71 So. 787 | La. | 1916
The plaintiff, appellee, is the successor to Reynolds & Co., contractors, who built levees for the defendant under four separate contracts. When the work' was completed and accepted by the board of commissioners, the plaintiff demanded compensation for extra work and losses which he claimed had been imposed upon him, amounting to $40,255.08 in excess of the original contracts. The board of levee commissioners referred the claims to its executive committee, who met and adopted a resolution, referring the matter to the board’s attorney, and authorizing him to appoint an expert engineer to examine into the claims and make a report to the board or to the executive committee. It was suggested that Capt. Hardie, a member of the executive committee of the board and city ‘ engineer for New Orleans, pass upon the claims as an expert; but he declined on account of his official position, and suggested that the matter be referred to H. S. Douglas for his expert opinion as an engineer. The minutes of the meeting of the executive committee disclose that the plaintiff was present and expressed his willing
It appears that the executive committee of the board approved four of the plaintiff’s bills, agregating $2,385.86, viz.: Bill No. 4, contract No. 2 (for loss of time of the laborers in the plaintiff’s employ getting out of the way of dynamite explosions by another contractor who was employed by the board to remove piling from the river near the new levee), $1,137.50, and force account bill on contract No. 2, $99.01, on contract No. 3, $209.83, and on contract No. 4, $939.52.
Pursuant to the resolution of the executive committee, the attorney for the board referred the remaining claims to the engineer, H. S. Douglas, for his expert opinion. Thereafter the plaintiff abandoned nine of his claims, aggregating $17,148.71, and of the remaining claims Mr. Douglas, in a detailed report to the attorney for the board recommended payment of the following, viz.:
(1) Contract No. 2, bill No. 5, for additional cost of hauling 6,000 cubic yards of earth a greater distance. than was contemplated in the contract, caused by the alleged arbitrary withdrawal of permission to use the batture near the new levee ............................$ 1,500.00
(2) Contract No. 2, bill No. 7, for extra compensation for constructing a levee from the middle of Poland street, that is, from the end of the levee described in the contract, to Kentucky street, the claim- being for the difference- between the contract price of the work described in the contract and the alleged value of the extra work.................. 4,200.00
(3) Contract No. 3, bill No. 1, for the loss of dirt deposited in place by the contractor and lost by the sinking of the foundation (plaintiff claimed $1,687.50), allowed................ 199.99
(4) Contract No. 4, bill No. 1, for earth lost by the sinking of the levee foundation in the vicinity of Eighth street, 2,700 cubic yards at 90 cents 2,430.00
(5) Contract No. 1, bill No. 5....... 2,039.13
(6) Contract No. 2, bill No. 9....... 3,419.55
Total recommended by ' Engineer Douglas for payment............$13,788.67
Mr. Douglas advised that oue of the plaintiff’s bills, referred to as contract No. 2, bill No. 6, amounting to $6,050, be not paid. It is for the loss of 11,000 cubic yards of earth that the plaintiff claims was blown out into the river from the batture in front of the levee between Poland and Mazant streets by the explosions of dynamite used by a contractor employed by the levee board to remove the old piling from the river. The plaintiff contends that it was stipulated in the contract that he might use the batture, and that by the loss of it he was compelled to haul the material a greater distance at an extra cost of 55 cents per cubic yard.
Col. S. E. Lewis, engineer for the levee board, advised the board’s attorney that the claims approved by Mr. Douglas should not be paid, excepting the four bills approved by the executive committee, amounting to $2,385.86. The attorney was of the same opinion, and submitted the matter to the levee board, with the report of Mr. Douglas and with his (the attorney’s) advice that only the four bills approved by the executive committee, amounting to $2,385.86, should be paid. By a resolution of the board the advice and recommendation of the attorney was approved and adopted.
The plaintiff sued for $22,224.53; that is, for the claims approved by the executive committee, amounting to $2,385.86, for those approved by Mr. Douglas, amounting to $13,788.67, and for bill No. 6, contract No. 2, rejected by Mr. Douglas, amounting to $6,050. Thereafter the defendant paid the amount of the four bills approved by the executive committee of the board, $2,385.86, less $250, being half of the fee of the expert, Douglas; and the plaintiff prosecuted his suit for the balance, $19,838.67.
Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for $14,379.98, with legal interest from judicial demand. The district judge
Opinion.
“Should differences arise between the contractor and the engineer in charge, the matter shall be submitted to the executive committee of the board, whose decision shall be final and binding upon the parties.”
The plaintiff contends that the foregoing clause refers only to disputes or differences as to matters over which the engineer is given authority within the terms of the contract, and particularly the following provisions, viz.:
“The work shall be done under the direction and supervision of the engineer designated by the board, whose directions shall be complied with, and of such local inspectors as may be appointed by the board of commissioners. He shall have the right to condemn all work not in accordance with the spirit or text of this agreement, or which shall not be in accordance with the dimensions, locations, and methods of construction prescribed by him or provided in these specifications.”
Construing similar clauses in a contract, in the case of Shea v. Sewerage & Water Board, 124 La. 299, 50 South. 166, it was held that they meant merely that the engineer was to be the judge of the manner of doing the work, and had final authority only to decide whether the contractor complied with the specifications and to condemn his work if he did not comply.
Such clauses in a contract are valid and binding upon the parties in so far as they make the representative of one of the parties the sole and final arbiter of the matters to which his authority is limited in the terms of the contract. That is as far as the authorities cited by the learned counsel for the levee board go. They all qualify their opinion that such a clause in a contract is valid and binding with a proviso; ’ e. g., unless legal cause for refusing to abide by the ruling of the arbiter is shown, or unless fraud or collusion or an arbitrary ruling, or a gross mistake implying bad faith on the part of the arbiter, is shown by the complainant. The questions whether the dispute is within the jurisdiction conferred upon the arbiter
The defendant’s counsel relies' upon the ruling in McNamara v. Board of Commissioners of the Tensas Basin Levee District, 44 La. Ann. 829, 11 South. 278, to the effect that the only relief afforded the contractor when he objected to a change in the extent or location of the leyee, as directed by the engineer of the levee board, was by the terms of the contract an appeal to the state board of engineers. In that case, however, the complaint was as to a matter within the authority or jurisdiction conferred upon the ■ engineer by the terms of the contract; and the tribunal that was made the final arbiter of the dispute in that ease was not the executive committee of the contracting levee board, but the state board of engineers.
“This receipt is made and given without prejudice to the rights of either party to the above-mentioned suit, and it is agreed by the plaintiff that it shall have the same effect as if legal tender of the above-mentioned amounts had been deposited in the registry of the .court.”
The “above-mentioned suit” referred to the caption of the receipt, viz.:
“No. 91,581, Division A, Civil District Court. Reynolds & Company versus Board of Commissioners of the Orleans Levee District.”
If the amount paid had been deposited into the registry of the court, it would not have defeated the plaintiff’s right to proceed with his suit on the disputed claims.- The purpose expressed in the receipt was to avoid the very consequence now claimed by the defendant; and we see no reason of law or equity for holding that they did not avoid it.
• “A portion of the earth for this levee can be obtained from the old levee and adjacent battures.”
The plaintiff construed the expression “adjacent battures” to include the batture extending beyond the end of the old levee as well as that directly in front of it. The meaning of “adjacent to” has not been restricted to abutting, adjoining, contiguous to, or bordering upon; it has been held1 to mean lying close by, near to, or in the neighborhood or vicinity of. See Corpus Juris, vol. 1, p. 1194 et seq. The engineer of the levee board gave that liberal construction to the term and agreed that the plaintiff might use the batture beyond the end of the levee. In consequence of this agreement, the plaintiff spent about $600 building a plank run for conveying the dirt to the new levee. There is no dispute that after the plaintiff began using the batture he was stopped by the defendant and was compelled to haul the earth a greater distance at an extra cost of $1,500. We agree with the district judge that this was not a matter on which the ruling of the executive committee of the defendant board was final and conclusive.
“Should the executive committee deem any changes necessary in the extent or location of the levee, or in the grade line, dimensions, or quantity of work required, such change shall be made by the contractor at the same rate of compensation as hereinafter stipulated, provided such change shall not exceed 20 per cent, in excess or in diminution of the contract price.”
The defendant contends that the executive committee had the right, under the clause quoted, to change the extent and location of the levee and increase its length and the quantity of .work required, as it did, by ordering the plaintiff to continue the levee from the center of Poland street to Kentucky street, and that the contractor was bound to build the additional length of the levee at the same rate of compensation stipulated in the contract. The'rate of compensation stipulated in the contract was 90 cents per cubic yard. The evidence shows that it was worth $1.15 per cubic yard to build the additional length, because the conditions regarding accessibility of material were less favorable to the contractor, especially after the defendant withdrew permission to use the batture below Poland street. The increase in the length of the levee required 16,800 cubic yards more earth, for which the plaintiff makes an extra charge of 25 cents per cubic yard. The evidence fully justifies the extra charge, if the plaintiff was not bound to build the additional length of levee at the rate of compensation stipulated in the contract. Whether he was or was not so bound depends upon whether the change in the length of the levee required by the executive committee came within the right to require any change in the extent or location of the levee or in the dimensions or quantity of work required at the same rate of compensation, not exceeding 20 per cent, in excess of the contract price. The change required by the executive committee was nothing more nor less than an increase in the extent in one of the dimensions of the levee and in the quantity, of work required. But the cost exceeded 20 per cent, of the contract price. The total yardage paid for under contract No. 2 was 77,300 cubic yards. The contract originally required only 60,500 cubic yards; hence the increase in the length from the middle of Poland street to Kentucky street made the cost exceed the contract price by 27% per cent. The extension of the length of the levee from the center of Poland street down to Kentucky street was not provided for in the contract; and the plaintiff was not bound to do the work at the same rate of compensation stipulated in the contract for building the levee that was described in the contract. The defendant was not entitled to have 20 per cent, additional work done at the rate of compensation stipulated in the contract and 7% per cent, of it at its actual value, because the plaintiff was not bound to do the extra work, exceeding by more than 20 per cent, the original work, at any rate of compensation; and it is not to be presumed that the executive committee would have required him to extend the length only 20 per cent, at the rate of compensation stipulated in the contract; At any rate, the executive committee did not require him to increase the length (and consequently the cost) only 20 per cent., and that was the limit of their right to increase the work to be done. The plaintiff protested against building the levee from the center of Poland street to Kentucky street, and did the work under protest, with reservation of his right to demand the actual value of the work, and only to avoid having the defendant undertake it and charge the excess cost to him. Our conclusion is that the decision
“The contractor takes all risks from accidents, floods, and casualties of every kind which may occur before the completion and acceptance of the work, and shall sustain all damages and injury that may be caused thereby.”
The sinking of the ground under the levee occurred before the completion or acceptance of the work, and the resulting loss must be borne by the plaintiff. The expert engineer to whom the claims were submitted approved these items on the ground that the caving of the foundation was a catastrophe, and not a casualty. Our understanding of the word “catastrophe” is that it means a notable disaster ; a more serious calamity than might ordinarily be understood from the term “casualty” ; but the assumption of all risks from accidents and casualties of every kind was intended to include, and must be held to include, an accident, casualty, disaster, or calamity so serious and important that it might be termed a “catastrophe.” Our conclusion is that these two claims should have been rejected.
For the reasons assigned, it is ordered and decreed that the judgment appealed from be amended by reducing the amount from $14,-379.98 to $11,849.99. As thus amended, the judgment is affirmed; the costs of the appeal to be borne by the appellee.