147 Pa. 416 | Pa. | 1892
Opinion by
The contract upon which the plaintiffs declared was for the erection of a bridge over the Schuylkill river at Market street. It contained a covenant on the part of the plaintiffs that they would complete the bridge within twelve months from the date of notice to commence work; and that, if, for any reason •except for the written consent of the chief engineer and surveyor, as therein provided, the completion of the work should •be delayed beyond that period, they would pay the city, as liquidated damages, and not as a penalty, the sum of $50 for each and every day during which the work should be so delayed. The delegation of authority to give the “ written consent ” which should relieve the contractors from the payment of damages for delay was in the following words: “ The chief engineer and surveyor, upon written notice from the parties of the second part (the plaintiffs) of the existence of causes over which they have no control, which must delay the completion of the work, may extend the period of its completion, and, in such case, the damages for delay shall begin to run from the period to which the date of completion shall have been extended.” The contract was dated June 15, 1886; notice to commence work under it was given Sept. 7, 1886, and the bridge was not completed until Feb. 25, 1888, 171 'days after the time limited for such completion. By another clause of the contract it was provided that, thirty days after completion of the work, the chief engineer and surveyor should “make a final estimate, including all legal and equitable deductions” from the contract price. That officer was of opinion that the neglect of the city to give the contractors notice to commence work in time to get the stone required for the masonry quarried and delivered before winter set-in, furnished a valid reason for an extension of the time for completion until Dec. 15, 1887, but not for any longer period. He accordingly charged them for sixty-two days’ delay after that date, at the rate of $50 per day, amounting to $3,100. That sum being withheld by the city, the contractors brought this suit for the recovery thereof.
It may be conceded, that if the time for completion of the bridge was indefinitely extended, or if the time clause of the contract was waived,, the power of the chief engineer and surveyor to make any deduction -whatever, on account of delay, was gone. But, assuming that all of the plaintiff’s evidence was true, was the time extended, or the time clause waived? Assuredly one or the other was done, if it was in the power of
Recurring to the clause of the contract under which alone the chief engineer and surveyor had authority to extend the time for the completion of the bridge, we shall see that nothing like a strict pursuance of that authority was shown. The power of the engineer could be called into exercise only by a written notice from the contractors of the existence of causes over which they had no control, which must delay the completion of the work. The letter of Jan. 22, 1887, falls short of such notice.
But, if we were to treat it as sufficient to call into exercise the powers of the engineer, there is yet this insuperable difficulty in the way of the plaintiff’s contention, that the extension of time, which the engineer was authorized to grant, was required to be in writing, and for a definite period. It is not, indeed, said in terms that any extension of time that might be granted must be for a definite period, but that is clearly implied.
There is, moreover, back of the contract, a limitation upon the powers of the chief engineer and surveyor, which no construction that may be put upon the terms in which they were delegated can affect. By article xrv of the act of June 1,1885, P. L. 87, it is provided, that “ all contracts, relating to city affairs, shall be in writing, signed and executed in the name of the city .... No contract shall be entered into or executed directly by the city councils, or their committees, but some officer shall be designated by ordinance to enter into and execute the same.” This section is mandatory, and therefore
The learned court below was clearly right in holding that the stipulation for the payment by the contractors of $50 for each day that they should be in default was intended to furnish a meas ure of damages. The measure suggested by the learned counsel for the plaintiffs would produce but a small fraction of the amount stipulated for in the contract, and, therefore, if correct, would indicate that the stipulation was, and must have been intended to be, penal. But it ignores the fact which alone could justify the municipal authorities in entering into the contract, and therefore must be assumed, namely, that the public convenience required the erection of the bridge, and that the loss resulting to the public from the want of it would amount to more than the cost of construction and maintenance. The interest on so much of the contract price, $271,000, as might be paid to the contractors by the time they should become in default, would amount to a considerable part of $50 per day, and would clearly be an element of damages, as the city would be paying that much interest without having the use of the bridge as an equÍAralent. But how much more than the interest upon the cost of construction the public inconvenience would amount to in dollars and cents it would be difficult, not to say impossible, to estimate. This difficulty brings the stipulation within the well settled rule that it will be inferred that parties intended a sum agreed to be paid upon breach of a contract as liquidated damages, whenever the damages are uncertain and not capable of being ascertained by any satisfactory rule.
The judgment is affirmed.