Bode & Grenier, LLP v. Carroll Knight
BODE & GRENIER, LLP, Appellee v. Carroll L. KNIGHT, Et Al., Appellants
Attorneys
Joseph Andrew Ahern argued the cause for appellants. With him on the briefs was Ben M. Gonek., Randell C. Ogg argued the cause and filed the brief for appellee.
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
Opinion filed for the Court by Circuit Judge BROWN.
âHell hath no fury like a lawyer scorned.â Tom Gordon, Hell Hath No Fury Like a Lawyer Scorned, Wall St. J., (Jan. 28, 2015), http://www.wsj.com/ articles/tom-gordon-hell-hath-no-fury-like-a-lawyer-scorned-1422489433. The problem with scorning a lawyer is that lawyers tend to sue. So it is here. A law firm based in the District of Columbia, Bode & Grenier, LLP, provided legal services to three Michigan-based companies owned and managed by Carroll Knight (âappellantsâ). More than ten years into the relationship, appellants stopped paying the bill. The predictable result? Litigation. The law firm prevailed in the district court, winning a judgment for $70,000 in overdue legal fees â plus $269,585.19 in legal fees for having to litigate over $70,000 in legal fees. We affirm the district court.
*856 I
Appellants offer petroleum fueling products and services, ranging from service stations to large-scale petroleum storage. Based in Michigan, the appellant companies operate in multiple Midwestern states. Bode & Grenier represented appellants between 1994 and 2008, advising on taxation, gasoline contracts, petroleum futures and various regulatory enforcement and litigation matters. Throughout most of the relationship, no written agreement governed the terms of legal representation or manner of payment. Appellants paid the law firm monthly based on oral agreements.
On November 25, 2005, catastrophe struck. Approximately 100,000 gallons of petroleum spilled out of holding tanks owned by appellants in Toledo, Ohio. Appellants stopped the leak, but were powerless to stop the flood of regulatory actions that followed in its wake. A month after the spill, Knight called Bode & Grenierâs managing partner, William Bode, to request the firmâs services. The firm soon tackled regulatory enforcement proceedings in Ohio, a lawsuit in federal court in Ohio, and counseled the company on other regulatory issues. As before, the firm billed appellants monthly.
According to the complaint, appellants began paying their legal fees sporadically between December 2005 and January 2007. At some point, they stopped paying. Bode issued an ultimatum: unless Knight and his companies agreed to pay overdue legal fees, and signed a document setting out the terms of prospective relations, the firm would immediately withdraw from all pending cases. Knight capitulated. On August 7, 2007, the parties executed three agreements: a Retention Letter setting out the terms of future relations; a Promissory Note (âNoteâ) obligating appellants to pay $800,000 in past-due legal fees; and a Confession of Judgment (âConfessionâ) authorizing the firm to instantly secure judgment if appellants failed to satisfy the Note by May 1, 2008.
The first of May came and went without appellants satisfying the Note. Wasting no time, the firm entered the Confession of Judgment in Michigan state court the next day, May 2, 2008. Judgment issued that very day, without a hearing or adversarial process, for $302,500 ($300,000 due under the Note, plus $2,500 in attorneyâs fees).
Three months later, in July 2008, Bode & Grenier filed the instant federal case in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia seeking $75,105.97 in unpaid legal fees owed under the Retention Letter. The complaint brought claims for breach of contract, unjust enrichment, guaranty, and a petition to pierce the corporate veil. Appellants counterclaimed, seeking disgorgement of all legal fees to compensate for alleged disclosures of client confidences in the complaint. Discovery closed in February 2009.
In March 2009, both parties moved for summary judgment. Appellants argued the Confession of Judgment filed in Michigan barred the federal suit under res judi-cata principles. Bode & Grenier opposed the counterclaim as baseless. In September 2011, the district court granted Bode & Grenierâs motion for summary judgment on the counterclaim, and denied appellantsâ motion for summary judgment based on res judicata. Bode & Grenier, LLP v. Knight, 821 F.Supp.2d 57, 59 (D.D.C.2011).
In November 2011, Bode & Grenier amended its complaint, adding a claim for attorneyâs fees. Appellants filed an amended answer in January 2012. That answer, like their original answer, admitted Bode & Grenierâs basic allegation that the law firm âprovided legal services to Defendants pursuant to the agreementâ between the parties. First Amended *857 Complaint Âś 33; Defendantâs Answer to First Amended Complaint Âś 33. Only one part of the answer was new: an affirmative defense attacking the law firmâs fees as unreasonable. With a new defense came further discovery, opened in March 2012.
Trial was set for November 13, 2012. In September 2012, appellants filed a pretrial statement that raised multiple defenses not included in their answer, including duress, failure of consideration and failure to comply with a condition precedent. The latter defense argued the law firm could not recover because its legal services were not approved by the âLitigation Committeeâ referred to in the Retention Letter. 1 The court struck the added defenses but permitted appellants to file a motion requesting leave to amend, which they filed on October 11, 2012, barely four weeks before trial. In their motion, appellants dropped the defense of duress, but stood by the other two. The court denied the motion. Allowing leave to amend, the court found, would unduly delay trial, requiring a third round of discovery. It would also prejudice the plaintiff, forcing them to face newly christened defenses not raised over the course of four years of litigation.
Trial went forward as scheduled on November 13, 2012. Bode & Grenier voluntarily dismissed all but the breach of contract and attorneyâs fee claims, the latter of which the parties agreed to handle in post-trial proceedings. Following a one-day bench trial, the court found in favor of Bode & Grenier on the breach of contract claim, entering judgment for $70,000, the amount of unpaid legal fees stipulated by the parties. In subsequent proceedings, the court granted the law firmâs claim for attorneyâs fees, rejecting the contention that the fees were either precluded by Michigan Law or limited by the Promissory Note. Bode & Grenier, LLP v. Knight, 31 F.Supp.3d 111, 113-20 (D.D.C.2014). Appellants timely appealed. We have jurisdiction to hear this appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II
We must first consider whether the Confession of Judgment filed in Michigan state court precluded the .current suit under res judicata principles. The trial court rejected appellantsâ summary judgment motion seeking preclusion. We review that decision de novo. See, e.g., Aka v. Wash. Hosp. Ctr., 156 F.3d 1284, 1288 (D.C.Cir.1998). â[A] party is only entitled to summary judgment if the record, viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, reveals that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact.â Id. Applying that framework, we affirm the decision.
Federal courts extend to state court judgments the same preclusive effect those judgments would receive in the originating state. See 28 U.S.C. § 1738 (requiring that state âjudicial proceedings ... shall have the same full faith and creditâ in other courts as they had âby law or usage in the courts of such State ... from which they are takenâ); see also Thomas v. Wash. Gas Light Co., 448 U.S. 261, 270, 100 S.Ct. 2647, 65 L.Ed.2d 757 (1980) (plurality opinion) (noting that the requirement to award preclusive effect to state court judgments, âif not compelled by the Full Faith and Credit Clause [of the Con *858 stitution] ... is surely required by 28 U.S.C. § 1738â). Michigan state law thus determines the preclusive effect of the Confession, if any.
Michigan statute prescribes the procedure for procuring a Confession of Judgment. Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.2906. Confessions of Judgment may take effect, âalthough there is no suit then pending between the parties,â upon the filing of the Confession, âsigned by [a Michigan] attorney,â with the local court. Id. § 600.2906. The document containing the confession must be âdistinct from that containing the bond, contract or other evidence of the demand for which such judgment was confessed.â Id. § 600.2906(1). The process âis purely ex parte.â Gordon v. Heller, 271 Mich. 240, 260 N.W. 156, 157 (1935). The party against whom judgment is entered never appears, having already consented to judgment.
Michigan courts have not considered the precise question before us: whether a Confession of Judgment triggers claim preclusion, known as res judicata in Michigan. âThe doctrine of res judicata is employedâ in Michigan âto prevent multiple suits litigating the same cause of action.â Adair v. State, 470 Mich. 105, 680 N.W.2d 386, 396 (2004). Subsequent actions are barred âwhen (1) the prior action was decided on the merits, (2) both actions involve the same parties â or their privies, and (3) the matter in the second case was, or could have been, resolved in the first.â Id. The party invoking res judicata bears the burden to prove it applies. Baraga Cnty. v. State Tax Commân, 466 Mich. 264, 645 N.W.2d 13, 16 (2002).
Under either of Michiganâs âtwo alternative tests for determining when res judicata will bar a claim in a second lawsuit because the claim could have, with the exercise of reasonable diligence, been brought in the first action,â Begin v. Mich. Bell Tel. Co., 284 Mich.App. 581, 773 N.W.2d 271, 283 (2009), overruled on other grounds by Admire v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co., 494 Mich. 10, 831 N.W.2d 849 (2013), preclusion through a Confession of Judgment is unlikely. First, the ââsame evidenceâ test looks to âwhether the same facts or evidence are essential to the maintenance of the two actions.â â Id. (quoting Jones v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 202 Mich.App. 393, 509 N.W.2d 829, 834 (1993)). Claim preclusion blocks a second action âbetween the same parties when the evidence or essential facts are identical.â Id. (quoting Dart v. Dart, 460 Mich. 573, 597 N.W.2d 82, 88 (1999)).
The second test casts a wider net by examining the relevant transactions of events. âWhether a factual grouping constitutes a transaction for purposes of res judicata is to be determined pragmatically, by considering whether the facts are related in time, space, origin or motivation, [and] whether they form a convenient trial unit....â Adair, 680 N.W.2d at 398; see also Restatement (Second) op Judgments § 24(2) (1982) (âRestatementâ) (substantially the same). Transaction-based preclusion âis justified only when the parties have ample procedural means for fully developing the entire transaction in the one action going to the merits to which the plaintiff is ordinarily confined.â Restatement § 24 cmt. a.
Here, the Confession of Judgment entered in Michigan state court had no preclusive effect. The Promissory Note underlying the Confession was carefully drawn, and Michigan Supreme Court precedent indicates that a Confession is a judgment without expectation it will be joined with other claims. See Gordon, 260 N.W. at 157.
*859 The Confession rested on a narrowly tailored Promissory Note obligating appellants to pay $300,000 in overdue legal fees. In the event of default, the Confession allowed the law firm to receive near-instantaneous judgment on the Note. And that is precisely what' happened: appellants defaulted, and the firm executed the Confession in Michigan without a hearing or adversarial process. Appellants appeared only constructively. Judgment issued as a purely ministerial act: no judge reviewed the substance of the dispute â the underlying evidence that proved appellants had failed to pay their bills. Under Michigan law, the court simply enforced the clear language of the Confession and Note.
We have no difficulty concluding the present suit need not have been brought earlier. Neither of the alternative tests Michigan employs to determine whether a subsequent action could have been brought in a prior ease supports preclusion. First, the Confession and the present action rely on different evidence: the former on a Note for past debts, the latter on prospective fees owed under the Retention.Letter.
The same transaction test asks whether the suits share a âsingle group of operative factsâ and âform a convenient trial unit.â Adair, 680 N.W.2d at 397-98. Here, the answer is no. Michiganâs Supreme Court makes clear that Confessions of Judgment are entered âpurely ex parte,â which implies they are entered without being joined to other claims. Gordon, 260 N.W. at 157. As the trial judge found, the mechanical process of entering a Confession hardly âlend[s] itself well to adding additional claims based upon the underlying debt.â Bode & Grenier, LLP, 821 F.Supp.2d at 63.
Michigan courts handle Confessions based on clear statutory command: as long as the parties present the appropriate paperwork and signatures, judgment issues immediately. Almost nothing about that process resembles an ordinary claim, which must be handled in the course of adversarial litigation, and ultimately examined by a judge or jury. These differences call to mind the Restatementâs warning that the same transaction test applies only âwhen the parties have ample procedural means for fully developing the entire transactionâ in the first action. See Restatement § 24 cmt. a. Requiring litigants to pile on every other available claim when filing a Confession would transform the entire process, hoisting the parties into adversarial litigation when they only meant to settle one part of their dispute. See id. § 26(l)(a) (noting that preclusion should be unavailable when âthe parties have agreed in terms or in effect that the plaintiff may split his claim, or the defendant has acquiesced thereinâ).
Because Confessions rest on mutual agreement, they will often involve straightforward obligations, such as the payment of a precise sum. Rigidly applying res judicata in this context may deter parties from agreeing to Confessions in the first place, an outcome counter to Michiganâs general preference for the private settlement of disputes. See Galperin v. Depât of Revenue of Mich, 327 Mich. 556, 42 N.W.2d 823, 825-26 (1950) (âThe [Michigan Supreme] â Court has often held that the settlement of disputed matters and the compromise of doubtful claims is favored by law. Efforts toward amicable settlement of disputed claims to avoid litigation meet with judicial approval.â).
Accordingly, we hold that the Confession did not bar the current suit under principles of res judicata.
Ill
A
Appellants next challenge the denial of a motion to amend their answer. Days be *860 fore trial, appellants sought to add two affirmative defenses â failure of a condition precedent and failure of considerationâ and remove their earlier admission that the law firm provided legal services pursuant to the âagreement.â Each of the new defenses took aim at a clause in the Retention Letter calling for a âLitigation Committeeâ (of unspecified membership) to approve legal services and fees. The trial court denied the amendment, finding the request was unduly delayed and would have prejudiced the plaintiff.
We review the denial under an abuse of discretion standard. See Firestone v. Firestone, 76 F.3d 1205, 1208 (D.C.Cir.1996). The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure permit parties to amend their pleadings âonce as a matter of courseâ within certain time periods. Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a)(1)(A). Otherwise, amendment requires âthe opposing partyâs written consent or the courtâs leave.â Id. § 15(a)(2). Courts must âfreely give leave when justice so requires.â Id. âAlthough the grant or denial of leave to amend is committed to a district courtâs discretion, it is an abuse of discretion to deny leave to amend unless there is sufficient reason, such as âundue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive ... repeated failure to cure deficiencies by [previous] amendments ... [or] futility of amendment.â â Firestone, 76 F.3d at 1208 (quoting Foman v. Davis, 371 U.S. 178, 182, 83 S.Ct. 227, 9 L.Ed.2d 222 (1962)).
The district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the belated addition of new defenses that would have required additional discovery. The issues appellants sought to interject â centering on the role of the Litigation Committee â threatened to fundamentally reshape the landscape of the litigation. Neither of two prior answers raised those issues. Instead, both answers admitted the law firm provided legal services pursuant to the partiesâ agreement. Two rounds of discovery focused, quite appropriately, on issues raised in the original and amended complaints and answers. Accordingly, the district court concluded the amendment would have likely required additional discovery. Bode & Grenier, LLP v. Knight,. No. 08-1323, slip op. at 7, 2012 WL 12284217 (D.D.C. Nov. 5, 2012).
The request simply came too late. The motion to amend arrived four years after litigation began, one year after summary judgment motions were decided, eight months after filing an amended answer and only days before trial. That is the very picture of undue delay. Cf. Elkins v. District of Columbia, 690 F.3d 554, 565 (D.C.Cir.2012) (finding undue delay when a motion to amend arrived âfive years after the initial complaint and after discovery had closedâ); Williamsburg Wax Museum, Inc. v. Historic Figures, Inc., 810 F.2d 243, 247 (D.C.Cir.1987) (finding undue delay on a motion to amend filed seven years after litigation began, when discovery had closed and the court had decided summary judgment motions); Doe v. McMillan, 566 F.2d 713, 720 (D.C.Cir.1977) (affirming a denial to amend a pleading thirty-eight months after the filing of the complaint). Had the motion been granted, discovery would have been reopened, the scheduling order replaced and the trial date reset.
Appellants suggest they gave fair notice of the Litigation Committee defense in deposition questions posed years before they filed the motion to amend. That argument fails. If anything, it proves only that the defenses they sought to raise were âbased on facts known prior to the completion of discovery.â Anderson v. USAir, Inc., 818 F.2d 49, 57 (D.C.Cir.1987). Appellants had no reason to wait years before addressing those defenses in their answer. Indeed, moving to amend *861 on the eve of trial bears the hallmarks of gamesmanship, defeating the orderly character of litigation the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure seek to foster. As this court has emphasized, âStrategic or merely lazy circumventions of a legal process grounded in a sound policy have the effect of eroding the regularized, rational character of litigation to the detriment of practitioners and clients alike.â Harris v. Secây, U.S. Depât of Veterans Affairs, 126 F.3d 339, 345 (D.C.Cir.1997). The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying amendment.
B
Affirming the denial resolves two related issues. First, appellants claim the district court improperly concluded the Litigation Committeeâs approval did not constitute a condition precedent. We cannot decide this question because the trial judge declined to rule on it. Before trial, appellants offered a short motion seeking judgment as a matter of law. That motion argued appellants should prevail because the Litigation Committee constituted a condition precedent, which the plaintiffs had failed to plead appropriately. The court found that motion âplainly prematureâ and âdecline[d] to address it.â J.A. 341 n.2. During trial, the court again declined to resolve the issue. See J.A. 494 (âI have made no ruling regarding condition precedent ... because I have no occasion to make such a ruling. And that is because the defendants admitted [in each of two answers filed] that the plaintiff provided legal services pursuant to the agreement.â). âIt is the general rule, of course, that a federal appellate court does not consider an issue not passed on below.â Singleton v. Wulff, 428 U.S. 106, 121, 96 S.Ct. 2868, 49 L.Ed.2d 826 (1976). That rule applies here. âThe issue before us is the denial of the leave to amend and not the merits of [the] new theoryâ appellants attempt to raise. Elkins v. District of Columbia, 690 F.3d 554, 565 (D.C.Cir.2012).
Second, appellantsâ opening brief intimates the district court erred by granting a motion in limine precluding mention of the Litigation Committee defense. But appellantsâ papers stop at suggestion: the issue is nowhere explained. Their opening brief lists the motion in limine in the rulings under review section,' but does not explain how the judge erred in granting the motion. âSimply listing the issues on review without briefing them does not preserve them.â Terry v. Reno, 101 F.3d 1412, 1415 (D.C.Cir.1996); Democratic Cent. Comm. v. Wash Metro. Area Transit Commân, 485 F.2d 786, 790 n. 16 (D.C.Cir.1973) (finding waiver where appellant provided âno argument whatever in supportâ of certain issues). As the issue is waived, we do not address it.
IV
After trial, the district court awarded the plaintiff $269,585.19 in attorneyâs fees under a fee-shifting clause in the Retention Letter. See Bode & Grenier, LLP, 31 F.Supp.3d at 123. The court interpreted the Retention Letter, which has no choice-of-law clause, in light of D.C. law, refusing to incorporate a provision in the Promissory Note requiring the application of Michigan law.
We confront two issues on appeal. First, appellants suggest the district court erred in failing to incorporate the Promissory Noteâs choice-of-law and attorneyâs fee clauses. According to appellants, the court should have applied Michigan law to the Retention Letter and limited the recovery of attorneyâs fees to fifteen percent of the debt. Second, appellants contend that, under Michigan law, Bode & Grenier cannot recover fees incurred while repre *862 senting itself, which the law firm did during much of the proceedings in district court.
We review questions involving contract interpretation and choice-of-law de novo. Essex Ins. Co. v. Doe ex rel. Doe, 511 F.3d 198, 200 (D.C.Cir.2008); Chicago Ins. Co. v. Paulson & Nace, PLLC, 783 F.3d 897, 901 (D.C.Cir.2015). Because both of appellantsâ arguments lack merit, we affirm the district court.
A
The Retention Letter did not incorporate the Promissory Noteâs.choice-of-law and attorneyâs fee clauses. âInterpretation of a contract, like statutory and treaty interpretation, must begin with the plain meaning of the language.â Am. Fed. Gov. Employees, Local 2924 v. FLRA, 470 F.3d 375, 381 (D.C.Cir.2006). Here, the inquiry begins and ends with the text. This suit rests on the Retention Letter, which contains no choice-of-law clause. Bode & Grenier seeks to recover under the Retention Letterâs fee-shifting clause, which makes appellants âresponsible for [the plaintiffs] costs of collecting any fees due and owing, including reasonable attorney fees and expenses.... â J.A. 210. The Retention Letter makes only brief mention of the separate Promissory Note signed the same day:
Notwithstanding the above ... this firm is owed the amount of $446,566 for legal services previously rendered in this matter. You have agreed to execute a Promissory Note in the amount of $300,000, payable in nine months, as a partial payment against that amount, and also to pay $20,000 per month for the next eight months as further partial payments of fees owed.
âIt is a general ruleâ of contract interpretation âthat reference ... to extraneous writings renders them part of the agreement for indicated purposesâ only. Md.-Natâl Capital Park & Planning Commân v. Lynn, 514 F.2d 829, 833 (D.C.Cir.1975). For that reason, a subcontract referencing the terms of the prime contract only âinsofar as they applyâ and âinsofar as they relate ... to the work undertaken hereinâ did not incorporate the prime contractâs dispute clause. Wash. Metro. Area Transit Auth. ex rel. Noralco Corp. v. Norair Engâg Corp., 553 F.2d 233, 234-36 (D.C.Cir.1977). Such nuanced language was âinsufficiently specific to incorporateâ the dispute clause âby reference.â Id. at 235; see also Johnson, Inc. v. Basic Const. Co., 429 F.2d 764, 775 (D.C.Cir.1970). A different situation exists where contractual language clearly exhibits an intent to incorporate another document. See, e.g., Tower Ins. Co. of N.Y. v. Davis/Gilford, 967 F.Supp.2d 72, 80 (D.D.C.2013). For instance, language stating that another document is âhereby referred to and made a part hereofâ may support total incorporation. Id. at 75, 80; see also Vicki Bagley Realty, Inc. v. Laufer, 482 A.2d 359, 366 (D.C.1984) (finding a sales contract and a lease incorporated where both documents specifically âreferred to the lease as an attachment or addendum to the sales contractâ).
In this case, the Retention Letter did not incorporate the Promissory Noteâs choice-of-law and attorneyâs fees provisions. The Retention Letter does not refer to the Promissory Note as an attachment. Nor does it incorporate the Promissory Note âinsofar as it appliesâ like the contract at issue in Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. See 553 F.2d at 234-36. Indeed, the sole mention of the Promissory Note comes at the close of the Retention Letter, âprefaced by the phrase â[n]otwithstand- *863 ing the above.â â Bode & Grenier, LLP, 31 F.Supp.3d at 118. As the district court concluded, the Retention Letter referenced the Promissory Note âfor the limited purpose of explaining the payment schedule for âlegal services previously renderedâ and amounts already owed____â Id. That outcome leaves the Retention Letter without a choice-of-law clause. It also requires reading the attorneyâs fees clause without reference to the Promissory Noteâs language limiting such fees to âfifteen (15)-percent of the principal sum of this Note.â J.A. 212. That fees-cap applies only to the Promissory Note, not the Retention Letter.
Appellants suggest the documents must be construed together because they were signed simultaneously and concern similar subjects. Appellant Br. 26-27. It is true that, âWhere two or more written agreements are contemporaneously executed as part of one complete package, they should be construed together and should be construed as consistent with each other, even if not all the agreements are signed by the same parties.â Trans-Bay Engârs & Builders, Inc. v. Hills, 551 F.2d 370, 379 (D.C.Cir.1976). Trans-Bay held that three documents â a Construction Contract, a Building Loan Agreement and a Regulatory Agreement â were incorporated because they âwere part of a package for a single project.â Id. A different scenario exists here. As the district court found, âalthough the documents were executed on the same day, they, address separate fees â fees already owed and fees to be incurred.â Bode & Grenier, LLP, 31 F.Supp.3d at 118.
Considering the Note and the Retention Letter together does not change our conclusion. The Promissory Note carefully limits its reach to its four corners. âThis note shall be governed byâ Michigan law, reads the choice-of-law clause. J.A. 213 (emphasis added). âAny dispute, claim, or cause of action arising out of or in connection with this note shall be brought in a court sitting in the State of Michigan without exception.â Id. (emphasis added). Likewise, the attorneyâs fee provision applies only â[i]n the event of default in the payment of this Note, and if suit is brought hereon â; in that case, recovery of fees is capped at âfifteen (15) percent of the principal sum of this Note.â Id. (emphasis added). âNoteâ clearly refers to the Promissory Note â not the separate Retention Letter. Such carefully drafted clauses confirm the parties knew how to choose the applicable law and cap attorneyâs fees when they saw fit. They chose not to do so in the Retention Letter. Thus, even if we were to read the documents together, the choice-of-law and attorneyâs fee clauses would not migrate to the Retention Letter.
Appellants also ask us to look beyond contractual language and' consider correspondence between the parties. This we cannot do. Under both Michigan and D.C. law, courts may only resort to extrinsic evidence in interpreting a contract when the language admits of no clear interpretation. See Burkhardt v. Bailey, 260 Mich.App. 636, 680 N.W.2d 453, 464 (2004) (âBut when the language of a document is clear and unambiguous, interpretation is limited to the actual words used, and parol evidence is inadmissible to prove a different intent.â) (omitting citations); In re Bailey, 883 A.2d 106, 118 (D.C.2005) (substantially the same). In this case, the partiesâ written agreements speak for themselves, and do not support incorporation.
B
The second issue before us asks whether Michigan or D.C. law applies to the Retention Letter. If Michigan law applies, we must determine whether Michigan permits *864 self-represented law firms to recover attorneyâs fees pursuant to contract. The district court applied D.C. law and rejected the argument that Michigan law precluded recovery. We affirm.
Because the Retention Letter neither contains nor incorporates a choice-of-law clause, we must determine which jurisdictionâs substantive laws to apply. âIn a diversity caseâ like this one, the âcourt follows the choice-of-law rules of the jurisdiction in which it sits.â Stephen A. Goldberg Co. v. Remsen Partners, Ltd., 170 F.3d 191, 193 (D.C.Cir.1999).
â[I]n the absence of an effective choice of law by the parties,â the District of Columbia employs â âa constructive blendingâ of the âgovernmental interest analysisâ and the âmost significant relationship test,â the latter as expressed in the Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Law § 188 (1988).â Id. at 193-94 (quoting Hercules & Co., Ltd. v. Shama Rest. Corp., 566 A.2d 31, 41 n. 18 (D.C.1989)). The analysis centers on five factors: â[1] the place of contracting, [2] the place of negotiation of the contract, [3] the place of performance, [4] the location of the subject matter of the contract, and [5] the domicil, ... place of incorporation and place of business of the parties.â Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Laws § 188(2)(a)-(e) (1988). For service contracts, âthe Restatement assigns presumptive weight to the place where the services are to be rendered.â Stephen A. Goldberg Co., 170 F.3d at 194; see Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Laws § 196 (applying âthe local law of the state where the contract requires that the services, or a major portion of the services, be rendered, unless, with respect to the particular issue, some other state has a more significant relationshipâ). If the scales of interest come out even, D.C. generally employs its own law. See KaiserGeorgetown Cmty. Health Plan, Inc. v. Stutsman, 491 A.2d 502, 509 n. 10 (D.C.1985).
Here, the factors weigh in favor of applying D.C. law, not Michigan law. The first two factors â the place of contracting and place of negotiation â are inconclusive. Mr. Knight negotiated from Michigan, and Bode & Grenier from D.C. Likewise, the fifth factor â domicilâweighs evenly on both ends.
In a dispute over a service contract, no factor matters more than the place of performance. Nearly all of the legal services at issue were performed in D.C. by attorneys licensed to practice in D.C. See Ap-pellee Br. 28-30. While the representation required occasional travel outside D.C. (mainly to Ohio), we find no evidence suggesting the firmâs attorneys routinely practiced in Michigan. The firm managed the representation from its sole office, located in D.C. The fourth factor â the location of the subject matter of the contract â supports applying D.C. law for the same reasons. This contract called for legal services managed and performed in D.C.
Though the Restatement factors lead us to apply D.C. law, we must pause to independently consider âwhich jurisdiction has the greatest interest in the subject.â Stephen A. Goldberg Co., 170 F.3d at 194. Michigan had relatively little connection to the services at issue. Though Knightâs companies call Michigan home, the legal services here concerned an oil spill in Ohio that triggered various regulatory and legal actions. None of the relevant legal services were performed in Michigan. That reality strongly supports the application of D.C. law.
Because we hold that D.C. law applies to the Retention Letter, we need not decide whether Michigan law bars the plaintiff from recovering legal fees incurred while *865 representing itself. Michigan law simply does not apply.
As the trial court concluded, the plain language of the Retention Letter permits the recovery of the âcosts of collecting any fees due and owing, including reasonable attorney fees and expenses ....â J.A. 210; see Bode & Grenier, LLP, 31 F.Supp.3d at 119-20. The Retention Letter nowhere precludes Bode & Grenier from recovering fees incurred while representing itself. That is enough to resolve the matter.
V
For the foregoing reasons the district court is
Affirmed.
. Various clauses in the Retention Letter refer to the Litigation Committee. Without defining the Committee's composition, the Retention Letter notes that the âFirm's role and scope of work in these matters will be determined by the Litigation Committee....â J.A. 209. The Committee also "approve[s] the anticipated fees incurred for the work to be performed.â Id.