Clark Bros., Inc. v. North Edwards Water District ( 2022 )


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  • Filed 4/22/22
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    CLARK BROS., INC.,                          D077200
    Plaintiff, Cross-defendant and
    Respondent,
    (San Bernardino County Super. Ct.
    v.
    No. CIVDS1511273)
    NORTH EDWARDS WATER
    DISTRICT,
    Defendant, Cross-complainant
    and Appellant;
    TRAVELERS CASUALTY AND
    SURETY OF AMERICA,
    Cross-defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Bernardino,
    John M. Tomberlin, Judge. Affirmed.
    Leon A. Brunet and Leon Alejandro Brunet for Defendant, Cross-
    complainant and Appellant.
    SMTD LAW and Jonathan J. Dunn for Plaintiff, Cross-defendants and
    Respondents.
    *      Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 8.1110, this opinion is
    certified for publication with the exception of parts B, C, and D of the
    Discussion.
    Drinking water provided by North Edwards Water District (North
    Edwards) to its customers contains three times the legal limit of arsenic,
    a carcinogen. Using funds earmarked for safe drinking water, the State of
    California (State) agreed to pay for North Edwards to construct a water
    treatment facility (the Project) to address this issue. In December 2013,
    Clark Bros., Inc. (Clark), a general contractor, was awarded the $6.2 million
    contract (Contract). But almost from inception, disputes arose between Clark
    and North Edwards. Ultimately in October 2014, while Clark still had three
    months to perform, North Edwards terminated the Contract. To date, the
    Project has not been completed.
    Clark sued North Edwards for breach of contract (and related claims);
    North Edwards cross-complained against Clark alleging similar theories.
    After a six week trial, a jury unanimously found North Edwards breached the
    Contract and awarded Clark over $3 million in damages. Clark also
    prevailed on North Edwards’s cross-complaint.
    Under Public Contracts Code1 section 20104.50, subdivision (b), a local
    agency that fails to pay progress payments within 30 days “shall pay
    interest” on the late payment. Here, as it awaited money from the State,
    North Edwards frequently took 60 days or more to pay. Based on this
    statute, which was incorporated into the Contract, the court instructed the
    jury that North Edwards was contractually “required” to pay Clark within 30
    days. In closing argument, Clark’s attorney used this instruction to argue
    that North Edwards breached by making late progress payments.
    On appeal, North Edwards contends the instruction was prejudicially
    erroneous because (1) section 20104.50 provides for interest on late
    payments, but does not make late payment a breach of contract; (2) the
    1     Undesignated statutory references are to the Public Contracts Code.
    2
    statute does not apply to State-funded projects; (3) Clark waived its claim by
    repeatedly accepting late payments; and (4) North Edwards was not required
    to pay Clark until it received reimbursement from the State for each payment
    claim.
    We agree with North Edwards’s first argument—section 20104.50 does
    not “require” payment within 30 days. Rather, it requires late payments be
    accompanied by 10 percent interest. The legislative purpose is to create a
    strong economic incentive for local government to pay promptly and to
    compensate the contractor when delay occurs—not to put local government in
    breach on multimillion dollar public works contracts whenever a progress
    payment is late.
    As we will explain, however, the error was not prejudicial. There was
    substantial evidence that North Edwards committed several far more serious
    breaches. More importantly, the jury awarded the exact amount of damages
    calculated by Clark’s expert, which did not include any amount for late
    payment. Thus, the record affirmatively shows the verdict was unaffected by
    any instructional error concerning prompt payment requirements.
    North Edwards further contends the trial court prejudicially erred in
    making several evidentiary rulings. We also reject these contentions and
    affirm the judgment.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. Events Leading Up to the Contract
    North Edwards is a public agency that furnishes water to about 220
    customers in the Mojave Desert. It has one employee, Dollie Dimples
    Kostopoulos.
    In June 2010, the State funded a study to determine how best to
    remove excessive arsenic levels from North Edwards’s water supply. Three
    3
    companies—Filtronics, Layne Christensen, and Pureflow—participated in a
    simulated “full scale arsenic removal.” According to AECOM Technical
    Services, Inc. (AECOM), the engineering firm administering the study, Layne
    Christensen won the competition. Pureflow finished last.
    Although the study was intended to objectively determine the best filter
    system subcontractor, even after Pureflow lost North Edwards insisted that
    all three companies be allowed to bid on the Project. Jesse Dhaliwal, an
    engineer employed by the State, disagreed because “Layne [Christensen] was
    the clear winner.” Nevertheless, Clifford Moyle, a North Edwards board
    (Board) member told Dhaliwal that the Board had the “right” to choose.
    Moyle, who describes himself as “an expert in all things construction,”
    threatened that if the State did not allow North Edwards to choose the filter
    subcontractor, it would scuttle the Project and supply arsenic laden water
    “forever.”
    For reasons never fully explained despite six weeks of testimony, North
    Edwards was adamant that Pureflow be selected, even though:
    • Layne Christensen had the least expensive waste disposal
    system;
    • Filtronics offered the least expensive operation and
    maintenance over 20 years; and
    • Pureflow had the highest capital cost.
    The Board’s insistence was also a bit puzzling because Pureflow does not
    actually manufacture anything. It does not have a contractor’s license, it has
    no proprietary designs or patents, and does not even own a wrench.
    Everything Pureflow sells is made and installed by other companies.
    In any event, Dhaliwal backed down and allowed North Edwards to
    select Pureflow as the filter system subcontractor. Shortly after, Pureflow
    asked to be paid about $600,000 in advance, before any equipment was even
    4
    manufactured. The State rejected that notion, countering that no payments
    would be made until at least half the equipment was delivered to the job site.
    On January 8, 2013—before general contractors had even bid—
    Pureflow and the State compromised on payment terms. They agreed that
    Pureflow would be paid for each major piece of equipment as and when it was
    manufactured and passed inspection at the manufacturing facility. This was
    incorporated into the Project specifications, making it binding on whichever
    general contractor was awarded the contract.
    In early May 2013, the State agreed to fund $4.9 million “to assist in
    financing a project which will enable [North Edwards] to meet safe drinking
    water standards . . . .” North Edwards was “solely responsible” for the
    Project’s design and construction. The State agreed to disburse funds to
    North Edwards after approving progress payment claims. An accompanying
    document informed North Edwards it was solely responsible for paying
    contractors “in a timely manner per the contractual requirements between
    them irrespective of whether payment has been received from the [State].”
    About three weeks later, North Edwards hired AECOM as the Project’s
    engineer and its representative on the job. Around the same time, Pureflow
    sent North Edwards a revised quotation ($959,815) listing equipment the
    successful bidding contractor would be obligated to purchase from Pureflow
    at specified prices.2 The quote states the general contractor will pay
    Pureflow as and when equipment was made and passed inspection.
    B. Clark is Awarded the Contract
    Out of 10 general contractors submitting bids, Clark’s was the lowest at
    about $6.2 million. In December 2013, after the State increased funding to
    2     Pureflow separately charged North Edwards $240,000 for preparing
    the specifications general contractors needed in formulating their bids.
    5
    $7.8 million, North Edwards awarded the Contract to Clark. Pureflow told
    Clark it would start fabricating the equipment and expected to have all of it
    delivered to the job site within 18 weeks after AECOM approved its
    drawings. On January 22, 2014,3 Clark’s one year period to complete the
    Project commenced.
    Six days later, Pureflow complained of cash flow problems. Clark
    sought to reassure Patrick Kennedy, Pureflow’s owner, that as a matter of
    practice Clark paid its subcontractors within 10 days after receiving payment
    from the Owner.
    At a preconstruction meeting on January 30, Pureflow stated it would
    complete performance by September 16. It also asked to be paid in advance—
    even though (1) the State had already rejected that proposal a year ago; and
    (2) just two weeks earlier Clark accepted Pureflow’s quotation, which
    provided Pureflow would be paid as equipment was manufactured and passed
    inspection. The State once again rejected Pureflow’s request for money up
    front.
    As might be expected in a State-funded but locally administered
    project, getting progress payments approved by the State and money
    disbursed takes time. At the January preconstruction meeting, Dhaliwal
    said the State would process payment requests in 45 to 60 days. But in
    practice, it commonly took 90 days or longer.
    C. The Power Pole Relocation Problem and Delays
    The project site was mostly vacant land, but there were two power
    poles and overhead electrical lines running through the middle of the site.
    Relocating them was an important first task because the poles were
    3        All dates from this point are in 2014 unless otherwise specified.
    6
    “right . . . where structural concrete slabs went” and the overhead power lines
    were a significant danger for workers using heavy equipment. As the owner,
    it was North Edwards’s obligation to move the poles and power lines before
    Clark started work. Based on information supplied by AECOM and North
    Edwards, Southern California Edison (Edison) planned to move the poles by
    March. Clark scheduled his work accordingly, to begin on site in April.
    In January, however, Clark noticed that the planned relocation would
    place the poles in conflict with Project water lines and a block wall. Clark
    was right, and as a result AECOM had to go back to the drawing board. The
    only solution was to move the poles and power across the street onto private
    property. It was North Edwards’s and AECOM’s responsibility—not
    Clark’s—to obtain an easement from that landowner, redesign the relocation,
    and obtain Edison’s approval for the new plans. AECOM did not submit
    revised plans to Edison until late June. There was nothing Clark could have
    done to expedite this.
    North Edwards did not obtain an easement to relocate the power poles
    until early October. In the meantime, Clark’s forces began work even with
    the poles and high voltage lines in the middle of the property. But some
    aspects of the Project, including some of the concrete slabs and equipment to
    be located on them, “just flat out couldn’t get done until those power poles
    were moved.” Under the Contract, Clark was entitled to a 230 working-day
    extension of time because of North Edwards’s delay in moving the power
    poles.
    D. North Edwards Demands Clark Enter Into an Unlawful Lease
    Consistent with common practice, the Contract allowed Clark to use
    the job site for “laydown, staging and construction.” Accordingly, in early
    April Clark brought workers, trailers, and heavy equipment to the remote
    7
    desert job site.4 Nevertheless, on literally the first day of work North
    Edwards refused to allow Clark’s equipment on site, instead insisting it lease
    a nearby vacant lot for that purpose. By no small coincidence, that lot was
    owned by James Allen—who is in a relationship with Kostopoulos.5 Allen
    demanded $5,000 rent (or alternatively, that Clark build a six-foot chain link
    fence with sliding gate on the property).
    Clark had been in the construction business for over 60 years, but this
    was a first. Never before had a public owner required payment as a condition
    to doing the work. After learning the lease was unlawful, Clark refused to
    pay Allen, who replied that Clark was “ ‘poison’ ” and should “ ‘get the hell
    out of here.’ ”6
    E. Undisclosed Gas Lines
    AECOM’s plans showed one underground gas line on the property. But
    early on, Clark discovered “a lot of [underground] gas lines” not depicted in
    the plans. This complicated the work, as water lines had to be “delicately”
    threaded “in between, over and under gas lines.” It also required complex
    changes in the type of pipe Clark was required to install.
    4      Between being awarded the Contract in January and mobilizing in
    April, Clark prepared about 100 submittals, each about two or three inches
    thick, for AECOM’s approval.
    5    Kostopoulos testified in deposition that she and Allen lived together
    and were “lifetime partners.”
    6     This was not the only such incident. North Edwards billed Clark
    double the usual price for water used on site. It also billed the State $14,000
    for Kostopoulos’s office services.
    8
    F. The Second Water Well
    The project site has one water well, and the plans called for
    construction of a second one about 20 feet away. When the well driller
    arrived, he refused to construct the new well because it was too close to the
    existing one. Clark’s president, Lawrence Clark, explained:
    “And with it only being 20 feet away from the existing well
    that’s actually sucking water out, it creates the scenario
    where chemicals and the pressure can transfer from the
    new hole over to the old hole and have a cave in or
    contaminate the drinking water, because you’re down there
    with chemicals and drilling fluid and all sorts of stuff.”
    Clark proposed “a couple of different workarounds,” but the issue was
    not resolved before North Edwards terminated the Contract. This caused an
    85-day delay for which Clark was not responsible.
    G. Pureflow Demands Cash in Advance and Early Payment for Filter Media
    In late April, Kennedy again (now, for the third time) demanded cash
    in advance. And in a related move, he also notified Clark that Pureflow
    would deliver the filter media7 to the job site right away, thus triggering a
    $149,000 progress payment—even though there was no place to put it. The
    tanks that would hold the media had not even been made yet.8
    North Edwards refused to agree to the early filter media delivery,
    stating that “financing” Pureflow was not its responsibility. Clark explained
    the “big picture” was that without the early payment for the filter media,
    “[P]ureflow will not be able to finish this project and in return this project
    7     Filter media is a fine porous substance (resembling sand) that removes
    arsenic and other substances from water.
    8     Pureflow needed the cash. The Project represented about one-third of
    Pureflow’s total annual revenue, and its suppliers were not extending credit.
    9
    will end up in court with everyone pointing fingers at each other.” Clark
    reminded North Edwards that he “did not pick Pureflow to supply the
    filtering system nor did Clark have the opportunity to select another
    supplier.” He urged North Edwards “to come together . . . on how [P]ureflow
    financially will supply and finish this project.”
    Despite North Edwards’s objections, Pureflow delivered the filter media
    early. Clark alone bore the cost of storing it.
    H. Pureflow’s Failure to Perform
    All the Pureflow-supplied equipment should have been delivered on site
    by mid-July. On June 23, Clark asked AECOM to identify which Pureflow-
    supplied equipment it had inspected. In response, AECOM did not identify
    any, and instead stated that Pureflow was Clark’s problem. The next day,
    Clark notified AECOM and North Edwards of Pureflow’s “potential failure to
    meet project schedule.” Clark reserved its rights “to claim additional costs,
    including but not limited to . . . delay and consequential damages . . . .”
    Like AECOM, North Edwards responded by claiming Pureflow was
    Clark’s problem—even though North Edwards selected Pureflow and
    negotiated its payment terms before Clark even bid on the project. Clark’s
    expert testified that as the project owner that had selected Pureflow, North
    Edwards “need[ed] to take ownership of it. Typically, the owner will step up
    and do that.”
    On June 27—now six months into the Project—Pureflow had done
    virtually nothing apart from the early delivery of filter media. Clark was also
    “shocked” that Pureflow “didn’t seem to care.” Three days later, Pureflow
    asked Clark for a $503,000 advance of “working capital” so it could “move
    forward” on the Project. This was now its fourth attempt to change agreed
    upon payment terms. Now desperate to try to complete the Project as close to
    10
    on-time as possible, Clark asked Dhaliwal to authorize the half-million dollar
    advance.
    On July 3, Moyle on behalf of North Edwards e-mailed Clark with
    instructions to “dump” Pureflow:
    “I understand you and one of your suppliers are having
    trouble delivering said equipment and designated system.
    That is not the problem of [North Edwards] . . . . Go direct
    to the suppliers and buy the equipment you contracted to
    supply to us. We don’t care if you have to dump Pureflow
    as your package supplier.”
    About a week later, and consistent with Moyle’s instruction, Clark sent a
    “formal notice of breach of contract” to Pureflow. Clark asked AECOM to
    identify another filter vendor, noting that Pureflow had already caused at
    least a 120-day delay.
    But three weeks later, North Edwards reversed position, telling Clark,
    “[Y]ou cannot replace Pureflow.” Meanwhile, the State had agreed to
    Pureflow’s demand for cash in advance. North Edwards claimed Clark was
    responsible for $200,000 in delays and penalties resulting from Pureflow’s
    conduct.
    By the end of July, Pureflow agreed to give Clark the names and
    amounts due its suppliers in anticipation of joint checks being prepared once
    the advance funds arrived from Sacramento. But Pureflow never gave Clark
    that information.
    “Q: Mr. Kennedy, is it fair to say that you knew all along
    that if you gave Clark Bros. this information, company
    names, the contact names, the telephone numbers, the
    evidence of the cost of the products . . . that Clark Bros.
    could go around you and purchase all of those items and
    have your vendors build them with you, and you would
    have lost your profit?
    “A: That thought crossed my mind.”
    11
    On August 8, and without telling Clark, Kostopoulos and Allen met
    with Kennedy. They discussed whether North Edwards could contract
    directly with Pureflow and exclude Clark. Kostopoulos said she intended to
    send the State’s $500,000 advance directly to Pureflow, bypassing Clark.
    Later that month, Moyle told the Board he had consulted a lawyer who
    agreed to “write two very strong letters, one to Clark, one to AECOM, and
    make them know they have to shit or get off the pot.” Moyle instructed the
    lawyer to “kick their ass.” When a North Edwards’s Board member asked
    Moyle, “What about Pureflow?” he replied, “Well, [the lawyer’s] not doing
    anything about Pureflow. He’s going to tell Clark he can’t fire Pureflow . . . .”
    Kostopoulos sent Archie MacDonald, Pureflow’s vice-president, an e-mail,
    stating she was “ ‘doing everything’ ” she could to force Clark to “ ‘rescind the
    termination of Pureflow ASAP.’ ” MacDonald thanked Kostopoulos for her
    “ ‘tremendous effort,’ ” stating, “ ‘Enjoy your weekend and go for a drive in
    your [Audi] A8. You deserve it.’ ”
    Despite this march towards litigation, for a brief period it appeared the
    parties could salvage the Project. On September 17, the State finally agreed
    to advance $500,000 for Pureflow. Clark and North Edwards agreed to
    disburse that money to Pureflow’s vendors by joint checks. All other terms of
    Pureflow’s purchase order would remain unchanged. But two days later,
    Pureflow quashed that agreement because the joint checks would not include
    any amount for Pureflow’s mark-up. From Clark’s perspective, once again
    Pureflow was holding the Project “hostage.”
    By October 8, North Edwards and AECOM agreed to Pureflow’s
    demand—the State’s advance would pay not only for the equipment, but
    Pureflow’s profit too. A week later, Clark was informed of this new
    agreement. Clark still wanted the money disbursed by joint checks to ensure
    12
    it was used for the equipment. Joint checks “are normal in the construction
    industry.”
    For reasons not explained at trial, North Edwards would not agree to
    disburse the $500,000 advance by joint checks. Under a document entitled
    “Reinstatement and First Amendment to Purchase Order” (Reinstatement), it
    was instead agreed that after receiving payment from North Edwards for
    amounts due Pureflow, Clark would wire funds to a trust account held by
    Pureflow’s lawyer. From that account the lawyer would pay (1) vendor
    invoices; (2) 90 percent of Pureflow’s profit when the equipment shipped; and
    (3) Pureflow’s remaining 10 percent profit on delivery.
    Because “everybody had signed off” on the Reinstatement and “there
    were attorneys present,” Clark believed Pureflow and North Edwards were
    “going to actually follow through with this.” In the end, Pureflow would
    receive every penny it asked for, and at the same time it was not held
    responsible for delays. Still, the Reinstatement was a “huge” relief for
    Clark—the Project was finally moving forward.
    But that did not last long. Just six days later on October 20, North
    Edwards terminated the Contract. Oddly, however, the Board kept this a
    secret from Clark for nearly two weeks. At a construction meeting on
    October 27, Lawrence Clark said his crew heard rumors they had been
    terminated. Kostopoulos (falsely) replied, “I can guarantee you” that North
    Edwards did not terminate the contract. She accused Clark or his workers of
    “making something up.”
    A day or so later, Clark received a letter from North Edwards’s
    attorney entitled, “Notice of Intent to Terminate Contract.” Ironically, the
    same day Clark also received Pureflow’s $500,000 advance from North
    Edwards. On November 10, Clark returned that money to Kostopoulos.
    13
    In mid-November, North Edwards hired an engineer, Chuck Krieger,
    who Kostopoulos knew to be “very knowledgeable about water plants” and
    who in the past had worked for North Edwards. The Board asked Krieger to
    inspect Clark’s work and determine “what needs to be done to complete” it.
    A few weeks later at a Board meeting, Kostopoulos read aloud part of
    Krieger’s report, which stated:
    “ ‘[A]lthough[ ] there have been some issues at the job site --
    many, if not most, appear to have been corrected or
    correctable and there still appears to be time within the
    contract completion schedule to remedy such deficiencies
    other than construction of Pureflow facilities and the new
    well site.
    “ ‘Given the very real possibility that in the event of
    litigation against the district, [Clark] may prevail with
    regards to various issues it raises[,] . . . [¶] [i]s there any
    desire by [North Edwards] to deescalate the matter and
    determine if there is any possibility of resolving the
    existing situation without litigation?’ ”
    After reading this, Kostopoulos asked her fellow Board members, “In other
    words, do we want to kiss Clark’s ass and take him back?” Apparently, the
    answer was no. The Board fired Krieger.
    At the same meeting, Kostopoulos also reported that North Edwards’s
    attorney “strongly urg[ed]” it to “immediately reconsider its position and
    attempt to resolve the matter with [Clark].” Kostopoulos called their lawyer
    “a little weasel” who did not have “balls enough to fight this thing.” Instead
    of heeding their lawyer’s advice, the Board fired him.
    Moyle suggested posting “No Trespassing” signs to both deter Clark
    from returning to the job site to allow them to “shoot” him if he did. Another
    Board member commented, with “buckshot in their butts,” “[t]hey’ll think
    twice about coming back.” When at trial Moyle was asked, “Did you stop to
    14
    consider, Mr. Moyle, that maybe the lawyer and maybe Mr. Krieger actually
    were giving you good advice?” he replied, “I don’t think so.”
    I. Verdict and Judgment
    In a first amended complaint (Complaint), Clark sued North Edwards
    and the State for breach of contract and related claims. North Edwards
    cross-complained against Clark and the insurer who issued its performance
    and payment bond. The State settled with Clark for $2.7 million before trial.
    By special verdict, the jury found that North Edwards breached its
    contract with Clark, resulting in $3,288.721 in damages. It also found in
    Clark’s favor on North Edwards’s cross-complaint. Postverdict, the court
    entered a $4,134,325.89 net judgment in Clark’s favor.9
    DISCUSSION
    A.    The Court Erroneously Instructed That North Edwards Was
    Contractually “Required” to Pay Clark Within 30 Days; However, the
    Error Was Harmless
    1. Background
    The Contract incorporates by reference section 20104.50. Subdivision
    (b) of that statute provides in part:
    “Any local agency which fails to make any progress
    payment within 30 days after receipt of an undisputed and
    properly submitted payment request from a contractor on a
    construction contract shall pay interest to the contractor
    equivalent to the legal rate . . . .” (§ 20104.50, subd. (b).)
    9     The net judgment includes: $182,656.14 in interest under section
    20104.50, $834,952.72 in prejudgment interest, $2,185,806.93 in prevailing
    party attorneys’ fees; $146,755.05 in expert fees and expenses under Code of
    Civil Procedure section 998, and $195,434.05 in costs. It also contains a $2.7
    million offset for the State’s settlement.
    15
    The Contract’s supplement to general provisions additionally provides in
    paragraph 1.10(G):
    “The project is being funded with State of California
    Proposition 84 funds, payments to the contractor for work
    performed for each given month will be paid by the District
    only after it receives reimbursement from the State. . . .”
    The Complaint alleges North Edwards “materially breached” by, among
    other things, “failing and refusing to pay [Clark] sums due under the contract
    within the time provided for the same pursuant to . . . section 20104.50.”
    Before trial, Clark moved to exclude evidence regarding payment obligations
    contrary to this statute. Its attorney told the court, “[T]here is a statute on
    point that says, all public entities must pay within 30 days.” The court
    denied the motion, but added that “doesn’t mean [Clark] won’t get an
    instruction . . . on the subject.”
    Lawrence Clark testified that the Contract, which incorporates by
    reference section 20104.50, requires the owner to pay the contractor within
    30 days. He admitted knowing from the outset that the State needed 45 to 60
    days to process payment requests. Nevertheless, he claimed that did not
    affect North Edwards’s obligation under section 20104.50.
    While discussing jury instructions with counsel, the court stated there
    was a “conflict” and “ambiguity” in the Contract because one provision
    required North Edwards to pay Clark within 30 days, but another stated it
    was required to pay only after receiving State reimbursement. The court
    construed this conflict against North Edwards as the drafter. Based on that
    ruling, the court instructed the jury that North Edwards “is required to make
    prompt payment to [Clark] for approved progress payment applications” and
    any provision “in the Contract Documents that are contrary to the prompt
    payment obligations of [North Edwards] as set forth in these instructions are
    16
    void and of no effect.” The instructions also stated that if North Edwards
    failed to make any progress payment “within 30 days,” Clark was entitled to
    10 percent interest.10
    In closing argument Clark’s attorney urged the jury to find that North
    Edwards breached stating, “[T]hey’re supposed to pay within 30 days. It’s a
    Prompt Pay Act. It’s in their contract. . . . It’s now in your jury instructions,
    law on that.”
    2. Section 20104.50 Does Not “Require” Progress Payments Be Made
    Within 30 Days; It Requires Interest Be Paid When Payment Is Made
    After 30 Days.
    California has many statutes designed to require prompt progress
    payments to general contractors and subcontractors. “These statutes are
    intended to discourage owners and direct contractors from withholding
    monies owed as a way of granting themselves interest-free loans.” (United
    Riggers & Erectors, Inc. v. Coast Iron & Steel Co. (2018) 
    4 Cal.5th 1082
    ,
    1088.) The statutes are scattered throughout the Civil Code, Business and
    Professions Code, Government Code, and Public Contracts Code.11
    This case concerns a local agency’s obligation to make progress
    payments to a general contractor, which is governed by section 20104.50.
    Subdivision (b) of that statute provides that “[a]ny local agency which fails to
    make any progress payment within 30 days after receipt of an undisputed
    10    The special instructions also stated that if North Edwards failed to pay
    within 30 days, Clark “is entitled to interest of ten percent.” However, the
    parties stipulated that the amount, if any, of prompt payment penalties
    would be decided by the court in a post-trial motion. In closing argument,
    Clark’s attorney told the jury, “Don’t worry about interest” because that
    would be handled “separate and apart from your deliberations.”
    11    (See, e.g., Civ. Code, section 8800; Bus. & Prof. Code, section 7108.5;
    Gov. Code, section 927; Pub. Contract Code, section 10261.5.)
    17
    and properly submitted payment request from a contractor on a construction
    contract shall pay interest to the contractor equivalent to the legal rate [set
    forth in Code of Civil Procedure, section 685.010].”12 Under subdivision (f) of
    Public Contracts Code section 20104.50, “[e]ach local agency shall require
    that this article, or a summary thereof, be set forth in the terms of any
    contract subject to this article.”13
    “ ‘In cases involving statutory interpretation, our “ ‘ “fundamental
    task . . . is to determine the Legislature’s intent so as to effectuate the law’s
    purpose.” ’ [Citation.] ‘ “If the statute’s text evinces an unmistakable plain
    meaning, we need go no further.” ’ [Citation.]” [Citation.] “We construe
    statutory language in the context of the statutory framework, seeking to
    discern the statute’s underlying purpose and to harmonize its different
    components.” ’ ” (San Diego Navy Broadway Complex Coalition v. California
    Coastal Com. (2019) 
    40 Cal.App.5th 563
    , 576.)
    Here, the operative language in section 20104.50, subdivision (b) is that
    a local agency “which fails” to pay within 30 days “shall pay interest” at the
    legal rate. Giving these words their plain meaning, the statute does not
    compel payment within 30 days. What it compels is that interest be paid (at
    the legal rate) when payment is made after 30 days.
    Of course, a 10 percent penalty for tardy payment is likely a strong
    incentive for local government to make progress payments within 30 days.
    But to incentivize payment within 30 days is not the same as to compel it.
    12     Code of Civil Procedure section 685.010, subdivision (a) provides,
    “Interest accrues at the rate of 10 percent per annum . . . .” Under
    subdivision (b) of that statute, the Legislature “reserves the right” to change
    this rate “at any time to a rate of less than 10 percent per annum.”
    13     Section 20104.50 is the only statute in article 1.7. Thus, the reference
    to “this article” effectively means section 20104.50.
    18
    There may be a number of good reasons why a local agency might take longer
    than 30 days to pay. In this case, for example, the sheer bureaucracy in
    having payments approved by AECOM, North Edwards, and the State made
    payment beyond 30 days not only possible, but a near certainty.
    Given the frequency with which even a good faith attempt to pay
    within 30 days may fail, section 20104.60 quite reasonably does not create a
    breach of contract every time a progress payment is made beyond 30 days.
    Rather, the legislative goal of prompt payment is effected by generously
    compensating the contractor for the time value of its money when delay
    occurs, and thus deterring tardy payments.
    We accordingly hold that when section 20104.50 is incorporated into a
    local agency’s public works contract, as it was here, the agency does not
    breach that contract merely by making a progress payment after 30 days.
    The statute is violated, and a breach of contract occurs, if and when the
    agency fails to pay the requisite interest after a late payment is made.
    This interpretation of section 20104.50 is further supported by
    comparing it to other prompt pay statutes containing different language. For
    example, on private works of improvement, Civil Code section 8800 provides
    “the owner shall pay the direct contractor, within 30 days . . . any progress
    payment due . . . .” (Italics added.) Under Business and Professions Code
    section 7108.5, a prime contractor “shall pay” a subcontractor within “seven
    days after receipt of each progress payment, the amount on account of the
    work performed by the subcontractor.” (Italics added in first quote.) Similar
    “shall pay” language is in Civil Code sections 8802, subdivision (b) (“the
    direct contractor shall pay the subcontractor the amount allowed . . . on
    account of the work performed by the subcontractor”), 8812 (“owner shall,
    within 45 days . . . pay the retention”), and 8814 (“direct contractor shall,
    19
    within 10 days . . . pay to each subcontractor . . . that subcontractor’s share of
    the payment”). Similarly, Public Contracts Code section 7107, subdivision (c)
    provides, “retention . . . shall be released” and section 10262.5 states, “a
    prime contractor . . . shall pay to any subcontractor . . . the respective
    amounts allowed the contractor on account of the work performed by the
    subcontractor . . . .”
    These statues illustrate that when the Legislature intends to require
    timely payment to a contractor or subcontractor (as opposed to merely
    incentivizing timeliness), it knows how to clearly say so. The absence of such
    language in section 20104.50, subdivision (b) thus manifests a different
    intention. (See In re Jennings (2004) 
    34 Cal.4th 254
    , 273, [“ ‘[W]here a
    statute, with reference to one subject contains a given provision, the omission
    of such provision from a similar statute concerning a related subject is
    significant to show that a different legislative intent existed with reference to
    different statutes.’ ”].)
    In asserting that section 20104.50 requires payment in 30 days, Clark
    points to a preamble in subdivision (a) of the statute that states, “It is the
    intent of the Legislature in enacting this section to require all local
    government to pay their contractors on time so that these contractors can
    meet their own obligations.” (Italics added.) However, although the
    preamble certainly reflects the Legislature’s serious concern about more than
    30 days’ delay in paying contractors, “ ‘legislative intent is not gleaned solely
    from the preamble of a statute; it is gleaned from the statute as a whole,
    which includes the particular directives.’ [Citation.] And ‘every statute
    should be construed with reference to the whole system of law of which it is a
    part so that all may be harmonized and have effect.’ ” (Briggs v. Eden
    Council for Hope & Opportunity (1999) 
    19 Cal.4th 1106
    , 1118–1119.)
    20
    As explained, the plain meaning of subdivision (b) of section 20104.50
    controls, especially when compared with distinct language in other prompt
    pay statutes. And in a very real economic sense, a 10 percent penalty for late
    payment will in many cases, effectively “require” local government to make
    progress payments within 30 days if at all possible.
    In a related argument, Clark relies on another portion of the statute’s
    preamble stating, “It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this article to
    fully occupy the field of public policy relating to the prompt payment of local
    governments’ outstanding receipts. The Legislature finds and declares that
    all government officials, including those in local government, must set a
    standard of prompt payment . . . .” (§ 20104.50, subd. (a)(2), italics added.)
    However, this provision is directed at charter cities, not local agencies
    like North Edwards. “[C]harter cities . . . may adopt and enforce ordinances
    that conflict with general state laws, provided the subject of the regulation is
    a ‘municipal affair’ rather than one of ‘statewide concern.’ ” (American
    Financial Services Assn. v. City of Oakland (2005) 
    34 Cal.4th 1239
    , 1251.)
    Accordingly, a charter city’s “ ‘local regulation is invalid if it attempts to
    impose additional requirements in a field which is fully occupied by statute.’ ”
    (Id. at p. 1252.) Here, by expressing an intent to “fully occupy the field,” the
    Legislature has preempted any local ordinance by a charter city that might
    conflict with section 20104.50. Because North Edwards is not a charter city,
    and even if it were, there is no potentially conflicting local ordinance, this
    part of the preamble does not apply.
    With section 20104.50 correctly interpreted, the irreconcilable conflict
    the trial court perceived simply disappears. Under the supplement to general
    provisions, North Edwards was not contractually required to make progress
    payments until it received such funds from the State. Under provisions in
    21
    the Contract incorporating section 20104.50, North Edwards is required to
    pay interest at the legal rate for payments made after 30 days.14
    3. The Error Was Not Prejudicial
    We turn now to whether the instructional error likely affected the
    outcome. A mistake in instructing the jury requires reversal only “ ‘where it
    seems probable’ that the error ‘prejudicially affected the verdict.’ ” (See Soule
    v. General Motors Corp. (1994) 
    8 Cal.4th 548
    , 580.) Here, we conclude it did
    not for two reasons. First, there was substantial evidence of numerous other
    (and much more serious) breaches by North Edwards, including its:
    • Unwillingness to take responsibility, as the owner who
    chose Pureflow, for Pureflow’s “failings in moving the
    project and delivering.”
    • Failure to extend Clark’s time to perform based on delay
    in (a) moving the power poles and lines, (b) dealing with
    undesignated high pressure gas lines, and (c) drilling
    the new well close to the existing one.
    • Improper management of the Project.
    • Termination of Clark when the general contractor still
    had three months to perform, even without any time
    extension.
    But although the case was tried on the theory that North Edwards committed
    several material breaches, the special verdict did not ask the jury to decide
    the issue with specificity. Question 2 merely asked: “Did North Edwards
    14   Because of this disposition, it is unnecessary to consider North
    Edwards’s contention that by repeatedly accepting late payments, Clark
    waived the “right” to be paid within 30 days.
    22
    Water District materially breach its obligations under its contract with Clark
    Bros., Inc. for the construction of the Project? ____ YES ____ NO.”15
    Nevertheless, we know the jury determined that North Edwards
    committed at least one other material breach that was entirely unaffected by
    the instructions on prompt payment. In answering Question 6 on the special
    verdict form, it specifically found that North Edwards furnished Clark with
    plans that were “erroneous, misleading or inaccurate.” In closing argument,
    directing the jury’s attention to verdict Question 2 (breach of contract),
    Clark’s attorney made the express connection between Questions 2 and 6
    when he stated that “most importantly, those plans and specs were not
    correct. So this [Question 2] should be answered yes. They materially
    breached their obligations.”
    Even more significant, North Edwards could not have been prejudiced
    by the instructional error because the record affirmatively demonstrates the
    jury did not base its damage award on tardy progress payments. Clark’s
    construction expert calculated damages by a simple formula that did not even
    consider late payment. He determined the amount Clark spent on the Project
    ($5,021,755), deducted what North Edwards paid Clark ($2,250,133), added a
    reasonable amount for profit ($377,230) and overhead ($139,869), resulting in
    $3,288,721 in claimed damage. The jury awarded this same $3,288,721.16
    15    The record does not contain any competing verdict form, nor on appeal
    does North Edwards contend the trial court erroneously refused to give its
    proposed verdict form.
    16    As previously noted (ante, fn. 10), Clark’s counsel told the jurors not to
    award any damages based on North Edwards’s failure to make timely
    progress payments because the court would make this calculation at a later
    time. The jury’s damage award makes it clear they followed this direction.
    23
    Thus, we are confident the verdict was unaffected by any instructional error
    regarding prompt payment obligations.
    B.    Any Error In Allowing Evidence of the State’s “No-Cost, No-Fault”
    Settlement Proposal Was Harmless
    About a year after this litigation commenced, the State offered a “no-
    fault, no-cost” proposal to settle the matter. As counsel described it, the State
    offered to pay Clark to return to the site, refurbish items that had been in the
    desert and decaying for a year, and “finish the job”—without regard to “who’s
    at fault.” North Edwards rejected the proposal.
    Before trial, Clark’s attorney explained he intended to offer this
    evidence to show North Edwards failed to mitigate the damages alleged in its
    cross-complaint:
    “[O]ur position is really that this goes to the duty to
    mitigate. And they’re going to put an expert up there that’s
    going to say that project has set [sic] and rotted for four
    years, and it’s Clark’s fault. . . . [¶] And what the evidence
    is going to show is they could have had it finished by Clark
    Bros . . . . and by the State who agreed to cover that cost.
    And they [North Edwards] chose time and again to say
    no . . . .”
    North Edwards countered that the State’s proposal was inadmissible because
    made during mediation.17 The court ruled that Clark could not offer
    evidence of “anything that has to do with mediation,” but otherwise the
    evidence was admissible on mitigation of damages.
    17    The mediation privilege in Evidence Code section 1119, subdivision (a)
    provides in part: “No evidence of anything said or any admission made for
    the purpose of, in the course of, or pursuant to, a mediation or a mediation
    consultation is admissible,” and in subdivision (c) that “All communications,
    negotiations, or settlement discussions by and between participants in the
    course of a mediation or a mediation consultation shall remain confidential.”
    24
    At trial, Lawrence Clark testified that the State’s “no-fault, no-cost
    proposal” was “always outstanding.” Kostopoulos testified in her deposition
    that North Edwards rejected the proposal. In closing argument, Clark’s
    attorney told the jury:
    “You know after the lawsuit the State came and said, we’re
    going to offer a no-fault, no-cost proposal. Let’s get Clark
    Bros. back out there. Let’s get the job done. You’ve got a
    jury instruction here . . . about the duty to what we call
    mitigating [sic] damages. . . . [¶] They have an obligation
    to mitigate their damages. They have an obligation to get
    that job done. And the State wanted them to have Clark
    Bros. come back and do it. . . . They should have let Clark
    Bros. complete this project. They would have had no
    damages.”
    On appeal, North Edwards again claims the State’s offer was made
    during “mediation” and was, therefore, inadmissible. However, the record
    citations in North Edwards’s opening brief show that the parties participated
    in mediation, but not what was said during it. The closest North Edwards
    comes is a citation to Kostopoulos’s testimony that the State’s proposal was
    made “when we went down to San Bernardino.” But there is no evidence that
    “San Bernardino” referred to mediation, as opposed to a settlement
    conference that the mediation privilege would not apply to, and there were no
    follow up questions to clarify.18 In its reply brief, North Edwards states that
    “any doubts” about whether the proposal arose in mediation are resolved by
    an October 2016 filing in the trial court that asked for a “[m]andatory
    [s]ettlement [c]onference” after an unsuccessful mediation session. However,
    that document merely states the parties “tentatively agreed to certain deal
    18    North Edwards’s pretrial motion to exclude evidence of the State’s
    proposal acknowledges it was made both in mediation and in “settlement
    conferences.”
    25
    points” and the parties “left the mediation having compromised.” It does not
    support the proposition that the State’s no-cost, no-fault proposal was made
    only in mediation.
    We have independently searched the record for any evidence, even a
    declaration, that would support a finding by the trial court that the State’s
    proposal was only made in mediation; we can find none. North Edwards’s
    trial brief contains an extensive discussion of the mediation privilege, but no
    declaration that the State’s offer was made during mediation or only in
    mediation (as distinguished from a settlement conference). Similarly, North
    Edwards’s motion in limine asserts the offer was made “numerous times
    during mediation,” but contains no declaration or other evidence to show
    that.
    On appeal, Clark contends the State’s offer was made “long before the
    parties were even ordered to mediation.” Although there is nothing in the
    record to show that either, it may explain the trial court’s ruling—the State’s
    settlement proposal was admissible on the duty to mitigate issue, but
    “anything that has to do with mediation” was not. In sum, on this record
    North Edwards cannot sustain its burden as appellant to show the court’s
    ruling violated the mediation privilege.
    North Edwards also contends the evidence was inadmissible under
    Evidence Code sections 1152 and 1154.19 However, these statutes provide
    19     Evidence Code section 1152 provides that an offer of compromise is
    “inadmissible to prove [the offeror’s] liability for the loss or damage or any
    part of it.”
    Evidence Code section 1154 provides, “Evidence that a person has
    accepted or offered or promised to accept a sum of money or any other thing,
    act, or service in satisfaction of a claim, as well as any conduct or statements
    made in negotiation thereof, is inadmissible to prove the invalidity of the
    claim or any part of it.”
    26
    that a settlement offer is inadmissible only to show liability (Evid. Code,
    § 1152) or the claim’s invalidity (id., § 1154). Here, the evidence was offered
    not to show North Edwards’s liability or invalidity of its claims, but rather
    that it had not reasonably mitigated its claimed damages.
    In any event, even assuming the court should have excluded this
    evidence, the record affirmatively demonstrates any error was harmless. The
    evidence was offered (and argued) only to show North Edwards failed to
    reasonably mitigate claimed damages on its cross-complaint. But the jury
    never found it necessary to even reach that issue. In special verdict Question
    9, the jury found that North Edwards did not perform its obligations under
    the Contract. The verdict form instructed the jury that after a “NO” answer
    to Question 9, it should “please answer no more questions.” Accordingly, the
    jury never even considered Question 12, which asked whether North
    Edwards reasonably mitigated its damages—because the jury determined
    North Edwards was not entitled to recover any damages on its cross-claims.
    In a related argument, North Edwards asserts that its rejection of the
    State’s settlement offer should have been excluded because it “paint[ed] [it]
    as being unreasonable and loath to allow [Clark] to complete construction.”
    Assuming without deciding that such an objection was preserved for appeal
    and had merit, any error would be harmless. There was ample other
    evidence that North Edwards acted unreasonably. The Board meeting where
    it fired its consulting engineer and attorney, each of whom advocated
    restraint and compromise, well established that.
    C.    The Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Allowing the Jury to Hear
    Audiotapes of North Edwards’s Meetings
    North Edwards audio-recorded several Board and construction
    meetings. Among other things, these contain discussions about AECOM,
    Pureflow, and North Edwards’s reasons for terminating Clark’s contract.
    27
    Ironically, during a recording from a December Board meeting, Moyle
    instructs Kostopoulos not to turn over any “voice recordings.” He did not
    want Clark’s attorneys to have “a real time” view of the parties’ interactions.
    This “real time” view included derogatory and racist statements by
    North Edwards. For example, in one meeting Board members referred to an
    AECOM engineer as “Chewbacca” and discussed getting AECOM to fire him
    because he was “another black” who will “listen to what you’re saying and do
    it his way.” At another meeting, a Board member disparaged Clark, stating
    he “came from Harlem.” As already noted, Kostopoulos referred to North
    Edwards’s former lawyer as a “weasel” and questioned whether “he’s got balls
    enough to fight this thing.” Moyle also threatened to shoot Clark’s personnel
    if they returned to the job site.
    Before trial, asserting this evidence was both irrelevant and unduly
    prejudicial, North Edwards moved to exclude “all derogatory and offensive
    comments” its personnel made in the recordings. The trial court denied the
    motion, stating:
    “I can’t imagine keeping that out . . . . It has to do with all
    kinds of factors. It has to do with bias. It has to do with
    motive. It has to do with potentially why it is that the
    [B]oard was not willing to let Clark Bros. back in.”
    [¶] . . . [¶]
    “[T]here were reasons that the [B]oard had in making the
    decision and maintaining the decisions that they made
    based on issues that had nothing to do with performance,
    but everything to do with personality and resentment,
    personal vice.”
    On appeal, North Edwards contends the evidence should have been
    excluded as inadmissible character evidence under Evidence Code section
    1101, subdivision (a). It also claims the court abused its discretion in not
    excluding the evidence under Evidence Code section 352.
    28
    At trial, however, North Edwards did not object under Evidence Code
    section 1101.20 Accordingly, that issue is forfeited on appeal. (Evid. Code,
    § 353, subd. (a); Crouch v. Trinity Christian Center of Santa Ana, Inc. (2019)
    
    39 Cal.App.5th 995
    , 1020.)21 In any event, even if we were to consider it, we
    would conclude the court did not abuse its discretion. Notwithstanding the
    general prohibition on character evidence, evidence suggesting North
    Edwards’s bias and prejudice was admissible to rebut its claim that it fired
    Clark for performance deficiencies. (Evid. Code, § 1101, subd. (b) [“Nothing
    in this section prohibits the admission of evidence . . . when relevant to
    prove” motive, intent “other than [a person’s] disposition to commit such an
    act.”].)
    Turning to the objection North Edwards did make, under Evidence
    Code section 352, a trial court may in its discretion exclude otherwise
    admissible evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the
    probability that its admission will “create substantial danger of undue
    prejudice, of confusing the issues, or of misleading the jury.” (Id., § 352,
    20     Page seven of North Edwards’s motion in limine contains a “see also”
    string cite to Evidence Code section 1101, subdivision (a). But there is no
    additional argument or analysis that the recordings are inadmissible
    character evidence. This is insufficient to raise the point in the trial court
    and likewise inadequate to preserve it on appeal. (See, e.g., Blizzard Energy,
    Inc. v. Schaefers (2021) 
    71 Cal.App.5th 832
    , 857 [arguments not supported by
    “meaningful analysis with citations to the record and authority” are
    forfeited].)
    21    “A verdict or finding shall not be set aside, nor shall the judgment or
    decision based thereon be reversed, by reason of the erroneous admission of
    evidence unless: (a) There appears of record an objection to or a motion to
    exclude or to strike the evidence that was timely made and so stated as to
    make clear the specific ground of the objection or motion . . . .” (Evid. Code,
    § 353.)
    29
    subd. (d).) In this context, prejudice refers to provoking emotional bias
    against a defendant, and the risk of inducing an emotional response that
    might engulf the dispassionate logical analysis required for the jury’s
    factfinding duty. (People v. Doolin (2009) 
    45 Cal.4th 390
    , 439.) On appeal,
    the issue is whether the trial court’s ruling was arbitrary, capricious, or
    patently absurd, resulting in a miscarriage of justice. (See People v.
    Avitia (2005) 
    127 Cal.App.4th 185
    , 193.)
    The trial court did not abuse its discretion. Board members calling the
    engineer “Chewbacca,” wanting to kick Clark’s “ass,” and referring to a
    lawyer as a “weasel” who lacked “balls” are all things one might expect to
    hear from an immature third grader at the school yard. But it is not the type
    of conduct that would likely engender an irrational emotional response by
    jurors.
    North Edwards’s racist comments are a closer call. Racism is
    repugnant and potentially inflammatory. However, evidence is not “unduly
    prejudicial” under Evidence Code section 352 merely because it casts a
    defendant in a bad light. (People v. Lindberg (2008) 
    45 Cal.4th 1
    , 50.) Here,
    we cannot say the court abused its discretion. The racial slurs were limited
    in number (two), and each was fleeting. Moreover, Moyle was given an
    opportunity to explain before the jury that “he’s another black” was not
    intended to be a racial slur, but rather a reference to a person, whose last
    name was “Black”—the first AECOM engineer on the Project who “wasn’t
    really good.” Moyle testified that the engineer they called Chewbacca “lied to
    us just like [Mr.] Black lied to us. So we got rid of him.”
    “The unfortunate reality is that odious, racist language continues to be
    used by some persons at all levels of our society. While offensive, the use of
    such language . . . is regrettably not so unusual as to inevitably bias the jury
    30
    against the defendant.” (People v. Quartermain (1997) 
    16 Cal.4th 600
    , 628.)
    Here, the racial slurs were only a very small portion of the evidence in a six-
    week trial. Clark’s attorney did not focus the jury’s attention on them.
    Accordingly, there is no reason to believe the jury found North Edwards
    liable for things it said, rather than for its conduct.
    D.    The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion In Restricting Evidence of
    North Edwards’s Limited Financial Resources
    Before trial, Clark moved to exclude evidence of the parties’ financial
    condition. The court granted the motion, stating, “The financial position” of
    each party “is not going to be relevant in this case.” After the ruling, North
    Edwards’s attorney stated that in “passing” the jury would hear that North
    Edwards is “economically disadvantaged.” Clark’s attorney replied, “I don’t
    have a problem with that . . . .”
    In its final argument on appeal, North Edwards contends the court
    prejudicially erred in not allowing additional evidence that it “lacked the
    financial resources itself to pay for this Project” and instead relied on State
    funding. North Edwards contends the evidence would also have explained
    why it chose Pureflow as “the only economically feasible option” it had.
    Although acknowledging that evidence of a party’s wealth or lack of it is
    ordinarily inadmissible, North Edwards contends the evidence was
    admissible in this case because its “economic condition was relevant to
    several key factual issues in this case” including its “alleged failure to
    mitigate.”
    North Edwards’s contention fails to persuade because the trial court
    allowed it to offer the evidence and make the arguments it now claims were
    precluded. For example, Kostopoulos testified that North Edwards’s limited
    financial resources necessitated that the State pay for the Project and fund
    progress payments. Moyle recounted that the Board “spoke[ ] at [length]”
    31
    with the companies participating in the pilot study, and after a “daylong
    meeting” determined that Pureflow was the one that “followed the scope and
    protocol” of the specifications. Nothing in the court’s ruling precluded North
    Edwards from introducing evidence of legitimate reasons for insisting on
    Pureflow as the sole-source filter and equipment provider.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Clark is entitled to costs on appeal.
    DATO, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    O’ROURKE, Acting P. J.
    IRION, J.
    32