GTG CONSTRUCTION CO., INC. v. GOEL SERVICES, INC. et al
Filing
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MEMORANDUM OPINION and ORDER denying 6 Defendant Goel's Motion to Stay and denying 7 Plaintiff's Motion for Default Judgment. Defendant Goel shall file a responsive pleading on or before September 19, 2012. Signed by Judge James E. Boasberg on 9/5/12. (lcjeb4)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
G.T.G. CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.,
Plaintiff,
v.
Civil Action No. 12-1129 (JEB)
GOEL SERVICES, INC., et al.,
Defendants.
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff G.T.G. Construction Co., Inc., an earth-moving services company, brought this
action claiming that it is owed more than $130,000 for equipment and services it provided on a
construction project at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. G.T.G.’s work on the
project was provided pursuant to an agreement with a subcontractor, Defendant Goel Services,
Inc., a company that was, in turn, providing services to Defendant Lagan Virginia LLC, the
contractor for the project. G.T.G. also asserts claims against Zurich American Insurance
Company, which issued a surety bond to Lagan guaranteeing the performance of its payment
obligations on the project.
Goel has now moved to stay the case arguing that G.T.G. must first exhaust
administrative-dispute procedures. G.T.G. responds that its agreement with Goel included no
terms requiring it to submit to such dispute resolution and that any such procedures set forth in
Goel’s separate agreement with Lagan do not flow down to G.T.G.’s agreement. As the Court
finds that Goel has failed to offer any evidence of an agreement with G.T.G. to arbitrate – or any
evidence that the G.T.G.-Goel agreement incorporated the dispute-resolution terms set forth in
Goel’s agreement with Lagan – it will deny Goel’s Motion.
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I.
Background
According to G.T.G.’s Complaint, in the summer of 2011, G.T.G. submitted a proposal to
Goel to provide equipment and operators for a project the latter was working on at the Airport.
See Compl., ¶¶ 7-8. The proposal contained G.T.G.’s daily rental rates and charges, which were
affirmed in a Goel purchase order. See id., ¶¶ 8, 9. On or about October 3, 2011, G.T.G. began
work on the project site; work orders were completed on a daily basis indicating the specific
equipment that would be required each day, and the charge for the work was invoiced each day.
See id., ¶¶ 11, 12. G.T.G. received payment for the work performed through part of
November 2011; however, in mid-November, while continuing to request additional work from
G.T.G., Goel stopped paying G.T.G.’s invoices. See id., ¶ 12. G.T.G. billed Goel $279,354.62
for the excavation work on the project, but only received payment for $148,840.36, leaving a
balance due to G.T.G. of $130,514.26. See id., ¶ 14.
On July 9, 2012, G.T.G. filed this suit against Goel demanding payment for its work and
asserting a breach-of-contract claim (Count I) and, alternatively, a quantum meruit claim (Count
III). See id., ¶¶ 23-28, 37-44. Additionally, G.T.G. asserted a payment-bond claim (Count II)
against the remaining parties, Lagan and Zurich, who it claims are jointly and severally liable
under a bond for the larger airport project. See id., ¶¶ 29-36. Goel now moves to stay this
litigation pending the exhaustion of the Administrative Disputes Procedure set forth in Lagan’s
construction contract with the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority (MWAA).
II.
Analysis
Defendant Goel’s Motion cites a number of cases in support of its stay argument. See
Mot. at 3-5. In each of these cases, there was a contractual provision within the agreement
between the subcontractor and the contractor that incorporated terms from the contractor’s
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agreement with the owner. See, e.g., Seal & Co., Inc. v. A.S. McGaughan Co., Inc., 907 F.2d
450, 453 (remanding case for imposition of stay and referencing dispute-resolution provision
within subcontract whereby subcontractor agreed to be bound to contractor to same extent that
contractor was bound to owner); Norment Sec. Grp., Inc. v. Travelers Cas. and Ins. Co., 505 F.
Supp. 2d 97, 105 (D.D.C. 2007) (granting stay and pointing to dispute-resolution provision in
subcontractor’s agreement requiring subcontractor to await resolution of contractor’s claims
against owner before subcontractor could assert claim against contractor); Skanska USA Bldg.,
Inc. v. Smith Mgmt. Constr., Inc., 967 A.2d 827, 836 (Md. App. 2009) (remanding with order to
stay and finding that subcontractor was required to comply with dispute-resolution provisions
clearly set forth in plain language of parties’ governing agreement). Here, however, Goel
provides the Court with no factual support for its claim that G.T.G. is bound by the terms in the
Lagan contract. Instead, it asserts without any justification that G.T.G. “agreed to be bound to
the Administrative Disputes Procedure in the Construction Contract for disputes due to
MWAA’s actions or involving the Contract Documents.” Mot., ¶ 9; see also Reply at 2
(repeating same assertion).
G.T.G., in response, disputes Goel’s contention that the parties have agreed to any such
terms, claiming that the “totality of the subcontract” with Goel was “a price proposal, a purchase
order, and a series of job work orders (attached as Exhibit C) none of which expressly or
implicitly incorporates any terms of any upstream contracts.” See Opp. at 2. G.T.G. contends
that because the agreement with Goel “contains no provisions regarding alternative dispute
resolution,” “GTG never contracted (explicitly or implicitly) to be bound by GOEL’s upstream
administrative disputes procedure.” See id. at 3. Goel fails to respond to this argument in any
meaningful way, instead merely stating in a footnote that it “denies GTG’s allegation in the
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Complaint and its Memorandum in support of its Opposition that the Proposal, Purchase Order,
and Job Work Orders formed a contract between GTG and Goel Services.” Reply at 2 n.1.
Significantly, Goel fails to point to a “flow-down” or “pass-through” provision in its agreement
with G.T.G. that would bind it to the dispute-resolution terms embodied in the separate
agreement between Lagan and MWAA. In the absence of any support for its claim that G.T.G.
is bound by administrative dispute-resolution procedures, the Court will deny Goel’s Motion.
Shortly after Goel filed its Motion, G.T.G. moved for default judgment, claiming that
Goel’s Motion to Stay was not a responsive pleading, and, as a result, it had failed to timely file a
response to the Complaint. See Motion for Default Judgment at 1-2. “While a motion to stay is
generally considered to be outside of the ambit of the Rule 12(b) motions that suffice as
responsive pleadings, they are often considered by courts prior to the filing of an answer.”
Sorensen v. Head USA, Inc., No. 06-1434, 2006 WL 6584166 at *1 (S.D. Cal.
October 13, 2006); see also Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and
Procedure § 1360 (3d ed. 2006) (“A motion to stay also is not within the ambit of the defenses
enumerated in Rule 12(b). Nonetheless, relying on their inherent power, federal courts often
consider these motions in an effort to maximize the effective utilization of judicial resources and
to minimize the possibility of conflicts between different courts.”). Where, as here, Goel’s
Motion to Stay was a timely and proper filing and it is clear that Goel is not ignoring the lawsuit,
entry of default judgment would be inappropriate. See Sorensen, 2006 WL 6584166 at *1
(noting that even if court were to enter default judgment, “that default would almost certainly be
vacated because Defendant appeared to be acting under the good-faith, but mistaken, belief that
its motion to stay qualified as a defense under Rule 12(b). Thus, its failure to file a timely
responsive pleading would be excusable.”).
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III.
Conclusion
The Court, accordingly, ORDERS that:
1. Defendant Goel’s Motion to Stay is DENIED;
2. Plaintiff’s Motion for Default Judgment is DENIED; and
3. Defendant Goel shall file a responsive pleading on or before September 19, 2012.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
/s/ James E. Boasberg
JAMES E. BOASBERG
United States District Judge
Date: September 5, 2012
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