58 Md. 509 | Md. | 1882
delivered, the opinion of the Court.
The appellant sued the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, in The Baltimore City Court, and declared in two counts. The first count was for money payable to the plaintiff for work and labor done by the plaintiff for the defendant at defendant's request; the second count set up a special contract, made with the Water Board of the City of Baltimore, for dredging Lake Roland ; which contract it alleged the city had stopped the plaintiff from completing, by' which he had lost large profits he would have received, if he had been permitted to complete the contract.
At the trial the appellant was permitted by the Court to recover, and did recover for certain work and labor mentioned in his third prayer which was granted; but by the instructions of the Court he was denied recovery for the alleged wrongful abrogation of the contract by the city, and for what he claimed to have done, by the directions of the engineer of the Water Board, in the way of spreading and grading the deposit removed from the lake, and which he contended was extra work, not called for by the contract. The City Court thought, that by the true construction of the contract, the City had the right to terminate the contract when three hundred thousand cubic yards of deposit had been removed from the lake ; and also that the work, charged for as extra work, was required by the contract, and no extra compensation was demand-able for it. The jury was so instructed, as asked by the first and third prayers of the appellee.
The Court also rejected the first and second prayers of the plaintiff, (appellant here), which presented the contrary view. The second prayer of the defendant (appel
The contract which we are to construe is made up of the following proposals and specifications: “Washington, December 6th, 1815. To the Water Board of the City of Baltimore, Gentlemen:—We propose to remove the deposit in Lake Roland, in accordance with the appended specification, viz., six hundred (600) cubic yards per day for twenty-two (22) cents per cubic yard, not less than 300,000 cubic yards shall be removed.” The specifications appended were as follows, viz., “The material from the great basin of the lake, or from tire entrance to Jones’ Falls and Roland Run, thence to near the Relay House, ■shall' be removed to the shore or land at north of lake, hound by mouth of Roland Run and Ellicott’s Branch. All of the material shall be laid not less than ten feet from the upper edge of the slopes, and distributed as directed by the engineer, around the above bounds. The material removed from Roland' Run will be deposited on
Subsequently, at the request of James Curran, who. was the Water Board engineer, the contractors submitted this projsosal, which was drafted by Curran: “ April 19th, 1816. To the Water Board of the City of Baltimore, Gentlemen:—In addition to the dredging of Lake Roland, we propose to remove the material to any point directed by the engineer on the City’s land bordering on the lake. And for all material moved beyond the limits of the specifications, thirty-five (35) feet, which shall be the minimum, and the maximum the City’s land. We agree to do the work for ten cents per cubic yard.” This proposal was also accepted by the Water Board, and the work proceeded during the summer and fall of 1816. In the spring of 1811 Allen assigned the contract to Morgan, the plaintiff, and the Water Board accepted Morgan as the contractor. The work was carried on from time to time during the years 1811, 1818, 1819 and 1880, until 1880,. in the month of April, when over three hundred thousand cubic yards having been dredged and removed, (for which $94,636.16 was paid,) the work was stopped by order of the Water engineer, acting under directions from the Water Board. When this was done, the plaintiff con
We also agree with the City Court in the construction put upon the contract in respect to its provision for distributing the sediment removed around the lake in accordance with the directions of the engineer. We do not think the appellant was entitled, under the contract, to recover for spreading and grading, as for extra work not provided for by the contract. The specifications at first provided that “all of the material shall be laid not less than ten (10) feet from the upper end of the lake, and distributed as directed by the engineer around the above bounds.” The second proposal was not intended to supersede the first specifications. It only was intended to amend the specifications in respect to the distance from the lake the sediment was to be removed. It provided for its removal thirty-five feet further than was contracted for in the original specifications. By its very terms it recognized the continuance of the specifications as the basis of computation under the new proposal.
We can see no room for doubt as to the true interpretation of the contract in this particular. It certainly did not mean that the engineer was only to direct where the sediment was to be dumped in piles, and that it was to be so left in great and unseemly heaps. It clearly pro
Judgment affirmed.