286 Mass. 148 | Mass. | 1934
This is a bill in equity brought by the plaintiff to cancel a contract for the construction of a sewer for the city of Boston. The case was heard upon a master’s report and a decree was entered cancelling the contract. The case is before this court upon the defendant’s appeal from the decree.
Pending the hearings before the master, the parties agreed upon the facts and the evidence, and in accordance with the agreement the master found as follows: The plaintiff is, and has been for several years, a general contractor. The defendant is a municipal corporation. “On the 30th day of April, 1932, a notice to bidders was issued by the commissioner of public works of the city of Boston inviting bids for the construction of sewerage works in Maywoods Brook in Laurel and Ottawa Streets from Dale to Sherman Streets, Roxbury, and the notice to bidders was contained in a pamphlet of seventy-five pages produced in evidence as Exhibit 1, which pamphlet also contained a proposal, and
Bids for the work were opened on May 10, 1932, and it appeared that twenty contractors had submitted bids, and that the plaintiff’s bid was the lowest. On May 12, 1932, a contract was signed between the plaintiff and the defendant for the construction of the work for the sum of $52,457. The price of the rock excavation was fixed by the city at $7 per cubic yard, and it was estimated that there would be found approximately two thousand five hundred cubic yards of said rock excavation. If this estimate were in conformity to the facts, the amount to be paid for rock excavation would be $17,500, slightly in excess of thirty-three per cent of the $52,457, the total estimate for the whole work. The city had two sets of borings made to indicate the nature of the ground where the sewer was to be constructed. The borings indicated the presence of a ledge, from five to fifteen feet below the surface of the street where the sewer was to be constructed. The engineers employed by the city considered the borings to be approximately correct, and
The quantity of rock was an important element in the
The proposal on page 5, Exhibit 1, provided as follows: “It is to be understood that the quantities given in the proposal are assumed solely as a basis for the comparison of proposals. The Commissioner does not expressly or by implication agree that- the actual amount of work will even approximately correspond therewith, but reserves the right to increase or diminish the amount of any class or portion of the work as he may deem necessary, without change of price per unit of quantity.”
The contract between the parties begins on page 25 of Exhibit 1, and provides that the plans and specifications annexed are made a part of the contract. On page 26 of Exhibit 1 appears the following: “Article 1. The Contractor has made his proposal from his own examinations and estimates, and shall not hold the City, its agents or employees, responsible for, or bound by, any schedule, estimate, sounding, boring or any plan of any thereof; . . . shall, subject to the provisions of the contract, take all responsibility of, and bear, all losses resulting to him in carrying on the contract . . . .'” On pages 26 and 27, Exhibit 1, it is recited: “Article 2. The Contractor shall do the work and do it in the manner set forth in the specifications of the contract, except that the City, by order in writing of the Commissioner, from time to time given to the Contractor or his foreman, may change, increase or take away any part of the work, or change the specifications, plans, drawings, form or materials thereof, or require the Contractor to hasten the work or to furnish any extra materials or extra labor relating thereto, and the Contractor
Three exhibits were introduced in evidence, namely: (1) the pamphlet of seventy-five pages containing the notice to bidders, proposal and contract hereinbefore referred to; (2) the plans of the work upon which the plaintiff based his bid; and (3) a canvass of the bid showing the amount paid by the plaintiff on each item, and the set prices made by the city on certain items. There was no evidence before the master relating to the terms of the contract other than that appearing in these three exhibits. The question for determination is whether there was any mutual mistake which requires the cancellation of the contract.
The contract was for the construction of certain sewerage works and involved a considerable amount of excavation. The case belongs to a class of cases where many uncertainties respecting conditions to be encountered exist and as to which the extent of labor to be performed or materials to be furnished cannot definitely be determined except as the work progresses. Although in cases of this kind parties may enter into a contract upon the basis of the existence of a definite amount of material which is to be excavated and removed, see Long v. Athol, 196 Mass. 497, they did not do so in the case at bar. Item 19 of the proposal stated, “Rock excavation. . . . For 2500 cubic yards, more or less, of rock excavation, the sum of Seven Dollars ($7.00) per cubic yard.” It was estimated by the city engineers, from the borings, that there would be found approximately this quantity of rock in the ground to be excavated for the construction of the sewer. But the defendant did not enter into the contract upon the basis of the existence of twenty-five hundred cubic yards or any other quantity of rock. This quantity plainly was used solely as a basis to determine the price which the defendant would pay per cubic yard for rock excavation. The contract
Although the plaintiff was given the data on the borings, yet the hazard of relying upon them was plainly recognized by the parties, and the risk was assumed by the plaintiff by art. 1 of the contract which provided that, “The Contractor has made his proposal from his own examinations and estimates, and shall not hold the City, its agents or employees, responsible for, or bound by, any schedule, estimate, sounding, boring or any plan of any thereof . . . . ” The plaintiff made no request before submitting his bid to make his own borings or to dig test pits, understanding from what he was told by the clerk in the street commissioner’s office upon an application which he made in March, 1931, in a case which had no relation to the'contract in issue, that such a request would not have been granted. This fact does not aid the plaintiff. He should have made request in the case at bar. The master found that the quantity of rock was an important element in the minds of both parties. While both assumed the presence of the quantity of rock given in the proposal, the defendant assumed it not as an existing quantity to be excavated at $7 per cubic yard, but solely as a basis for the comparison of proposals. The plaintiff, on the other hand, unwarrantably, assumed it as an existing quantity to be excavated at the unit price fixed. It was intended as an approximation. The case is governed in principle by what was decided in Young v. Holyoke, 225 Mass. 140. In that case it was said at pages 143-144: “While some of the estimates were grossly inadequate, the defendant was ignorant of this fact, and it made no pretence of knowing the exact amount of labor and material required to complete the structure. ... It was understood by the plaintiff and the defendant that the rock surface, the depth of the rock excavation and the character of the material were not even approximately correct. The quantities of work to be done were merely approximate. It was plainly stated that there was no express or implied agreement 'that the
It follows that the decree must be reversed and a decree entered dismissing the bill with costs.
Ordered accordingly.