Court Opinion

ID: 9407635
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-07-07 18:05:05.695661+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:20:39.343347
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

CONSOLIDATED, LLC,                     )
                                       )
           Plaintiff,                  )
                                       )
     v.                                )
                                       )     C.A. No. N22C-06-084 CEB
                                       )
GFP CEMENT CONTRACTORS,                )
LLC, and ATLANTIC STATES               )
INSURANCE COMPANY,                     )
                                       )
           Defendants.                 )

                         Submitted: May 25, 2023
                          Decided: July 07, 2023

                                ORDER

  Order on Motion of Defendant GFP Cement Contractors LLC for Reargument
                                 DENIED.

Kevin S. Mann, Esquire, and Christopher P. Simon, Esquire, CROSS & SIMON,
LLC, Wilmington, Delaware. Attorneys for Plaintiff Consolidated, LLC.

Krista M. Reale, Esquire, and Tara D. McManamy, Esquire, MARGOLIS
EDELSTEIN, Wilmington, Delaware. Attorneys for Defendant GFP Cement
Contractors, LLC.

BUTLER, R.J
      Upon consideration of the motion filed by Defendant GFP Cement

Contractors, LLC (“GFP”) for reargument of this Court’s May 15, 2023 decision

granting   partial   summary      judgment     for   Plaintiff   Consolidated,     LLC

(“Consolidated”), it appears to the Court:

      1. GFP was unsuccessful in its defense of a motion by Consolidated for

summary judgment. GFP now asks the Court to revisit its ruling by way of a motion

for reargument pursuant to Rule 59(e).1 The Court assumes the reader’s familiarity

with the Court’s initial ruling and so only recounts the background relevant to

affirming that ruling.2

      2.    In their contract, the parties agreed that GFP would indemnify

Consolidated for “any and all damages” “arising out of, relating to, or resulting in

any way from” any “damage or loss” that is “claimed to result in whole or in part

from any actual [or] alleged” “act or omission of any of its. . . contractors.”3

      3.   GFP does not dispute that Commercial Ready Mix Products, Inc.

(“CRMP”) was its contractor and does not dispute that a CRMP cement truck rolled

over causing damage to the Owner’s property. And GFP has produced nothing that

contradicts an affidavit from Consolidated indicating that the Owner charged

1
  Super. Ct. Civ. R. 59(e).
2
  The Court directs the unfamiliar reader to Consolidated, LLC v. GFP Cement
Contractors, LLC, 2023 WL 3496188 (Del. Super. May 15, 2023).
3
  Ex. A to Compl. § M, D.I. 1.
                                          1
Consolidated $160,131.86 as compensation for the damage to the Owner’s property

resulting from the clean-up from the CRMP cement truck mishap.4

         4. GFP wants to litigate the bona fides of the Owner’s damage claim. It wants

to examine whether CRMP “caused” damage to the Owner’s property, or whether

Consolidated was somehow to blame for the cement truck tipping over.5

         5. If there was no indemnification agreement, a causation inquiry might be

necessary. If GFP had not agreed to compensate Consolidated for any and all claims,

whether actually or allegedly caused by its contractors, the Court might well have

denied Consolidated’s motion and required discovery on causation and damages.

But that was not the deal that GFP made with Consolidated.

         6. The Court adheres to its view that, once the Owner charged Consolidated

the remediation expense from the CRMP truck clean up, Consolidated suffered a

“damage or loss” as the result of an act by GFP’s contractor. If the Owner’s charge

was unwarranted or improper somehow, GFP may well have rights against the

Owner for causing GFP the burden of making Consolidated whole under the

indemnification clause. But that is not this case. GFP has proffered no evidence or

argument that the CRMP truck did not have a mishap, or that the Owner did not

withhold the expense out of its account payable to Consolidated. Neither has it

4
    Ex. A to Pl.’s Mot. for Summ. J., D.I. 24.
5
    Def.’s Mot. for Rearg. ¶ 6, D.I. 49.
                                            2
rebutted Consolidated’s affidavit and accompanying invoice from the Owner in the

amount of $160,131.86, representing the cost of clean-up. In short, GFP has not

placed a material fact in issue that would deny Consolidated summary judgment.

         7.   After the Court’s ruling on May 15, GFP advised the Court that

Consolidated never paid GFP under the contract and, moreover, the indemnification

obligation exceeds the value of the contract even if GFP had been paid. 6 The

indemnification provision, however, contained no limitation to the contract’s value

or to timely payment by Consolidated. Nor was any counterclaim or set-off pled

against Consolidated. These allegations are not relevant to the Court’s analysis and

thus the Court sees no reason to permit reargument.

         8. For the foregoing reasons, GFP’s motion for reargument is DENIED.

         IT IS SO ORDERED.

                                                 Charles E. Butler, Resident Judge

6
    Id. ¶ 10; Def.’s Mot. to Am. ¶ 7, D.I. 60.
                                             3