Brox v. H.J. Stabile

USCA1 Opinion









March 25, 1994 NOT FOR PUBLICATION
NOT FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
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No. 93-1970

BROX INDUSTRIES, INC.,

Plaintiff, Appellee,

v.

H.J. STABILE & SONS, INC. ET AL.,

Defendants, Appellants.

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APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE


[Hon. Martin F. Loughlin, Senior U.S. District Judge]
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Before

Torruella, Circuit Judge,
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Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
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and Selya, Circuit Judge.
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James E. Owers, with whom Sulloway & Hollis was on brief for
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appellant Reliance Insurance Company and Morgan A. Hollis, with whom
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Gottesman & Hollis was on brief for appellant H.J. Stabile & Sons,
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Inc.
Frank P. Spinella, Jr., with whom Hibbard & Spinella, P.A. was on
______________________ _________________________
brief for appellee.


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BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. This diversity
BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge.
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case requires us to rule on the timeliness of a notice of

claim under a payment bond. The district court, after an

evidentiary hearing, held that the notice was timely and

therefore granted judgment for plaintiff-appellee Brox

Industries in the amount of $178,155.86. We affirm.

I.
I.

BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
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We set forth a summary of the pertinent facts found

by the district court. In June 1991 defendant-appellant H.J.

Stabile & Son, Inc. entered into a contract with Wal-Mart

Stores, Inc. to build a store in Seabrook, New Hampshire. In

July 1991 Stabile obtained a payment bond from co-defendant-

appellant Reliance Insurance Company. Reliance, of course,

is the real party in interest. Stabile subsequently

subcontracted with Atom Contracting Corp. to do work on the

Wal-Mart project. Atom then subcontracted with Brox to do

both on-site and off-site paving.

Under Stabile's contract with Wal-Mart all work was

to be completed on the project by December 3, 1991. By mid-

December Brox had not completed a substantial portion of the

paving work under its contract with Atom. On December 13

Stabile instructed Brox that it should cease operations on

the project due to the onset of winter. Because all of the

parties recognized that paving cannot be done properly in the



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winter, they agreed that Brox would return the following

spring to complete the work. Stabile fully expected that

Brox would return to the work-site in the spring, and Brox

anticipated doing so. On December 23, 1991 Brox notified

Stabile that substantial work remained for the spring,

provided Stabile with an estimate of the remaining work, and

stated that the total amount of the paving work performed to

date was $201,106.50. Brox invoiced Atom for this work in

December 1991.

In February and March 1992, in response to concerns

of Wal-Mart about the quality of Brox's paving, Brox

conducted tests of its work. Also in March 1992, a Brox

employee filled in several potholes at the worksite in

preparation for returning to the project.

By March of 1992 Stabile had paid Atom all sums due

for work performed by Atom and its subcontractors, including

Brox. Atom, however, still owed Brox $178,155.86 for work

done through December 13, 1991. On March 18, 1992 Brox sent

a notice of claim for that amount to Reliance as surety for

Stabile. Nonetheless, Brox anticipated that it would finish

the paving work in the spring under its contract with Atom.

On May 14, 1992 Atom informed Stabile that it

intended to honor their contract, and that the State of New

Hampshire wanted two roads, which were contiguous to the

planned store, to be paved by June 1. On June 4 Stabile



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agreed to the additional paving with a charge back to Atom.

Although the specifics are unclear, shortly thereafter

Stabile recognized that Atom would be unable to meet its

contractual obligations, and therefore it sought to engage a

new contractor to complete the paving work.

On June 11, after a brief bidding period, Stabile

and Brox entered into two contracts for the completion of the

paving at the project, one for on-site and one for off-site

work. On June 30 Stabile formally terminated its contract

with Atom. Brox finished the paving work at the project.

In August 1992 Brox commenced a diversity action in

the United States District Court for the District of New

Hampshire against Stabile and Reliance seeking payment under

the bond issued by Reliance as surety for Stabile. Under the

bond, a party not in direct privity with the principal, such

as Brox, must give notice of its claim to: the Principal,

the Surety, or the Owner, "within ninety (90) days after such

claimant did or performed the last of the work or labor, or

furnished the last of the materials for which said claim is

made." No claim is made that Brox failed to give notice as

required to the Principal, Surety or Owner.

The principal defense of Stabile and Reliance is

that Brox's March 18, 1992 notice was untimely under the

bond's requirements. Brox moved for summary judgment based

on two alternative theories. It argued first that, assuming



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arguendo that its notice was untimely, Reliance must show
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prejudice from the tardiness in order to bar recovery under

the bond. According to Brox, no prejudice could be shown.

Alternatively, Brox maintained that its notice was timely

under the bond.

The district court, in an opinion dated August 18,

1993, found that Brox's notice was timely. According to the

district court, "[t]he crux of the case . . . appears to be

whether [Brox's] work [was] completed in December, 1991."

Brox Industries, Inc. v. H.J. Stabile & Son, Inc., No. 92-
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426-L, slip op. at 6 (D.N.H. August 18, 1993). At the

evidentiary hearing the court stated that "[i]f . . . an

agreement [about a winter hiatus] was made then clearly

[Brox's] work under its subcontract with Atom was not

completed on December 13, 1991 and [Brox's] failure to give

notice within ninety days of that day would not bar recovery

under the bond." Because the court eventually found that

Brox still had substantial work to do on the contract as of

December 13, and that the parties agreed to a winter hiatus

of greater than ninety days, it held that Brox's notice was

not untimely. Id. at 7.
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In response to Brox's argument that work done at

the project site in February and March 1992, i.e., quality
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tests and pothole repairs, reset the ninety-day notice

period, the district court found that both the tests and the



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pothole repairs were remedial in nature and did not "advance

the completion of the project." Id. at 5. Accordingly,
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under New Hampshire law, the district court found that the

above work had no effect upon the ninety-day notice period.

See Tolles-Bickford Co. v. School, 94 A.2d 374 (N.H. 1953).
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This conclusion and its predicate factual findings have not

been appealed. The court entered judgment for Brox for the

full amount of its claim, and defendants appealed.

II.
II.

DISCUSSION
DISCUSSION
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The focus of this litigation has been twofold: (1)

whether, given the circumstances surrounding Brox's work on

the project, its notice of March 18, 1992 was timely under

the bond issued by Reliance; and (2) whether, if the notice

was not timely, Reliance must demonstrate prejudice from the

delay in order to bar Brox's recovery. Because the district

court ruled in the affirmative on the first issue, it never

reached the second.

Because this is a diversity action, the substantive

law of the forum attaches. Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304
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U.S. 64, 78 (1938). The parties' arguments as to the

timeliness of Brox's notice hinge upon two New Hampshire

Supreme Court cases.

In American Fidelity Co. v. Cray, 194 A.2d 763
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(N.H. 1963) a claimant on a payment bond was precluded from



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recovering due to late notice of claim. The principal in

Cray was under a contract with the State of New Hampshire.
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It was required by statute to obtain a contract bond, and the

bond's notice requirement was prescribed by statute. Under

the version of N.H. RSA 447:17 in effect at that time, in

order to obtain the benefit of the bond, a claimant for labor

performed or materials furnished "shall within ninety days

after said claimant ceases to perform said labor or furnish

said materials . . . file . . . with the department of public

works and highways . . . a statement of the claim." From May

to November 1958, Cray provided fuel and lubricants to the

principal on a highway construction project. In late 1958,

prior to the completion of the project, the principal shut

down the job for the winter. It never returned. In the

spring of 1959 the surety completed the project through

another construction company. In May 1959 Cray noticed a

claim with the proper authority for money owed to it by the

principal.

Although Cray did not provide any materials to the

principal after November 1958 -- more than ninety days prior

to its filing a claim under the bond -- Cray maintained that

it did not "cease" to furnish fuel and lubricants under the

bond at the time of the winter shutdown in November 1958.

Cray argued that its agreement with the principal was a

continuing one such that the ninety day notice requirement



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should have been tolled during the seasonal hiatus. After

reviewing the facts of the case, the New Hampshire Supreme

Court stated:

We cannot accept Cray's contention that
it ceased to furnish materials not in
November 1958, after which date no
materials were in fact furnished, but the
following spring when LaClair failed to
resume operations.

Id. at 766. Defendants argue that Brox is in the same
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position as Cray was, and that its notice is therefore

untimely.

Defendants' position is substantially undercut by

the New Hampshire Supreme Court's subsequent opinion in New
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England Metal Culvert Co. v. A.E. Williams Construction Co.,
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196 A.2d 713 (N.H. 1963). In New England Metal Culvert the
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contractor on a highway construction project placed a single

order with the plaintiff in January 1961 for various

materials, including a metal culvert and pipe. As was the

case in Cray, the contractor was under contract with the
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State, and was required by statute to obtain a bond.1

Delivery of the pipe was to be "as required." Id. at 714.
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On April 25, 26 and 27, 1961 a metal culvert was delivered,

but the contractor was not ready to receive the pipe, and it

was not delivered. In October 1961, after learning that the


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1. On April 29, 1961 the notice requirement contained in RSA
447:17, see supra p. 7, was amended to require such a filing
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"within ninety days after the completion and acceptance of
the project."

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contractor was in financial straits, the plaintiff filed a

notice of claim under the bond for payment of the materials

that it had delivered in April. The contractor subsequently

defaulted on the project, and the surety completed

construction through a different construction company. In

December 1961 a new construction company was hired by the

surety to finish the job. This new company ordered the exact

same pipe from the plaintiff that had been ordered by, but

never delivered to, the original contractor. Id. The pipe
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was delivered by plaintiff to the new contractor on December

13 and 15, 1961 and was paid for in a timely manner.

The court ruled that plaintiff's October 27, 1961

notice was timely under the pre-amendment version of the

notice statute. Id. at 715. This conclusion was based on
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two factors. First, the contract between plaintiff and the

original contractor "was a single contract although separable

or divisible as to deliveries." Id. And second, "[o]n
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October, 27, 1961, when the plaintiff first gave notice of

its claim, although more than ninety days had elapsed since

delivery of the culvert it had not then ceased to furnish

materials, but was bound by its [original] contract to make

additional deliveries on request." Id. Moreover,
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the remaining pipe was furnished to the
job on December 13 and 15, 1961 for use
in carrying out the contract with the
State. Thus the plaintiff did not cease
to furnish materials within the meaning
of RSA 447:17 until December 15, 1961 . .


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. . Unlike the situation in American
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Fidelity Co. v. Cray, supra, the
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plaintiff in this case had a single
contract for a series of deliveries of
specified materials.

Id. (citation omitted). The court concluded that "[a]
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notice filed within ninety days of the last delivery on

December 15, 1961 would have constituted compliance with the

requirements of the statute before amendment, and permitted

recourse to the bond for recovery of the price of the culvert

delivered in April 1961." Id. The court further held that
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although plaintiff's filing was premature, the premature

notice satisfied the notice requirement. Id. at 716.
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Brox argues that it is similarly situated to the

plaintiff in New England Metal Culvert, and that its notice
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was therefore timely. We agree. As in New England Metal
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Culvert, Brox had a single contract with Atom. At the time
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Brox gave notice of its claim, more than ninety days had

passed since its last paving work on the project.

Nevertheless, at the time Brox gave its notice, it was still

obligated to complete the paving work after the spring thaw.

Brox eventually completed the paving work necessary for

carrying out Stabile's contract with Wal-Mart. These

factors, we believe, place this case squarely under the

shadow cast by New England Metal Culvert.2
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2. The district court also found, consistent with New
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England Metal Culvert, that Brox's notice was, in effect,
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prematurely filed. Brox Industries, Inc. v. H.J. Stabile &
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Accordingly, under the rule articulated by the New

Hampshire Supreme Court in New England Metal Culvert, if a
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claimant is still obligated to perform additional work under

its original contract at the time notice is given under a

payment bond, such as the one at issue here, the notice is

not untimely even if more than ninety days have passed since

the last work was performed by the claimant under the

original contract. In effect, the claimant's notice can be

viewed as covering the claimant's prior work, for which it

has not been paid, as well as the work that it is obligated

to perform in the future -- work for which it has also not

yet been paid. The ninety-day notice period does not begin

to run until the claimant actually completes the work that it

was contractually obligated to perform at the time notice was

given. Thus, as the New Hampshire Supreme Court has noted,

although the claimant's notice is premature, it is valid.

At oral argument Reliance sought to distinguish New
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England Metal Culvert on the ground that one contract was at
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issue in that case whereas two contracts are implicated in

the present case. Defendants' contention is not persuasive.

It is clear, as in the present case, that the plaintiff in

New England Metal Culvert completed its performance, i.e.,
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made the December 13 and 15 pipe deliveries, under a second




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Son, Inc., slip op. at 7.
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contract which required completion of the performance called

for under the original contract. Id. at 714.
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Although New England Metal Culvert involves a
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statutory notice requirement, as opposed to a contractual

requirement, we can see no reason why the New Hampshire

Supreme Court's interpretation of the former would not apply

to the latter. See, e.g., Raitt v. National Grange Ins. Co.,
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285 A.2d 799 (N.H. 1971) (contractual subrogation provision

construed consistently with identical statutory subrogation

right). In fact, the notice requirement at issue here is

identical to the Miller Act's ninety-day notice requirement,

and the New Hampshire Supreme Court has looked to Miller Act

cases in construing the pre-amendment version of RSA 447:17.

See New England Metal Culvert, 196 A.2d at 715 (citing
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cases).

Aside from the two New Hampshire cases discussed

above, the parties have focussed their attention on cases

construing the ninety-day notice requirement in the Miller

Act, 40 U.S.C. 270b(a). Because we have found controlling

precedent under New Hampshire law, we need not delve into

these cases. Nevertheless, we note that the Miller Act cases

are not hostile to our holding.

On the question of ninety-day gaps between

performances, we have uncovered only a handful of cases.

Those cases have held, where there is a break of greater than



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ninety days between deliveries under a series of purchase
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orders, that the last delivery does not resurrect claims for
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payment for the earlier deliveries. See United States v.
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Peter Reiss Constr. Co., 273 F.2d 880 (2d Cir. 1959)
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(Friendly, J.). This was essentially the issue in Cray, and
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the court there reached the same conclusion. Of course, in

Cray, the plaintiff never made any deliveries after the
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ninety-day plus hiatus. On the other hand, where work is

performed under a contract, as opposed to a series of

purchase orders, a greater than ninety-day interval in

performances will not bar recovery on the earlier performance

despite the absence of immediate notice. See Id. at 882;
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United States v. Chester Constr. Co., 104 F.2d 648 (2d Cir.
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1939). This was the situation in New England Metal Culvert,
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and the New Hampshire Supreme Court reached the same result.

The three Miller Act cases relied on by defendants

in their brief would not warrant a contrary conclusion. The

first case, United States ex rel. J.A. Edwards & Co. v.
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Thompson Constr. Corp., 273 F.2d 873 (2d Cir. 1959),
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concerned the substance of a notice of claim under the Miller

Act, not its timeliness under the ninety-day notice

requirement. And the last two cases, United States ex rel.
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John D. Ahern Co. v. J.F. White Contracting Co., 649 F.2d 29
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(1st Cir. 1981) and A.B. Cooley v. Barten & Wood, Inc., 249
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F.2d 912 (1st Cir. 1956), although more closely analogous to



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the instant case, do not involve gaps in the claimant's

performance of greater than ninety days, and are therefore of

limited relevance. This is particularly true given the New

Hampshire Supreme Court's clear statement in this matter.

Defendants' have failed to identify, and we cannot

decipher, any substantive distinction between New England
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Metal Culvert and the case at bar. Accordingly, the judgment
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of the district court is Affirmed.
Affirmed
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