102 Kan. 799 | Kan. | 1918
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action by the Lantry Contracting Company against the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company, to recover compensation claimed for certain- extra items of work done, material furnished, and expenses incurred in the construction of the Raton tunnel on the defendant’s railroad, for which payment had not been made. The case was tried by a referee, and on February 21, 1916, he returned findings of fact and conclusions of law which were in favor of plaintiff as to three items of its claim. After over
Plaintiff contends that the questions presented are not open to review, because the appeal was not taken within six months after the motion for a new trial was decided. The original abstract failed to show the filing of the motion for a new trial addressed to the court on February 23, 1916, two days after the decision by the referee. When attention was called to the omission, a supplemental abstract was filed showing the filing of the motion on the day stated, and further, that it had been presented to the court and taken under-advisement on July 6, 1916, and that a decision overruling the-motion was made on January 15,1917, about four months prior to the taking of this appeal. The grounds of that motion include all the questions that are raised on this appeal, and hence they may be reviewed.
The referee found, and the court adjudged, that the plaintiff was entitled to recover $15,646, over and above the allowance made and paid by the defendant, with interest from July 10, 1909, amounting in all to $22,895.16. This award in-' eluded an item of $2,443.22, with interest thereon, for the setting of stulls, as to which there was an agreement. Another was for $3,140.50 for resetting posts on new foundations of the tunnel lining, which was done on orders and plans given and provided by the chief engineer of the defendant. Then there
The contention of defendant is that the claims for extra work and material were to be left to the decision of the chief engineer, who was appointed by the parties to give a final decision upon any disputes that might arise, and who, under the contract, was required to make a final estimate of the amount, quantity, and character of all work and material performed and furnished by the contractor, including extra work and material, and that his decision should be final and conclusive and have the effect of an awardand further, that if the contractor should claim that a mistake had been made in the estimate or decision of the chief engineer the contractor should present its objections in writing within ten days after the finp.1 estimate was made. It is contended that the plaintiff had failed to comply with these requirements as to disputed items or to prove that they had been waived by the defendant. The plaintiff, on the other hand, insists that the action of the chief engineer in disallowing its claims was not effective, because he acted as the agent of the defendant and not as an impartial arbiter between the parties, that his decisions were the result of partisanship, and therefore were not binding. There is no claim that the chief engineer acted fraudulently, but merely that he misconceived the functions of an arbiter and failed to understand the duties incumbent upon him, and proceeded on the theory that it was still his duty to act as agent for the defendant and to secure the best terms of settlement that he could obtain for it. The referee found, and we think upon sufficient evidence, that he “mistook his position as that of an agent of the defendant for the purpose of securing a settlement in its interest. He did not in all matters exercise his own judgment, but as to some advised with the legal department of• defendant, and held himself subject to the orders of defendant’s superior officers, and dictated terms of settlement conditional on the plaintiff beginning or abstaining from suit;
An attack is made on the findings that the plaintiff was entitled to recover on its claims for setting stulls and resetting posts. It is based on noncompliance with the provision of the contract thát if extra work is done for which prices were not fixed in the contract the chief engineer should give a written order for the doing of such work and should fix the prices to be paid, and that the obtaining of the engineer’s certificate for such work and the prices therefor should be a condition precedent to the contractor’s right to be paid therefor, and that nothing should be deemed extra work which could be measured or estimated under the terms of the contract. It appears that ■part of the construction of the tunnel consisted of upright ■posts or piles supporting the timbers upon which rested the framework for the roof of the tunnel. In places it was decided to be more convenient and better to substitute, in place of these posts, short pieces of timber called stulls, which, instead of resting upon the floor of the tunnel, were placed in a slanting position and rested in a niche cut in the wall. It was agreed that the stull answered the purpose of a post and that the work of cutting the niche in the rock on which the stull rested •was,the equivalent of the difference in the amount of lumber between a stull and a post. This difference was treated as lumber and was thereafter carried in the estimate as lumber down to the final estimate. The substitution of one kind of
In respect to the item allowed for resetting posts, it appears that after the timbers of the tunnel had been placed it was decided that there should be a concrete foundation along the sides of the tunnel in order to support the concrete lining of the tunnel. The chief engineer ordered the work and submitted a blueprint directing how it should be done, and after-wards caused the work to be done under the superintendence of a local engineer. In the contract it was agreed that plaintiff should receive $45 a thousand for all lumber placed in the tunnel, and after the work was commenced the defendant notified the plaintiff that it would only allow $25 a thousand for lumber reset or used a second time. A trench along each side .of the tunnel had to be made for the foundation for the posts, and as the work proceeded it was necessary to remove and then reset the posts. On the basis of $25 a thousand feet for lumber used a second time, the plaintiff submitted its claim for the work, and while defendant did pay for the excavation and cement work done under the plan, it refused to pay for the resetting of the posts. A formal writing ordering this extra work was not made, but the blueprint set forth the details of the work and is deemed to be sufficient, under the circumstances, to meet the requirement that extra work must be done under a written order. An explanation of the blueprint was doubtless necessary to a complete understanding of it, and this was furnished by the oral directions of the chief engineer and his assistant under whose supervision the written plans were executed.
There was much contention as to the final estimate and the conduct of the parties with reference to it. It was stipulated that when the chief engineer made a final estimate at the completion of the work any objections of the contractor to it were to be presented in writing within ten days after the estimate
One of the contentions of defendant is that a final settlement was made, and that when the final estimate with a voucher attached was signed by Mr. Kelly and payment thereon accepted, it constituted an accord and satisfaction which is conclusive. on plaintiff. The sending of the estimate and voucher was only a step in the numerous negotiations between the parties as to the amount due for the work. In signing the voucher the defendant was distinctly informed by plaintiff that it would not accept the amount named in the estimate as the amount due, but would accept it as a partial payment. With this qualification and warning the defendant subsequently .paid the money specified in the estimate. Under the circumstances, the money was paid and received on account and not as a final and complete satisfaction of the debt. No check or money accompanied the estimate, nor was there any statement with it that the subsequent acceptance of payment would be regarded as payment in full. Nothing connected with the sending of the estimate and the qualified signing of the voucher amounted to an acknowledgment that the payment was to be regarded as a full discharge of defendant’s obligation. Besides, the payment was not made or received on the estimate until the fact that the plaintiff would only receive the amount as partial payment had been clearly brought to the attention of the defendant. The case was quite unlike one where a check or money is tendered in full satisfaction of a claim, and where the creditor is informed and bound to under
There is a contention that, the item for lumber, brought into the case by an amendment of the petition, and for which an allowance was made, was barred by the statute of limitations. The amendment was filed more than five years after the completion of the tunnel. Objection was made to the amendment on the theory that it set up a distinct claim or cause of action not included in the original petition, and that it could not be tied to the original by the doctrine of relation. The general rule is that when an amendment does not set up a new cause of action the statute of limitations .is arrested at the date of filing the original petition. In the original pleading the contract was set forth and its performance by the plaintiff, followed by allegations of the failure of the defendant to comply with its requirements in several particulars, including the failure to furnish transportation of coal and lumber, a failure to pay for extra work and extra lumber for supports made necessary by changes, of plans, and also the value of lumber under, an agreement as to the stulls already described. Later, and after' the trial had commenced, the, plaintiff in its amendment alleged that the defendant had not allowed or paid for 227,000 feet of lumber which was used in the construction of the tunnel, and it was asked that this item be added to the judgment. The action was based upon the contract, and the pleading did not purport to contain more than one cause of action. The contract provided for the construction of a tunnel as an entirety, and an action to recover for noncompliance with its terms states only a single cause of action. The fact that the defendant failed to pay for a
Defendant insists that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the finding of the referee making an allowance for the lumber item, and also as to the other items that were allowed; but, after a critical examination of the evidence, we have no hesitation in saying that the findings of the referee have sufficient support. It is manifest from the findings that the referee gave careful attention to the evidence and that his conclusions were drawn with discriminating judgment.
Plaintiff, in its cross appeal, contends that coal is material, and that under the contract defendant was to furnish free transportation of material required in carrying out the contract. The meaning of the term material as used in the contract is not free from doubt, but it is insisted that the exceptions enumerated in the cpntract as to materials — to wit:. feed for teams and men, commissary supplies and explosives — ‘indicate that all other materials than these were to be carried free. In Philadelphia, Appellant, v. Malone, 214 Pa. St. 90, a contractor who had undertaken the construction of a reservoir gave a bond which required that all materials furnished for the work should be paid for, and it was held that coal used to generate steam for the operation of a steam shovel and a locomotive in making the excavations was not within the obligation of the bond. Óf like import, is Lyman Coal Co. v. U. S. Fidelity & Guar. Co., 82 Vt. 94. Regardless of these'
“The intention of the parties to a contract is to be determined primarily by the language employed therein, construed in its ordinary meaning. If a provision be fairly susceptible of two meaning's, then the general scope and purpose of the entire transaction and all the surrounding circumstances are to be considered in determining which meaning was intended.” (Brick Co. v. Gas Co., 82 Kan. 752, syl. ¶ 2, 109 Pac. 398.)
(See, also, Brown v. Shields, 78 Kan. 305, 96 Pac. 351; Royer v. Silo Co., 99 Kan. 309, 161 Pac. 654.)
The testimony introduced was sufficient to satisfy the referee that the term used was not intended by the parties to include the coal used in the excavation. In the negotiations between the parties the bid appears to have been made upon the theory that coal sufficient for the purpose would be found as the excavation of the tunnel proceeded. The .evidence was sufficient to sustain the finding of the court that free transportation for coal was not within the contemplation of the parties in the making of the contract.
Other objections are not deemed to be material, and, finding no error in the record, the judgment, is affirmed.