KO Pipeline, LLC v. Moorhead Brothers, Inc.
Filing
16
OPINION and ORDER denying 13 Plaintiff's Motion for Summary Judgment. Signed by Judge George C. Smith on 5/10/18. (sem)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO
EASTERN DIVISION
KO PIPELINE, LLC,
Plaintiff,
Case No. 2:16-cv-969
JUDGE GEORGE C. SMITH
Magistrate Judge Deavers
v.
MOORHEAD BROTHERS, INC.,
Defendant.
OPINION AND ORDER
This matter is before the Court upon Plaintiff KO Pipeline, LLC’s Motion for Summary
Judgment (“KO’s Motion”) (Doc. 13). The Motion is fully briefed and ripe for disposition. For
the following reasons, KO’s Motion is DENIED.
I.
BACKGROUND
Defendant Moorhead Brothers, Inc., a South Carolina corporation, was the general
contractor on a project based in Belmont, Ohio known as the Clark 12” LP Gas Project (the
“Project”). (Doc. 1, Compl. ¶ 6–7). Plaintiff KO Pipeline, LLC, organized under the laws of
Ohio, performed pipeline construction services for Moorhead on the Project pursuant to a
Subcontract. (Id.; Doc. 1-1, Subcontract). As provided by the Subcontract, Moorhead retained
10% of all payment requests by KO until the work was 100% complete. (Doc. 1-1, § 3.1(C)). It
is undisputed that KO and its subcontractors completed the substantive pipeline work
contemplated by the Subcontract no later than September 26, 2015. (Doc. 13-2, Moorhead’s
Resp. to Req. for Admission No. 4).
At that point, the final 10% retainage amount was
$86,593.50. (Id., Admission No. 10).
The Subcontract required KO to provide lien waivers for each of the subcontractors hired
by KO. (Doc. 1-1, § 3.1(C)). Moorhead was also permitted to withhold from Subcontract
payments an amount necessary to protect Moorhead from “any claim or lien against [Moorhead]
or the premises arising out of [KO’s] performance of this Subcontract” asserted by other parties
“until the situation has been satisfactorily remedied or adjusted by [KO] to the sole acceptance of
[Moorhead].” (Id., § 3.1(B)). Of the subcontractors that KO hired to work on the Project, KO
was able to obtain lien waivers for all but two: B&N Construction, Inc. and 7K Construction,
Inc. (Doc. 13-1, Ozalas Aff. ¶ 5).
B&N and 7K contended they had supplied additional services on the Project for which
they had not been paid. (Id.). After discussing the situation with Moorhead, KO provided
documentation to B&N and 7K that allegedly demonstrated that any amounts owing to B&N and
7K were more than offset by amounts that B&N and 7K owed to KO. (Id.). However, KO did
not provide the Court with the documentation provided to B&N and 7K, nor does KO specify
whether the amounts B&N and 7K owed KO were related to the Project, or even the amount that
B&N and 7K claimed remained outstanding from the Project. B&N and 7K continued to refuse
to provide lien waivers for the Project. (Id. ¶ 6).
In December 2015, KO and Moorhead exchanged a string of emails regarding release by
Moorhead to KO of certain funds related to the Project. (Doc. 13-1, Emails, PAGEID #51–55).
On December 11, 2015, Moorhead’s representative stated, “once I receive all the final lien
waivers from the list below (with the exception of B&N and 7K) completely filled out I will be
able to release payment to you.” (Id., PAGEID #53). On December 12, 2015 (a Saturday),
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another representative of Moorhead stated, “[t]he wire paperwork was turned in and wire will go
out Monday.” (Id., PAGEID #51). However, the parties are now in agreement that Moorhead
continues to withhold $86,593.50 in retainage. (Doc. 13-2, Admission No. 10). It is not clear
from the record whether the wire transfer did not proceed on Monday, December 14, 2015, as
anticipated, or whether this email string was in fact referring to the release of funds other than
the 10% retainage amount.
On December 15, 2015, MarkWest, the owner of the Project, paid Moorhead its final
retainage payment.
(Doc. 13-1, MarkWest Payment Remittance Advice, PAGEID #50).
Although not in the record, Moorhead apparently sent a letter to KO on January 19, 2016,
suggesting that the only reason Moorhead had not released the retainage was that KO had not
been able to provide a lien waiver for B&N Construction, with whom KO may have a dispute.
(Doc. 13-2, Letter from KO’s counsel, PAGEID #70). KO made a demand through its counsel
for payment of the retainage on June 8, 2016, in which it noted that the time for any
subcontractor to file a lien on the Project had expired, and that therefore “B&N Construction no
longer has any conceivable claim against the owner (or Moorhead with whom it had no
contract).” (Id.).
Moorhead did not release the retainage funds, and KO commenced this action on October
10, 2016, in order to recover the $86,593.50 withheld from the subcontract payments, as well as
interest under Ohio’s Prompt Payment Act, R.C. § 4113.61, and attorney’s fees and costs. KO
now moves for summary judgment on its contract and Prompt Payment Act claims.
II.
SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
KO moves for summary judgment pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure. Summary judgment is appropriate when “there is no genuine dispute as to any
material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a);
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Berryman v. SuperValu Holdings, Inc., 669 F.3d 714, 716–17 (6th Cir. 2012). The Court’s
purpose in considering a summary judgment motion is not “to weigh the evidence and determine
the truth of the matter” but to “determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial.” Anderson v.
Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 249 (1986). A genuine issue for trial exists if the Court finds
a jury could return a verdict, based on “sufficient evidence,” in favor of the nonmoving party;
evidence that is “merely colorable” or “not significantly probative,” however, is not enough to
defeat summary judgment. Id. at 249–50.
The party seeking summary judgment shoulders the initial burden of presenting the Court
with law and argument in support of its motion as well as identifying the relevant portions of
“‘the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the
affidavits, if any,’ which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56). If this initial
burden is satisfied, the burden then shifts to the nonmoving party to set forth specific facts
showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e); see also Cox v.
Kentucky Dep’t of Transp., 53 F.3d 146, 150 (6th Cir. 1995) (after burden shifts, nonmovant
must “produce evidence that results in a conflict of material fact to be resolved by a jury”).
In considering the factual allegations and evidence presented in a motion for summary
judgment, the Court “views factual evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party
and draws all reasonable inferences in that party’s favor.” Barrett v. Whirlpool Corp., 556 F.3d
502, 511 (6th Cir. 2009). But self-serving affidavits alone are not enough to create an issue of
fact sufficient to survive summary judgment. Johnson v. Washington Cty. Career Ctr., 982 F.
Supp. 2d 779, 788 (S.D. Ohio 2013) (Marbley, J.). “The mere existence of a scintilla of evidence
to support [the non-moving party’s] position will be insufficient; there must be evidence on
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which the jury could reasonably find for the [non-moving party].” Copeland v. Machulis, 57
F.3d 476, 479 (6th Cir. 1995); see also Anderson, 477 U.S. at 251.
III.
DISCUSSION
KO asserts that Moorhead was obligated to release the $86,593.50 in retainage by both
the Subcontract and the Prompt Payment Act. The Court will consider each of these grounds in
turn.
A.
The Subcontract1
KO’s Subcontract with Moorhead contains several provisions that bear on the conditions
for payments to KO. Section 3.1(A), titled “Contract Price,” provides in part that “[p]ayment for
such Work and materials by [MarkWest] to [Moorhead] shall be a condition precedent to
payment by [Moorhead] to [KO].” Section 3.6, titled “Application for Payment,” provides in
part: “Release of all retainage once vegetation has matured to a MarkWest accepted amount.”
Section 3.1(C), titled “Payment Schedule,” provides in part that:
[Moorhead] shall retain 10 percent (10%) on all [KO] payment requests until the
work is one hundred percent (100%) complete then the retainage will be reduced
to 0 percent (0%) and the work is completed and [MarkWest] has released the
final payment. Paid in Full to Date Lien Waivers shall be provided by the
Subcontractor, for each and every Payment Request, for all materials furnished to
Payment Request Date and II subcontractors furnished to Payment Request Date,
by the Subcontractor.
Finally, “Work” is defined under § 2 and “shall include all mobilization, demobilization, labor,
tools, equipment, insurance, taxes, supervision, and insurance [sic] for the completion of all
Work for the Construction of the [Project] in its entirety. . . . [KO’s] Work shall include and not
be limited to: grading, stringing pipe, welding, coating, ditching and full restoration of the
[Project’s] right of way easement.”
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KO asserts, and Moorhead does not dispute, that the West Virginia choice of law provision contained in the
Subcontract is void under R.C. § 4113.62(D)(2) (making non-Ohio choice of law provisions unenforceable in
construction contracts for improvements to real estate located in Ohio). The Court therefore applies Ohio law to the
Subcontract.
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1.
Completion of the work
The parties do not dispute that KO and its subcontractors completed the substantive
pipeline construction work on the Project by September 26, 2015. KO’s position is that 100% of
the work was complete at that time, and after MarkWest made its final retainage payment to
Moorhead on December 15, 2015, all conditions for release of the $86,953.50 Subcontract
retainage had been fulfilled. Moorhead contends, however, that KO failed to complete all
“work” required by the Subcontract because it failed to provide lien waivers for B&N and 7K.
(Doc. 13-2, Admission No. 4).
The Court disagrees that provision of lien waivers under § 3.1(C) constitutes part of the
“Work” as defined by § 2. While the substantive part of the “Work” definition “shall include
and not be limited to” various types of construction work, the procedural part of the “Work”
definition “shall include all mobilization, demobilization, labor, tools, equipment, insurance,
taxes, supervision, and insurance” without a caveat that the definition may include other types of
procedural or administrative requirements not listed. That is, if the parties intended for lien
waivers to be included in the definition of “Work,” they would have expressly included it. Thus,
the Court concludes that KO’s “Work” on the Project was 100% complete by the time MarkWest
released its final retainage payment to Moorhead on December 15, 2011, and the conditions for
Moorhead’s final payment to KO, absent another contractual exception, were fulfilled.
2.
Withholding pending resolution of claims by KO’s subcontractors
Even if conditions for final payment were fulfilled, Moorhead argues that it was
nevertheless permitted by the Subcontract to withhold the $86,593.50 in retainage under
§ 3.1(B), which provides that
In the event of any breach by [KO] of any provision or obligation of this
Subcontract, or in the event in the event of the assertion by other parties of any
claim or lien against [Moorhead] or the premises arising out of [KO’s]
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performance of this Subcontract, [Moorhead] shall have the sole right to retain out
of any payments due or to become due to [KO] an amount sufficient to
completely protect Moorhead from any and all loss, damage or expense there
from until the situation has been satisfactorily remedied or adjusted by [KO] to
the sole acceptance of [Moorhead].
Moorhead contends that KO’s failure to provide lien waivers or otherwise address claims of
nonpayment by B&N and 7K triggered this provision and permits it to withhold funds otherwise
due under the Subcontract.
Section 3.1(B) thus provides two grounds for withholding payment otherwise due under
the Subcontract: (1) KO’s breach “of any provision or obligation of this Subcontract,” or (2) “the
assertion by other parties of any claim or lien against [Moorhead] or the premises” arising out of
KO’s work.
a.
KO’s breach of the Subcontract
KO acknowledges that it was required by the Subcontract to provide lien waivers for all
subcontractors it hired. (Doc 13-1, Ozalas Aff. ¶ 5). It also acknowledges that it did not provide
lien waivers for B&N or 7K. (Id.). However, KO argues its failure to provide lien waivers
should not permit Moorhead to withhold the retainage because (1) provision of lien waivers is
not a condition precedent to payment; (2) Moorhead waived its right to require lien waivers for
B&N and 7K; and (3) even if provision of lien waivers was otherwise a requirement for
Moorhead to release the retainage, this requirement should be excused to avoid forfeiture. All of
these arguments lack merit.
First, KO is correct that conditions precedent are disfavored in contract law, and that the
language of the Subcontract does not indicate that lien waivers are a condition precedent to final
payment. E.g., Campbell v. George J. Igel & Co., 2013-Ohio-3584, 3 N.E.3d 219 (4th Dist.),
¶ 13 (“Conditions precedent are not favored by the law, and whenever possible courts will avoid
construing provisions to be such unless the intent of the agreement is plainly to the contrary.”).
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The Court has already concluded that all conditions necessary for Moorhead to make final
payment to KO were met. But § 3.1(B) allows Moorhead to withhold amounts from payments
that are otherwise due if necessary to redress KO’s breach of any provision of the Subcontract.
Thus, the fact that provision of lien waivers was not a condition precedent to final payment is of
no assistance to KO.
Second, KO has not put sufficient evidence into the record to establish waiver by
Moorhead of the lien waiver requirement. KO relies on a statement in an affidavit by its owner,
Kimberly Ozalas, that “Moorhead notified me that it was satisfied and that KO Pipeline LLC
retainage would be released even without lien waivers from B&N Construction, Inc. and 7K
Construction, Inc.” (Doc. 13-1, Ozalas Aff. ¶ 5). KO also relies on the email exchange in which
Moorhead’s representative stated that “once I receive all the final lien waivers from the list
below (with the exception of B&N and 7K) completely filled out I will be able to release
payment to you.” (Doc. 13-1, Emails, PAGEID #53). However, the Court questions whether
this email referred to the $86,593.50 currently withheld by Moorhead as retainage, as the same
email chain suggested that whatever funds were referred to in the email were in fact released by
wire transfer the following Monday, December 14, 2015. (Id., PAGEID #51). Moreover, the
final retainage payment from WestMark to Moorhead (an express condition precedent to
Moorhead’s release of KO’s final retainage) was not made until Tuesday, December 15, 2015; it
therefore seems unlikely that Moorhead would agree to release KO’s final retainage before it
received payment from WestMark. And finally, an affidavit by Moorhead’s Division Manager
states that “Moorhead did not agree to pay KO if they were not able to provide lien waivers from
B&N Construction, Inc. and 7K Construction.” (Doc. 14, Sessions Aff. ¶ 11). The Court
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therefore finds an issue of fact as to whether Moorhead waived KO’s obligation to provide lien
waivers for B&N and 7K.
The Court is also not convinced that KO’s obligation to provide lien waivers must be set
aside to avoid forfeiture.
KO cites Evans, Mechwart, Hambleton & Tilton, Inc. v. Triad
Architects, Ltd. for the proposition that KO should be paid for the substantive work it has
completed, even though it may not have fulfilled all of its contractual obligations. 196 Ohio
App. 3d 784, 2011-Ohio-4979, 965 N.E.2d 1007, ¶ 16. There, the general contractor refused to
pay the subcontractor anything, even after the subcontractor completed all work on the project,
because the project owner cancelled the project and refused to pay anything to the general
contractor. Id.¶ 5. However, the court determined that the subcontract at issue contained a “paywhen-paid” clause rather than a “pay-if-paid” clause. That is, the timing, but not the existence,
of the general contractor’s obligation to pay the subcontractor was pegged to the time of payment
by the project owner to the general contractor. Id. ¶¶ 18–24. As a result, even though the project
owner never paid anything to the general contractor, the general contractor was still obligated to
pay the subcontractor for the completed work within a reasonable time. Id. ¶ 25.
Evans, Mechwart is inapposite, however. In construing the subcontract, the court did rely
in part on principles disfavoring forfeiture, but principally relied on the plain language of the
contract itself, which other courts had already determined to constitute a “pay-when-paid”
clause. Moreover, the subcontractor in Evans, Mechwart had fulfilled all of its contractual
obligations and was faced with receiving nothing in return. In contrast, KO admittedly has not
fulfilled all of its contractual obligations and has already received 90% of the Subcontract price.
The Court therefore finds that, if any “forfeiture” were to occur, it would not be disproportionate
to KO’s failure to obtain lien waivers as required by the Subcontract. See Restatement (Second)
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Contracts, § 229 (requiring “disproportionate forfeiture” before excusing the non-occurrence of a
contractual condition).
b.
Assertion by other parties of claims or liens
KO argues that the time for any subcontractors to file liens on the Project has long
expired, and therefore there can be no possibility of claims by KO’s subcontractors against
Moorhead or the Project premises. And, indeed, Moorhead has admitted that the time for the
filing of liens has expired (at least as of July 21, 2017, when it responded to KO’s request for
admission of that fact). (Doc. 13-2, Admission No. 7). Moorhead further admitted that neither
KO nor any of its subcontractors filed mechanics’ liens related to the Project. (Id., Admission
No. 5). It is therefore true that neither Moorhead nor the Project can be liable for any claims
pursued via mechanics’ lien. Conveyor Eng’g Co. v. Foreman Indus., Inc., 2d Dist. Montgomery
No. 8244, 1984 WL 5429, at *6 (Jan. 19, 1984) (when the time for filing a mechanics’ lien has
expired, “the situation as to the payment or collection of money is the same as if there were no
mechanics’ lien law.”).
However, the Subcontract provides for withholding upon the assertion of “any claim or
lien” against Moorhead. (Doc. 1-1, § 3.1(B)). Ohio’s mechanics’ lien statute does not displace
any other remedies that may be available to KO’s subcontractors. Janell, Inc. v. Woods, 70 Ohio
App. 2d 216, 217–18, 435 N.E.2d 1138, 1140 (1st Dist. 1980); Blewett v. Sullivan, 104 Ohio
App. 486, 489, 145 N.E.2d 839, 841 (8th Dist. 1957). A mechanics’ lien does not itself create a
claim; it merely provides security for a subcontractor’s claim for payment from contractors or
owners higher up the chain. See R.C. § 1311.11(B) (when a mechanics’ lien is void for failure to
timely commence suit, “the claim upon which the lien was founded is not prejudiced by the
failure, except for the loss of the lien as security for the claim.”). Thus, any claims by KO’s
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subcontractors upon which a mechanics’ lien may have been founded are not barred by failure to
timely file a mechanics’ lien.
The question then becomes whether KO’s subcontractors could have any nonmechanics’-lien claims against Moorhead or the Project for non-payment. KO’s subcontractors
do not have a contractual relationship with Moorhead or MarkWest, so no contract claims are
available to them. However, Ohio courts have recognized that subcontractors may have quasicontractual claims for nonpayment against entities other than the parties to their subcontract.
Filo v. Liberato, 2013-Ohio-1014, 987 N.E.2d 707 (7th Dist.), ¶ 36 (denying motion to dismiss
unjust enrichment claim by subcontractor against project owner). It is therefore possible that
B&N and 7K could assert quasi-contractual claims against Moorhead even though the time for
filing a mechanics’ lien has expired.
KO has not demonstrated the absence of a genuine issue of material fact as to whether
B&N and 7K’s claims of nonpayment support withholding under § 3.1(B).
The facts
surrounding when, how, and why B&N and 7K refused to provide lien waivers, and what
Moorhead knew about their refusal, are not sufficiently developed in the record. It could well
be, on the facts as asserted by KO, that B&N and 7K have viable claims against Moorhead. As
the Court is required to “view[ ] factual evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving
party and draw[ ] all reasonable inferences in that party’s favor,” the Court cannot conclude on
this record that KO is entitled to summary judgment on the basis of the Subcontract. Barrett,
556 F.3d at 511.
B.
Ohio’s Prompt Payment Act
Even if payment of the retainage is not required by the Subcontract, KO may still succeed
if payment is required by Ohio’s Prompt Payment Act, R.C. § 4113.61 (the “PPA”). That statute
requires payment of final retainage by a contractor to a subcontractor within ten calendar days
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after receipt of final retainage from the owner.
R.C. § 4113.61(A)(3).
As MarkWest
undisputedly paid Moorhead its final retainage on December 15, 2015, KO argues that the PPA
required Moorhead to pay KO its final retainage no later than January 3, 2016 (apparently
allowing Moorhead to make the payment within ten business days, rather than the ten calendar
days specified by the statute). (Doc. 13, Mot. at 13).
However, the PPA also allows a contractor to “withhold amounts that may be necessary
to resolve disputed liens or claims involving the work or labor performed or material furnished
by the subcontractor or material supplier.” R.C. § 4113.61(A)(1). As discussed supra, the facts
as recounted by KO suggest the real possibility of claims by B&N and 7K against Moorhead
involving the work performed by KO.
Further, unlike the withholding provision in the
Subcontract, the PPA does not require that the disputed claims be asserted against Moorhead; it
would also encompass contractual claims between B&N or 7K and KO, which Moorhead was
aware of in late December 2015 when KO disclosed its inability to obtain lien waivers.
KO argues that Masiongale Elec.-Mechanical, Inc. v. Constr. One, Inc. forecloses the
application of the PPA’s withholding provision. 102 Ohio St.3d 1, 2004-Ohio-1748, 806 N.E.2d
148. In that case, the Ohio Supreme Court held that breach of a lien-waiver clause in a
construction contract does not create a disputed lien or claim involving the work or labor
performed or material furnished by the subcontractor within the meaning of R.C. 4113.61(A)(1).
Id. ¶ 22.
However, in Masiongale, there was no indication that entities hired by the
subcontractor actually had claims for non-payment; the general contractor was relying on the
subcontractor’s failure to provide lien waivers alone to withhold payment. That is not the case
here, as it is undisputed that B&N and 7K claimed they had not been paid in full for their work
on the project.
These appear to be precisely the type of disputed claims involving work
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performed by the subcontractor that the PPA’s withholding provision was meant to target. As a
result, KO has not demonstrated that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on its PPA
claim.
IV.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, KO’s Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED.
The Clerk shall remove Document 13 from the Court’s pending motions list.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
/s/ George C. Smith
GEORGE C. SMITH, JUDGE
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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