THOMAS C. WHEELER, Judge.
Plaintiffs, International Industrial Park, Inc., KYDDLF and RDLFGFT No. 1 LLC, and Rancho Vista Del Mar, are landowners in the Otay Mesa area of San Diego County, California. Plaintiffs (or "Landowners") contend that the Government breached a contract in which it promised to build a road across Plaintiffs' property. During the negotiations over the contract and the post-contract dispute, the Landowners became embroiled in litigation in this Court over the Government's use of their land to patrol the border between the United States and Mexico.
The parties entered into a contract, called "Department of Homeland Security Right-of-Entry for Construction" ("the contract" or "ROE-C") on August 6, 2008. The contract provided for the Landowners to give the Government (1) a one-year right-of-entry to construct two (eastern and western) access roads across the Landowners' property to the border, in exchange for the payment of one Dollar and (2) an easement along the western access road in exchange for the permanent improvement of that road to "County specifications standards." The ROE-C also provided for the Government to extinguish a preexisting easement that the Landowners conveyed to it, which no longer would be necessary to patrol the border in light of the new arrangement. The contract included an exhibit ("Exhibit 1"), which mapped the alignment of the improved road and listed the requirements for a "County specifications" road in an inset box. Mr. David Wick, Plaintiffs' agent, signed the ROE-C on July 31, 2008. Mr. John Baker, the contracting officer for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers ("the Corps") and Chief of the Real Estate Division for the Albuquerque District, signed it on August 6, 2008.
In the fall of 2008, Ms. Cook and Mr. Wick entered into various contentious discussions concerning the agreed scope of construction for the road improvements. Ms. Cook asserts that during the course of those discussions, Mr. Wick said he no longer wanted the alignment set forth in the contract. In contrast, Mr. Wick merely remembers suggesting a new alignment after Ms. Cook said the Government did not have the budget to meet all specifications under the original alignment. After December 2008, the parties began negotiating a new alignment but never reached an agreement.
On August 14, 2009, Government officials met with Mr. Wick and told him that the Government would not perform under the contract. On August 24, 2009, Mr. Wick wrote a letter demanding performance. The Government never responded. Plaintiffs filed a complaint in this Court on October 14, 2009.
The Government initially challenged this Court's jurisdiction over Plaintiffs' claims, arguing that the Contract Disputes Act ("CDA"), 41 U.S.C. §§ 601-613 (2006) (current version at 41 U.S.C. §§ 7101-7109), covered the August 6, 2008 agreement, and that Plaintiffs did not comply with CDA jurisdictional prerequisites. The Court denied Defendant's motion to dismiss on October 12, 2010, holding that the CDA did not apply to the ROE-C.
In the instant matter, the parties dispute the scope of the road improvement obligation created under the ROE-C. Defendant argues that the contract created no construction obligation. Further, even if it did create a construction obligation, Defendant argues that the contract is not enforceable because there was no meeting of the minds as to the obligation's scope. On the one hand, the Landowners believe that the improved road has to meet all the requirements of a public road, which could be dedicated to San Diego County. On the other hand, the Government believes that the scope of improvement is limited to the specific elements listed in the inset box of Exhibit 1 to the contract. Finally, Defendant contends that the Government is not in breach of its obligation because the Landowners rescinded or waived their rights under the ROE-C. Defendant also contends that equitable estoppel justifies relief for the Government because the Landowners' actions materially prejudiced it.
The Court held a four-day trial in Washington, D.C. from April 12 through April 15, 2011. During trial, the Court received the testimony of twelve witnesses, three of whom were experts. The parties filed post-trial briefs on June 14, 2011 and reply briefs on July 14, 2011. The Court heard closing arguments on August 9, 2011.
In brief summary, the Court finds that the parties signed an enforceable contract with a construction obligation on August 6, 2008. However, the scope of road improvement is limited to the requirements actually specified in the contract, in the inset box of Exhibit 1. The record does not demonstrate that Plaintiffs ever rescinded or waived their rights under the contract, nor does equitable estoppel justify relief for the Government. Plaintiffs are entitled to damages for the cost of constructing an improved road consistent with the elements specifically listed in the inset box. Based upon the estimation of Defendant's expert, the Landowners therefore are entitled to $1,708,185 in damages.
Plaintiffs in this case, International Industrial Park, Inc., KYDDLF and RDLFGFT No. 1 LLC, and Rancho Vista Del Mar are owners of parcels of land in the Otay Mesa area of San Diego County, California. (Stip. ¶ 1-3.) Plaintiffs are owned by the De La Fuente family of San Diego, California. (Stip. ¶ 4.) Plaintiffs International Industrial Park, Inc. and Rancho Vista Del Mar, as well as several other entities owned by the De La Fuente family, brought suit in this Court in 2006 seeking just compensation for the Office of Border Patrol's ("Border Patrol's") taking of their property.
While litigation over the takings claim was ongoing, the parties began to discuss the possibility of the Landowners granting the Government an easement in exchange for an improved road.
In mid-2007, Ms. Cook, the attorney representing the Government during the takings litigation, entered into discussions with Mr. De La Fuente about the possibility of supplementing the BLM easement. (Cook, Tr. 554-56.) The Government would construct an improved road along a safer and more functional route in exchange for an easement along that route.
Mr. Wick and Mr. Pena met in October 2007 to discuss a route that would run perpendicular to the Donovan State Prison, a route which they called "Alignment 1." (Wick, Tr. 219-20);
As Mr. Wick negotiated access across Plaintiffs' property with Mr. Pena and Ms. Cook, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection ("CBP") identified a portion of the border with Mexico within the San Ysidro Mountains, referred to as "the A-1" segment, for the erection of several miles of pedestrian fencing. (Stip. ¶ 14; Flossman, Tr. 522.) The Border Patrol is the law enforcement arm of the CBP, which itself is a component of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. (Stip. ¶¶ 5-6.) The Border Patrol was responsible for identifying areas across the border, like the A-1 segment, where there was a need for "persistent impedance." (Flossman, Tr. 520, 522.) The Facilities Management and Engineering Organization ("FMNE"), another component of the CBP, is an organization that provides solutions for the Border Patrol once it has identified a requirement. (Flossman, Tr. 517-20.) The FMNE's solution for providing persistent impedance along the A-1 segment was to erect a pedestrian fence. (Flossman, Tr. 519-20.)
The A-1 segment is part of the "Pedestrian Fence 225" (or "PF-225") project. (Flossman, Tr. 521-22.) The PF-225 project, itself a part of the broader "Border Infrastructure System," involves the erection of 225 miles of pedestrian fence and infrastructure in various locations along the southwestern border of the United States. (Stip. ¶ 14.)
In addition to identifying areas of persistent impedance, the Border Patrol also was responsible for conducting landowner outreach to gain access to the burgeoning fence. (Flossman, Tr. 523-25.) The FMNE also coordinated with the Border Patrol to ensure that nothing the former did to facilitate constructing the fence would harm the latter's ability to conduct enforcement operations. (Flossman, Tr. 525.) Loren Flossman is the Director of the Program Management Office for Border Patrol Facilities and Tactical Infrastructure at the FMNE. (Flossman, Tr. 517-18.) Mr. Flossman testified that Mr. Pena was in charge of outreach to local landowners, such as Mr. De La Fuente, at the time of the A-1 segment negotiations.
The CBP worked with the Corps to provide real estate and construction services for the actual building of the fence. (Stip. ¶ 15.) Specifically, the CBP worked with the Corps to determine how and where to erect the fence. (Flossman, Tr. 523.) The two organizations also worked together on writing requests for proposals ("RFPs") and on source selection. (Flossman, Tr. 524.) The Corps awarded the contracts and oversaw the work of contractors.
To construct a fence along the A-1 segment, the CBP preferred to have access from both the east and the west. (Flossman, Tr. 525-26.) On January 22, 2008, the Corps issued an RFP "for the Design-Build, Construction of Monument 250 Roadway and Primary Border Barrier Fence, San Diego County, California, RFP No. SANUR-08-0002." (Stip. ¶ 17);
Mr. Wick maintains that, after their initial meetings in the fall of 2007, the Border Patrol did not keep Plaintiffs "in the loop" concerning decisions about constructing an improved access road to replace the BLM easement. (Wick, Tr. 233.) On April 16, 2008, Mr. Wick emailed Mr. Pena and Ms. Cook, stating that he had received a telephone call from a potential contractor bidding on the January 22, 2008 RFP. (Wick, Tr. 234);
As part of his April 16 email, Mr. Wick sent Mr. Pena and Ms. Cook a third alignment, which he believed would have the least adverse impact on the Landowners' property. (Wick, Tr. 236-38);
On May 13, 2008, Mr. Wick met with Government officials, including Mr. Pena and Mr. Miller, at the Alta Cafe in San Diego County. (Wick, Tr. 239; Miller, Tr. 658.) The parties discussed an agreement-in-principle and walked along the actual proposed alignment. (Wick, Tr. 240; Miller, Tr. 658.) At that meeting, Mr. Wick said the improved road should be "60-foot wide with asphalt, curbs, sidewalk and appropriate drainage." (Miller, Tr. 659.) The next day, Mr. Wick sent an email to Mr. Pena memorializing the May 13 meeting.
During trial, Mr. Wick testified that he never told the Government officials what he specifically meant by the term "county standards." (Wick, Tr. 130-31.) Instead, he sent the October 17, 2007 email with the Public Road Standards attachments and visually showed Mr. Pena what the Landowners expected. (Wick, Tr. 131.) At trial, Mr. Wick explained that the Landowners needed the road improved to County standards because they expected to dedicate it to San Diego County. (Wick, Tr. 131-32.) The only way that San Diego County would accept a dedication was if the road were built to its standards and specifications. (Wick, Tr. 132.)
On July 3, 2008, Ms. Cook sent Mr. Wick a draft of an agreement that the Corps had composed. (Stip. ¶ 22);
The Corps returned a revised draft to Mr. Wick, which Mr. Wick and Ms. Cook further revised in his office. (Cook, Tr. 574-75);
On July 25, 2008, Ms. Cook sent Mr. Wick an updated draft of the Exhibit 1 map.
On behalf of the Landowners, Mr. Wick signed the final version of the ROE-C on July 31, 2008; Mr. Baker, the contracting officer for the Corps, signed it on behalf of the Government on August 6, 2008. (Stip. ¶ 24);
(JX 39.) Paragraph 1 of the ROE-C explains that the owner gives an irrevocable right to enter the lands described in Exhibit 1 to the Government at any time for a period of twelve months "in order to perform work related to the construction and maintenance of two (2) access roads . . . to be constructed to County specifications standards, and paving that portion of the Otay Truck Trail as shown in Exhibit 1."
The ROE-C also has two attached exhibits. The final Exhibit 1 depicts the agreed alignment of the improved access road.
On September 10, 2008, the Corps sent a letter to Granite notifying it that the Corps would be exercising Option 2. (Miller, Tr. 669);
(JX 43.)
On November 13, 2008, the Corps learned that if Granite were to incorporate the additional elements into the road improvement, as Mr. Wick insisted, construction would cost $2.32 million, about $520,000 more than estimated.
Ms. Cook called Mr. Wick on November 18, 2008. (Wick, Tr. 184; Cook, Tr. 584.) Here too, the parties have contrasting memories as to the content of their conversation. Mr. Wick remembers Ms. Cook saying that the Government did not have enough money to meet the contractual road improvement requirements. (Wick, Tr. 184-85.) Therefore, he suggested an alternative alignment. (Wick, Tr. 185.) They discussed returning to the alignment perpendicular to Donovan State Prison (Alignment 1), and Ms. Cook told Mr. Wick that she would get back to him.
Ms. Cook, on the other hand, remembers calling Mr. Wick to say that she understood there was a dispute concerning the meaning of "County Standards." (Cook, Tr. 584.) She then merely acknowledged that the road was getting "awfully expensive." (Cook, Tr. 585.) Mr. Wick then suggested returning to Alignment 1.
After her November 18 conversation with Mr. Wick, Ms. Cook asked the Corps to determine how much money the Government would save by returning to Alignment 1. (Cook, Tr. 586.) The Corps analyzed the two alignments and determined that returning to Alignment 1 would cost an additional $405,000, compared with $520,000 from incorporating the additional elements into Alignment 4. (Miller, Tr. 687-88.)
On December 2, 2008, after the Corps had determined that returning to Alignment 1 would not save much incremental money, Mr. Wick and Ms. Cook spoke again.
Mr. Wick remembers merely trying to convince Ms. Cook to convey to the Corps that Alignment 1 would be cheaper because: the Landowners already had graded along it, the route had no archeological mitigation costs, and the Landowners already had installed laterals for water, sewer, and dry utilities. (Wick, Tr. 321-22.) Mr. Wick denies telling Ms. Cook that the Landowners did not want Alignment 4, as identified in the contract. (Wick, Tr. 186.) He also denies telling her that there were remaining archaeological concerns requiring land to be left as open space. (Wick, Tr. 186-87, 202-03, 321-22.)
On December 5, 2008, Ms. Cook sent an email to Mr. Wick and his attorneys on the status of the post-contractual negotiations.
(JX 55.) Ms. Cook concluded the email, "Please let me know right away if you have any questions, or if I have stated anything incorrectly."
Whatever the nature of the exchanges between Ms. Cook and Mr. Wick, the result was that, by early December 2008, the Corps understood Mr. Wick no longer was interested in pursuing Alignment 4 and instead preferred Alignment 1. (Miller, Tr. 689) ("[I]n the case of Alternative 1, we had an understanding that Mr. Wick supported that particular choice and that he was no longer interested in pursuing Alternative 4 as originally agreed to."); (Flossman, Tr. 533) (explaining that he understood the change in alignment as being something the Landowners wanted). Mr. Miller presented the two options to Mr. Flossman and the other Government officials in a conference call. (Miller, Tr. 689.) The officials informed Mr. Miller that if Alignment 1 was both less expensive and what the Landowners wanted, then the Corps should agree to return to Alignment 1. (Miller, Tr. 689.) Mr. Miller changed the draft CMR to reflect the change in alignment and the additional $405,000 in funding. (Miller, Tr. 691-92.) Mr. Flossman signed the CMR in December 2008.
Despite agreeing on Alignment 1, the parties could not agree on the length of the preexisting BLM easement to be vacated under their revised bargain. (Wick, Tr. 194; Flossman, Tr. 535-36.) At trial, Mr. Michael Hance, a Border Patrol Operations Officer, testified that under Alignment 4 from the August 6, 2008 ROE-C, the Border Patrol would have had access to canyons it needed for enforcement operations. (Hance, Tr. 796-98.) Under Alignment 1, however, the Border Patrol would not have access; therefore, the Government no longer could vacate the full BLM easement. (Wick, Tr. 194; Hance, Tr. 796-98.) Mr. Flossman understood Mr. Wick to state that a failure to vacate the full BLM easement would be a "deal breaker;" thus, the parties reached an impasse. (Flossman, Tr. 535-36.)
On August 14, 2009, Mr. Wick and his colleague Ms. Lindsay Arobone, an asset manager for SD Commercial, met with various Government officials, including Mr. Brett Koerting, Mr. Bijan Nooranbakht, and Mr. Eric Eldridge, in Mr. Wick's office; Ms. Vinger attended telephonically. (Wick, Tr. 197-98.) The officials explained that the Border Patrol had instructed them to stop the road improvement project. (Wick, Tr. 199.) Mr. Wick became angry and threatened to sue. (Wick, Tr. 200.) On August 24, 2009, Mr. Wick sent a letter to the Corps entitled, "Demand for Performance of August 6, 2008 Contract." (Stip. ¶ 33);
Consequently, the Government decided not to exercise Option 2 in its separate agreement with Granite. (Riley, Tr. 810.) Mr. James Riley, then an office engineer for the Corps, prepared and negotiated a change order. (Riley, Tr. 808-09.) The Government was entitled to a credit of $190,000 from Granite for Option 2. (Riley, Tr. 810, 814.) However, the Government had to reimburse Granite for the additional costs that Granite would incur in building the border fence without access from the west.
Plaintiffs presented two expert witnesses at trial. Ms. Cynthia Eldred testified as an expert on San Diego County land use.
On the cost of building the road, Plaintiffs presented the expert opinion of Mr. Leslie Knight. Mr. Knight qualifies as an expert in construction cost estimation and management in San Diego County.
The Government's expert on the cost of building the road was Mr. Chad Hutchison. Mr. Hutchison also qualifies as an expert in construction cost estimation and management.
"To recover for breach of contract, a party must allege and establish: (1) a valid contract between the parties; (2) an obligation or duty arising out of the contract; (3) a breach of that duty; and (4) damages caused by the breach."
Defendant makes several contentions as to why it has no responsibility at all under the ROE-C. The Government asserts that the ROE-C did not contain a construction obligation. (Def.'s Post-Trial Br. 30-34.) It also asserts that the parties did not have the necessary meeting of the minds on a material term of the contract and, absent a meeting of the minds, there is no enforceable agreement.
The Court finds that the record does not support Defendant's contentions in its efforts to avoid contractual liability. The Court finds that there was a sufficient meeting of the minds, such that the August 6, 2008 ROE-C is an enforceable contract with a construction obligation. The Court also finds that the evidence does not show Mr. Wick ever rescinded or waived his rights under the contract. However, the Court does agree with the scope of the construction obligation that Defendant proposes. As Defendant states, the ROE-C obliges the Government to construct an improved road, built consistent with the elements listed in the inset box. Despite Plaintiffs' contentions, the contract does not require the Government to meet all of the standards and specifications necessary to dedicate a public road to San Diego County. By never building any road, and then repudiating its obligation in August 2009, the Government breached the ROE-C. Accordingly, Plaintiffs are entitled to damages for breach of contract, but damages are limited to the cost of meeting only those road improvement elements specifically listed in Exhibit 1 to the contract.
Defendant argues that the ROE-C contained no construction obligation. (Def.'s Post-Trial Br. 30.) Rather, Defendant submits that the contract gave the Government an irrevocable right to enter the Landowners' property for twelve months from the date of the instrument to construct the two access roads to the border.
Contract interpretation starts with the agreement's "plain language."
The Court finds that the plain meaning of the contract requires the Government to construct an improved road. The Preamble of the ROE-C states:
(JX 39.) Thus, the Preamble sets out the consideration that the Landowners are to receive in exchange for the right-of-entry to construct the two access roads. The grant of the right-of-entry for one Dollar is conditioned on a secondary exchange: an easement to access the border from the west via the Otay Truck Trail, in exchange for the permanent improvement of the newly servient land. Without the easement for road exchange, no right-of-entry is granted. The Government's interpretation reads out of the ROE-C the language set forth in the Preamble, making the Preamble superfluous. Such an interpretation is untenable under the longstanding
The Government argues that there is no enforceable contract because there was no mutual assent as to the scope of the road construction improvements, an essential term in the ROE-C. (Def.'s Post-Trial Br. 30, 34-37.) At the time Plaintiffs entered into the contract, they believed "County specifications standards" meant the Government would construct an improved road, which could be dedicated to San Diego County, and that the Government would go to the County to ascertain what its standards were. (Wick, Tr. 120-21, 131-33.) The Government, in contrast, understood "County specifications standards" to be limited only to those elements specifically listed in the inset box. (Miller, Tr. 668-69.) Defendant asserts that this disagreement compels the Court to discharge it of all responsibilities under the ROE-C.
Courts are disinclined to find a contract wholly unenforceable because there was no meeting of the minds.
The Court does not believe that the parties' disagreement about the meaning of the term "County specifications standards" requires it to find that there was no enforceable contract whatsoever. First, the Court finds that the disagreement over the scope of the term's construction does not go to the heart of the ROE-C. The heart of the contract is a right-of-entry to construct two access roads in exchange for one Dollar, contingent upon a secondary exchange of an easement for the construction of a permanent road improvement along it. The scope of that improvement is but a lesser detail. There are many ways in which the parties could have disagreed about the scope of the construction obligation, and the Court will not allow such disagreement to undermine the heart of the bargain.
Second, the parties did not have equally reasonable understandings as to the meaning of the term "County specifications standards." The Government's understanding was more reasonable. Mr. Wick states he told Mr. Pena and Ms. Cook that the improved road needed to be built to "San Diego specifications and standards." (Wick, Tr. 123-26.) At trial, Mr. Wick described how he had communicated the meaning of the term to the Government officials:
(Wick, Tr. 268.) Based on their conversations with Mr. Wick and with Baker Engineering, Mr. Miller, Ms. Cook, and Ms. Vinger added the inset box to memorialize the definition of "County specifications standards" applicable to the ROE-C. (Miller, Tr. 668-69.) The elements listed in the box were consistent with the information Mr. Wick had provided Mr. Pena in his October 17, 2007 email.
By contrast, Mr. Wick's understanding of the term is not reasonable. Mr. Wick interprets "County specifications standards" to mean an improved road that could be dedicated to the County. There is no written evidence documenting any communication between Mr. Wick and the Government, to demonstrate that he expected the Government to approach the County to ascertain and comply with all specifications necessary to dedicate a public road. If Mr. Wick believed "County specifications standards" impelled the Government to construct a road that could be dedicated to the County, he should have ensured such a definition was articulated expressly in the ROE-C. Further, once the Government added the inset box, Mr. Wick should have been on notice to the fact that the Government believed the scope of construction included only those elements specifically listed. Otherwise, the Government would have added an entirely useless section to the contract, in disregard of the teachings of
Plaintiffs posit four arguments, grounded in the text of the ROE-C, as to why only their interpretation of the term "County specifications standards" is reasonable and why the inset box list is not exhaustive: (1) if the inset box wholly defines the elements of the improved road, it would have been headed "specifications for this contract" rather than "County specifications standards," (Pls.' Post-Trial Resp. Br. 13); (2) the capital "C" in "County specifications standards" necessarily implies that the standards to be used are those of the County in which the road is to be built,
The Court does not find these arguments convincing. The elements listed in the inset box all are requirements to dedicate a road to San Diego County. "County specifications standards" could refer to some official County standards without necessarily referring to all of them. Likewise, the word "includes" does not only apply to exhaustive lists; sometimes it is used for non-exhaustive ones. Finally, even if the usage of "if applicable" is problematic, the Court does not understand the phrase to mean automatically that the ROE-C required the Government to meet all of the specifications necessary to dedicate the improved road to the County.
Furthermore, in their response brief, Plaintiffs criticize Defendant's interpretation of "County specifications standards" as making no practical sense. (Pls.' Post-Trial Resp. Br. 41.) Plaintiffs question where utilities would go, how Plaintiffs' lessees, vendors, and customers would access the land, and whether the public could enter the land.
Since Defendant had a reasonable understanding of "County specifications standards" and Plaintiffs did not, the Court adopts Defendant's reasonable understanding of the term. Thus, the Government did not have to construct a road conforming to all of the specifications necessary for dedication to San Diego County. However, the ROE-C is enforceable and obliged the Government to construct a road conforming to each of the elements specifically listed in the inset box.
Defendant argues that even if, as the Court has found, there is an enforceable contract with a construction obligation, there is no liability because Mr. Wick rescinded or waived the Landowners' rights under the ROE-C. (Def.'s Post-Trial Br. 30, 37-41.) Further, Defendant argues that the doctrine of equitable estoppel bars Plaintiffs' claims.
Where "each party agrees to discharge all of the other party's remaining duties of performance under an existing contract," there is an agreement of rescission. Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 283(1) (1981). "The validity of an agreement to rescind a contract is controlled by the same rules as in the case of other contracts; there must exist an offer by one party and an unconditional acceptance of that precise offer by the other, prior to withdrawal by the offeror, before a binding agreement is born." 29 Samuel Williston & Richard A. Lord, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts § 73:15 (4th ed. 1993) (internal footnote omitted). In addition to rescission through writing, contracts may be rescinded orally or through the conduct of the parties.
Defendant's rescission argument is grounded in a statement Ms. Cook remembers Mr. Wick making in their December 2, 2008 phone conversation.
In reviewing the conflicting trial testimony, the Court finds that while Mr. Wick may have expressed a preference for one alignment over the other, his expression of a mere preference did not rise to an offer for rescission. Even under Ms. Cook's recollection, Mr. Wick's statements did not amount to an unequivocal disavowal of the ROE-C. He never went so far as to express an intention to dissolve the binding contract between the parties. Further, there is not a single piece of contemporaneous written evidence showing that Mr. Wick wanted an alignment other than Alignment 4. Although a contract can be rescinded orally, the Court finds it suspicious that with all of the emails exchanged between Mr. Wick and the Government, Mr. Wick never once mentioned in writing that he was requesting a new alignment or that he no longer wished to be bound by the contractual one. Indeed, in his contemporaneous writings on the issue, Mr. Wick stated his belief that the parties still had a binding contract.
Defendant argues that the conduct of both parties shows each acted as if the contract had been abandoned. (Def.'s Post-Trial Resp. Br. 24, 26-28);
Defendant relates two instances in which Ms. Cook insinuated that the contract had been rescinded, and Mr. Wick did not quarrel with her statement. In an email dated December 5, 2008, Ms. Cook told Mr. Wick that she and the Corps were in the process of "redrafting and updating" the previous right-of-entry. (JX 55.) Likewise, in an email dated March 4, 2009, Ms. Cook recounted, to a number of Government officials, telling Mr. Wick that the Government would condemn alternative land if the parties could not reach an agreement.
Additionally, Defendant argues that Mr. Wick treated the ROE-C as abandoned after December 2, 2008, when he filed an action for trespass after Government representatives brought construction equipment on to the Landowners' property. (Def.'s Post-Trial Resp. Br. 24.) If proven, this argument might be persuasive evidence that Mr. Wick acted as if the contract had been rescinded. However, Defendant provides no evidence showing that the Government in fact was using the construction equipment in compliance with the contract, or any other evidence on the circumstances surrounding the alleged trespass or Plaintiffs' reasons for filing the trespass action. For the above reasons, Mr. Wick did not rescind the Landowners' rights under the ROE-C.
"A waiver is an intentional relinquishment of a known right."
The Government argues that Mr. Wick's suggestion to return to Alignment 1, and his apparent attempts to convince Ms. Cook that the alternative alignment would be cheaper, amounted to a waiver of the Landowners' contractual right to construction under Alignment 4. (Def.'s Post-Trial Br. 41.) The Court, however, does not find that this evidence rises to an intentional relinquishment of Plaintiffs' right to have the improved road constructed at all. Mr. Wick may have expressed a preference for Alignment 1, but the evidence does not show that he waived the Landowners' right to Alignment 4 in the event the parties could not agree to an alternative arrangement.
Equitable estoppel is "administered in favor of one who has been induced to alter his line of conduct with respect to the subject matter in controversy so as to have foregone some right or remedy which he otherwise would have taken."
The parties agree that the proper measure of damages is expectancy damages, the benefits the non-breaching party expected to receive had the breach not occurred.
At trial, Plaintiffs presented the expert testimony of Ms. Eldred, who testified as to San Diego County's prerequisites to approve construction and to accept a road for public dedication. (Eldred, Tr. 83-84.) Plaintiffs' damages expert, Mr. Knight, interpreted "County specification standards" to mean a road that could be dedicated to the County. (Pls.' Post-Trial Br. 52.) In his cost estimate, he therefore incorporated all of the elements that Ms. Eldred expressed as prerequisites.
By contrast, Defendant's expert, Mr. Hutchison, calculated his cost estimate from plans that the contractor Granite had derived only from those elements listed in the inset box of the ROE-C. (Hutchison, Tr. 827-28);
For the reasons stated in this opinion, the Court finds that only the Government's interpretation of "County specifications standards" is reasonable. The Court also finds Mr. Hutchison to be a reliable and trustworthy witness. Therefore, the Court will adopt his cost estimate and award Plaintiffs damages of $1,708,185.
Based on the foregoing, the Court finds that Plaintiffs are entitled to recover $1,708,185 in damages due to the Government's breach of the August 6, 2008 ROE-C. The clerk shall enter final judgment against Defendant in that amount. Pursuant to Rule 54(d) of the Court, costs are awarded to Plaintiffs.
IT IS SO ORDERED.