41 Ind. App. 229 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1907
The appellant, the Western Construction Company, entered into a contract with the city of Cincinnati to furnish material and construct a certain pump pit and other improvements, as set forth in the contract, and which involved the use of a large amount of stone. It was provided by the terms of the contract between the city and-the appellant that the stone to be furnished “shall be of the best
It was provided further in said contract that
“said trustees may, at pleasure, appoint and employ, at their own expense, such officers as may be necessary, who are to act as engineers, inspectors or agents for the purpose of supervising, in said first party’s (city of Cincinnati’s) interest, the materials furnished and work done as the same progresses; that such officers shall have authority to reject any materials which do not in their opinion conform to the plans and drawings, specifications and contracts, and it shall be admissible for them to do so at any time during the progress of the work until its completion and acceptance, notwithstanding the fact that such defective materials may have been previously overlooked and received.”
A contract was entered into between the appellant and appellee, whereby the appellee contracted to furnish the appellant the stone necessary to be used in said work; the contract between the appellant and appellee providing as follows:
“(A) Whereas, said construction company has entered, or is about to enter, into a contract with the city of Cincinnati, Ohio, to perform certain work, viz.: The construction of pump pits, walls, conduit, revetment of slopes, etc., and will require certain supplies and services in performing the same; and, whereas, said contractor (the Romona Oolitic Stone Company) desires to furnish said construction company in whole or in part with such supplies and services; now, therefore, said contractor agrees to furnish and deliver f. o. b. cars at Pendleton Shops Station (near Cincinnati), Pennsylvania railroad, all dressed Bedford oolitic lime-. stone for walls, coping, and all other stone of the quality required to complete the contract entered into by*232 the Western Construction Company and the city of Cincinnati, as shown on the general and detail plans and under the specifications of this contract numbered thirty-two, for the Western Pumping 'Station. Blue prints and specifications will be furnished to the contractor, in order properly to get out suitable sizes and dimension stone, all in accordance with the attached specifications of the board of trustees. (B) The supplies and service furnished must be suitable for the purpose, and subject to the inspection and acceptance of the chief engineer or other duly authorized agent of the city of Cincinnati, which inspection and acceptance or rejection shall take place upon delivery of the stone as aforesaid. (C) The contractor agrees to begin the delivery of said dressed Bedford oolitic limestone on August 1, 1902, and to deliver regularly upon the completion of car-load lots, and to complete the same in full on or before October 1, 1902. (D) If the contractor shall fail in any of the matters of delivery, quality, rate or time, as before specified, the construction company shall have the right to declare the contract forfeited and void, or to procure said supplies or service from other parties, and to charge any excess in the cost of procuring the same over the price herein specified to the contractor, who hereby agrees to pay said excess. (E) Supplies offered or shipped under this agreement that are not in compliance with the conditions or specifications hereof, or that may be rejected by the engineer or agents of said' city of Cincinnati, shall be used by said construction company as backing, and shall be paid-for at the rate of $4.50 per cubic yard. (P) The contractor shall use care in properly loading the cut stone on the cars to avoid any breakage. Should any stones be injured in transit, the contractor will stand the loss. Should the construction company, by badly handling, cause a ■ stone to be injured, the loss shall be borne by the construction company; the intention being that the stone shall be delivered to the construction company ready to set, in compliance with the plans and specifications for doing the work, as contracted. (G) Said supplies are to be shipped via cars and delivered at Pendleton Shops Station, Ohio. (H) In consideration of the faithful performance of the covenants and agreements of the contractor, the construction company agrees to pay the Romona Oolitic Stone Company therefor in the following manner, to wit: Por all said Bedford*233 oolitic limestone suitable and acceptable for the purpose used, including face stone, coping, etc., as required, of the kind known as ‘buffi color,’ so delivered in any calendar month, and invoiced by the fifth of the next succeeding month, payment shall be made between the fifteenth and twenty-fifth days of said succeeding month, at the rate of $8.50 per cubic yard, measurements to determine a cubic yard being based upon the bottom beds of stones dressed or minimum quarry or square measure, all f. o. b. Pendleton Shops Station, Ohio. Minimum sizes shall be shipped, but should any excess be received, said excess shall be considered as backing, and compensation allowed on the basis of concrete backing — $4.50. The thickness of courses shall conform to sizes mentioned on last page of the agreement. The construction company will pay freight charges upon the .stone and charge the same to the contractor, who will allow said payments on his account, by a credit. Twenty per cent of all amounts due the contractor under this agreement shall be retained by. the construction company until the completion of the contract and the acceptance by the chief engineer of the stone, when the amount so retained will become immediately due, and shall be paid by cash. Strikes and inability to secure cars or other causes beyond the control of the contractor, causing a delay, would be causes for an extension in fulfilling the order. Any stone which might be broken or unfit for face stone and can be used as backing, shall be so used, permission of the chief engineer having been heretofore obtained. (I) It is mutually agreed that there are no oral reservations or modifications between the parties affecting the conditions hereof; that no subsequent changes or alterations of these terms shall be binding unless agreed to in writing over the signatures of both parties hereto.”
Under this contract the stone company shipped to the place of delivery at Pendleton Shops Station forty-four carloads of stone. The construction company took the stone from the cars and hauled it on wagons from Pendleton Shops Station to the site of the work, a distance of three-quarters to a mile, and stacked it up ready for use when required. But three car-loads of the stone were inspected by the city engineers on board the cars at the place of delivery
It is insisted by appellant that the appellee never intended to comply with the contract on its part; that it knew when it shipped the stone from the quarry that it would not be accepted by the city engineers, and that knowing this fact the appellee shipped the stone in such condition that it could not be properly inspected at the place of delivery, and that the city’s inspecting engineers refused to make such inspection any place except at the site of the work, and that it was therefore necessary for the appellant to remove the stone to the place where it could be inspected.
In this case the appellant had the unquestioned right under the contract to require the acceptance of this stone by the city’s inspecting engineers before it could be required to accept the same from the 'appellee as a compliance with the terms and conditions of the contract. Upon the refusal of the inspecting engineers to act in the matter, it had the
There are three material respects in which we think the rights of the appellee would be affected by a failure to inspect and accept or reject the stone according to the terms of the contract. The contract provides for the shipment of dressed stone, ready to be placed in the wall. It provides that for all damage done to the stone in transit the appellee shall be responsible. For all damage done to the stone in handling the same by the appellant, after it has received the stone, the appellant shall be liable.
The evidence shows that from the character of the stone it was liable to be chipped and damaged both in shipment on the cars and in removing from the cars, transporting on the wagons, and in unloading from the wagons and stacking up in the yards. It further shows that damage was done to a great many stones in this way. Whether this damage resulted from transportation on the cars, or whether it resulted from handling the stone in unloading it from
There was another element in the contract that was important to the appellee: It .could not be determined what quantity of stone would be required to comply with the terms of the contract until the stone was inspected and accepted. Prompt inspection and notice to the appellee of the stone as it was received would enable the appellee to gauge the quality and grade of stone shipped, and prevent its sending an unnecessary amount of dressed stone to be used as “backing” at the price paid for much cheaper material. It was unfair to the appellee to defer inspection until it had shipped a sufficient quantity of dressed stone to fill its contract, and then inspect and reject ninety per cent of it, and use the stone shipped for face work at $8.50 per cubic yard for concrete filling at $4.50 per cubic yard. Appellee was contracting to supply the dressed stone for the work, not the concrete “backing.” The provisions of the contract in reference to the use of the rejected stone was a mere incident, intended to save the appellee the costs of transportation, not a source from which profits were to be expected.
We conclude that the receipt of the stone by the appellant from the railroad, without its having been inspected or accepted or rejected by the inspecting engineers, and transporting it to the site of the work, taking it under its
Other questions are discussed by counsel in their brief, but we do not deem it necessary to consider them.
Judgment affirmed.