PacifiCorp v. SimplexGrinnell, LP

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FILED: May 15, 2013 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON PACIFICORP, an Oregon corporation, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. SIMPLEXGRINNELL, LP, a Delaware limited partnership, Defendant-Appellant. Multnomah County Circuit Court 090303793 A148167 Leslie M. Roberts, Judge. Argued and submitted on September 11, 2012. Charles C. Eblen, Missouri, argued the cause for appellant. With him on the briefs were Anna S. Raman and Preg O'Donnell & Gillett PLLC, and Shook, Hardy & Bacon LLP, Missouri. Bruce L. Campbell argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief were Jeffrey T. Sagalewicz and Miller Nash LLP. Before Schuman, Presiding Judge, and Wollheim, Judge, and Nakamoto, Judge. NAKAMOTO, J. Affirmed. 1 NAKAMOTO, J. 2 Defendant SimplexGrinnell, LP, appeals a supplemental judgment and 3 money award denying its motion for attorney fees, litigation expenses, and other 4 reasonable costs. Plaintiff PacifiCorp brought this action alleging that defendant, while 5 performing electrical work for plaintiff's power plant, breached its contract to perform 6 fire inspection services, which caused property damage and loss of business. The parties' 7 contract contained an indemnity clause in which defendant agreed to indemnify and 8 defend against any type of damage, "including attorneys' fees and/or litigation expenses, 9 brought or made against or incurred by" plaintiff. Defendant prevailed at trial and sought 10 attorney fees under ORS 20.096, which makes reciprocal a one-sided "prevailing party" 11 attorney fee provision. The trial court denied defendant's motion. Because the indemnity 12 clause did not grant a right to attorney fees in actions to enforce the contract between 13 plaintiff and defendant, we affirm. 14 The procedural facts are undisputed. Defendant agreed to perform certain 15 fire-system inspection services at plaintiff's Currant Creek Power Plant in Mona, Utah. 16 While defendant was performing inspection services, an explosion occurred at the plant, 17 causing plaintiff to sustain equipment damage and loss of power generation. Plaintiff 18 commenced this action for breach of contract, and the jury found that defendant had 19 breached its contract with plaintiff but had not caused plaintiff's damages. Following 20 entry of judgment, defendant moved for an award of attorney fees, prevailing-party fees, 21 litigation expenses, and other reasonable costs. Defendant argued that it was entitled to 1 1 attorney fees under ORS 20.096(1), which provides: 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "In any action or suit in which a claim is made based on a contract that specifically provides that attorney fees and costs incurred to enforce the provisions of the contract shall be awarded to one of the parties, the party that prevails on the claim shall be entitled to reasonable attorney fees in addition to costs and disbursements, without regard to whether the prevailing party is the party specified in the contract and without regard to whether the prevailing party is a party to the contract." 9 If a contract provision of the type specified provides for reasonable attorney fees for one 10 party and not the other party, then ORS 20.096 makes the attorney fee provision 11 reciprocal and provides both parties a right to attorney fees. 12 There was no provision in the parties' contract that expressly provided for 13 an award of attorney fees to the prevailing party in the event of an action, or other dispute 14 between the parties, for a breach of the contract. However, defendant contended that the 15 indemnification clause in the contract comes within ORS 20.096 and entitles plaintiff to 16 attorney fees against defendant, because the indemnification clause specifically states that 17 defendant agrees to indemnify plaintiff for all costs and damages, including attorney fees 18 arising out of the performance or nonperformance of the contract. That indemnification 19 clause provides: 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 "[Defendant] specifically and expressly agrees to indemnify, defend, and hold harmless [plaintiff], its officers, directors, employees and agents (hereinafter collectively 'Indemnitees') against and from any and all claims, demands, suits, losses, costs and damages of every kind and description, including attorneys' fees and/or litigation expenses, brought or made against or incurred by any of the Indemnitees to the extent resulting from or arising out of any negligence or wrongful acts of [defendant], its employees, agents, representatives or subcontractors of any tier, their employees, agents or representatives in the performance or nonperformance of [defendant's] obligations under this Contract or in any way related to this 2 1 2 Contract. The indemnity obligations under this Article shall include without limitation: 3 4 "a. Loss of or damage to any property of [plaintiff], [defendant] or third party; 5 6 7 "b. Bodily or personal injury to, or death of any person(s), including without limitation employees of [plaintiff], [defendant] or its subcontractors of any tier; and 8 9 10 "c. Claims arising out of Workers' Compensation, Unemployment Compensation, or similar such laws or obligations applicable to employees of [defendant] or its subcontractors of any tier. 11 12 13 "[Defendant's] indemnity obligation under this Article shall not extend to any liability caused by the sole negligence of any of the Indemnitees." 14 15 (Emphasis added.) Plaintiff countered that the indemnification clause applies only to attorney 16 fees that it may incur while defending third-party claims due to defendant's negligence 17 and does not grant plaintiff attorney fees from direct actions between plaintiff and 18 defendant. In other words, plaintiff argued, the indemnification clause is not a fee- 19 shifting provision. After hearing oral argument, the trial court ruled in plaintiff's favor, 20 denying defendant's request for attorney fees. 21 On appeal, defendant renews its argument that, because the indemnification 22 provision is a one-sided attorney fee provision, ORS 20.096 applies. Plaintiff counters 23 that the indemnification provision provides for attorney fees only when a third party files 24 a claim against plaintiff, not when the claims are between plaintiff and defendant. There 25 is no dispute that ORS 20.096 applies if the indemnification clause would have allowed 26 plaintiff to receive an award of attorney fees if plaintiff had prevailed on its breach of 3 1 contract claim against defendant. The only issue is whether the indemnification 2 provision contains a prevailing-party clause that would have allowed plaintiff to recover 3 attorney fees. If so, then the reciprocal attorney fee provision under ORS 20.096 applies, 4 and defendant is entitled to its fees. Therefore, our task is to determine whether the 5 indemnification clause grants plaintiff the right to recover attorney fees from defendant 6 when plaintiff successfully prevails on a breach of contract claim against defendant. 7 We review a party's entitlement to attorney fees based on the trial court's 8 interpretation of a contract for legal error. Squier Associates, Inc. v. Secor Investments, 9 LLC, 196 Or App 617, 622, 103 P3d 1129 (2004). When interpreting a disputed contract 10 provision, we follow the three-step analysis described in Yogman v. Parrott, 325 Or 358, 11 361-65, 937 P2d 1019 (1997). First, we examine the text of the disputed provision in the 12 context of the document as a whole, and if the text is unambiguous, our analysis ends. Id. 13 at 361; ORS 42.230.1 "Whether a provision is ambiguous is a question of law, as is the 14 meaning of an unambiguous provision." Williams v. RJ Reynolds Tobacco Co., 351 Or 15 368, 379, 271 P3d 103 (2011). Second, if the text is ambiguous, we examine extrinsic 16 evidence to determine the parties' intent, including the parties' practical construction of 17 the provision. Yogman, 325 Or at 363-64. Finally, if the first two steps do not resolve 1 ORS 42.230 provides: "In the construction of an instrument, the office of the judge is simply to ascertain and declare what is, in terms or in substance, contained therein, not to insert what has been omitted, or to omit what has been inserted; and where there are several provisions or particulars, such construction is, if possible, to be adopted as will give effect to all." 4 1 2 the ambiguity, we resort to appropriate maxims of construction. Id. at 364. We begin with whether the indemnity clause is ambiguous. "A contract 3 provision is ambiguous if it is susceptible to two or more plausible interpretations--that is, 4 two or more sensible and reasonable interpretations[.]" Emmert v. No Problem Harry, 5 Inc., 222 Or App 151, 157, 192 P3d 844 (2008). Accordingly, we examine each party's 6 interpretation to determine whether it is plausible. 7 Plaintiff's interpretation that the indemnity clause refers only to third-party 8 actions is a plausible construction. The services agreement between the parties contained 9 an indemnification clause, titled in bold, underlined capital letters, 10 "INDEMNIFICATION." As plaintiff notes, there is no express language purporting to 11 give either party a right to an attorney fee award in direct actions against each other. 12 Instead, the provision provides that defendant agrees to "indemnify, defend, and hold 13 harmless" plaintiff "against and from any and all claims, demands, suits, losses, costs and 14 damages of every kind and description, including attorneys' fees and/or litigation 15 expenses" incurred by plaintiff arising from the contract. That type of broad language 16 suggests that defendant is required to indemnify plaintiff against third-party claims. 17 In addition, we have held that a general indemnity clause contained in a 18 lease agreement, without express language regarding claims between the parties, was 19 insufficient to allow one contracting party to recover from the other. In Boise Joint 20 Venture v. Moore, 106 Or App 83, 86, 89, 807 P2d 707 (1991), the plaintiff leased a 21 motel building to the defendant and sought to recover its $600,000 investment in the 5 1 property when defendant discontinued lease payments. The plaintiff relied on the 2 indemnity clause in the lease agreement to argue that the defendant was required to 3 indemnify the plaintiff for its loss. The indemnity clause provided: 4 5 6 7 "Tenant's Covenants of Indemnity. Tenant further covenants and agrees to protect, indemnify and forever save harmless the Landlord and the Demised Premises of and from any and all judgments, loss, costs, charges and expenses whatsoever, including attorneys' fees, arising out of: 8 9 "A. Any breach or default by Tenant in the performance or observance of any of the covenants as contained herein." 10 Id. at 89 (emphasis in original). Applying Idaho law, we held that the indemnification 11 provision did not apply to claims between the parties, but only to third-party actions. Id. 12 Boise Joint Venture is instructive because the broad language in that 13 indemnity clause is similar to the broad language in the indemnity clause at issue in this 14 case. Both clauses expressly state that one party agrees to indemnify, hold harmless, and 15 defend the other party against "any and all" losses and costs, but does not expressly state 16 that the indemnification clause applies to direct actions between the parties. Thus, we 17 conclude that plaintiff's interpretation is plausible. 18 As for whether defendant's construction is also plausible, defendant relies 19 on broad language in the clause to argue that it is an indemnification provision that also 20 contains a fee-shifting provision for actions between the parties. Specifically, defendant 21 highlights the portion of the indemnification clause that allows plaintiff to recover "costs 22 and damages of every kind and description, including attorneys' fees and/or litigation 23 expenses, brought or made against or incurred by [any of the Indemnitees] * * * arising 6 1 out of any negligence or wrongful acts of [defendant] * * * in the performance or 2 nonperformance of [defendant]'s obligations under this Contract * * *." (Emphasis 3 added.) Defendant suggests that the clause allows plaintiff to be indemnified for 4 damages--in this case attorney fees and litigation expenses--arising out of defendant's 5 nonperformance of the contract. At first reading, it appears that defendant's interpretation 6 of the indemnification clause is a plausible one. However, upon closer examination, 7 particularly when applying defendant's interpretation of the indemnity clause to first- 8 party actions, defendant's interpretation leads to absurd results, making it unreasonable. 9 Applying defendant's construction to a direct action between the parties, the 10 indemnification clause requires defendant to "indemnify, defend, and hold harmless" 11 plaintiff "against and from any and all claims, demands, suits, losses, costs and damages 12 of every kind and description, including attorneys' fees and/or litigation expenses[.]" 13 (Emphasis added.) If defendant files a breach of contract action against plaintiff, then, 14 under defendant's interpretation of the terms of the indemnification clause, defendant 15 must "indemnify, defend, and hold harmless" plaintiff. In practical terms, regardless of 16 the merits or outcome of defendant's claims against plaintiff, defendant would be required 17 to indemnify plaintiff. Simply stated, defendant could not obtain relief on a first-party 18 claim against plaintiff. Defendant's interpretation leads to an unreasonable result, which 19 the parties likely did not intend. 20 21 Defendant also argues that plaintiff's construction cannot be reconciled with subparagraph (a). Subparagraph (a) states that defendant's indemnity obligations "shall 7 1 include without limitation * * * [l]oss or damages to any property of [plaintiff], 2 [defendant] or any third party[.]" Defendant contends that, because subparagraph (a) 3 distinguishes between plaintiff's, defendant's, and a third-party's property damage, the 4 provision contemplates actions between the parties. And, defendant adds, because 5 attorney fees are a form of damages, subparagraph (a) requires defendant to indemnify 6 plaintiff for its attorney fees. 7 We disagree with defendant that subparagraph (a) renders its construction 8 of the indemnity clause plausible. As we stated above, applying defendant's 9 interpretation to a direct action between the parties would lead to an absurd result. The 10 same holds true under subparagraph (a). If defendant filed a direct action against plaintiff 11 for loss of or damage to defendant's property, defendant would be required to "defend, 12 indemnify, and hold harmless" plaintiff for such damage, even if plaintiff bore significant 13 responsibility for causing the damage. Under subparagraph (a), defendant once again 14 would be on both sides of the legal action in a claim against plaintiff. That interpretation 15 is not sensible. 16 Plaintiff offers an explanation for subparagraph (a) that is plausible: 17 subparagraph (a), like subparagraphs (b) and (c), illustrates the breadth of defendant's 18 indemnity obligation. It covers damage to any property that may subject plaintiff to a 19 claim or loss, including, for example, plaintiff's property that is subject to a third-party 20 security agreement. In that case, if plaintiff leased equipment or purchased equipment 21 subject to a third-party lien and the equipment was damaged, defendant would be 8 1 required to indemnify plaintiff against claims by the third-party lienholder for the loss or 2 damage. In that scenario, the equipment would be "property of" plaintiff but subject to 3 litigation from a third-party lienholder. 4 We also observe that, as plaintiff points out, the contract is between 5 sophisticated parties and that if these business entities wanted a fee-shifting provision in 6 the contract for their disputes concerning the contract, they could and presumably would 7 have drafted one. In sum, we conclude that defendant's interpretation is not plausible.2 8 9 Accordingly, the indemnity clause is unambiguous. It does not apply to actions between the parties. And, because the indemnity clause would not entitle plaintiff 10 to recover attorney fees in this contract enforcement action, the reciprocity statute, ORS 11 20.096, does not apply. Therefore, the trial court correctly concluded that defendant is 12 not entitled to attorney fees. 13 Affirmed. 2 Because we conclude that the indemnity clause is unambiguous, we need not address defendant's argument that allegations in plaintiff's own complaint, in which plaintiff seeks attorney fees, are evidence of the parties' intent that the indemnity clause applies to direct claims. See Yogman, 325 Or at 364 (stating that the parties' conduct and practical construction are clues to the parties' intent). 9

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