This is а petition against the Commonwealth under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 258, to recover a balance due. under a written contract, executed by the petitioner with the Commonwealth, for the construction of an extension to a reenforced concrete beam bridge in the towns of Bоurne and Wareham; and also to recover damages alleged to have been suffered by the petitioner on account of delays in the
G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 258 furnishes the only remedy for the establishment and enforcement of all claims at law or in equity against the Com monwеalth except in the few instances where some other method is authorized. Nash v. Commonwealth,
The character and purport of a pleading are to be determined by the substantial allegations and the essential matters which it contains rather than its form or the title by which it is described. E. S. Parks Shellac Co. v. Jones,
The petitioner is not harmed by dealing with the plea
The findings of fact made by a judge in an action at law must be sustained if they can be supported upon any reasonable view of the evidence, including suсh rational inferences as the evidence warrants. Moss v. Old Colony Trust Co.
A party to a contract, who is not precluded by its terms from asserting a claim for damages due to delay in com
The parties may, and did in the case at bar, contract in referenсe to delay. It appears from the contract, which was introduced in evidence, that the petitioner undertook the construction of an extension to a bridge, and to furnish all labor and materials required for the performance of the work in conformity with the provisiоns of the contract; and agreed "to receive as full compensation for everything furnished and done by the Contractor under this contract . . . and also for all loss or damage arising out of the nature of the work aforesaid . . . and for all risks of every description connеcted with the work, and for all expenses incurred by or in consequence of the suspension or discontinuance of the work as herein specified . . . such unit prices as are set out in the accompanying proposal.” The specifications which were a pаrt of the contract contained the following provision: "Article XVIII. Delay in Commencing Work. The Department may delay the commencement of the work, or any part thereof, if the Department shall deem it for the interest of the Commonwealth so to do. The Contractоr shall have no claim for damages on account of such delay, but shall be entitled to so much additional time in which to complete the whole or any portion of the work required under the contract as the Engineer shall certify in writing to be just. The Contractor shall have no claim for damages on account of any delay on the part of the Department in performing or furnishing any work or materials to be performed or furnished by the Department in connection with the execution of the work covered by
The article must be construed in reference to all the remаining provisions of the written contract oTwhich it forms a pMC Contracts are made to be performed, and it must be~held that the parties intended to enter into a complete and 'final arrangement under such terms antT conditions as" would create and define their obligations аnd would enable themTTo accomplish their contemplated aims and objects. With this end in view, every phrase and clause must be presumed to nave been designedly employed, and must be practicable, when eon-given strued with all the other phraseology containеd in t.hp. instrument, which must be"considered as a workable a.nrl hájmonioWTneans Tpr^carrying out and effectnfl.ting the intent of the parties. The literal interpretation of any word or1 phrase niay"be qüalified by the context in which it appears, by the general purpose manifested by the еntire contract and by the circumstances existing at the time the contract was executed. Cohen v. Bailly,
The contract was executed upon March 5, 1935, and provided for its completion by June 29, 1935. The work was to commenсe immediately upon the execution of the contract and was to continue without cessation until completed. The parties must have contemplated that there might be delay in the commencement of the work and they agreed that in that event the petitioner should be given such additional time for completion as the engineer should determine was just, but it was specifically provided that the petitioner should have no claim for damages on account of such delay. Such a provision negatives any pecuniary compеnsation for delay. Haydnville Mining & Manuf. Co. v. Art Institute,
The judge was right in ruling that the word “suspension,” as used in that portion of the contract providing that the expenses incurred by a suspension of the work should be borne by the petitioner, included interruptions in the progress of the work. Enright v. United States, 54 Fed. (2d) 182. McComber v. Kellerman,
The petition, in so far as it sought to reсover for delays either in commencing the work or in temporary interruptions after the work was begun, did not set forth any valid
The petitioner did not introduce any evidence showing the reasons or causes of any of the delays alleged in its petition. The characterizatiоn of the action of the department of public works as negligent, unreasonable or due to indecision is not enough to avoid the pertinent provisions of the contract. The respondent or the officials in charge of the work are not charged with arbitrary, caрricious or fraudulent action, nor with acting in bad faith or under such a gross mistake as to be tantamount to fraud. Marsch v. Southern New England Railroad,
There is nothing in the contention that the plea should have alleged, and the respondent should have proved, that the delay in beginning the work was deemed to have been in the interest of the Commonwealth. If it were material, then the petitioner, and not the Commonwealth, for reasons sufficiently stated, had the burden of showing that the delays were inconsistent with the public interest. No question of pleading was raised, and in the absence of evidence to the contrary it could be inferred that the officials in charge of the work were acting fairly and impartially in the public interest. Larkin v. County Commissioners of Middlesex,
Upon a report in an action at law, we can consider only such questions of law as are contained in the report. Weiner v. D. A. Schulte, Inc.
In view of the nature of the proceedings held in the Superior Court, we might add that, if we were to treat the plea as a demurrer, it would have to be sustained, and the same result would be reached as that tо which we have come. Stein v. Canadian Pacific Steamships, Ltd.
The action of the judge in ruling that the claims based upon delay were barred by the contract was right. Decision is to be entered for the petitioner in the sum of $423.38, together with interest from the date of the filing of its petition to the date of the filing of the offer of judgment, and the Commonwealth is to have costs from the date of the filing of the offer of judgment. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 75. G. E. Lothrop Theatres Co. v. Edison Electric Illuminating Co. of Boston,
So ordered.
