United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
___________
No. 02-4156
___________
O'Brien & Gere Technical *
Services, Inc., a New York *
Corporation, *
*
Plaintiff/Appellee, *
*
v. *
*
Fru-Con/Fluor Daniel Joint *
Venture; Fru-Con Construction *
Corporation, a Missouri Corporation; *
Fluor Daniel, Inc., a California *
Corporation, *
* Appeal from the United States
Defendants/Appellants. * District Court for the Eastern
* District of Missouri.
____________________ *
*
Fru-Con/Fluor Daniel Joint *
Venture; Fru-Con Construction *
Corporation; Fluor Daniel, Inc., *
*
Third Party Plaintiffs, *
*
v. *
*
Reliance Insurance Company, *
a Pennsylvania Corporation, *
*
Third Party Defendant/ *
Appellee. *
___________
Submitted: November 20, 2003
Filed: August 26, 2004 (corrected 10/26/04)
___________
Before BYE, RICHARD S. ARNOLD, and SMITH, Circuit Judges.
___________
BYE, Circuit Judge.
This case illustrates the adage which counsels against going into business with
someone who has less money than you.
The Procter & Gamble Company hired the Fru-Con/Fluor Daniel Joint Venture
(the Joint Venture)1 as a general contractor to build a paper-manufacturing complex
in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. In April 1998, the Joint Venture hired O'Brien & Gere
(OBG) to design and build six buildings in the complex for the lump sum of $15.3
million. In April 1999, after the project had undergone many changes and delays and
the Joint Venture had paid OBG $21.82 million, the Joint Venture terminated OBG
before it completed the work it had been hired to perform. OBG then brought this
diversity action and submitted the case on a quantum meruit theory, seeking to
recover the reasonable value of its services, which exceeded the contract price. The
Joint Venture counterclaimed alleging OBG had breached the contract.
1
As the case caption indicates, the venture consisted of Fru-Con Construction
Corporation and Fluor Daniel, Inc.
2
For ease in reading, round numbers are utilized where they do not affect the
analysis.
2
The district court3 ruled the parties abandoned the contract, awarded OBG $5.4
million in quantum-meruit damages,4 and dismissed the counterclaim. On appeal, the
Joint Venture contends the court erred in finding the parties abandoned the contract
and in calculating the reasonable value of OBG's services. We affirm.
I
A. Contract Formation and Early Departures from the Subcontract
On February 24, 1998, the Joint Venture sent OBG a request for proposal
(RFP) inviting it to bid on the design and construction of the six buildings. The RFP
had two important requirements. First, Buildings 51 and 52, which were to hold the
paper production equipment, had to be completed by January 1, 1999, the date Procter
& Gamble expected to start operating the plants.5 Second, the RFP required bidders'
proposals to conform to certain seismic requirements.
On April 8, 1998, OBG submitted a proposal to do the work for $15.4 million.
Because of the Joint Venture's compressed timetable, OBG proposed holding a
kickoff meeting within a week of the project award to determine the weight and
location of Building 51, so OBG could then begin the design process.
3
The Honorable Carol E. Jackson, United States District Judge for the Eastern
District of Missouri.
4
As discussed in Part III, the court deducted $1.4 million in back-charges from
the quantum meruit award.
5
Because they were to house the actual manufacturing plants, Buildings 51 and
52 were apparently the most important and costly. The four other buildings were
warehouses or similar facilities.
3
OBG's proposal also contained a section entitled Commercial and Technical
Clarifications and Exemptions. One commercial clarification was OBG's request the
Joint Venture eliminate the “pay when paid” provision, under which the Joint Venture
would become obligated to pay its subcontractors only after it was paid by Procter &
Gamble. Because of OBG’s limited cash-flow, OBG required payment within thirty
days of invoicing in order to support its continued work on the project.
On April 14, 1998, the parties met to discuss the project and OBG's
clarifications. Two days later, OBG submitted its Best and Final Offer (BAFO),
which stated new technical clarifications. As a result of the technical clarifications
discussed on April 14, the bid price rose to $15.8 million, which OBG then agreed to
discount to $15.3 million, the final contract price.
The next day, April 17, 1998, the Joint Venture sent OBG a Notice to Proceed,
which stated (1) the scope of the work would be according to the documents recently
exchanged and discussed, and (2) the official subcontract would be issued within
fourteen working days and was effective as of the date of the Notice. OBG
understood the “recently exchanged documents” to include the Joint Venture's RFP,
OBG's own original proposal, and OBG's BAFO. James Fox, OBG's project
manager, executed the Notice and entered into contracts with sub-tier contractors.
On April 27, 1998, the Joint Venture forwarded OBG eleven new drawings for
Buildings 51 and 52. On May 11, while the Joint Venture had yet to send the official
subcontract, the Joint Venture dropped Building 76 from OBG's scope of work.
Between this date and the date they executed the subcontract, July 6, OBG bid for a
new building, 75. Though OBG started work on Building 75 on July 13, it could not
submit invoices until September, when the Joint Venture executed the $7 million
subcontract modification adding the Building to the scope of the work.
4
On July 1, 1998, the Joint Venture sent the official subcontract to OBG.
Although the parties had already changed significant aspects of the agreement by
dropping building 76 and adding 75, the subcontract substantially restated the Joint
Venture's Request for Proposals.
On July 6, 1998, Mr. Fox signed and returned the subcontract. In his cover
letter, he noted the subcontract had not “incorporated all previously communicated
and agreed upon comments. To avoid further delays in subcontract execution and
release of payment . . . [OBG] has executed the Subcontract based upon incorporation
of . . . changes . . . by hand and initialed.” He also stated milestones would follow in
a separate document and crossed out the milestone dates in the body of the contract.
B. Design and Performance Delays
Neither party disputes the district court's finding both parties created delays
through faulty design and performance. First the design delays. The parties agreed
to use an expedited “design-build” process on the two most important buildings in the
complex, 51 and 52, which would be the site of the manufacturing plants. Once
Building 51's design was complete, Building 52's was to follow shortly with only
minor modifications. Early on, however, the Joint Venture made frequent changes
to Building 51's equipment loads by changing the location and quantity of equipment
components the Building would support. OBG's engineers could not finalize the
design for Building 51 until the Joint Venture could identify the proper equipment
loads.
OBG's own design flaws compounded the problem. Most critically, OBG's bid
had understated the amount of steel and concrete needed to meet the RFP's seismic
specifications meant to prevent building drift in the event of an earthquake. Also,
because the Joint Venture's initial drawings specified column lines could not be
moved without permission, OBG assumed the Joint Venture had arrived at the proper
5
distances between buildings, although the subcontract stated that the Joint Venture's
drawings represented a “conceptual phase.”
As a result of the design flaws, Building 51's equipment-load requirements rose
from the 800 tons indicated in the RFP to 1,500 tons. The amount of steel and
concrete increased proportionally. While OBG had proposed using 790 tons of steel,
for example, it actually used 1,600 tons to complete the building. In time, OBG
admitted only 250 of the additional 810 tons could be attributed to the Joint Venture's
increased equipment loads. The rest were attributable to OBG's design flaws.
There were also delays in performance. The contract called for completion of
the project by April 20, 1999. When OBG was fired on April 9, 1999, none of the
buildings had been completed and construction on Building 61 had not begun.
Again, the parties appear not to dispute they both had a part in causing delays.
Starting with the eleven changes it forwarded to OBG on April 27, 1998, the
Joint Venture made eighty changes to Building 51's design elements, including the
weight and location of the mezzanines and the number, weight, and size of air
handling units on the roof. These elements affected the structural design. As a result,
within a four-month period through the summer of 1998, OBG had to reissue its
“Issued For Construction” drawings for Building 51's foundation eight times and for
its roof plan ten times.
OBG also experienced delays in completing the steel erection. Its erection sub-
tier contractor was one month late in starting, the sub-tier contractor maintained a
smaller crew than anticipated, and steel was late in arriving. Other delays were
caused by OBG's defective doweling and use of defective anchor bolts.
Finally, an unanticipated delay occurred when OBG discovered poor subsoil
and pre-existing fire lines which the Joint Venture had failed to designate in its
6
conceptual drawings. Because of these conditions, a 300-foot-long retaining wall,
which OBG had agreed to build as work outside the scope of its bid, had to be
redesigned and made much larger. Due to the delays in completing the wall, the
construction of Building 51 had to be resequenced, with the dry-in date reset for
October 15. Despite the many delays and disputes, OBG eventually missed the
deadline for this critical first building by only two days.6
C. Changes in the Scope of Work
Through Paragraph 3.0, the subcontract required OBG to make changes to its
scope of work whenever it received written instructions for changes from the Joint
Venture. Although OBG had to “promptly proceed in compliance with such written
instructions,” it could not collect on any increase in costs from the change until the
parties had agreed to the price in writing.7 The merger clause, moreover, required
modifications to the subcontract be in writing; otherwise, they were not enforceable.
Thus, the two provisions – Paragraph 3.0 and the merger clause – created a lag
between OBG's performance of changes and its receipt of payment for those changes:
OBG was required immediately to comply with the Joint Venture's written
instructions but it had to wait for the parties to agree to a price and then reduce the
agreement to writing before it could receive payment. Naturally, these delays
exacerbated OBG's cash-flow problems, and the possibility always lurked the parties
might not agree on the price of a change after even after OBG had already completed
the work.
6
Indeed, though the Joint Venture was concerned about the number of changes
it was passing on, OBG did not seek schedule extensions with respect to a majority
of the changes.
7
If the parties could not reach an agreement as to price, then OBG would be
paid on a costs and materials basis for the change.
7
The change process itself is the subject of much dispute. Whenever OBG
determined it was required to perform work outside the scope of its base, it sent the
Joint Venture a Potential Change Orders form (PCO). If the Joint Venture agreed the
PCO order was a change to the scope of the contract, or if the Joint Venture wanted
to initiate such a change, the Joint Venture sent OBG a Change Order Request
(COR). During the course of the project, OBG sent the Joint Venture 111 PCOs, and
the Joint Venture sent OBG 89 CORs.8
The parties' disagreement came to a head as they tried to negotiate the costs to
accelerate the dry-in date for Building 51. On July 16, 1998, the Joint Venture issued
COR 28 and asked OBG to provide pricing to accelerate the partial dry-in date to
October 15. On August 12, OBG submitted a proposal in response to the COR,
indicating it could complete the acceleration for $2.1 million, a sum it later reduced
to $1.8 million. OBG alleged the Joint Venture instructed it to spread this sum across
five other open CORs, which, together with COR 28, became known as the Big Six.
The Joint Venture, of course, denied giving the directive and argued OBG drastically
underbid the contract and was attempting to make up the costs by submitting inflated
CORs.9
8
The parties contemplated that, once a COR was approved, a subcontract
modification would be issued for signature. To reiterate, the Joint Venture would not
release payments without a signed subcontract modification. At trial, the Joint
Venture asserted that only a modification created an enforceable agreement, while
OBG asserted the approved COR was binding.
9
OBG submitted COR 28 with a price of $616,000. The Joint Venture does not
argue that $1.8 million price for the Building 51 acceleration was inflated. Thus, it
appears OBG indeed did spread out the costs of acceleration among other CORs. On
the other hand, the district court found evidence that OBG had also inflated the Big
Six to cover some $300,000 in extra costs it incurred in redoing defective work.
8
On August 25, 1998, the Joint Venture signed the Big Six for a total amount
of $2.9 million, and in September, it prepared the corresponding subcontract
modifications. However, it never issued them. Instead, the Joint Venture wrote a
letter to all its subcontractors announcing that its representatives could approve
changes of no more than $5,000.
As the dispute over the Big Six swelled to a crisis, the parties held meetings on
October 21 and 23, 1998, at which OBG informed the Joint Venture it would not
perform work on change orders until the written subcontract modifications were
issued. In response, the Joint Venture reminded OBG of its contractual obligation to
comply with written instructions regarding changes and stated that OBG's refusal
would place it in default. Consequently, OBG continued performing work on the
disputed work changes.
At the meetings, it also became clear the parties disagreed about the point from
which to measure scope-of-work changes: OBG insisted changes should be measured
from the drawings in place on April 17, 1998, the date of the Notice to Proceed. The
Joint Venture wanted to measure changes from the 30% drawings OBG issued on
May 20, 1998. Like the Big Six, this issue was never resolved.
D. Impasse and Exhibit A
Having reached an impasse, the parties established teams of negotiators to
examine the scope-of-work and change-order issues. The teams met through January
and February 1999 and had minimal success. During this same period, the parties
also executed Subcontract Modifications 002 through 007 in the total amount of
$1.25 million. Through Exhibit A to these modifications, OBG attempted to proceed
with the work even while protecting the right it claimed to be paid for the other,
disputed changes and delays:
9
EXHIBIT A
This Contract Modification is entered into by the parties with the
understanding that the Contractor [OBG] has made certain claims
against the Company [the Joint Venture] for delays, accelerations, and
schedule impacts occurring prior to the date of this Contract
Modification . . . . and certain claims against the Company for scope of
work changes and extra work that are not covered by this Contract
Modification, all of which remain unresolved and open . . . . and with
respect to which both parties hereto fully reserve and retain all of their
respective rights, positions, defenses and arguments.
Thus, the parties proceeded with the work although they could not resolve their
disputes. Ironically, even in signing the Modifications, the parties could not agree to
the incorporation of Exhibit A. All the contract modifications contained a recitation
that OBG agreed to perform the modification work “in accordance with all of the
terms and conditions of the [subcontract].” Moreover, the Joint Venture
representative did not initial Exhibit A, and instead wrote, “the Company rejects all
changes to this contract modification form which was agreed to in the original
subcontract.”
E. Subcontract Amendment and Escrow Fund
By the time the disputes over changes and scope of work came to a head in
October 1998, OBG was experiencing cash-flow problems and was struggling to pay
its sub-tier contractors. In an effort to keep the sub-tier contractors on the job, the
Joint Venture and OBG executed an Amendment to the Subcontract on November 20,
1998. The Joint Venture agreed to make advance payments of up to $4 million in
exchange for OBG's completion of new milestone dates. OBG received an advance
of $1 million upon execution of the Amendment and another advance of $1.7 million
in December 1998 when it achieved some of the amended milestones. OBG did not,
in the end, meet all the new milestones, and the Joint Venture later learned OBG used
the advance payments to satisfy its loans before paying its sub-tier contractors.
10
The Amendment acknowledged OBG's “cash flow problems have arisen as a
result of both parties' delays in the timely resolution of Subcontractor's change orders
which have produced corresponding delays in Subcontractor's invoicing and
payments.” The Amendment also contained a pledge by both parties that they would
“continue negotiating their respective claims in good faith” and that “the parties shall
conduct a meeting on or before December 3, 1998 to establish a procedure for the
timely resolution of all change orders.”
In March 1999, in yet another attempt to pay OBG's subcontractors, the Joint
Venture agreed to place $5.3 million in escrow on the condition OBG's surety,
Reliance Insurance, do the same. Reliance agreed. But, unbeknown to the Joint
Venture, Reliance delayed establishing its fund until it renegotiated a priority-of-
interest agreement with OBG's loan holder. Meanwhile, and without the Joint
Venture's knowledge, OBG offered its sub-tier contractors settlement packages of
fifty to sixty cents on the dollar. Upon learning of the settlement offers, the Joint
Venture became more concerned the sub-tier contractors would quit, and this concern
became another factor in its decision to terminate OBG.
F. Termination
Pursuant to the subcontract, the Joint Venture withheld the January and
February 1999 progress payments because OBG had failed to reach the agreed-to
goals. The Joint Venture then fired OBG in early April 1999.
II
The parties to this diversity action agree Missouri substantive law applies. In
Missouri, “the decree or judgment of the trial court will be sustained by the appellate
court unless there is no substantial evidence to support it, unless it is against the
weight of the evidence, unless it erroneously declares the law, or unless it erroneously
11
applies the law.” Murphy v. Carron, 536 S.W.2d 30, 32 (Mo. 1976) (defining
standard applicable to bench trials). In this appeal, the Joint Venture argues the
district court's judgment finding abandonment of the contract was against the weight
of the evidence.
Under Murphy, the reviewing court sets aside the judgement as against the
weight of the evidence only if it firmly believes the judgment is wrong. Id. ; Lucent
Techs., Inc. v. Mid-West Elecs., Inc., 49 S.W.3d 236, 241 (Mo. Ct. App. 2001). This
standard of review shows “great deference” to the findings of a trial judge. Alltype
Fire Prot. Co. v. Mayfield, 88 S.W.3d 120, 123 (Mo. Ct. App. 2002).
A. Abandonment of the Contract
Under Missouri law, recovery in quantum meruit is generally limited to the
agreed-upon price for the goods and services; the contract price does not limit
recovery, however, where the parties abandon the contract. Holland v. Tandem
Computers, Inc., 49 F.3d 1287, 1288-89 (8th Cir. 1995). Because OBG already
received payment ($21 million) in excess of the contract price ($15.3 million), OBG
can only recover in quantum meruit if the evidence supports a finding the parties
abandoned the contract.
“An abandonment may be accomplished by express mutual consent or by
implied consent through the actions of the parties.” Schwartz v. Shelby Constr. Co.,
338 S.W.2d 781, 788 (Mo. 1960). “Abandonment can be shown by acts and conduct
consistent with the intent to abandon,” and the district court may discount contrary
testimony that no abandonment existed. Land Improvement, Inc. v. Ferguson, 800
S.W.2d 460, 464 (Mo. Ct. App. 1980). Proof of abandonment must be made by clear,
unequivocal, and decisive evidence, and must manifest the parties' actual intent to
abandon contract rights. McBee v. Gustaaf Vandecnocke Revocable Trust, 986
12
S.W.2d 170, 173 (Mo. 1999). The Joint Venture argues the evidence shows the
parties continually manifested an intent to be bound by the subcontract.
In this case, reviewing the district court's judgment with the deference due to
it under Missouri law, we cannot say we are left with a firm belief the judgment is
wrong. See Murphy, 536 S.W. 2d at 32 (“Appellate courts should exercise the power
to set aside a decree or judgment on the ground that it is 'against the weight of the
evidence' with caution and with a firm belief that the decree or judgment is wrong.”).
In other words, OBG presented clear substantial evidence the parties manifested an
intent to abandon their rights under the contract.
Most fundamentally, the parties could not keep up with the extremely tight
construction schedule they set for themselves. Contrary to their expectations in
reaching an agreement, the kickoff meeting, subcontract execution, and first
modification were each delayed by several precious weeks or more. Later, defective
designs and performance by both parties caused further delays, which in turn had a
detrimental domino effect in two ways: They set back the cumulative work schedule,
and they exacerbated OBG's precarious cash-flow position, which in turn forced OBG
again to postpone work. In short, the project progressed at a different pace from that
contemplated by the subcontract; the parties departed from the contract milestones,
even after they were amended.
Second, the actual job became substantially different from the contract job.
The scope, quantity, and frequency of changes are factors in a court's finding the
parties abandoned a contract. See Schwartz, 338 S.W.2d at 788-90. As to Building
51 alone, there were eighty changes to the equipment locations, and several changes
to the equipment load, which was ultimately doubled. There were similarly frequent
13
changes to the number, size, and weight of air handling units on the roof, duct work,
pipe racks, and other components. Such changes affected the structural design which
was continually revised and delayed. OBG reissued the “Issued for Construction”
drawings for Building 51's foundation eight times and for its roof plan ten times in
four months. Similarly, the need to redesign the retaining wall, which itself was
change work, complicated and delayed work on Building 51. Perhaps under normal
circumstances in the construction business, a myriad of changes may not so transform
a project as to reflect an abandonment of the contract by the parties. This case is
different. While the parties understood a certain amount of change was inherent to
the design and construction process, the number and frequency of the changes
transformed, or so the district court could reasonably believe, the nature of the task
OBG believed it undertook when it signed the subcontract while it was strapped for
cash.
Third, about half-way through the work, it became apparent the parties did not
agree about two fundamental facts: What documents defined the base scope of the
work and the design stage from which work changes should be measured. The parties
never resolved these differences. In other words, for half of the time they were
together on the project, they operated by agreeing to disagree, without a shared
understanding of basic rights and duties under the subcontract.
Fourth, though the subcontract allowed the Joint Venture to make payments
directly to OBG's sub-tier contractors, the parties renegotiated advanced payments in
exchange for new subcontract milestones in lieu of issuing subcontract modifications.
Also, toward the end of OBG's services, the Joint Venture funded the escrow account.
As the district court stated, “the need to resort to these extra-contractual devices to
address a matter as fundamental as project pricing for change work reinforces the
conclusion that the parties abandoned the contract.”
14
The most crucial evidence supporting the court's finding of abandonment may
be the breakdown of the work change process. The contract contained an inherent
flaw: The Changes clause required OBG immediately to comply with change
requests, even while the price was being negotiated. When the parties could not
resolve their disputes over the prices of the Big Six, OBG was forced to continue
working – something it could not do because of its cash-flow problems. In essence,
given OBG's financial state, the Changes clause led to an impasse which effectively
suspended the contract.
This flaw in the subcontract surfaced after a dispute erupted over Big Six. To
whatever extent OBG underbid the contract and then inflated costs of the Big Six to
make up the difference, there were other delays and changes for which OBG was not
responsible and which increased OBG's costs substantially. Nevertheless, the Joint
Venture withheld payment on the Big Six by declining to issue contract modifications
as required by the subcontract, though the CORs contained undisputed charges,
including the $1.8 million cost of accelerating Building 51. Meanwhile, apparently
because it had already committed resources to the project and needed whatever cash
it could get, OBG remained on the job. Likewise, apparently because it faced
looming completion deadlines, the Joint Venture kept on the job a subcontractor it
believed had underbid the contract and inflated CORs. In other words, the parties
altogether abandoned the subcontract's flawed process for pricing and paying
changes, resorting to whatever expedient they could conceive to see the project
through.
The parties resorted to the Amendment and the modifications which were
themselves problematic. In signing the Amendment and all the modifications but one,
OBG crossed out language reaffirming the contract and attached Exhibit A, which
acknowledged the fact that the change process had ground to a halt because of
unresolved disputes. In turn, the Joint Venture representative did not initial Exhibit
15
A and instead wrote, “the Company rejects all changes to this contract modification
form which was agreed to in the original subcontract.”
The Joint Venture argues the Amendment and modifications are evidence the
parties repeatedly reaffirmed the contract. In truth, however, the Amendment and
modifications only cast light on the reality the parties maintained a working
relationship outside the parameters of the contract, so much so that they could not
even agree to disagree. We conclude there was substantial evidence to support the
district court's finding the parties abandoned the subcontract.
III
Quantum meruit recovery is limited to the reasonable value of the services
performed. Bash v. B.C. Constr. Co., 780 S.W.2d 697, 698 (Mo. Ct. App. 1989). In
reviewing the district court's determination of reasonable value under Missouri law,
we affirm the determination “unless there is no substantial evidence to support it, it
is against the weight of authority, or it erroneously declares or applies the law.”
Kennco Contractors, Inc. v. Duncan, 53 S.W.3d 557, 559 (Mo. Ct. App. 2001)
(applying the Murphy standard).
Reasonable value is “the price usually and customarily paid for such or like
services at the time and in the locality where the services were rendered.” Kinetic
Energy Corp. v. Trigen Energy Corp., 22 S.W.3d 691, 697 (Mo. Ct. App. 1999)
(citation omitted). The plaintiff must shoulder the burden of proving the reasonable
value of its services. Id.
The district court determined the reasonable value of OBG's services as
follows. First, it calculated the value of OBG's base subcontract work by adding the
subcontract price of $15,300,000 and the price of the eight approved modifications,
16
$9,525,884, for a total of $24,825,884. Then, the court subtracted the Joint Venture's
payments of $21,772,082, for a balance of $1,567,975 due on the base work.
The court then calculated the value of the change work at $3,797,891,
reflecting the CORs which the Joint Venture had approved but not absorbed in
executed contract modifications. In doing so, the court made a finding of fact the
approvals, in absence of testimony from the Joint Venture employee who signed the
CORs, represented the value of the change work listed on those CORs. Adding the
value of the unpaid change work to the balance due on the base work, the court
arrived at a figure of $6,851,693.
Finally, the court subtracted $1,369,007 for back-charges for OBG's scheduling
delays and for the Joint Venture's costs in completing and redoing OBG's work. In
summary, the district court concluded OBG was entitled to recover in quantum meruit
the amount of $6,851,693, and the Joint Venture was entitled to offset that amount
by $1,369,007 in back-charges, for a total recovery by OBG in the amount of
$5,482,686.
The Joint Venture challenges the award on several grounds. First, it correctly
cites Bash for the proposition the contract price cannot serve as the measure of
damages in quantum meruit where the plaintiff has not fully performed the contract.
780 S.W.2d at 699 (stating the agreed price for full performance is not a reasonable
value for partial performance). OBG, in turn, correctly distinguishes that case by
citing Zeller v. Janssen for the proposition the contract can serve as a basis for
valuation where there is evidence of the percentage of work completed. 569 S.W.3d
5, 6 (Mo. Ct. App. 1978) (stating contractor completed 68% of the work and therefore
a reasonable value of the work within the scope of contract equaled 68% of the
contract price).
17
These citations are red herrings, for the present case does not manifest the
concerns which bar use of the contract price to begin with. Under the subcontract,
the Joint Venture paid OBG incrementally for each milestone and for undisputed
work changes. Using this progressive method, the Joint Venture paid OBG
$21,772,082, well over the original subcontract price of $15,300,000. While OBG
never finished the buildings, it clearly provided services worth the price of the
original subcontract and its subsequent modifications. Indeed, because of the lag in
the contractual scheme, the Joint Venture apparently did not pay OBG until well after
it had completed the paid-for work. It is also undisputed the Joint Venture suspended
payments when it believed that OBG could not proceed to the Joint Venture's
satisfaction. Under this payment structure, at most there could be doubt as to OBG's
full performance of only the last, marginal modification. Thus, the price of the
subcontract, including modifications, was a reliable method for valuating OBG's base
services.
Next, the Joint Venture argues the district court's calculations created a $2.3
million windfall for OBG. The Joint Venture points to the testimony of OBG's
project manager who apparently stated “when we left the job we had $2.3 million of
work remaining.” From this testimony, the Joint Venture concludes the OBG's own
work valuation priced the base work services at $21,030,057 ($23,340,0576 minus
$2.3 million). As a factual matter, this conclusion does not follow necessarily from
the manager's testimony. The court may have easily understood the testimony to
reflect only the amount of work remaining, regardless of how much work OBG had
already completed. For example, OBG could have performed $30 million worth of
services to get to the point where there was still $2.3 million worth of work left to
perform.
Finally, the Joint Venture points out its expert testified the CORs contained
overstatements to the tune of $1.6 million. Indeed, the court specifically found the
CORs generally contained “overstated unit prices and material quantities,
18
duplications, and mistakes.” Still, as to the ten CORs which the Joint Venture had
chosen to approve, the Court found the approval was sufficient evidence of the
parties' valuation of the work. Faced with conflicting evidence, the district court
apparently decided that, as to these ten CORs, the evidence of the Joint Venture's
signature on the approval line weighed more heavily than the testimony of the expert
witness.10 This decision was within the province of the judge as the fact-finder.
We note the district court specifically found that its calculations did not
compensate OBG for certain services which OBG undoubtedly provided but which
were difficult to valuate reliably (for example, the additional work needed to build the
retaining wall). We also note the Joint Venture argued all along that OBG had
underbid the contract. As the district court suggested, the value of OBG's services
may have exceeded the damages award.
IV
Because the finding the parties abandoned the contract is supported by the
weight of the evidence, we affirm the district court's judgment. Because substantial
evidence supports the district court's determination of the reasonable value of OBG's
services, we affirm the court's damages award.
______________________________
10
Moreover, among the ten disputed CORs was COR 28 for accelerating
Building 51. To repeat, OBG argued this COR was understated by $1.2 million and
the difference spread among the other five CORs in the Big Six. The court found
that, among the nine other CORs in dispute, those belonging to the Big Six overstate
the price by only $350,000. Thus, even on the expert's testimony, OBG provided the
Joint Venture $850,000 in unpaid services.
19