06/30/2021
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE
September 30, 2020 Session
SNAKE STEEL, INC. v. HOLLADAY CONSTRUCTION GROUP, LLC
Appeal by Permission from the Court of Appeals
Chancery Court for Davidson County
No. 17-1037-III Ellen Hobbs Lyle, Chancellor
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No. M2019-00322-SC-R11-CV
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CORNELIA A. CLARK, J., with whom JEFFREY S. BIVINS, C.J., and SHARON G. LEE., J.,
join, concurring separately.
We fully concur in the opinion of the Court but write separately to urge the
General Assembly to clarify an issue that this decision does not address: whether
Holladay Construction Group, LLC (“Holladay”), had a statutory obligation to deposit
the retainage it received from 2200 Charlotte Avenue, LLC, (“Owner”) on May 27, 2015,
into a separate, interest-bearing escrow account, or was obligated at that point only to pay
subcontractors, such as Snake Steel, within ten days of receipt of the retainage from
Owner.
The Court declines to address this question because Holladay did not preserve it in
the courts below and failed to properly raise it in this Court. See Hodge v. Craig, 382
S.W.3d 325, 334 n.3 (Tenn. 2012). Before the trial court, Holladay “stipulated” that it
had an obligation to put the retainage in an escrow account at least after May 27, 2015,
when it received the retainage from Owner.1 This argument reflects one reasonable
1
At the November 2, 2018 hearing on the cross motions for summary judgment, counsel for
Holladay stated:
We have two statutes that we’re asking [you] to look at. One is [section] 66-34-
104(c), which is the $300 per day penalty for every day retained funds are not put in an
escrow account.
interpretation of the Prompt Pay Act—that Tennessee Code Annotated sections 66-34-
104(a) and 66-34-103(d) may be read together as requiring owners and prime contractors
to sequentially establish escrow accounts for retainage, while preventing owners and
prime contractors from becoming simultaneously responsible for depositing retainage
funds for subcontractors in escrow accounts. Such an interpretation aligns with the
purpose of the Prompt Pay Act as described in the majority opinion. See State v.
Marrow, 75 S.W.3d 919, 921-22 (Tenn. 2002) (“We must construe statutory segments
‘together in light of the general purpose and plan . . . and object to be obtained.’”
(alteration in original) (quoting Neff v. Cherokee Ins. Co., 704 S.W.2d 1, 3 (Tenn.
1986)).
Yet, an argument can also be made that, by enacting Tennessee Code Annotated
section 66-34-103(d), the General Assembly intended to absolve prime contractors, like
Holladay, from any obligation to deposit retainages they receive from owners into
separate, interest-bearing escrow accounts. Interpreting section -103(d) in this manner is
consistent with a separate statutory provision, which requires a prime contractor to “pay
all retainages due any remote contractor within ten (10) days after receipt of the
retainages from the owner.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 66-34-103(b). Notably, section -103(b)
contains no language requiring the prime contractor to deposit such retainages into a
separate, interest-bearing escrow account upon receipt from the owner. See also In re
C.K.G., 173 S.W.3d 714, 729 (Tenn. 2005) (citing Fletcher v. State, 951 S.W.2d 378, 382
(Tenn. 1997)) (“Courts must . . . adopt, if possible, a reasonable construction which
provides for a harmonious operation of the laws.”).
That is stipulated by us that when the owner was retaining the money, they were
not in an escrow account, when the owner paid those funds to my client, Holladay, they
did not put them in an escrow account. There is no issue of fact there. We are exposed to
that claim because we didn’t do it, we being the contractor, but the owner also didn’t do
it.
(Emphasis added). Similarly, Holladay stated in its Reply Brief before this Court that it “should have
complied with the requirements of the Prompt Payment Act and placed Snake Steel’s . . . retainage . . .
into a separate, interest bearing account.”
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Both interpretations are reasonable,2 and, unfortunately, these legitimate questions
of statutory interpretation have not been preserved for resolution in this appeal. Given
the steep daily penalty3 that applies when a party obligated to deposit retainage into an
interest-bearing escrow account fails to do so, I urge the General Assembly to provide
clear answers to these questions of statutory construction.4 I am authorized to state that
Justice Bivins and Justice Lee concur in this separate opinion.
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CORNELIA A. CLARK, JUSTICE
2
In fact, relevant legislative history can be read as supporting either interpretation of the Act’s
requirements. See Hearing on H.B. 3105 Before the Com. Comm., 108th Gen. Assemb. (Tenn. Mar. 4,
2008) (statement of Rep. Charles Curtiss, Chairman, Com. Comm.) (“It’s clearly the intent of the
legislature that retainage only be held out one time. There is [sic] not going to be two or three different
people holding out retainage on a project, and we had a judge actually rule that retainage can be held out
twice by the owner and by the prime contractor and that’s not the intention. This legislation straightens
that.” (emphasis added)).
3
While Tennessee Code Annotated section 66-34-104(c) has been amended to provide that the
$300 per day “penalty” is now to be paid “as damages, not as a penalty,” see Tenn. Code Ann. § 66-34-
104(c) (2015), the repercussions for failing to deposit the funds into an escrow account are still
significant, regardless of how they are characterized.
4
Clarification is also needed to determine the obligation of a prime contractor when an owner,
who is controlling the retained funds, fails initially to deposit the funds in an escrow account. See § 2:26.
Terms—Retainage, 27 Tenn. Prac. Const. Law § 2:26 (“If, however, the owner . . . deposits retainage in
an appropriate account that is meant for the benefit of contractors on the project, the successive tiers of
contractors that are to withhold retainage are relieved of the responsibility of also placing funds in
escrow.” (emphasis added)); § 2:40 Prompt Pay Act, 27 Tenn. Prac. Const. Law § 2:40 (“While all
participating parties on a project may have retainage provisions as part of their contract, if the owner . . .
places retainage in escrow that will eventually be distributed to the prime . . . contractor[], retainage
withheld by the remote contractors does not have to be placed in an escrow account pursuant to
[Tennessee Code Annotated section] 66-34-104(a).” (emphasis added)).
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