Fisk Electric Company v. DQSI, L.L.C.
Opinion
*647 A subcontractor performed electrical work for a general contractor on a post-Hurricane Katrina federal construction project. The subcontractor alleges that the general contractor fraudulently induced it into entering a settlement agreement that released the general contractor from any claims for liability under the Miller Act-a federal statute that requires general contractors to secure payment to subcontractors on most federal construction projects. The district court granted summary judgment to the general contractor. We determine that there is a genuine issue of material fact on justifiable reliance-an element of the subcontractor's fraudulent-inducement claim-and therefore REVERSE the district court's judgment and REMAND for further proceedings.
I.
DQSI, L.L.C., the general contractor here, contracted with the United States Army Corps of Engineers to perform work on a post-Hurricane Katrina pump station construction project. Western Surety Company issued a Miller Act payment bond on the project on DQSI's behalf. DQSI subcontracted with Fisk Electric Company; Fisk was to perform electrical work on the project. The contract allowed Fisk to assert claims for money damages for unforeseen delays not caused by Fisk. Due to delays apparently caused at least in part by adverse weather conditions, the completion of the project was delayed 464 days. Fisk asserted that it experienced significant additional expenses because of the delay, amounting to more than $400,000. Fisk invoiced DQSI for this amount but apparently was never paid. Months before filing a lawsuit, Fisk also submitted to DQSI a Request for Equitable Adjustment seeking damages for the 464 days of delay.
In 2013, Fisk sued DQSI and DQSI's surety, Western, pursuant to the Miller Act,
*648 In December 2013, Clyne sent a letter to DQSI. According to the letter, Fisk had previously requested from DQSI a copy of the bilateral modifications issued to DQSI by the Corps granting the 464-day extension. When DQSI had not readily complied with the request, Fisk had obtained copies of the bilateral modifications directly from the Corps through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request. The contract modification to which Clyne's December 2013 letter refers contains a "closing statement" declaring the following: "It is further understood and agreed that this adjustment constitutes compensation in full on behalf of the Contractor, its subcontractors and suppliers for all costs and markups directly or indirectly attributable to the change, for all delays...." However, none of the bilateral modifications obtained through the FOIA request were signed by DQSI. According to Clyne in the December 2013 letter, "It appears from the documents that we received [through the FOIA request], that Fisk was foreclosed from seeking compensation from the Corps before Fisk and DQSI even began negotiations."
Fisk and DQSI mediated the case in April 2014. Clyne states in an affidavit that "based on the representations made at mediation by DQSI, my concerns about the [Request for Equitable Adjustment] expressed in my December 10, 2013 letter were laid to rest." Clyne states that "[b]ased on the prior representations by Mr. Lee and Mr. McCumsey and the fact that DQSI was agreeing to submit Fisk's claims to the Corps, I believed that Fisk's claims were still viable with the Corps and there had been no prior waiver of any rights to seek equitable adjustment."
The "memorandum of agreement" signed at mediation states that "Fisk agrees to provide DQSI with a fully supported [R]equest for Equitable Adjustment that is certifiable by DQSI to [the Corps]." In the memorandum of agreement, DQSI also agreed "to submit to [the Corps] the Request for Equitable Adjustment presented by Fisk provided that DQSI will only be responsible to submit the Request for Equitable Adjustment if it is certifiable to [the Corps] and is fully supported by Fisk." 3 Fisk also agreed "to defend, indemnify[,] and hold DQSI harmless in connection with, arising from, or related to DQSI's submission of Fisk's Request for Equitable Adjustment to [the Corps]." Following mediation, Fisk submitted a Request for Equitable Adjustment nearly identical to the previous one, again seeking damages for the 464-day delay. DQSI objected that the Request for Equitable Adjustment was "not properly supported as required" by the memorandum of agreement. Following mediation, Fisk filed a motion to enforce settlement. The motion was granted, requiring DQSI to submit Fisk's Request for Equitable Adjustment within seven days of the court order. DQSI submitted a Request for Equitable Adjustment to the Corps.
In December 2014, Fisk and DQSI entered into a settlement agreement intended "to formalize the terms" of the memorandum of agreement. 4 As part of the settlement, Fisk and DQSI agreed to a mutual release in which Fisk would release DQSI from any claims for the consideration of approximately $55,000. In consideration of the releases of claims, DQSI agreed "to submit a Request for *649 Equitable Adjustment ('REA') presented by Fisk to [the Corps]." In the event that the Corps awarded funds in response to the Request for Equitable Adjustment, the settlement agreement provided that if the amount exceeded $175,000, DQSI would retain the excess funds, provided that it would not retain more than $25,000. 5 According to Clyne, "[w]ithout the representations made by Mr. Lee and Mr. McCumsey and the understanding that Fisk had a viable option to present its claims to the Corps, I would not have accepted the settlement agreement." Gregory Thomas, Fisk's in-house general counsel who executed the settlement agreement on Fisk's behalf, states in his affidavit that during negotiations he "was specifically told by representatives of DQSI that DQSI had not received payment for the work done by Fisk or for its delay damages and therefore Fisk could present a request for adjustment (REA) to obtain payment." According to Thomas, "Fisk relied on this fundamental representation by DQSI in accepting the settlement agreement...."
In early 2015, the Corps informed DQSI that Fisk's Request for Equitable Adjustment, which DQSI had submitted following mediation, "does not substantiate any Government-caused delays that have not been previously addressed through bilateral modifications." About a month later, Fisk and DQSI met with the Corps to discuss Fisk's Request for Equitable Adjustment. Clyne stated that at the meeting, he "was told by the Corps that it would not entertain the [Request for Equitable Adjustment] because DQSI had settled all aspects of the modifications related to Fisk's [Request for Equitable Adjustment]." According to Clyne, this was "the first time that [he] was told that the Corps already had a final settlement with DQSI."
Fisk then filed its second lawsuit against DQSI and Western. Fisk's complaint lists four claims: (1) rescission of release; (2) a Miller Act claim against DQSI and Western; (3) an alternative claim for breach of contract against DQSI; and (4) another alternative claim for unjust enrichment. Under Claim 1, Fisk alleges that it is entitled to rescind the release of liability in the settlement agreement on the basis of fraud pursuant to Louisiana Civil Code article 3082. 6 Under Claim 2, Fisk alleges that it is entitled under the Miller Act to an action and judgment against DQSI and Western for approximately $410,000, plus interest, costs, and attorneys' fees.
DQSI moved to dismiss the lawsuit and filed a motion for summary judgment; it also sought to enforce the settlement agreement. The district court denied all three motions. The district court concluded that there was a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Fisk knew that DQSI had waived Fisk's right to delay damages. Among other things, the district court noted that Fisk "still stipulated to the submission of the [Request for Equitable Adjustment] in the Agreements, which suggests that [Fisk] had some reasonable expectation of recovery."
About a year later, DQSI filed a second summary-judgment motion. The district *650 court determined that federal law applied, stating that "[b]ecause the claims in this case are premised on the Miller Act, federal law governs the validity of the Agreements and thus any fraud claim that might invalidate them." However, relying on federal district court cases applying Louisiana law, the district court concluded that Fisk could not demonstrate justifiable reliance-an element of a fraudulent-inducement claim. The district court granted DQSI's summary-judgment motion, stating that "[i]n light of very convincing evidence of fraud by movant, we were unable to find an exception that would allow excusing opponent's above noted deficiencies." Fisk timely appealed.
II.
We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo
.
Gulf & Miss. River Transp. Co. v. BP Oil Pipeline Co.
,
III.
We must first decide whether federal or state law applies to Fisk's claim for fraudulent inducement into the settlement agreement. Fisk argues that federal law applies because the release "arose out of a federal law dispute (the Miller Act)." Fisk contends that the district court failed to apply the correct legal standard for justifiable reliance by imposing an active duty of investigation on the party alleging fraud. DQSI argues that summary judgment was appropriate here under both federal law and Louisiana law.
Federal law applies. "Questions regarding the enforceability or validity of [settlement] agreements are determined by federal law-at least where the substantive rights and liabilities of the parties derive from federal law."
Mid-S. Towing Co. v. Har-Win, Inc.
,
The Miller Act serves "to protect persons supplying labor and material for
*651
the construction of federal public buildings in lieu of the protection they might receive under state statutes with respect to the construction of nonfederal buildings."
Arena v. Graybar Elec. Co.
,
Young v. BP Exploration & Production, Inc.
(
In re Deepwater Horizon
),
Here, the rights and liabilities of the parties allowing Fisk to sue DQSI and Western for delay damages incurred in a federal construction project derive from the Miller Act, and thus federal law applies.
See
In re Schooler
,
(1) a material representation was made; (2) the representation was false; (3) when the representation was made, the speaker knew it was false or made it recklessly without any knowledge of the truth and as a positive assertion; (4) the representation was made with the intention that it be acted upon by the other party; (5) the party acted in reliance on ... the representation ; and (6) the party suffered injury.
Having determined that federal law applies, we must next decide whether the party alleging fraud must engage in active investigation to satisfy the standard *652 of justifiable reliance. Although the district court initially determined that federal law applied, it later incorporated Louisiana law on justifiable reliance into the federal standard. DQSI contends that there is no meaningful difference between federal law and Louisiana law on the requirements of justifiable reliance. Moreover, DQSI insists that there is no genuine issue of material fact on the element of justifiable reliance because Fisk is a sophisticated party that did not actively investigate whether DQSI was engaged in fraud.
DQSI fails to apprehend the requirements of justifiable reliance under federal law. Supreme Court precedent-on which both Fisk and DQSI rely-shows that federal contract law relating to fraudulent inducement does not require active investigation to demonstrate justifiable reliance. In
Field v. Mans
, the Supreme Court defined justifiable reliance by looking to the Restatement (Second) of Torts as "the most widely accepted distillation of the common law of torts."
The Court found instructive the Restatement's illustration of a seller who claims his land is free of encumbrances: "according to the Restatement, a buyer's reliance on this factual representation is justifiable, even if he could have 'walked across the street to the office of the register of deeds in the courthouse' and easily have learned of an unsatisfied mortgage."
We have held the same. In
Deepwater Horizon II
, we applied federal law in a maritime case involving an oil spill settlement program.
Here, there is a genuine issue of material fact on the element of justifiable reliance. 10 DQSI emphasizes that Clyne, Fisk's supervisor of operations, obtained through the FOIA request copies of all the contract modifications months before mediation. DQSI contends that Fisk could have contacted the Corps directly to determine whether the unsigned contract modifications it had obtained represented finalized, binding documents. As a subcontractor, however, Fisk had no direct relationship with the Corps. Moreover, the affidavit of Glenn A. Price supports Fisk's contention that it reasonably believed at settlement that negotiations with the Corps were ongoing and thus that the 464-day delay damages claim was still viable. 11 Price, an expert with significant experience in federal construction projects, states that "the modifications received by Fisk in response to its FOIA Request were not fully executed" because "DQSI was required to sign the modifications" but had not done so. Price also notes that DQSI could have protected its subcontractors by striking the "Closing Statement" of the contract modifications that waived any future claim for delay damages.
In addition, the summary-judgment record contains affidavits stating that DQSI
*654 made representations during mediation and settlement negotiations that the Request for Equitable Adjustment for the 464-day delay damages claim was still viable. Clyne, Fisk's supervisor of operations, states in an affidavit that "[b]ased on the representations made at mediation by DQSI, my concerns about the [Request for Equitable Adjustment] expressed in my December 10, 2013 letter were laid to rest." According to Clyne, "[w]ithout the representations made by Mr. Lee and Mr. McCumsey and the understanding that Fisk had a viable option to present its claims to the Corps, I would not have accepted the settlement agreement." Thomas, Fisk's in-house general counsel who executed the settlement agreement on Fisk's behalf, states in his affidavit that during negotiations he "was specifically told by representatives of DQSI that DQSI had not received payment for the work done by Fisk or for its delay damages and therefore Fisk could present a request for adjustment (REA) to obtain payment." According to Thomas, "Fisk relied on this fundamental representation by DQSI in accepting the settlement agreement...." 12
In the settlement agreement, DQSI agreed "to submit a Request for Equitable Adjustment ('REA') presented by Fisk to [the Corps]." DQSI insists that there is a significant distinction between "a" Request for Equitable Adjustment and "the" Request for Equitable Adjustment. This argument is meritless. 13 If submitting any Request for Equitable Adjustment for delay damages stemming from the 464-day delay was impossible-and if DQSI but not Fisk knew this at the time of settlement negotiations-then it is a small wonder that the district court found "very convincing evidence of fraud by [DQSI]." On this record, applying the correct legal standard, there is a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether Fisk justifiably relied on DQSI's representations about Fisk's Request for Equitable Adjustment at settlement.
IV.
Accordingly, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
"The Miller Act requires general contractors on most federal construction projects to furnish a bond for performance and to secure payment to all suppliers of labor and materials."
J.D. Fields & Co. v. Gottfried Corp.
,
In accord with the parties' briefing, we generally refer to Appellees throughout simply as "DQSI," rather than as "DQSI and Western."
As a subcontractor, Fisk had no direct relationship with the Corps and therefore relied on DQSI to submit the Request for Equitable Adjustment on its behalf.
Western was not a signatory to the memorandum of agreement or the settlement agreement.
In addition, the settlement agreement states Fisk's assertion that DQSI owed it approximately $488,000, together with legal costs, as a result of DQSI's alleged failure to pay Fisk. The agreement also notes that "DQSI has since asserted that it is entitled to seek liquidated damages from Fisk at the rate of $3,800.00 per day pursuant to the Subcontract as a result of delays in the Project's completion, which delays DQSI asserts were caused by Fisk...."
This article provides that "[a] compromise may be rescinded for error, fraud, and other grounds for the annulment of contracts." La. Civ. Code Ann. art. 3082.
Pursuant to Fifth Circuit Rule 47.5.4, unpublished opinions issued on or after January 1, 1996, generally are not precedent, although they may be cited as persuasive authority pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 32.1(a).
DQSI leans heavily on the statement in
Field
that "it is only where, under the circumstances, the facts should be apparent to one of [the victim's] knowledge and intelligence from a cursory glance, or he has discovered something which should serve as a warning that he is being deceived, that [a victim of alleged misrepresentation] is required to make an investigation of his own."
DQSI fails to address Deepwater Horizon II in its response brief, although Fisk relies on this case extensively in its opening brief.
Based on
Hobbs v. Alcoa, Inc.
,
DQSI contends that Price's affidavit "consists of little more than conclusory statements" and is therefore insufficient as summary-judgment evidence. The authorities DQSI cites to support this assertion show that "unsupported affidavits setting forth 'ultimate or conclusory facts and conclusions of law' are insufficient to either support or defeat a motion for summary judgment."
Orthopedic & Sports Injury Clinic v. Wang Labs., Inc.
,
Fisk contends that "[t]he district court erred by evaluating the credibility of the witnesses and the weight of the evidence." We need not reach this issue to determine that granting summary judgment was unwarranted here.
Indeed, in the memorandum of agreement, which the settlement agreement was "meant to formalize," DQSI agreed "to submit to [the Corps] the Request for Equitable Adjustment presented by Fisk...." (emphasis added).
Reference
- Full Case Name
- FISK ELECTRIC COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. DQSI, L.L.C. ; Western Surety Company, Defendants-Appellees.
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published