Martin, later jointly sued American Asphalt, contending that they would have been the low bidders on those projects if American Asphalt’s bid had included labor costs based on the statutorily required prevailing wage.  American moved to dismiss the claims, arguing that that Allan and Martin did not have the required existing relationship and reasonable probability of being awarded the contracts to show intentional interference with prospective economic advantage.  After various conflicting lower court rulings on the issue, the matter was eventually presented to the California Court of Appeals, which denied the motions, stating:

The second-place bidder on a public works contract [may] state a cause of action for intentional interference with prospective economic advantage against the winning bidder if the winner was only able to obtain lowest bidder status by illegally paying its workers less than the prevailing wage... if the plaintiff alleges it was the second lowest bidder and therefore would have otherwise been awarded the contract, because that fact gives rise to a relationship with the public agency that made plaintiff’s award of the contract reasonably probable. 
 
The usual course of action in a case such as this would be for the second low bidder to file a bid-protest with the awarding authority, or to challenge any subsequent bid based upon such conduct.  However, this carries strong implications as the same principle could allow a second low bidder to sue the low bidder directly any time that it can show that that a low bidder knowingly used cut corners to secure the bid.  For example, contractors who commit wage-hour violations may be subject to challenge from the second low bidder, contending that they carried a lower labor number than appropriate in their bid.  If the second low bidder can show that the difference allowed the winning contractor to secure the bid, the contractor may be subject to significant liabilities.

Arbitration Waiver Violates Chapter 93A

Monday, March 2, 2015

A Massachusetts Superior Court Judge has held that a contractor’s failure to register with the Commonwealth under Mass. Gen. Laws. Chapter 142A constitutes an injury under Mass. Gen. Laws c. 93A (the Massachusetts Consumer Protection Statute). See Groleau v. Russo-Gariele, Norfolk Superior Court, Civil Action No. 2012-01818.  Chapter 142A regulates the home improvement contracting industry and allows a homeowner to submit disputes under the Home Improvement Contractor Arbitration Program (“HICARB”).

The homeowner hired the contractor to perform work on her home.  The contractor told the homeowner she needed to sign an “Affidavit/Home Improvement Contractor Law Supplement to Permit Application” in order to get a building permit.  The affidavit identified the contractor as a “Home Improvement Contractor” and contained language at the bottom indicating that homeowners dealing with unregistered contractors did not have access to HICARB.  At the time, the contractor was not registered with the Commonwealth.  He did not inform the homeowner of this.

Prior to completion of the project, the contractor stopped working on the property and sued the homeowner for unpaid amounts.  The homeowner counterclaimed alleging breach of contract, as well as violations of Chapters 142A and 93A.  At the conclusion of the jury-waived trial, the judge found that the homeowner owed the contractor $1,988.  However, he also found that the contractor violated Chapter 142A by operating without a certificate of registration.  The judge found that the homeowner could show actual damage stemming from the contractor’s failure to register because she lost the ability to arbitrate the dispute, which may have resulted in significant additional attorneys’ fees.

In finding that the homeowner sustained “injury,” the judge found that the contractor abandoned the project without justification, given that he was not owed substantial funds, and had accepted payment for work he had not performed.  The judge held that the abandonment caused additional costs attributable to the completion of work within the scope of the contract and deprivation of occupancy of the property that the homeowner otherwise would have enjoyed.  The judge dismissed the contractor’s argument that signing the affidavit waived the plaintiff’s right to arbitrate, noting that Chapter 142A makes it unlawful for any agreement for residential contracting services to contain a provision that would waive any rights conveyed to the owner under that chapter.  Additionally, the judge held that the affidavit did not actually waive the owner’s statutory rights by its terms.  The affidavit also does not waive Chapter 142A rights in a clear and conspicuous way as would be expected in a consumer transaction in which a business owner claims a consumer has waived consumer protection rights.  The judge noted that the information in the affidavit referencing unregistered contractors was merely a “notice” and is not suggestive of a waiver of statutory rights is signed by the homeowner.

The judge entered judgment for the homeowner on her Chapter 93A claim, which allows her to submit a motion for the contractor to pay her legal fees and costs.  This case shows how the courts will work to invalidate written agreements that require a consumer to give up a statutorily protected consumer right and will also invalidate agreements that include waivers which are not “clear and conspicuous.”