Roland Alonso v. Westcoast Corporation , 920 F.3d 878 ( 2019 )


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  •      Case: 17-30877   Document: 00514905855     Page: 1   Date Filed: 04/08/2019
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    No. 17-30877
    FILED
    April 8, 2019
    Lyle W. Cayce
    ROLAND A. ALONSO; RCS CONTRACTORS, INCORPORATED,      Clerk
    Plaintiffs - Appellees
    v.
    WESTCOAST CORPORATION,
    Defendant - Appellant
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Louisiana
    Before DENNIS, OWEN, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
    LESLIE H. SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judge:
    After a jury trial, Westcoast Corporation was found liable for breaching
    a contract it entered with RCS Contractors, Inc. Among Westcoast’s claims of
    error are the finding of a bad-faith breach, the language of the verdict form,
    and the award of attorney fees. We conclude there was one error, which was
    the amount of a penalty determined under the Louisiana Prompt Payment Act.
    We VACATE and REMAND for further proceedings as to the penalty. As a
    result of that reversal, we also VACATE and REMAND the award of attorney
    fees for reconsideration of the amount after the statutory penalty is
    reconsidered. In all other respects, we AFFIRM.
    Case: 17-30877     Document: 00514905855     Page: 2    Date Filed: 04/08/2019
    No. 17-30877
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    This dispute arises out of the Army Corps of Engineers’ West Roosevelt
    Street Sewer Force Main Relocation Project in Baton Rouge, Louisiana (the
    “project”). The Corps contracted with Garner, who is not a party to this suit.
    Garner in turn subcontracted the work to Westcoast, who then entered a
    subcontract with RCS.      RCS was to “provide all labor, material, special
    equipment and supervision required to install and complete” the project
    according to the specifications provided by the Corps, and it was to be paid
    $496,450. The parties expected the subcontract to be completed in 120 days.
    RCS began work in September 2010.           Several interruptions slowed
    completion and increased the cost of the project.          Several change orders
    documented increases in the subcontract price, which were primarily based on
    unanticipated costs.
    The first interruption began when it was discovered that certain existing
    physical joints on the sewer system would need to be bypassed and relocated.
    Work was put on hold in March 2011 pending a full redesign. Even after
    completion of the redesign, work could not be resumed until September 2011,
    when the flood stage of the Mississippi River fell to a safe level. The second
    period of interruption began in December 2011 and continued until January
    2012 while a solution was developed to correct for leaking pipes.
    RCS stopped its work on the project in July 2012 without completing its
    final “punch list” work. In August 2013, RCS and its president, Roland Alonso,
    filed suit against Westcoast in the Middle District of Louisiana, claiming that
    Westcoast failed to submit change orders promptly, which prevented RCS from
    being compensated for the additional work it had performed on the project, and
    that Westcoast also failed to make prompt payments to RCS under the change
    orders it did submit. We will refer to the plaintiffs jointly as “RCS.”
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    After a jury trial and post-hearing motions, the district court entered an
    amended final judgment. It awarded the plaintiffs $304,189 on the claim of a
    bad faith breach of contract, $66,450 under the state Prompt Payment Act,
    $130,517.60 in attorney fees, and $400 in costs.
    DISCUSSION
    The ruling by the district court from which this appeal was taken was
    Westcoast’s renewed motion for a judgment as a matter of law (“JMOL”). “We
    review de novo the district court’s denial of a motion for judgment as a matter
    of law, applying the same standard as the district court.” International Ins.
    Co. v. RSR Corp., 
    426 F.3d 281
    , 296 (5th Cir. 2005). A JMOL is appropriate
    when “a reasonable jury would not have a legally sufficient evidentiary basis
    to find for the [nonmoving party] on that issue.” FED. R. CIV. P. 50(a). “In
    resolving such challenges, we draw all reasonable inferences and resolve all
    credibility determinations in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.”
    Foradori v. Harris, 
    523 F.3d 477
    , 485 (5th Cir. 2008).
    The jury’s “verdict should be affirmed ‘unless the facts and inferences
    point so strongly and overwhelmingly in the movant’s favor that reasonable
    jurors could not reach a contrary conclusion.’” EEOC v. EmCare, Inc., 
    857 F.3d 678
    , 683 (5th Cir. 2017) (citation omitted).
    Westcoast raises four issues, which we will discuss in the following order:
    I. Did the district court correctly enter judgment confirming the jury’s
    verdict in favor of RCS on its bad faith breach of contract claim?
    II. Did the district court correctly decide not to ask on the verdict form
    whether RCS substantially breached the subcontract?
    III. Did the district court correctly grant judgment to RCS on their claim
    for a penalty payment under the Louisiana Prompt Payment Act?
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    IV. Did the district court correctly grant attorney fees to RCS under the
    Prompt Payment Act?
    I. Bad Faith Breach of Contract by Westcoast
    Westcoast makes three arguments to support its claim that the district
    court erred in entering judgment on RCS’s claim of a bad faith breach of
    contract: (A) RCS substantially breached the subcontract, and this constitutes
    an affirmative defense under Louisiana law; (B) the language of the
    subcontract specifically prohibits the assessment of delay damages; (C) it was
    entitled to back-charge RCS for the cost of flagmen fees and liquidated
    damages, because the subcontract assigned the cost of acquiring the flagmen
    to RCS and Westcoast was left to complete the work RCS left unfinished. We
    address each argument.
    (A) Substantial Breach
    Under Louisiana law, “one party’s substantial breach, which would
    preclude his enforcement of the contract, is an affirmative defense that may be
    asserted by the other party.” LAD Servs. of La., L.L.C. v. Superior Derrick
    Servs., L.L.C., 
    167 So. 3d 746
    , 756 (La. Ct. App. 2014). Westcoast alleges that
    it presented “uncontroverted evidence” at trial that RCS substantially
    breached the subcontract, which it maintains supported an affirmative defense
    for its own breach.    Specifically, Westcoast alleges that RCS’s failure “to
    provide the as-built drawings, lien waivers, and certifications” as required
    under the subcontract constituted substantial breach. Westcoast relies on the
    testimony of Dr. Jerry Householder, an expert for RCS, to show that the
    president of RCS “abandoned the job” and “breached the contract by not
    providing final lien waivers.”
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    RCS responds with both a procedural and a substantive argument. First,
    it contends Westcoast waived any potential affirmative defense arising out of
    RCS’s own breach because Westcoast never presented this argument to the
    district court. The principal failure is said to be in Westcoast’s motion for
    JMOL, which challenged only the jury finding that Westcoast breached the
    subcontract. It did not argue that evidence of RCS’s breach of the subcontract
    required a verdict in Westcoast’s favor. Second, Westcoast’s argument is said
    to fail on the merits because the evidence at trial was insufficient to establish
    as a matter of law that RCS substantially and materially breached the
    subcontract prior to Westcoast’s breach.
    RCS is correct that Westcoast waived 1 any affirmative defense it might
    have had. If a party fails to move for JMOL under Rule 50(a) after all the
    evidence has been presented, then “that party waives both its right to file a
    renewed post-verdict Rule 50(b) motion and also its right to challenge the
    sufficiency of the evidence on that issue on appeal.”                   Flowers v. S. Reg’l
    Physician Servs. Inc., 
    247 F.3d 229
    , 238 (5th Cir. 2001). Westcoast did not
    move for JMOL under Rule 50(a) on the theory that RCS substantially
    breached the contract and thus excused Westcoast from its duties under the
    subcontract.
    Though the issue was waived, we consider an issue raised for the first
    time on appeal for plain error, which requires proof that: “(1) there was error;
    1 We accept the validity of the point made in an at least one of our precedents that the
    word “forfeit,” not “waive,” is the correct label for a “failure to make the timely assertion of a
    right” that does not completely foreclose appellate review. NewCSI, Inc. v. Staffing 360 Sols.,
    Inc., 
    865 F.3d 251
    , 259 n.7 (5th Cir. 2017) (citation omitted). “Waiver,” on the other hand, is
    an “intentional relinquishment of a known right, and extinguishes an error completely.” 
    Id.
    (citation omitted). The linguistic battle will need to be waged elsewhere, as this opinion uses
    the word “waiver” to avoid any unintended distinction from the precedents we are quoting
    which do the same.
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    (2) the error was clear and obvious; (3) the error affected [the appellant’s]
    substantial rights; and (4) the error seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or
    public reputation of judicial proceedings.” SEC v. Life Partners Holdings, Inc.,
    
    854 F.3d 765
    , 783 (5th Cir. 2017).
    To succeed on its claim that RCS’s breach justified its own undisputed
    breach, Westcoast was required to prove that RCS’s breaches were substantial.
    See LAD Servs. of La., 
    167 So. 3d at 756-57
    . A breach is substantial if it is an
    actual cause of the other party’s “failure to comply with its obligations.” 
    Id. at 756
    .     We have held that a jury’s finding of breach was not supported by
    sufficient evidence where “the record on appeal reveal[ed] overwhelming,
    undisputed evidence that [the other party to the contract] repeatedly and
    substantially breached the contract prior to the termination.” Olympic Ins. Co.
    v. H. D. Harrison, Inc., 
    463 F.2d 1049
    , 1050 (5th Cir. 1972). Absent similar
    uncontradicted evidence establishing that RCS substantially breached the
    subcontract, this court cannot disturb the jury’s verdict.
    The alleged breach by RCS included failing to complete clean-up and
    close-out projects such as a failure to provide final lien waivers and
    certifications, failure to turn over the as-built drawings, and failure to complete
    the “punch list” of final tasks. RCS contends that these breaches occurred well
    after Westcoast had already breached the subcontract, and thus RCS’s breach
    could not have been the actual cause for Westcoast’s breach.
    Alonso testified that Westcoast breached the contract by: not obtaining
    change orders, not providing workable plan specifications, and not providing
    access to the Corps. Alonso also testified that Westcoast falsely informed him
    in writing that the change orders were approved and told RCS to resume work
    on the project when the Corps had not yet approved the change orders. He
    testified he had no choice but to finish the job because otherwise “raw sewage
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    would be on the street.” The jury also heard testimony that RCS refused to do
    additional work “because of the lack of payment.” Thus, a reasonable jury
    could conclude that Westcoast’s breaches were substantial and RCS had no
    substantial breach because Westcoast’s breaches caused RCS’s refusal to
    complete the final duties of the subcontract.
    We find no clear and obvious error, and thus no plain error, to undermine
    the jury’s implicit finding that RCS’s breach was not substantial.
    (B) Delay Damages
    Westcoast contends that the subcontract prohibited any claims
    associated with delay damages, citing this provision:
    If the Subcontractor is delayed in the prosecution of its Work due
    to the acts of the Owner and/or its agents and the Subcontractor
    suffers delay damages there from, the Contractor agrees to
    transmit to the Owner any claims submitted to it by the
    Subcontractor. . . . It is agreed that in no event will the Contractor
    be liable for Subcontractor’s claims for delay.
    Westcoast contends that there was “uncontroverted evidence” at trial
    that it promptly transmitted any claims from RCS to the contractor Garner,
    and that Garner transmitted those claims to the Corps.                 Thus both
    contractually and factually, it argues the jury award of $304,189 for bad faith
    breach of contract must have included “delay damages,” and such damages are
    impermissible.
    RCS responds that the subcontract provision barring delay damages is
    not enforceable under Louisiana law because of the jury finding that Westcoast
    breached in bad faith. Such a finding amounts to intentional or gross fault.
    Louisiana law provides that any “clause is null that, in advance, excludes or
    limits the liability of one party for intentional or gross fault that causes damage
    to the other party.” LA. CIV. CODE ANN. Art. 2004. The term “gross fault” in
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    that provision “encompasses not only gross negligence, but also bad faith
    breach of contract or fraud.” Wadick v. Gen. Heating & Air Conditioning, LLC,
    
    145 So. 3d 586
    , 599 (La. Ct. App. 2014).
    The jury instructions, for which no error on this point is alleged on
    appeal, provided that “[b]ad faith generally implies actual or constructive
    fraud or refusal to fulfill contractual obligations, not an honest mistake as to
    the actual rights or duties.” Additionally, the jury was instructed to weigh the
    credibility of the witnesses and “to interpret the contract between these two
    parties.” “It is not the role of this court to second-guess jurors, so long as there
    was a legally sufficient evidentiary basis for their verdict.”         Goodner v.
    Hyundai Motor Co., 
    650 F.3d 1034
    , 1045 (5th Cir. 2011).
    There was sufficient evidence from which the jury could reasonably
    conclude that Westcoast breached the contract in bad faith. Therefore, the
    provision of the subcontract barring delay damages was unenforceable under
    Louisiana law. See LA. CIV. CODE ANN. art. 2004. Westcoast’s motion for
    JMOL on this issue was correctly denied.
    (C) Flaggers and Liquidated Damages
    Third, Westcoast argues that the damage award on RCS’s bad faith
    breach of contract claim should have been reduced to reflect the cost of
    “flaggers” and also for other liquidated damages Westcoast incurred for which
    it asserts RCS is responsible.
    As to flaggers, they were needed because a portion of the project took
    place near a railroad track. The evidence supports that the parties understood
    when negotiating the subcontract that it would at times be necessary to hire
    railroad flaggers. The parties dispute who was required to pay for them.
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    Westcoast relies on the language of the subcontract, which states that
    all “cost and coordination for railroad [flaggers] shall be the responsibility of
    the Subcontractor as specified as required.” Based on this language, Westcoast
    argues it is entitled to a return of the $84,000 it paid to hire flaggers.
    RCS counters that this subcontract provision was subsequently modified
    by oral agreement and course of conduct between the parties. To support that
    there was an amendment to the contract, RCS was required to “prove by a
    preponderance of the evidence facts or acts giving rise to the modification.”
    Driver Pipeline Co. v. Cadeville Gas Storage, LLC, 
    150 So. 3d 492
    , 501 (La. Ct.
    App. 2014).    We will affirm the jury’s verdict “unless ‘there is no legally
    sufficient evidentiary basis’ for the jury’s verdict.” Lane v. R.A. Sims, Jr., Inc.,
    
    241 F.3d 439
    , 445 (5th Cir. 2001) (quoting FED. R. CIV. P. 50(a)(1)). There is a
    legally sufficient evidentiary basis for the jury’s verdict unless “the facts and
    inferences point so strongly and overwhelmingly in favor of the moving party
    that reasonable jurors could not arrive at a contrary verdict.” Carmona v.
    Southwest Airlines Co., 
    604 F.3d 848
    , 855 (5th Cir. 2010).
    Louisiana caselaw provides that a “written construction contract may be
    modified by oral agreement and by the conduct of the parties, even when the
    contract provides that change orders must be in writing.” Driver Pipeline, 
    150 So. 3d at 500
    . The written contract can be modified through “silence, inaction,
    or implication” and whether it was modified “is a question of fact.” 
    Id. at 501
    .
    Evidence supporting a modification is as follows. Alonso testified that in
    order to pay for the flaggers, RCS would be required to carry railroad
    insurance. Nevertheless, the subcontract bidding allocated no funds to pay for
    such insurance. Indeed, counsel for Westcoast stated at oral argument before
    this court that his client “grabbed the railroad insurance because [Westcoast
    could] charge a premium to the federal government for it.” Alonso also testified
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    at trial that his original quote for the project included the cost of coordination
    of the flaggers, but that an employee for Westcoast’s parent company who
    reviewed RCS’s initial bid on the project told him “to delete that item” because
    RCS was not “going to handle the flagging.”
    RCS also contends that the “conduct of the parties during construction
    clearly demonstrated that [flagger] coordination and costs fell under
    Westcoast’s scope of work and was not passed down to RCS.” Alonso testified
    that Francisco Galvan initially scheduled the flaggers on behalf of Westcoast.
    RCS began consulting with Galvan on flaggers coordination only after RCS’s
    work was halted because no flagger was present on a certain day. Testimony
    from Thomas Schutt, Westcoast’s general counsel, confirmed that Westcoast
    did all the coordination for the flaggers. Both Alonso and Schutt testified that
    Westcoast did not invoice RCS for the costs of the flaggers until months after
    RCS stopped working on the project. Taken together, this testimony supports
    the jury’s finding that the parties modified their agreement regarding who was
    responsible for coordinating and paying the cost of the flaggers.
    There is undisputed evidence that (1) the railroad insurance was
    removed from the contract; (2) RCS did not have railroad insurance, and that
    it could not hire flaggers without railroad insurance; and (3) Westcoast
    modified the flaggers provision of the subcontract by its coordination and
    financing of the flaggers. We conclude that “the facts and inferences” do not
    point so strongly and overwhelmingly in Westcoast’s favor that they compel
    this court to overturn the jury’s verdict. Thus, there is sufficient evidence to
    support the jury’s finding that the flaggers were Westcoast’s responsibility.
    As to liquidated damages, Westcoast argues that RCS delayed the
    completion of the project by 111 days, which resulted in $107,779 in damages.
    RCS argued it would only be liable for damages related to the delay in
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    completion of the project if it was responsible for the delay. Michael Meredith,
    Westcoast’s project manager, agreed that Westcoast would not be entitled
    these damages unless RCS was responsible for the delays. RCS’s own expert,
    Dr. Householder, testified there was no record explanation for why RCS did
    not show up on certain days. Still, Dr. Householder answered in the negative
    when asked on the stand whether “RCS was responsible for any of the delays
    on this project.” He further testified that it was not accurate to say that RCS
    was responsible for any delays.        Instead, any claim from Westcoast for
    liquidated damages because of delays on the project was “in bad faith.” Here,
    too, there is sufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding as to the liquidated
    damages.
    The district court correctly denied Westcoast’s motion for JMOL on
    RCS’s claim for bad faith breach of contract.
    II. Jury Verdict Form
    Westcoast alleges the district court erred in failing to ask on the verdict
    form whether RCS substantially breached the subcontract.             This issue is
    related to the question of whether the district court erred in granting judgment
    to RCS on its breach of contract claim. Our resolution to that question is
    relevant to the effect any error might have had, but it does not answer the
    question of whether any error occurred in the first place.
    Westcoast did not object to the absence of a question about substantial
    breach at trial, and so we review for plain error. Again, to obtain relief under
    plain error review, an appellant must show “(1) there was error; (2) the error
    was clear and obvious; (3) the error affected [the appellant’s] substantial
    rights; and (4) the error seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or public
    reputation of judicial proceedings.” Life Partner Holdings, 854 F.3d at 783.
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    This court in its discretion may grant relief if the appellant makes this
    showing. Baisden v. I’m Ready Prods., Inc., 
    693 F.3d 491
    , 506 (5th Cir. 2012).
    Westcoast argues it was plain error for the district court not to include a
    question on the verdict form asking if RCS had substantially breached the
    subcontract. It asserts that this error “could hardly be more clear and obvious”
    because it “effectively prevented the jury from reaching a verdict that is
    consistent with Louisiana law.” That argument is based on “the principle that
    where one party substantially breaches a contract the other party to it has a
    defense and an excuse for non-performance.” Olympic Ins., 
    463 F.2d at 1053
    .
    RCS counters that, even if the absence of an instruction about
    substantial breach was error, the error did not affect Westcoast’s substantial
    rights because the jury was instructed that it could not hold Westcoast liable
    if RCS had substantially breached as well. RCS is referring to the instruction
    that if “one party to a contract substantially breaches the contract, then the
    breaching party cannot enforce the contract it has breached or demand
    damages from the other party to the contract.” Accordingly, RCS contends that
    the jury was properly instructed and had to decide if RCS substantially
    breached the contract before it could decide if Westcoast was liable for the
    breach of contract.
    In one of our precedents, the appellant alleged that a question on the
    verdict form “conflat[ed] the question of license (an affirmative defense on
    which [appellee] bore the burden of proof) with that of infringement (a claim
    on which [appellant] carried the burden).” Baisden, 693 F.3d at 506. Although
    we acknowledged that the jury question was “not a model of clarity,” we held
    that “the mere fact that issues of liability and affirmative defense were
    combined into a single question is not grounds for a new trial.” Id. The
    appellant also had failed to show his substantial rights were affected because
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    the district court correctly instructed the jury and no evidence suggested the
    jury did not follow those instructions. Id. at 507. We concluded there was no
    plain error in a question on the verdict form that combined liability and an
    affirmative defense. Id.
    Baisden controls the outcome here. Combining the issues of liability and
    an affirmative defense into a single question on the verdict form did not
    constitute plain error.
    III. Louisiana Prompt Payment Act
    The Louisiana Prompt Payment Act provides, if a “subcontractor without
    reasonable cause fails to make any payment to his subcontractors and
    suppliers within fourteen consecutive days of the receipt of payment from the
    owner . . . [the] subcontractor shall pay to the subcontractors and suppliers, in
    addition to the payment, a penalty.” LA. STAT. ANN. § 9:2784(C). The Act
    further provides that the penalty shall be “one-half of one percent of the
    amount due, per day, from the expiration of the period allowed herein for
    payment after the receipt of payment from the owner. The total penalty shall
    not exceed fifteen percent of the outstanding balance due.” Id. “[N]othing in
    the text of § 9:2784(C) suggests any opportunity for relief where the contractor
    has not received payment from the owner.” United States ex rel. Cal’s A/C &
    Elec. v. Famous Constr. Corp., 
    220 F.3d 326
    , 330 (5th Cir. 2000).
    After being properly instructed that the “total penalty shall not exceed
    15 percent of the outstanding balance due,” the jury awarded $66,450 to RCS
    on its claim under the Louisiana Prompt Payment Act.
    The question on appeal is whether this award is supported by the
    evidence presented to the jury. RCS alleges that it is but fails to identify
    specific late payments sufficient to support the full $66,450 award. Westcoast
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    claims that it is not but concedes that there is evidence to support an award of
    $19,053.88.
    The relevant evidence here primarily consists of change orders eight
    through eleven. These change orders were drafted by Westcoast. Each one
    documented a change in the total amount due to RCS under the terms of the
    subcontract. Change order eight increased the subcontract total to compensate
    RCS for additional costs incurred during the redesign of the project. Change
    order nine increased the total amount due under the subcontract to
    $1,013,026.85 to compensate RCS for additional costs incurred during the
    second period of disruption and to compensate RCS for “two days of railroad
    flagging.” Change order ten reduced the total value of the subcontract by
    $84,625 as a back-charge for the cost of all railroad flaggers. Change order
    eleven further reduced the total value of the subcontract by $107,779.99 to
    account for extended overhead charges as a back-charge “due to work
    performed in the field extending past contractual completion.”        This final
    change order pegged the total value of the subcontract at $820,621.86.
    Also relevant is evidence of payments Westcoast has already made to
    RCS. Determination of an appropriate penalty under the Act depends in large
    part on a determination of how much, if anything, Westcoast still owes RCS.
    The parties agree that RCS received a total of $693,596 from Westcoast before
    it ceased work on the project in March 2012. RCS does not claim that the late
    payment penalty applies to any part of those funds it received before March
    2012. Finally, the parties agree that Westcoast paid RCS $127,025.86 in
    October 2015 and $12,529.73 in August 2016.
    Westcoast argues its payments of $693,596 and $127,025.86 are evidence
    that it paid the full $820,621.86 owed to RCS according to the calculation of
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    the total value of the subcontract set forth in change order eleven. 2 Westcoast
    argues that the maximum penalty possibly owed to RCS under the Act would
    therefore be $19,053.88 – a fifteen percent penalty on its October 2015
    payment.
    RCS argues that, because it was not responsible for the cost of the
    flaggers or extended overhead charges, the correct measure of the value of the
    subcontract is the total set forth in change order nine:                 $1,013,026.85. 3
    Because we have upheld RCS’s argument that it should not have been back-
    charged for the cost of the flaggers or the extended overhead charges,
    Westcoast could properly be subject to a penalty on $319,430.85, the difference
    between the $1,013,026.85 Westcoast owed RCS and the $693,596 it promptly
    paid. Applying the fifteen percent cap to this total, the maximum penalty
    would therefore be $47,914.63.
    We have tried to discern the means by which the jury calculated the
    $66,450 penalty. Mathematically, it almost works to start with the jury’s
    award of $304,189 in damages for Westcoast’s breach of contract. The jury
    might have included this amount in its calculation of the penalty owed to RCS
    under the Act because it (1) represented payments the jury determined RCS
    should have received from Westcoast but did not; and (2) would be remitted
    more than fourteen days after Westcoast received payment from Garner. If
    the jury started with that figure, then added the October 2015 payment of
    $127,025.86 and the additional payment of $12,529.73 that Westcoast made in
    2  Westcoast explains that its even later payment of $12,529.73 made in August 2016
    reflected $3,679.73 in payment RCS should have received under change order three, and a
    $8,850 back-charge for the costs of flaggers for which RCS was inadvertently assessed twice.
    3 Significantly, Westcoast received full payment from Garner for the work described
    in change order nine; Westcoast had received a total of $1.44 million from Garner by March
    2013.
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    August 2016, it would have found that Westcoast failed to make prompt
    payment of $443,744.59. Applying the fifteen percent cap to that total results
    in a penalty under the Act of $66,561.69, which is about $100 more than jurors
    awarded. Of course, this may not have been the jury’s calculation.
    The jury’s use of its own award as the starting place for its calculation of
    a penalty under the Act would be unsupportable. That calculation of damages
    includes costs that Westcoast never passed along to Garner. To reiterate, a
    late penalty is due under the Louisiana Prompt Payment Act only for those
    sums a contractor receives but fails to pay to its subcontractors and suppliers
    within fourteen days. No late penalty would be owed on amounts Garner never
    dispersed to Westcoast. Jurors had to decide the penalty based on evidence of
    payments Westcoast received from Garner for work RCS completed but which
    Westcoast failed to pay to RCS within fourteen days. Whatever path the jury
    followed to calculate the award, we cannot identify an amount of late payments
    large enough to sustain the penalty.
    “There is a strong presumption in favor of affirming a jury award of
    damages. . . . However, when this court is left with the perception that the
    verdict is clearly excessive, deference must be abandoned.”            Eiland v.
    Westinghouse Elec. Corp., 
    58 F.3d 176
    , 183 (5th Cir. 1995). In diversity cases,
    federal courts must apply the new trial and remittitur standard of the forum
    in which it sits. Fair v. Allen, 
    669 F.3d 601
    , 604 (5th Cir. 2012). Louisiana law
    gives courts the discretion to grant a new trial “in any case if there is good
    ground therefor, except as otherwise provided by law.” LA. CODE CIV. PROC.
    ANN. art. 1973. There is a basis for a new trial here, where the jury awarded
    damages exceeding those permitted under the clear language of the Prompt
    Payment Act. We remand to the district court for new trial on damages under
    the Prompt Payment Act.
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    Case: 17-30877     Document: 00514905855     Page: 17    Date Filed: 04/08/2019
    No. 17-30877
    IV. Attorney Fees Under the Louisiana Prompt Payment Act
    The district court’s decision to grant or deny attorney fees is reviewed for
    abuse of discretion; factual findings are reviewed for clear error. McClain v.
    Lufkin Indus., Inc., 
    519 F.3d 264
    , 284 (5th Cir. 2008). “Under Louisiana law,
    attorney’s fees ordinarily are not recoverable unless specifically authorized by
    statute or contract.” Hollybrook Cottonseed Processing, LLC v. Am. Guarantee
    & Liab. Ins. Co., 
    772 F.3d 1031
    , 1036 (5th Cir. 2014). The Louisiana Prompt
    Payment Act specifically authorizes attorney fees.           Under the Act, a
    “subcontractor shall be liable for reasonable attorney fees for the collection of
    the payments due to the subcontractors and suppliers.”           LA. STAT. ANN.
    § 9:2784(C).
    There is no challenge on appeal as to the factual findings supporting the
    calculation of the attorney fees award. The only dispute is whether attorney
    fees should be granted for work completed up through trial. Westcoast argues
    that RCS’s award for attorney fees should be limited to fees earned for
    recovering the $127,025.86 payment, the only late payment it acknowledges.
    Since the payment for $127,025.86 was made in October 2015, Westcoast
    contends that the award for attorney fees should not reflect any hours worked
    after that date. RCS responds that it is entitled to attorney fees through trial
    because it did not receive its last payment under the Louisiana Prompt
    Payment Act until that time.
    We agree that RCS was entitled to damages under the Louisiana Prompt
    Payment Act, albeit not the full $66,450 awarded by the jury. Because RCS’s
    monetary recovery will be revised, it also is necessary that attorney fees be
    reconsidered in light of that change.
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    No. 17-30877
    CONCLUSION
    The award of damages under the Louisiana Prompt Payment Act was
    excessive. We vacate the award of the late payment penalty and remand to
    the district court for a new trial on damages under the Prompt Payment Act.
    We also vacate and remand to the district court the specific award of attorney
    fees under the Act for recalculation in light of our remand regarding the late
    payment penalty. We affirm the judgment in all other respects.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
    18