PHIPPS, Presiding Judge.
This appeal from two summary judgment orders is the third appearance of this case before this court.
In American Management I, AMS and AMSE (hereinafter collectively "Pinnacle") appealed the trial court's grant of Fort Benning Family Communities LLC (hereinafter "FBFC") and Fort Belvoir Residential Communities, LLC's (hereinafter "FBRC") motion to enjoin Pinnacle from pursuing a Virginia action, which action it filed after it had filed in the instant (Georgia) suit an answer, counterclaim, motion to dismiss the action, and motion to dismiss the declaratory judgment claim related to the termination of the Fort Belvoir property management agreement ("PMA") under the doctrine of forum non conveniens. Pinnacle also appealed the trial court's denial of its motion to dismiss the declaratory judgment claim for forum non conveniens.
In American Management II, Pinnacle appealed the trial court's order (entered October 2011) which lifted the restriction in an earlier injunction that had prohibited FBRC from removing Pinnacle as property manager
While American Management II was on appeal, Pinnacle filed in the instant action an amended counterclaim, adding, inter alia, a claim against FBFC alleging breach of contract for wrongful termination; Pinnacle asserted that in June 2010, it was "physically... forced out ... as the property manager," and "others" were installed to perform its duties. Pinnacle later filed a "Second Amended Counterclaim," wherein it, among other things, added a claim against FBRC for breach of contract for wrongful termination.
FBFC and FBRC (hereinafter, collectively "the Owners") amended their complaint seven times, ultimately dropping their claims for declaratory judgment as to whether their PMAs with Pinnacle automatically terminated for cause, adding a claim for violation of Georgia's RICO statute, and maintaining their initial claims for breach of fiduciary duty, aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, conspiracy to commit fraud, and unjust enrichment.
On January 17, 2014, the Owners filed a motion for summary judgment, which they later amended after Pinnacle filed its second amended counterclaim; in an amended brief the Owners asserted that they were entitled to judgment as a matter law on four counts of Pinnacle's second amended counterclaim, which counts alleged a breach of contract for wrongful termination of both PMAs (two counts), the failure to pay AMSE for reimbursable expenses, and the failure to pay AMSE a certain fee for supervising a mold abatement project to completion and under budget. On January 24, 2014, Pinnacle filed a motion for partial summary judgment as to claims alleged in the Owners' seventh amended complaint, including those for breach of fiduciary duty, aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, conspiracy to commit fraud, RICO, and unjust enrichment.
On March 20, 2014, the trial court entered an order granting the Owners' motion for summary judgment as to Pinnacle's two wrongful termination claims, and denying the Owners' motion with regard to Pinnacle's claims based on the failure to pay AMSE the expenses and fee (as set out above). On the same day, in a separate order, the trial court denied Pinnacle's motion for partial summary judgment with regard to the Owners' complaint. It is from these two orders that Pinnacle appeals.
On appeal, Pinnacle contends that the trial court erred by: (1) granting summary judgment in favor of the Owners as to AMSE's counterclaim for wrongful termination of the PMAs; (2) failing to apply Virginia's economic loss rule to bar FBRC's tort claims; (3) denying Pinnacle's motion for summary judgment as to the Owners' claim for breach of fiduciary duty; (4) denying Pinnacle's motion for summary judgment as to the Owners' claim for aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty; (5) denying Pinnacle's motion for summary judgment as to FBRC's claims under Georgia's RICO statute; and (6) denying Pinnacle's motion for summary judgment as to the Owners' unjust enrichment claim.
1. To support its contention that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of the Owners on Pinnacle's counterclaim alleging breach of contract for wrongful termination of the PMAs, Pinnacle advances several arguments. Pinnacle argues that: (a) statements in affidavits upon which the trial court relied "raised myriad issues of disputed facts"; (b) the Owners failed to give Pinnacle notice of an alleged default and an opportunity to cure any default, as required by the PMAs; (c) the Owners' termination of the PMAs was based on an allegation of fraud, rather than on a determination of fraud (which determination was for a jury to make); and to the extent that the trial court relied on "misconduct" as a basis to terminate the PMAs, that term is not defined in the PMAs and could not serve as a basis for the trial court's summary judgment ruling; (d) because the Owners "had discretion over
(a) Pinnacle argues that statements in affidavits upon which the trial court relied "raised myriad issues of disputed facts," precluding summary judgment.
The PMAs provided that AMSE would receive an annual base fee (plus reimbursement of certain expenses) as well as the opportunity to earn a property management incentive fee. AMSE's incentive fee was based on various factors, including its timeliness (evaluated on a "pass/fail" basis) in responding to resident requests for maintenance; the requests were entered by Pinnacle as "work orders" into a certain database utilized by Pinnacle. An investigation undertaken at Pinnacle's behest revealed that although managers at Fort Belvoir did not direct employees to enter false reports into the database, several Pinnacle associates had sometimes done so. The investigator's report read:
In moving for summary judgment, the Owners presented sworn affidavits and excerpts of deposition testimony of former AMSE employees at Fort Belvoir and Fort Benning purporting to show that they admitted to falsifying work order data to improve or increase "pass percentage," which resulted in overpayments of management incentive fees. Pinnacle responded by filing a brief opposing the Owners' summary judgment motion and a separate response to the Owners' statement of theories of recovery and material fact. In the latter document, Pinnacle disputed allegations of employee misconduct by pointing to other evidence in the record purporting to show conflicts in the employees' statements. In neither its brief opposing the Owners' summary judgment motion, nor in a supplemental response brief later filed, did Pinnacle attempt to counter the misconduct evidence adduced by the Owners, instead limiting its response to reasons
On appeal, Pinnacle argues that evidence of the following precluded a grant of summary judgment to the Owners: employees made conflicting statements regarding whether they had falsified data or were instructed by supervisors to falsify data; although some employees testified that certain supervisors had instructed them to change data inputs, the accused supervisors denied the allegations; and some employees had credibility issues. In its order granting (partial) summary judgment to the Owners, the trial court referenced testimony of the following three former Pinnacle employees, and concluded that "[t]hese unrebutted admissions conclusively establish that Pinnacle employees engaged in intentional misconduct."
(i) Wanda Gotay. The Owners attached to their motion for summary judgment an affidavit Gotay had executed and an excerpt of Gotay's deposition testimony. The affidavit showed that Gotay had worked for Pinnacle at Fort Belvoir. The deposition excerpt included her testimony that she had falsified work orders, "changing fails to passes," by "selecting a time that [she] would make up that fell within the pass range for that specific type of work order." Gotay testified that in addition to changing "fails" to "passes," she would, at the direction of a supervisor, "close out" work orders she believed had not actually been completed.
In its appeal brief, Pinnacle points out that in Gotay's deposition, Gotay admitted that (prior to the deposition) she had been interviewed by Pinnacle's investigator and at that time denied having changed date and time information.
By their own terms, the PMAs terminated upon the requisite acts committed by Pinnacle or its "employees" or agents. Therefore, whether Gotay's data was falsified at the behest of a supervisor was immaterial, and any conflict in the evidence regarding that issue could not work to preclude summary judgment.
"On appeal we review the trial court's grant of summary judgment de novo to determine whether the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, demonstrates a genuine issue of material fact."
(ii) Denise White. White, a former Pinnacle employee at Fort Benning, testified that she changed thousands of work orders "from fails to passes," without knowing whether the work requested had in fact been completed within the timeframes set by the PMAs for their completion. White testified that after reviewing a "pass/fail report," she would "click on the item that showed as failed[,] ... pull that work order up and change the dates, close it out again, and it would pass."
Pinnacle rebuts this evidence by pointing to White's testimony that she sometimes changed the priority of a work order if, for instance, a call "come through as an emergency but yet it was just a frame wall or a hole in the wall or a minor issue, ... I would change [the priority of the work order] from emergency to ... urgent or routine." But White's testimony that she changed the priority of a work order did not contradict her testimony that she changed an entry from "fail" to "pass." "To the contrary, it is, at best, a mere inconclusive inference ... insufficient to get [Pinnacle] by [the Owners'] motion for summary judgment."
Pinnacle further asserts that because the supervisor who White testified had instructed her to falsify data denied White's accusations, and because White purportedly "gave conflicting accounts of why she left Pinnacle, and may have harbored a grudge against [Pinnacle]," summary judgment was precluded. Pinnacle argues that evidence of the foregoing "raises a question of bias and also places [White's] credibility at issue." Pinnacle posits: "The material fact is therefore contradicted because the believability of her
Pinnacle misconstrues Harding. Read in context, the foregoing principle applied and precluded summary judgment because conflicting or contradictory evidence went to a material issue in that case.
(iii) Vonnie Bussey. Bussey, a former Pinnacle employee at Fort Benning, testified that she changed work orders that "had failed on it" to "pass," by "chang[ing] the time and date," knowing that the information she was entering was inaccurate.
As with White, Pinnacle asserts that because the supervisor whom Bussey testified had instructed her to falsify data denied the accusations, and because issues as to Bussey's credibility allegedly existed, summary judgment was precluded. For the same reasons given in Division 1(a)(ii), these assertions lack merit.
(b) Pinnacle asserts that division (C) of Paragraph 18.1 of the PMAs required the Owners to give notice of and an opportunity to cure any alleged default, and that the Owners failed to do so. We do not agree that 18.1(C) contained a notice and cure provision.
Section 18 of each PMA is entitled "Termination," and is divided into seven paragraphs (18.1, 18.2, 18.3, 18.4, 18.5, 18.6, and 18.7). Paragraph 18.1 of the Fort Belvoir PMA pertinently reads as follows.
Paragraph 18.1 of the Fort Benning PMA is similar to Paragraph 18.1 of the Fort Belvoir PMA. That paragraph in either PMA identifies the occurrence of five categories of events that "shall terminate" the PMA and "all obligations of the parties [there]under shall cease"; either paragraph enumerates under the "Default" category, "theft, fraud, or other knowing or intentional misconduct by Manager or its employees or agents" as occurrences that each constitute an event of default.
Pinnacle argues that the notice and cure provisions of division (A) are imputed to division (C), stating "[t]he events of `default' in C are an extension of 18.1(A), identifying additional types of default. Likewise, the language of C does not exclude notice and cure. The two clauses must be read together." The Owners disagree, stating "[t]he parties bargained that some of the[] terminating events contain notice and cure rights," but that the "most serious of the[] terminating
Under neither PMA is a "default" synonymous with a "breach" of the contract terms. Under division (A) of Paragraph 18.1, a default is defined as "a material breach of this Agreement" and includes the additional elements of notice and timely attempts to cure.
(c) Pinnacle claims that the Owners' termination of the PMAs was based on an allegation of fraud, rather than on a determination of fraud, which was a matter for a jury. Pinnacle further claims that to the extent that the trial court relied on "misconduct," as a basis to terminate the PMAs, that term was not defined in the PMAs, and thus, could not have served as a basis for the trial court's summary judgment determination.
The ground upon which the Owners moved for summary judgment, and upon which the trial court ruled, was "knowing or intentional misconduct," not fraud. The trial court made no finding in its order concerning fraud. Therefore, there is nothing for our review in that regard. Pinnacle's claim that the word misconduct was not defined in the PMAs and thus could not have served as a basis for the trial court's summary judgment determination also fails, inasmuch as Pinnacle did not raise that argument below, and cannot raise it for the first time on appeal.
(d) Pinnacle claims that the default provision was not automatically triggered in the event of fraud, arguing that the Owners "had discretion over whether to terminate the PMAs in the event of fraud; that is, they could elect the remedy or waive it."
Regarding whether the default provision was "automatically triggered" in this case, Section 18 of each PMA is entitled "Termination," and Pinnacle does not point to any other section that provides a method by which either PMA terminated. Paragraph 18.1 of each PMA states that "[n]otwithstanding" the provisions of the preceding paragraphs, "this Agreement shall terminate in any event and all obligations of the parties hereunder shall cease ... upon the occurrence of" certain specified events including — pursuant to subparagraph (C)(6) of the Fort Belvoir PMA, and subparagraph (C)(4)
Pinnacle argues that Section 23 of each PMA reserved what Pinnacle believed to be "every other remedy available in contract and at law," and that therefore, the Owners had discretion over whether to terminate the PMAs upon the occurrence of a default. Section 23 is entitled "Rights Cumulative: No Waiver," and the first sentence reads:
No right or remedy was reserved to the Owners in either 18.1(C)(6) of the Fort Belvoir PMA or 18.1(C)(4) of the Fort Benning PMA. Instead, those provisions mandated that the occurrence of specified events (theft, fraud, or other knowing or intentional misconduct by Pinnacle or its employees or agents) "shall terminate" each PMA. And Pinnacle does not point to any language in Section 23 that confers upon a party discretion whether to adhere to mandatory provisions of the PMAs.
Nothing in any of the cases relied upon by Pinnacle leads to a contrary conclusion. In Holden v. Smith,
In Holden, this court determined that the remedy provision of the contract referred to "`the exercise of the right of forfeiture,' implying the vendor may choose not to exercise the right. It also provides that the sellers may pursue remedies other than forfeiture `contemporaneously or otherwise,' implying the seller may choose another remedy in lieu of forfeiture."
Nothing in Eagle Glen Unit Owners Assn. v. Lee,
Mendel v. Pinkard
Unlike in this case, the controlling documents in the cases upon which Pinnacle relies conferred upon a party discretion to act.
(e) Pinnacle contends that an "implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing" applied to the Owners' termination of the PMAs, that it was for a jury to decide whether the Owners had exercised their purported duties under said covenant "in good faith," and that there was "ample evidence [the Owners] did not act in good faith." Pinnacle argued before the trial court: "The duty of Good Faith and Fair Dealing requires that you examine the acts taken with discretion to determine whether they were arbitrary or egregious."
But Pinnacle failed to raise a viable defense of breach of a duty of good faith and fair dealing where, as determined in Division 1(d), the pertinent termination language of either PMA was mandatory, and not discretionary.
(f) Pinnacle contends that the trial court erred by ignoring "limits [put] on [the Owners] imposed by the Operating Agreements
The parties entering into the Operating Agreement of Clark Pinnacle Belvoir LLC were Clark Belvoir LLC and Pinnacle Belvoir LLC; the parties entering into the Operating Agreement of Clark Pinnacle Benning LL were Clark Benning LLC and Pinnacle Benning LLC.
Pinnacle argues that "Clark Realty, the Clark Manager of Clark Pinnacle Belvoir and Clark Pinnacle Benning" violated provisions of the operating agreements by failing to obtain the vote and consent of the Pinnacle Manager before removing Pinnacle and choosing a replacement, and consequently the Owners' "removal of Pinnacle as property manager violated the Operating Agreements of Clark Pinnacle Belvoir and Clark Pinnacle Benning, [and] is a wrongful termination." But Pinnacle did not assert this argument in the trial court.
For instance, in its brief opposing the Owners' summary judgment motion, and in its supplemental response brief filed later, Pinnacle asserted that violation of the operating agreements showed that the Owners had failed to exercise good faith, which duty we determined in Division (1)(e)
Each PMA states that it is the "entire agreement between Owners and Manager with respect to the management and operation of the Project." And Pinnacle failed to show that the Owners breached any obligations they owed to Pinnacle by allegedly violating provisions of operating agreements to which neither the Owners nor Pinnacle were parties.
(g) Pinnacle contends that the PMAs' "insurance clause precludes automatic termination." We will not consider this argument, as Pinnacle did not assert it before the trial court.
2. Pinnacle contends that the trial court misconstrued Virginia law and erred by "failing to apply Virginia's economic loss rule to bar FBRC's tort claims" alleging breach of fiduciary duty, aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, and fraud.
"The `economic loss rule' generally provides that a contracting party who suffers purely economic losses must seek his remedy in contract and not in tort."
Pinnacle claims that "FBRC ... elicited no evidence of a breach of a common law duty that would exist independently of the contract," but that "[n]evertheless, the Trial Court found that there was a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Pinnacle owed a fiduciary duty independent of the contractual relationship." The Owners posited, "this is not a breach of contract case," i.e., that the claims alleging fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, and aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty arise from breaches of common law duties, and not breaches of contracts (the PMAs). Thus, the Owners assert, the trial court correctly ruled that the tort claims were not barred. Applying Virginia's economic loss rule to these claims, regarding the Fort Belvoir PMA, the trial court denied Pinnacle's summary judgment motion as to these claims.
(a) Breach of fiduciary duty. In their claim alleging breach of fiduciary duty, the Owners alleged that "under the Belvoir PMA, AMSE acted as an agent and fiduciary of FBRC." The Owners asserted that "in its capacity as an agent and fiduciary of FBFC and of FBRC, AMSE was obligated to, among other things," do the following: manage the Projects by selecting vendors to perform repairs, maintenance, and other services; negotiate rates with vendors; pay vendors for work performed; ensure the various vendors were hired and paid in a commercially reasonable and economical and honest manner; accurately report data in connection with its response to resident work orders; and obtain insurance on behalf of and for the benefit of the Owners. The Owners claimed that "[i]n performing all of these duties, AMSE owed FBFC and FBRC the highest duty known to the law, could not engage in any self dealing, and was required at all times to put the interests of FBFC and FBRC above its own interests." The Owners argued before the trial court, "the Pinnacle defendants owe[d] common law fiduciary duties to [us]. They are our agent who controlled [our] money and who had authority to act on behalf of the agent and bind the agent under certain circumstances."
The Owners claimed, however, that AMSE breached its fiduciary duties to them in the following ways: causing the Owners to pay vendors above-market rates for products and services, to pay for vendors' double-billing, and to pay vendors for services that were not performed; failing to report to the Owners information known to Pinnacle regarding allegations and facts of bribery, kickbacks, inflated rates, and double-billing between Pinnacle's employees and vendors; covering up conduct of bribery, kickbacks, inflated rates, and double-billing between Pinnacle's employees and vendors; reporting to the Owners false work order response times, which caused Pinnacle to be paid a higher incentive fee than it was entitled to receive; and causing the Owners to "pay fraudulently inflated insurance rates and related fees." The trial
"A fiduciary relationship exists in all cases when special confidence has been reposed in one who in equity and good conscience is bound to act in good faith and with due regard for the interests of the one reposing the confidence."
The alleged fiduciary duties the Owners claimed were breached related to certain provisions of the PMAs. For instance, Sections 8 and 9 of each PMA "authorized" AMSE to "hire, supervise, discharge and pay all personnel reasonably necessary to be employed in the management, maintenance and operation ... from Owners' funds"; Section 9 "authorized" AMSE to "negotiate contracts for non-recurring items of expense," not to exceed a specified amount; Section 15 entitled AMSE to be paid an incentive fee calculated on the basis of work performance information AMSE reported; and pursuant to Section 12, AMSE "shall obtain and to keep in force" insurance coverage through a "Master Insurance Program."
Notwithstanding the fact that each PMA stated that it was the "entire agreement between Owners and Manager with respect to the management and operation of the Project," and that "[n]othing contained in this agreement shall be construed as creating a partnership, joint venture, or any other relationship between the parties to this Agreement," if any fiduciary relationship existed between the Owners and AMSE, the relationship was with respect to the aforestated matters, and but for the existence of the PMAs, AMSE would not have owed FBRC fiduciary duties. "Any fiduciary duty allegedly breached in this case existed solely because of the contractual relationship between [FBRC] and [AMSE].... Therefore, we hold that [FBRC] failed to assert a valid [tort] claim for breach of fiduciary duties."
(b) Aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty. In Division 2(a),
(c) Fraud. The allegations of fraud include, in part, the same misconduct alleged in the breach of fiduciary duty claim; and the Owners further alleged that Pinnacle "acted with scienter. By making affirmative misrepresentations of some facts, and by failing to disclose and/or concealing other facts which they had a duty to reveal, [Pinnacle] intended to induce ... FBRC to continue its contractual relationship with AMSE under the Belvoir Property Management Agreement."
In Richmond Metropolitan Auth. v. McDevitt Street Bovis, Inc.,
In this case, Pinnacle has not connected the alleged misrepresentations to any duty or obligation specifically required by the Fort Belvoir PMA, except with regard to the allegations of a breach for causing the Owners to pay fraudulently inflated insurance rates and related fees. Because those allegations relate to Pinnacle's obligation under the PMA to obtain and to keep in force insurance coverage through a Master Insurance Program, the Owners failed to assert a valid tort claim for fraud in that regard.
3. Pinnacle contends that the trial court erred by denying its motion for summary judgment on the Owners' claim for breach of fiduciary duty regarding the Fort Benning PMA. We disagree.
The allegations of breach of fiduciary duty under the Fort Benning PMA are the same as the allegations of breach of fiduciary duty under the Fort Belvoir PMA. The trial court applied Georgia law to FBFC's breach of fiduciary duty claim regarding the Fort Benning PMA. Under Georgia law,
Pinnacle asserts that, pursuant to Georgia's Brokerage Relationships in Real Estate Transactions Act (the "Act"),
Pursuant to OCGA § 10-6A-3 (2) of the Act, "`Broker' means any individual or entity issued a broker's real estate license by the Georgia Real Estate Commission pursuant to Chapter 40 of Title 43." Pinnacle has not pointed to any evidence showing that AMSE met this statutory definition in order to bring AMSE under the Act.
Next, Pinnacle concedes that "[t]he PMAs create[d] an expressly limited agency in AMSE," but asserts that "an agent is a fiduciary only with respect to the matters within the scope of his agency," and the Owners "have not alleged a breach of AMSE's limited fiduciary duty with respect to any of its four agency powers."
4. Pinnacle contends that the trial court erred in denying its motion for summary judgment on the Owners' claim that it aided and abetted a breach of fiduciary duty to the Owners.
(a) We need not address this contention with regard to the Fort Belvoir PMA, as we addressed that issue in Division (2)(b)
(b) Concerning the Fort Benning PMA, because AMSE was not a stranger to either the contract at issue or to the business relationship (between it and the Owners) giving rise to and underpinning the contract (the PMA), AMSE could not be liable for aiding and abetting a breach of any fiduciary duties.
White v. Shamrock Bldg. Systems,
Accordingly, we reverse the trial court's order to the extent that it denied summary judgment on this claim regarding the Fort Benning PMA.
5. Pinnacle contends that the trial court erred by denying Pinnacle's motion for summary judgment as to FBRC's claims against Pinnacle under Georgia's RICO
Pinnacle contends that "Georgia's RICO statute does not reach the alleged conduct at Fort Belvoir." Pinnacle asserts that the choice of law for the RICO claim, which "sounds in tort," is determined by the rule of lex loci delicti, which, with regard to the RICO claim asserted by FBRC against Pinnacle, would be Virginia, as "FBRC sustained any injury in Virginia and certainly not in Georgia."
The Owners respond that the public policy exception to the rule of lex loci delicti applies. They argue that "Virginia has no civil remedy for racketeering," and that this "radically dissimilar" difference in the form of redress in Virginia law compared to Georgia law contravenes Georgia's established public policy to condemn racketeering and to "provide any civil claim for a private plaintiff harmed by racketeering." The Owners assert that "[t]o allow similar fraudulent misconduct — by the same companies and set of executives — to receive disparate legal treatment, makes no legal sense and runs contrary to Georgia policy."
But Pinnacle argues that it would be improper to permit FBRC to assert against Pinnacle a claim under the Georgia RICO statute when FBRC has no connection with Georgia, and Pinnacle has no connection to Georgia as it concerns FBRC's RICO allegations regarding the Fort Belvoir PMA. The appellate record supports Pinnacle's assertions that FBRC is a Delaware limited liability company with an office in Maryland; Clark Pinnacle Belvoir LLC (FBRC's managing member) is a Virginia limited liability company; Fort Belvoir is located in Virginia; AMSE is a Washington limited liability company; the Belvoir PMA states that its execution, interpretation and performance shall in all respects be controlled and governed by the laws of the state of the location of the project, which is Virginia; there is no evidence that FBRC was a victim of a crime or tort in Georgia; and there is no evidence that any criminal or tortious conduct by Pinnacle employees in Georgia resulted in injury to FBRC outside of Georgia.
The law that all claims alleged must bear a significant relationship to the forum state for the law of the forum state to apply is clear.
None of the cases relied upon by the Owners involved the constitutional limitations on choice of law set forth above; and in any event, in each of those cases, unlike here, it was clear that Georgia had significant contacts to the claims asserted, thus supporting the state's interest in applying Georgia law.
We cannot determine from the order whether the trial court, in its conclusion that the Georgia RICO statute applied because Virginia did not have a civil RICO statute, considered whether Georgia had a significant contact to FBRC's RICO claim such that the choice of Georgia law was not arbitrary or unfair.
6. Pinnacle contends that the trial court erred by denying its motion for summary judgment as to the Owners' unjust enrichment claim.
The Owners assert that the PMAs "do not govern the frauds and schemes executed by Pinnacle"; the Owners' claim for unjust enrichment is predicated on evidence they assert showed that Pinnacle "tricked the Owners into paying them millions of dollars through years of extra-contractual fraud and lies[,] ... [including] secret fees, fraudulently inflated compensation, and kickbacks from vendors in exchange for passing fraudulently inflated costs on to the Owners." In denying Pinnacle's summary judgment motion as to this claim, the trial court ruled that "[b]ecause unjust enrichment ... [is] [a] common-law claim[], Georgia choice-of-law rules require application of Georgia law to [the Owners'] unjust enrichment ... claim[ ]." The trial court further ruled that, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party (the Owners) on summary judgment, genuine issues of material facts exist and the claim should be presented to a jury.
Pinnacle does not dispute the trial court's application of Georgia law to this claim, particularly regarding the Fort Belvoir PMA. Rather, Pinnacle contends that the Owners' claim for unjust enrichment fails as a matter of law because of the existence of express contracts, and because the Owners
Because there was no contract between the Owners and AMS (which entity was not a party to either PMA), the trial court's denial of summary judgment regarding the Owners' claim against AMS for unjust enrichment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part, and case remanded with direction.
DOYLE, C.J., concurs.
BOGGS, J., concurs in judgment only.