Court Opinion

ID: 1048437
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-08 02:59:55.560704+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:52:02.084889
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                           AT KNOXVILLE
                                 August 31, 2010 Session

   RAY BELL CONSTRUCTION CO., INC. v. STATE OF TENNESSEE,
        TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

                        Appeal from the Claims Commission
                No. T20071215-1    William O. Shults, Commissioner

               No. E2009-01803-COA-R3-CV - Filed November 24, 2010
Dall. M ICHAEL S WINEY, J., dissenting.

              I respectfully dissent from the majority’s decision to affirm the judgment of the
Claims Commission. I believe the Claims Commission erred in finding a latent ambiguity
in the contract, and as this was the purported basis for the Claims Commission’s decision,
I would reverse the decision of the Claims Commission and grant judgment to the Tennessee
Department of Transportation.

               I agree with most of the majority’s Opinion, specifically as regarding the law
as to what constitutes a latent ambiguity and when parol evidence can be admitted. My
disagreement with the majority is that the contract here is crystal clear as to Ray Bell
Construction Company, Inc.’s (“RBCC”) claim to incentive payments, and there is no
ambiguity, latent or otherwise, in the parties’ contract. The underlying theme throughout the
Claims Commission’s decision is that it would be unfair to RBCC not to allow this incentive
payment. Such a perceived “unfairness” is not a sufficient basis for the Claims Commission
or this Court to rewrite the parties’ contract.

              As stated by the majority, Special Provision 108(B) of the parties’ contract
thoroughly addresses liquidated damages, incentive payments, and disincentive payments.
As quoted in the majority’s Opinion, Special Provision 108(B) reads as follows:
              The project shall be completed in its entirety on or before
              December 15, 2006.

              For each calendar day prior to December 15, 2006, that all work
              in the original contract has been completed and all lanes are
              opened to the free, safe and unrestricted passage of traffic, an
              incentive payment of ten thousand dollars ($10,000) per day
              shall be made to the contractor as an incentive. However, the
              maximum amount of incentive payments shall not exceed two
              million five hundred thousand dollars ($2,500,000).

              For each day after December 15, 2006, that all work in the
              original contract is not completed, the sum of ten thousand
              dollars ($10,000) per day shall be deducted from monies due the
              Contractor as a disincentive. The amount of monies that may be
              deducted as a disincentive shall be unlimited except that the
              disincentive may be waived if the working time is extended in
              accordance with the Standard Specifications.

              ...The December 15, 2006, completion date may be extended in
              accordance with the Standard Specifications, however, no
              incentive payment will be made if work is not completed in its
              entirety by December 15, 2006.

              Also of importance, as noted by the majority’s Opinion, the parties’ contract
contains a specific precedence clause that provides that the Supplemental Specifications,
such as Special Provision 108(B), control over the Standard Specifications. Therefore, there
is no dispute but that a Supplemental Specification such as Special Provision 108(B)
involved here controls over any Standard Specification.

              I believe the dispositive language is the language from that portion of the
Special Provision 108(B) that reads as follows:

              The December 15, 2006, completion date may be extended in
              accordance with the Standard Specifications, however, no
              incentive payment will be made if work is not completed in its
              entirety by December 15, 2006.

               I believe this language is clear and in no way contains any latent ambiguity.
Rather, the language is crystal clear in its statement that even though the December 15, 2006,

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completion date may be extended in accordance with the Standard Specifications, RBCC was
to receive no incentive payments unless “the work is completed in its entirety by December
15, 2006.” The extension of the December 15, 2006, completion date may well have
protected RBCC from any disincentive payments under the contract as Special Provision
108(B) did not provide that even if the completion date was extended beyond December 15,
2006, disincentive payments still would be owed if the work was not completed by December
15, 2006. Making it even clearer, Special Provision 108(B) provides that disincentive
payments are unlimited “except that the disincentive may be waived if the working time is
extended in accordance with the Standard Specifications.” There is no comparable language
stating that the December 15, 2006 deadline for incentive payments may be waived if the
working time is extended in accordance with the Standard Specifications. Special Provision
108(B) instead says RBCC will not receive any incentive payment if the work is not
completed by December 15, 2006, even if the completion date is extended.

               The very contract provision that creates incentive payments, Special Provision
108(B), is the very contract provision that says unequivocally that “no incentive payment will
be made if work is not completed in its entirety by December 15, 2006”, and this is so even
if the December 15, 2006 completion date is extended.

               As the contract is clear and there is no latent ambiguity, I believe it was error
to allow any parol evidence. It is my opinion that the contract between these parties should
have been enforced as written as it is not the duty of the Claims Commission or the courts
to rewrite a contract that it believes to be either unfair or to contain provisions that were a
result of an “oversight.” While it might seem to us to be the equitable thing to do, our job
is to enforce the clear contract as agreed between the parties.

              It is my opinion there was no latent ambiguity, and it was, therefore, error to
allow parol evidence. I, respectfully, believe that parol evidence was used not to explain a
latent ambiguity but rather to create a latent ambiguity where none existed. I would reverse
the Claims Commission.

                                                    _________________________________
                                                    D. MICHAEL SWINEY, JUDGE

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