Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. v. A. M. Walkup Co.

112 S.E. 663, 132 Va. 386, 1922 Va. LEXIS 32
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 16, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 112 S.E. 663 (Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. v. A. M. Walkup Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. v. A. M. Walkup Co., 112 S.E. 663, 132 Va. 386, 1922 Va. LEXIS 32 (Va. 1922).

Opinions

In 1915, the Florida Railroad Commission entered an order requiring the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, hereinafter called Coast Line, and the Seaboard Air Line Railway Company, hereinafter called Seaboard, to build a union station at the intersection of the two roads at Ocala, Florida, the station to be located on the Carmichael property, *Page 388 in the northwest angle made by the crossing of said roads.

On April 16, 1916, the railroad companies entered into an agreement with A. M. Walkup Company, Incorporated, hereinafter called Walkup Company, to erect the station for the sum of $15,500, to be paid one-half by each company. The work of construction, which, under the terms of the contract, was under the supervision of W. D. Faucette, chief engineer of the Seaboard, or his duly authorized representatives, was begun on April 26, 1916.

On July 1, 1916, Walkup Company received a telegram from Faucette ordering it to stop work. On July 3, 1916, the council of the city of Ocala held a special meeting to consider the proposed change of site of the union station to the Masters property, in the southwest angle of the crossing. The location of the Carmichael property being such as to create the necessity for the public to cross the main line and yard tracks of the Seaboard in reaching the union station, Vice-President Sedden, of the Seaboard, who was present at the council meeting, wrote the president of the city council on July 7, 1916, that his company would pay $15,000 on account of the Masters property, provided the city would, among other things, secure the Masters property for the Carmichael lot and $20,000, and secure the consent of the Railroad Commission for moving the station.

In consideration of a conveyance of the Carmichael property and the payment of $20,000, of which $15,000 was paid by the Seaboard and $5,000 by the Coast Line, the Masters property was conveyed to both roads in equal shares.

In August, 1916, after bids were received for the work, a contract was entered into between the Seaboard engineers and Walkup Company, "to take down the building as it then stood and remove it across the track and rebuild it to its then condition — to the same extent of completion that it was at that time," for $5,400. The contractor was not permitted, *Page 389 however, to resume work until June 20, 1917, and in the meantime the United States government had entered the war, and the price of labor and material had increased to such an extent that the contract could not be completed except at a loss.

In a conference, held June 18, 1917, at which the Coast Line was not represented, the Seaboard engineers in charge of the construction work agreed Walkup Company should be allowed an additional sum of $3,639.23 "to compensate for increased cost of labor and materials and other expenses which resulted from stopping the work on the union station in 1916."

Upon final completion of the building, there was due and unpaid to the contractor a balance of $3,552.25, with interest from May 28, 1920, which each railroad claimed the other owed, to recover which this suit was instituted against both companies.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the Seaboard and against the Coast Line for the amount claimed, and judgment was entered accordingly.

The case is before us upon a writ of error granted the Coast Line, and upon the motion of the Seaboard to be dismissed as a party to the petition of the plaintiff in error.

The contention of the Seaboard is that, under the original contract of April 16, 1916, each road was severally liable for fifty per cent of the cost of construction of the station on the Masters property; that the extra allowances of $5,400 and $3,639.23, aforesaid, were properly allowed thereunder by the supervising engineers, as a part of the cost of construction, and that it has paid its half under that contract. While the contention of the Coast Line is that, under said original contract, it is liable for only one-half of the original contract price, $15,500; that the allowances aforesaid were made under new contracts entered into between Walkup Company and the Seaboard engineers, without authority on their part to bind the Coast Line to pay any part of said allowance; that it has agreed to pay no part of the *Page 390 $3,639.23, and only $2,000 on the cost of removal, and has paid all it owes the plaintiff.

[1] It is admitted that W. D. Faucette, supervising engineer, had authority, under the contract of April 16, 1916, to direct the work. When he, or his authorized representative, ordered the work stopped, he was acting as the agent of both roads, and his action in this respect has been ratified by both companies by their conduct in consenting to the change of location and in contributing money towards the cost of removing and rebuilding the station on the Masters property. The delay occasioned by this order resulted in damages to the contractor, for which both railroads are liable, under said contract of April 16, 1916. The adjustment, by the engineer in charge, of the contractor's claim for damages occasioned by the delay was reported to both defendants, and, while they disagree as to what portion each should pay, neither one contends that the allowance agreed upon was unreasonable.

[2] It is held in Alleghany Iron Co. v. Teaford, 96 Va. 372,31 S. E. 525, that "a plaintiff may recover damages sustained by him for loss resulting from unreasonable delay on the part of the defendant in permitting him to perform his contract."

The written contract of April 16, 1916, does not provide for the taking down, removal and rebuilding of the station at a new location after it was partly completed, and contains nothing which can be construed, expressly or by implication, to bind either party to pay any portion of the expense incurred for that purpose.

The Coast Line gained nothing by the change of location, and refused at all times to pay one-half of the cost of the Masters lot, or one-half the expense of removing the station and rebuilding same thereon, and as soon as it learned that Engineer Faucette was attempting to bind the Coast Line to pay one-half the cost of removal under the original *Page 391 contract, his authority in that respect was repudiated by J. E. Willoughby, chief engineer of the Coast Line.

It plainly appears from the correspondence between W. D. Faucette, chief engineer of the Seaboard, and the Coast Line officials that the agreement was that, for cost of removal, the Coast Line would pay only $2,000, the city of Ocala having agreed to pay the remaining $700. Engineer Faucette acknowledges this in his letter of August 4, 1916, addressed to J. C. Muchison, general superintendent of the Coast Line, in which he says the Coast Line will pay $7,000 and no more — $5,000 on the Masters lot and $2,000 on cost of moving the station. In the same letter he says, as soon as permission can be obtained to go on the Masters property, he will have the contractor start moving the building, evidently relying on the city of Ocala, or the Seaboard, whose employee he was, to pay the $700, which the Coast Line refused to pay. The president of the city council of Ocala telegraphed W. L. Seddon, vice-president of the Seaboard, on July 21, 1916, as follows: "The city council will pay $700 for A. C. L., amount lacking for their part moving depot. Am taking matter up with Railroad Commission."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 S.E. 663, 132 Va. 386, 1922 Va. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-coast-line-railroad-co-v-a-m-walkup-co-va-1922.