292 F. 29 | 8th Cir. | 1923
Appellee Walter S. Dickey (impleaded for the purpose of a counterclaim filed by appellants', with his surety, Maryland Casualty Company), who was the plaintiff below, brought this action in equity to cancel a contract made by him with appellant Roswell drainage district, and for an accounting, and to recover, on a quantum meruit, money alleged to be due said appellee for work and materials done and furnished by him, pursuant to such contract and before an alleged breach thereof by the drainage district.
Cfoming now to the merits: Upon the trial below each of the parties contended that the contract had been breached by the other— plaintiff, Dickey, for that he had not been paid the money due him for work, labor, and materials, as and at the times provided in the contract; and defendant1 drainage district, for that Dickey had used certain materials in the work, to wit, iron for manholes, of less thickness than was prescribed by the specifications, and for that he had not vigorously and continuously prosecuted the work, as in the contract provided. Upon these contentions, the drainage district bottomed its counterclaim for damages accruing to it from the alleged breach of the contract by Dickey.
Briefly stated, and so far as is pertinent, the contract sought to be canceled provided for the digging of about 100 miles, of trenches, the laying of sewer tile therein, the backfilling of such trenches, the excavating of rock and quicksand incidental thereto, the straightening of a river, called Southsprings river,'and the construction of manholes; all labor, machinery, and materials to be furnished by Dickey. The
The trial court dismissed the counterclaim and found for Dickey, canceling the contract, because of a breach thereof by the drainage district in the matter of making payments due Dickey, as and when such payments fell due, and entered judgment for him for the sum of $21,-276.65. From this decree this appeal was taken by the. drainage district in the conventional mode.
The errors urged for reversal are: (a) That the trial court erred in holding that Dickey’s use of iron, in constructing manholes of a thickness less than called for in and by the specifications, was not a breach of the contract; (b) in holding that Dickey’s alleged failure to prosecute the work vigorously and continuously was not a breach of the contract; (c) in holding that Dickey was entitled to recover $14,711.28, for extra work in excavating rock and quicksand; and (d) in finding against the drainage district upon its counterclaim.
If there had been, as there was not, a fixed and definite time’ agreed on for completion, and no exceptions written into the contract for delays incident to circumstances, then, of course, the scarcity of labor and the incompetency thereof, and the difficulty of getting materials and repairs, would have afforded no legal excuse for a failure to complete within the period provided. But when, by implication of law, completion is required only in a reasonable time, that time which is reasonable will be determined by a reference to the situation existing at and pending performance. 13 C. J. 685.
“The failure of the plaintiff to pay on the 15th of June and July was not induced by defendant’s alleged failure to make the required deliveries, for the plaintiff did not know that it had not received one-third of the ^output of the mines from May 10th to June 30th until sometime in the month oí August. If the plaintiff did not receive one-third of the output during that time, if it had known that fact, it could have rescinded the contract and sued for damages, or affirmed the contract and deducted the-amount it had lost be-i cause of short deliveries from what it owed defendant for the coal already delivered, and then paid the difference. In ignorance of the alleged short deliveries, it could do neither, but it could and should have paid for the June deliveries on July 15th. This it deliberately failed or refused to do, though defendant was actually clamoring for its money due on the coal it had 'delivered. It now seeks to justify its failure to pay in accordance with the contract by the defaults of the defendant of which it was at that time ignorant. In other words, it argues that one breach justifies another, and when both parties to a contract separately breach it, one breach neutralizes the other, and results in the affirmance of the contract; that the second breach, deliberately made in ignorance of the first, cures the first, and the contract stands just as though no breach had been made, in spite of the determination of the party damaged by the second to terminate it. We are unable to assent to this proposition. One breach has no neutralizing effect upon the other.*33 The party injured by a breach may disregard it, or terminate the contract, but he may not ignore it, and plead it as an offset to his own breach.”
Of the facts, that the drainage district was withholding payments due to Dickey, and that in the meantime it was urging completion, there is no doubt upon the record. Moreover, upon the question of what would have been a reasonable time within which to complete the work, the evidence was conflicting; some of the witnesses place such time at four years, and others at six years. There was also conflicting evidence upon the question whether Dickey had vigorously and continuously prosecuted the work, under the situation confronting him. Reliance in such case may again be had upon the rule touching the presumptions which this court is permitted to indulge, with reference to the chancellor’s findings upon conflicting evidence. Harrison v. Fite, 148 Fed. 781, 78 C. C. A. 447; Thallman v. Thomas, 111 Fed. 277, 49 C. C. A. 317. It follows that, for both or either of the reasons given, the finding upon this question ought not to be reversed.
The question whether the trial court erred in allowing Dickey extra compensation for excavating rock and quicksand is one whereof the solution is furnished by the contract itself. This contention of appellants is bottomed on that part of the contract which fixes an upset price for the work of straightening Southsprings river, and so appellants contend that, since Dickey was to get $9,947.27 for this work, he was not entitled to extra compensation therefor, even though he met with rock and quicksand in its performance. This view wholly overlooks and leaves out of consideration those provisions of the contract, which were of general application, that Dickey should receive $3.50 per cubic yard for solid rock excavation requiring blasting, where the amount thereof exceeded 100 cubic yards, and $4 per cubic yard for the excavation of quicksand, where in the opinion of the engineer sheeting was required, in excess of 100 cubic yards. There was little, if any, dispute about the facts on this point. Upon the trial the evidence conclusively showed the correctness of this finding, provided the above clauses of the contract apply to excavation in the work of straightening Southsprings river.
These provisions for extra pay for rock and quicksand excavation are, as said, general ones, and clearly apply to rock and quicksand, wherever encountered in the quantities stated, during the work of excavation. It is clear, therefore, that, if they were not intended to apply to excavation in Southsprings river, they do not apply to any excavation whatever.' This is apparent, because compensation for laying sewer tile is based wholly upon the number of lineal feet of tile of various diameters to be laid; and the work of excavation and trench filling is included in the price per foot of tile laid, without fixing any additional compensation for excavation whether in soil or in rock and quicksand. If, then,, these clauses do not apply to excavation in Southsprings river, they are nugatory, and wholly void and inapplicable to any excavation required to be done under the contract. The contention of appellants has the effect to read them entirely out of the contract, and accordingly it is disallowed.
Having reached these conclusions, no occasion exists to discuss
Having found no error meet for reversal, the case should be affirmed, which is accordingly ordered.