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Construction Industry News

COMMENT: Amelco and What It Means to Total Cost and Abandonment Claims


March 11, 2002


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(A version of this article appears in the California Construction Law Reporter, published by the West Group.)


By James E. Acret

It was a familiar story. A city with grandiose plans for a combination city hall and performing arts center put the project out for bid before working drawings had been fully finished and co-ordinated. The project was under construction according to a scheme under which major trades contracted directly with the city, their activities coordinated by a construction manager. The city issued 248 sketches that changed electrical work. Every part of the electrical system was changed at least once. In one room alone there were 40 changes. Electrical contractor Amelco was flummoxed. Although 32 negotiated change orders increased the contract price by more than $1 million, Amelco still lost more than $2 million but could not produce evidence to tie the overruns in labor, equipment and materials to specific changes.

The city had breached its contract by failing to provide proper drawings and by requiring excessive changes. How was Amelco to prove its damages? Damages for breach of contract must be such as were within the contemplation of the parties at the time when the contract was formed or at least foreseeable at that time. A claimant must show specific damages were caused by a particular breach. But a just claim should not be defeated merely because it is impossible to prove the exact amount of damages.

Fanciful computations of costs to cover the lack of specific data could invite a counterattack based on the False Claims Act. Amelco needed a legal theory that would fill the gap. Three theories were available: total cost, rescission and abandonment.

Under total cost theory, a contractor unable to prove exact damages may be paid the total cost of the work.

Under rescission theory, a contractor can respond to an unexcused material breach of contract by canceling the contract and recovering the reasonable value of its work.

Under abandonment theory, a contractor can show that parties abandoned the contract and recover the reasonable value of its work.

Amelco proceeded to litigate abandonment and total cost at the same time. A jury found that the city both had abandoned and breached the contract, and awarded $2,134,586 on the abandonment count and an identical $2,134,586 on the breach of contract count. The California Supreme Court reversed, throwing out the abandonment claim and sending the total cost claim back to the trial court for retrial on the issue of damages. Amelco Electric v. City of Thousand Oaks, ___ Cal.4th ___, 2002 DJDAR 1285 (Cal. 2002).


Abandonment

The opinion teaches that abandonment jurisprudence does not apply to California public contracts. Application would undermine the objectives of competitive bidding statutes. It would open the door for a contractor to connive with a public official to submit a low bid with a secret understanding to abandon the contract and thus give the contractor a demand upon the public fisc unlimited by the contractor's low bid.

This is a farfetched conspiracy theory. A conniving official does not need to resort to abandonment to enrich a contractor. Abandonment is complicated! It requires a deficient set of plans and lots of changes! It requires a lawsuit! The most effective way for a corrupt official to funnel money to a contractor would be by issuing change orders, not by conniving at abandonment.


Total Cost

The court approved employment of total cost jurisprudence on claims against public agencies but laid down some rules for proving damages that will be difficult for Amelco or any other contractor to fulfill. Amelco must assign costs to specific breaches of contract and prove that those costs were caused by the city and not partly by Amelco or another trade contractor.

The Amelco decision will make bidding California public work less attractive. The risk is increased that an agency might supply a deficient set of plans, breach the contract and get away with it because the contractor cannot produce sufficiently clear proof of damages.


Rescission and Stopping the Work

A contractor might consider rescission instead of abandonment, but the Supreme Court's rationale would apply equally to both. Odds are if a public contract cannot be abandoned, it also cannot be rescinded.

The dissenting opinion in Amelco suggests another legal tactic: Stopping the work. But for most projects, that option is not available because most public contracts include a provision that in the event of a dispute, the contractor will not stop the work. Contractors will be advised to recognize every potential claim from its inception, forget about depending on the agency to issue reasonable change orders and assign the forensic personnel necessary to track costs.


Private Work

The Amelco decision impliedly accepts the validity of abandonment jurisprudence as applied to private projects. It is also significant that the Supreme Court accepts the total cost theory while at the same time making a total cost claim a lot tougher to prove.


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