In this case, the court construed the language of a written
contract for supplying materials and labor in constructing
waterworks for the City of Fort Wayne, Indiana, in regard to extra
work, and an increase in the quantity of work, caused by an
alteration of plan, and in regard to defects in materials furnished
by the city, causing delay and expense to the contractor, and
reversed the judgment of the circuit court because of an erroneous
construction by it of such language.
This was an action brought by plaintiffs in error (who were
plaintiffs below) to recover from defendant the cost of certain
materials and work connected with the furnishing and laying of
water pipes for the waterworks of the city. The case is stated in
the opinion of the Court.
Page 119 U. S. 313
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action at law, brought October 26, 1881, in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Indiana by
Richard Wood and others, partners, doing business as R. D. Wood
& Co., in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, against the City of Fort
Wayne, a municipal corporation in Indiana, to recover damages for
the alleged breach by the latter of a written agreement made
between it and the plaintiffs on the 10th of September, 1879, in
reference to the construction by the latter of waterworks in the
City of Fort Wayne. The agreement was made between the city, by its
"trustees of waterworks," of the first part, and R. D. Wood &
Co., of the second part, and bore the seal of the city and the
statement that it was "approved by the city council, September 15,
1879," signed by the clerk.
By the contract, the party of the second part agrees, for the
consideration mentioned in it,
"to do all the work and furnish all the materials called for by
this agreement, and in strict accordance with the specifications
and requirements as hereinafter set forth. And that the said city
shall have the right to appoint such civil engineer, and inspectors
under him, as the trustees of waterworks may deem advisable, and
that said engineer shall determine the amount of work and materials
to be paid for under this contract, decide all questions relative
to the execution thereof, and his estimate and decision shall be
final and conclusive. The whole to be in accordance with the
preceding proposal signed by the said second party, and conformably
to the following specifications, both of which
Page 119 U. S. 314
are to be mutually considered, as to all expressions, intents,
and purposes, as a part of this contract."
The material parts of the agreement, out of which the questions
involved in the suit arise, are as follows:
"Specifications. The work to be done consists in furnishing . .
. cast iron water pipes,' some 'of sizes ranging from 24 inches to
4 inches diameter; . . . also, in trenches, laying pipes, and
special castings, including back-filling, setting valves,
constructing and setting valve boxes, vaults, and covers, and
setting hydrants, including all crossings of rivers and canals. . .
."
"The delivery of the pipe shall commence on or before the first
day of October, 1879, and be continued with regularity until the
completion of the contract, which shall be on or before the first
day of June, 1880. Special castings shall be delivered as may be
required by the engineer. . . ."
"Pipe laying will consist in excavating and refilling trenches;
in taking up and replacing pavements or other surfaces; in hauling
and laying pipes, setting special castings, stop cocks, air cocks,
check valves, hydrants, and all other appurtenances incident to the
pipe distribution; in cutting pipes, making joints, preparing
foundations, building brick or stone vaults, blowoff wells; in
repairing damages caused to gas pipes, sewers, drains, and
cisterns; in clearing the streets or grounds of all rubbish or
refuse caused by the above work; in furnishing lead and gasket for
joints, fuel for melting lead, clay and rope for bands, blocks and
wedges for use under pipes, wrought iron straps for securing caps,
reducers, and other parts liable to draw; in furnishing and setting
or constructing boxes or vaults for stop cocks, air cocks,
manholes, including furnishing and fitting cast iron frames and
covers thereto; in furnishing sand and all other materials for
masonry, and all tools and labor necessary for the complete
fulfillment of this contract. . . ."
"The above work to be done in the City of Fort Wayne, Indiana,
along the lines and in the streets, as indicated on the
distribution map in the office of the trustees or city engineer's
office, and in such other streets and places in said city as
may
Page 119 U. S. 315
be directed. The trenches for the pipes shall be opened in
accordance with the lines and grades as given or directed by the
engineer. . . . All pipes, special castings, stop cocks, air cocks,
check valves, and hydrants will be furnished to the contractor in
the city pipe yard, or on the cars upon which they are received
from the foundry. They will be delivered to him as soon as
received, and it shall be his duty to notify the engineer of any
defects or breakage before removal from cars; otherwise all damage
arising from such cause shall be made good by said contractor. The
contractor shall have no claim upon the city for any delay in the
delivery of pipes or other materials from the manufacturers. . . .
Stop cocks, air cocks, hydrants, special castings, and all other
parts pertinent to the supply or distribution, shall be set of laid
at the required points in such manner as the engineer may direct. .
. . A box or vault of wood or masonry shall be furnished and set
over each of the stop cocks and over each of the air cocks and
manhole pipes, and the iron frames and covers shall be properly
fastened to them. These boxes are to be made of the form and
dimensions shown on the plans furnished, and approved by the
engineer. . . ."
"And the said party of the second part hereby agrees to receive,
and the said first party hereby agrees to pay, the following prices
as full compensation for the work contemplated in this
contract:"
"(1) For laying the pipes and all special castings appertaining
thereto, setting check valves, stop cocks, and air cocks, including
the excavation and refilling of trenches; all bailing, and shoring,
and ramming; the taking up and replacing paving or other surface of
the streets; the removal of all rejected or surplus materials from
the grounds or streets; the repairing of damage caused to gas
pipes, sewers, drains, streets, cisterns, etc., and the expense of
avoiding such obstructions; the hauling of all pipes and other
castings and appurtenances onto the grounds, and returning those
not used to the pipe yard; the furnishing of all blocks and wedges,
and all materials for
Page 119 U. S. 316
making the joints; the cutting of pipes, and all other expenses
of materials, tools, and labor required by the specifications and
incident to this particular work; the lengths to be measured along
the center of the pipe, and in the case of branches as starting
from the center of the main pipe -- twenty-four-inch pipe -- the
sum of sixty (60) cents per lineal foot. . . ."
"(5) For furnishing and setting all wooden stop cock and air
cock boxes, including fitting and securing the iron covers, the sum
of _____ each; cost is included in price for pipe laying. . .
."
"And it is hereby agreed that no claim for extra work shall be
made or entertained unless such extra work shall have been done in
obedience to a written order of the engineer and trustees, and a
stipulated price for same agreed upon whenever such stipulation may
be practicable. When otherwise, such claims to be made to the
trustees in writing within ten days after the completion of such
extra work, or before the payment of the next succeeding monthly
estimate after such work is done, failing to do which, all rights
of the contractor to such extra pay shall be forfeited. . . ."
"The said trustees shall have the right to make any alterations
in the extent, dimensions, form, or plan of the work contemplated
by this contract, either before or after the commencement of
construction. If such alterations diminish the quantity of work,
the price paid shall be proportionately diminished, and no
anticipated profits allowed for the work omitted. If they increase
the work, such actual increase to be paid for at contract rate for
work of its class."
"All loss or damage arising out of the nature of the work
aforesaid, or from the action of the elements, or from any
unforeseen obstructions, or any difficulties that may be
encountered in the prosecution of the same, also for all expenses
which may be incurred in consequence of the temporary suspension of
any part of said work, shall be incurred by the contractor without
extra charge to said city."
The complaint sets forth a compliance by the plaintiffs with the
contract, and the completion of the work September 1, 1880, and the
failure of the defendant to pay to them $4,179.75 allowed by the
contract to be retained by the defendant until six months after the
completion of the work.
Page 119 U. S. 317
It also avers in its second paragraph that before the contract
was made, two agents of the plaintiffs were shown by the trustees a
distribution map in the office of the city engineer, as indicating
the lines and streets on which the pipes were to be laid, from
which to make their bid for the work; that before making their bid,
they examined the map and found that the main pipe leading from the
pumping works to the reservoir was to cross the St. Mary's River on
the line of Calhoun Street; that they thereupon carefully examined
the riverbed in the Calhoun Street line, and estimated that the
crossing of the river at that place would cost only $500, which was
a correct estimate of such cost; that the bid of the plaintiffs for
the work and the contract was made with express reference to the
crossing of the river at that place; that the contract expressly
refers to such distribution map as showing the lines and the
streets on which the work was to be done, it being the only
distribution map then on file in the office of the trustees or in
that of the city engineer; that as the plaintiffs were about
commencing the work, their agents were informed by the trustees and
the engineer that they had changed the plan of the work so as to
make the crossing of the river on the line of Clinton Street,
instead of Calhoun Street, and the plaintiffs were ordered to make
the crossing at Clinton Street; that the plaintiffs, after their
agents had examined the river bed at the Clinton Street crossing,
and had found that the water there was seven feet deep (it being
only about two feet deep at the Calhoun Street crossing), and that
the bed of the river was composed of quicksand, protested against
the change, and declined to go on with the work unless they would
be paid for the extra or additional cost of making the crossing at
Clinton Street over the cost of making it at Calhoun Street; that
the trustees requested such agents not to make at that time any
claim for extra work or extra pay for crossing the river, and
insisted that the work should be proceeded with, promising that
they would in future make it all right about such extra work; that
such agents gave to the trustees notice in writing that, by reason
of such change, the plaintiffs would demand extra pay for crossing
at Clinton
Page 119 U. S. 318
Street equal to the difference in cost over crossing at Calhoun
Street; that under the direction of the trustees and the engineer,
the plaintiffs laid the main pipe across the river, on the new line
at an additional cost, over the cost of crossing at Calhoun Street,
of $4,575, and that, within two days after the completion of the
work of crossing the river, such agents made their claim in writing
to the trustees for the extra work, with an itemized account of its
cost, the whole cost being $5,075, from which $500 was to be
deducted as the cost of crossing at Calhoun Street, the item being,
"Extra expense on river crossing with 24-inch pipe caused by change
of original plan, $4,575." The complaint also contains, in its
third paragraph, the common counts, claiming $12,000 for work and
labor done, materials furnished, personal property sold and
delivered, and money paid, laid out, and expended. A bill of
particulars under this paragraph claims, in addition to the $4,575,
these items:
"Extra expense caused by special castings not fitting, and delay
in receiving same, in 20-inch line, $750; 149 wooden valve boxes,
difference between those furnished and those contracted for at $3,
$447."
The defendant demurred to the second paragraph of the complaint,
but the demurrer was overruled. It then answered by a general
denial and a plea of payment in full. It also set up a claim of
$3,000 against the plaintiffs for work done by the defendant which
the plaintiffs were bound by the contract to do but neglected to
do.
As to the second paragraph of the complaint, the answer avers
that when the contract was executed, it was stated to the
plaintiffs and agreed that no map or plan of distribution of pipes
had been made, but that the defendant's engineer, Cook, would
prepare such a map and plan and file it in the office of the
trustees or in that of the city engineer; that such map and plan
was to be the map and plan referred to in the contract, and was to
designate the streets on which the pipes were to be laid, to all of
which the plaintiffs then agreed; that Cook prepared a plan and
map, and it was filed; that when the plaintiffs commenced work,
they inquired where the pipes
Page 119 U. S. 319
were to be laid, and the city engineer pointed out to them where
the work was to be done, and at their request prepared a map and
plan showing the manner in which the pipe was to be laid under the
river on the line of Clinton Street, which the plaintiffs accepted,
and which was in accordance with Cook's map and plan; that the
plaintiffs then commenced work on Clinton Street, in excavating and
laying pipes under the river where it crossed Clinton Street, and
according to such working plan, without objecting; that it was no
more difficult or expensive to lay the pipe under the river on
Clinton Street than it would have been to lay it under the river
where the river crosses Calhoun Street, and that any expenditure
over $500 was the result of extravagance and unskillfulness.
As to the third paragraph of the complaint, the answer, in its
sixth paragraph, avers that all the materials were furnished, and
all the labor was performed, under the written contract at prices
specially set forth therein; that the contract price has been fully
paid, and that no written order was made by the city engineer and
trustees directing the plaintiffs to furnish any extra materials or
do any extra work.
A motion by the plaintiffs to strike out the sixth paragraph of
the answer was denied, and then the plaintiffs replied, denying
generally the allegations of the answer.
The case was tried before a jury, who found a verdict for the
plaintiffs for $4,100, being the amount agreed to be due to the
plaintiffs, excluding the three above-named items of $4,575, $750,
and $447, amounting to $5,772, and a judgment for $4,100, with
interest and costs, was entered for the plaintiffs, to review which
they have brought this writ of error.
The plaintiffs gave some evidence in support of the three items
amounting to $5,772 (the defendant introducing no evidence), but
the court declined to allow the plaintiffs to introduce further
testimony in support of those items, "on the ground," as the bill
of exceptions states,
"that notwithstanding the location of the crossing of the St.
Mary's at Calhoun Street, the defendant had a right, under its
contract with the plaintiffs, to change the place of crossing to
Clinton Street, as it did, said contract securing to the defendant
that right, and
Page 119 U. S. 320
that the plaintiffs had no right under the contract between the
parties to claim anything on account of either of the three
items."
The court also struck out all of the plaintiffs' evidence,
except the contract, in support of the three items and instructed
the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiffs for $4,100. To
these rulings and instruction the plaintiffs excepted. This action
of the circuit court is assigned for error.
We are of opinion that the court erred in its view of the rights
of the plaintiffs under the contract. The clause providing that no
claim for extra work shall be made or entertained unless such extra
work shall have been done in obedience to a written order of the
engineer and trustees is an independent clause from that which
provides that the trustees shall have the right to make any
alterations in the plan of the work, either before or after its
commencement, and the extra work referred to in the former clause
does not embrace work done in pursuance of an alteration made by
the trustees in the plan. The latter work may be, in one sense,
extra work, but if it results from an alteration of plan by the
trustees, and there is, in consequence, an increase in the quantity
of work, the actual increase is to be paid for at the "contract
rate for work of its class." The extra work referred to in the
former clause required the authoritative written order of the
engineer and trustees; but as the trustees had the right to alter
the plan, work done to carry out such alteration, when made by the
trustees, was authorized by the trustees in a manner equivalent to
a written order by them and the engineer. The change of plan
involved in crossing at Clinton Street was authority for the
additional cost of crossing there, without a written order.
The contract states that the work is to be done "along the lines
and in the streets, as indicated on the distribution map." The
plaintiffs gave evidence tending to show that the map which the
plaintiffs' agents examined before making the contract did not then
show a crossing at Clinton Street; that the plaintiffs consequently
based their estimates and bid on a crossing at Calhoun Street; that
the change by the trustees to Clinton Street was notified to the
plaintiffs on the day on
Page 119 U. S. 321
which the work on the river was to begin; that the map was
subsequently marked with a crossing at Clinton Street, and that the
increased cost caused by the change was $4,575. The contract
expressly provides that if the alteration of the plan increases the
quantity of work, the actual increase shall be paid for by the
city. The only measure of payment provided for is the "contract
rate for work of its class." The price fixed in the contract, of 60
cents per lineal foot for laying 24-inch pipe such as that used in
crossing the river was based on the obstructions and difficulties
to be expected in crossing at Calhoun Street in two feet of water,
the general price being based on the laying of the pipe on land,
and the expense of crossing the river at Calhoun Street being
estimated at $500, in the price per lineal foot asked for laying
24-inch pipe. The increase of cost in crossing at Clinton Street
was $4,575. The contract fixes no special rate for laying the pipe
under the river, and it cannot fairly be said that there was any
contract rate for work of the class of that done in crossing the
river in the depth of water, and with the quicksand, found at
Clinton Street. On the view taken by the defendant, the trustees
could have made an alteration of plan requiring that the pipes
should traverse a great length of the river, in deep water and
quicksand, in crossing it diagonally, and the city could have had
all the work done at the general price per lineal foot for laying
the pipe. The contract is not capable of such a construction. The
actual increase of cost is to be paid for.
The provision that all loss or damage arising "from any
unforeseen obstructions, or any difficulties that may be
encountered in the prosecution of the" work "shall be incurred by
the contractor without extra charge" to the city cannot fairly
apply to the obstructions and difficulties at the changed place of
crossing resulting from the increased depth of water and the
quicksand.
As to the claim for the $750, the "special castings" were to be
supplied by the defendant from a manufacturer at Fort Wayne, and
not by the plaintiffs. They were connections between larger and
smaller pipes. The plaintiffs had the
Page 119 U. S. 322
trenches ready, but the castings, when furnished to them, were
defective in size, and expense and delay ensued in remedying the
defects, causing a damage to the plaintiffs, as alleged, of $750.
The defendant contends that the clause in the contract which
provides that the plaintiffs "shall have no claim upon the city for
any delay in the delivery of pipes or other materials from the
manufacturers" throws the loss from these defects on the
plaintiffs. But we do not so think. The defects were such as could
not be detected till the castings were being put in place, and the
claim is not for delay in their delivery within the meaning of the
clause referred to. Nor does any work done by the plaintiffs in
altering the castings come under the head of such extra work as
required a written order.
The size of the valve boxes is not mentioned in the contract,
nor their cost. They were therefore to be of the usual size and
cost. The trustees afterwards required the valve boxes to be of a
size which made them cost $3 more each than those of the usual size
would have cost. This was a change of plan, and the increased work
caused by it is agreed to be paid for, but there is no contract
rate for work of the class. The item of $447 seems to be
recoverable.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the case is
remanded to that court, with a direction to award a new trial.
Judgment reversed.