345 Mass. 384 | Mass. | 1963
This is a petition under G. L. c. 258 to recover $30,266.70, as a balance due for 201,778 cubic yards of gravel backfill furnished under a contract for highway construction. The judge in the Superior Court found for the respondent and denied a request to rule that such a finding was not warranted. The petitioner duly excepted. There was no error.
The Commonwealth has paid for the gravel as 11 ordinary borrow” at the unit price of fifty cents a cubic yard. The petitioner contends that it should be paid for as “gravel borrow” at sixty-five cents a cubic yard.
The specifications next set out are relevant. “Section A-2 Roadway Excavation . . . A2.33 Peat . . . shall be excavated to such widths and depths as the engineer may direct. Backfilling where peat is removed shall consist of selected clean sandy material of a gravelly nature or of rock or boulders obtained from the excavation or from borrow.” ‘1 Section A-6 Borrow Description A.610 . . . When, in the opinion of the engineer, there is not sufficient suitable material available either from excavation within the slope lines ... or within the limits of the highway location to form the necessary . . . backfill, the contractor shall obtain such additional material as may be necessary from outside of the highway location. A6.ll Classification. This material shall be classed as ordinary borrow, gravel borrow, sand borrow, etc., and shall be of a quality satisfactory to the engineer and as hereinafter specified. Materials A6.20 . . . Ordinary borrow shall consist of a material satisfactory to the engineer and not specified as gravel borrow, sand borrow, or other particular kind of borrow. This material shall contain no stones over 8 inches in their largest diameter. . . . A6.21 . . . Gravel borrow shall consist of hard, durable stone and coarse sand practically free from loam
Sections A6.22 through A6.25 state definitions for sand borrow, loam borrow, loam or clay hardening, and peat borrow.
The evidence showed that the material used for backfill was “tested and approved gravel . . . all of which was borrow, i.e., obtained from outside of the highway location.”
We assume that the Commonwealth must pay for gravel borrow if such was required by the engineer or, with his knowledge and approval, and without a caveat by him, was supplied by the contractor in the belief that the contract required it. The engineer is not shown to have made such a requirement or to have had such knowledge. We do not construe § A2.33 to specify that gravel borrow must be used as backfill. If the backfill is not rock or boulders, it need be only “clean sandy material of a gravelly nature.” Plainly such material would not necessarily meet the specifications for gravel borrow. Hence, proof that the gravel supplied was tested and approved does not entitle the petitioner to be paid for gravel borrow. We may not infer that the testing and approval were more than was required for material to be used for backfill. There is no evidence that the gravel supplied in fact met the tests for gravel borrow. In view of the precise definition of gravel borrow in § A6.21, it is not enough to show that tested gravel was supplied and that it was borrow.
There is no provision that gravel (of whatever test) will be paid for at the unit price for gravel borrow. The petitioner relies on a provision which appears in § D-2, the title of which is “Leaching Basins.” Subsection D2.41, “Basis of Payment,” includes the provision that gravel used for backfilling will be paid for at the contract unit price per cubic yard under the item for gravel borrow. The petitioner also refers to § G-l (“Concrete Sidewalks”) and subsection G1.41 which provides that ‘ ‘ [g] ravel, cinders, or
On the evidence, the borrow supplied fits the definition of “ordinary borrow” in § A6.20. It was “material satisfactory to the engineer and not specified as gravel borrow, sand borrow, or other particular kind of borrow.” We think the clause “not specified as gravel borrow” means “not within the specifications herein stated for gravel borrow.”
Excephons overruled.