Bart Arconti & Sons, Inc. v. Ames-Ennis, Inc.

340 A.2d 225, 275 Md. 295, 1975 Md. LEXIS 964
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1975
Docket[No. 188, September Term, 1974.]
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 340 A.2d 225 (Bart Arconti & Sons, Inc. v. Ames-Ennis, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bart Arconti & Sons, Inc. v. Ames-Ennis, Inc., 340 A.2d 225, 275 Md. 295, 1975 Md. LEXIS 964 (Md. 1975).

Opinion

Levine, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A contract dispute between a general contractor and subcontractor — exacerbated by a lengthy labor strike — has led to this appeal. Following a non-jury trial consuming 13 days in the Superior Court of Baltimore City (Sklar, J.) — during which almost 1900 pages of testimony were amassed, and countless exhibits were admitted — the trial judge resolved the contest in favor of the general contractor, Ames-Ennis, Inc. (Ames-Ennis). The subcontractor, Bart Arconti & Sons, Inc. (Arconti), its two principals, brothers Bart Arconti, Jr. (Bart) and George Arconti (George), and *297 two other corporations which they also controlled, G & L Construction Company and Atlas Tile & Terrazo, Inc., appeal from a judgment entered against each of them in the sum of $475,902.10.

After it had been awarded three contracts to construct public buildings in the City of Baltimore, the Northern Parkway Junior High School (Northern Parkway), the Women’s Detention Center at the Baltimore City Jail (Women’s Detention Center), and an extension to McCulloh Homes, a housing project for senior citizens, Ames-Ennis entered into subcontracts with Arconti in 1969 for the performance of the masonry and related work on each of those undertakings.

The execution of the three subcontracts was preceded by intensive negotiations between the parties. From the myriad changes and interlineations which characterize each of the documents in their final form, emerged the following provisions common to each of them, which are material to the outcome of this case. At the outset, the prime, contract and its accompanying' documents, with respect to which time is expressly made of the essence, are incorporated into the subcontracts. In relevant part, article 4 of the subcontract provides:

“(a) The Subcontractor agrees to proceed with said work, and every part and detail thereof, in a prompt and diligent manner, and to facilitate the performance thereof, and will do the several parts of the work at such times and in such order as the General Contractor may direct, and shall and will proceed with and wholly finish the said work according to the said Drawings and Specifications, and this Contract, in such time as not to delay the other trades and to insure completion of the General Contract within the time fixed therein, the General Contract time being of the essence of this Contract and the date for completion of your phase of work being as shown on attached Schedule. . . .
*298 “(c) Should there be a refusal on the part of this Subcontractor to comply with the aforegoing requirements in any respect which shall run more than two days after written notice, the General Contractor shall have the right to take possession of all materials and tools and make independent arrangements for the continuation and/or completion of same, charging such cost, as well as any expense or damages incurred as the result of default, against the unpaid balance. If such costs and expenses exceed the unpaid balance, this Subcontractor agrees to pay the deficit to the General Contractor. In this event, Subcontractor shall not be prevented from continuing or completing the work during or following the supplying of any such materials or installation by the Contractor.
“(d) Subcontractor shall reimburse and make good to General Contractor any damage sustained by General Contractor by reason of back charges, of other subcontractors and proportional share of liquidated damages and penalties payable to Owner, and the assent of the General Contractor to the delayed completion of the work shall not be construed as a waiver of Subcontractor’s obligation to make good any such damage caused to the General Contractor by such delay.”

Section (g) of article 7 provides in relevant part:

“Should there be a work stoppage caused by a strike, picketing, boycott or by any voluntary or involuntary cessation of work by employees of the Subcontractor, which in the judgment of the Contractor will cause; or is likely to cause unreasonable delay in the progress of construction then upon twenty-four (24) hours’ written notice the Contractor shall have the right to prosecute the work as described in Article 4, Paragraph C. In such event the Contractor shall have the right to *299 take possession of and use all of the Subcontractor’s materials (exclusive of tools) intended for use on the work. The cost of completion shall be charged against the Subcontractor’s remaining interest in the contract price. If the Subcontractor’s remaining interest in the contract price exceeds the cost of completion, the Subcontractor shall be entitled to the difference. If, however, the cost of completion exceeds the Subcontractors’ remaining interest in the contract price, then the Subcontractor agrees to pay the Contractor such excess within thirty (30) days after written demand for such excess has been made upon him by the Contractor.”

In addition, article 3(m) of the Northern Parkway subcontract requires that “[a]ll work shall be performed with sufficient manpower, material and equipment such as to adhere strictly and rigidly to the Construction Schedule, time being the essence of this contract.”

Subject to a specified sum being retained until completion, esfch of the contracts provided for the subcontract price to be paid for “the value of the work performed during any calendar months” in monthly installments “within five days after payment therefore is received by the Contractor from the Owner.”

During a period ranging from August through October 1969, Arconti commenced to work on the three projects, beginning with Northern Parkway. According to the evidence, problems ensued almost immediately at the school and the Women’s Detention Center. This entire period, through March 1970, was punctuated by repeated requests from Ames-Ennis to Arconti — written and verbal — to supply adequate labor and materials for those projects. For the most part, these complaints went unheeded — to the extent that frequently they were not even relayed by Bart or George to their own supervisory personnel on the jobs. Illustrative of 'this manpower deficiency is the evidence that Arconti never had more than eight workers at Northern *300 Parkway — and usually less — whereas it should have had three or four times that many.

Similar problems arose in respect to Arconti’s failure to make timely submissions of material samples for approval by the city’s architects. Although Arconti went through the motions of challenging the Ames-Ennis evidence in this regard, even Bart conceded at the trial that his company may have been somewhat “dilatory.” Because of these delays, performance by Arconti had proceeded so slowly, according to evidence presented by Ames-Ennis, that by late March only two to four percent of the work at Northern Parkway had been completed instead of the expected 65 to 75 percent.

Throughout this period, the monthly payments on the contracts were made in accordance with the requisitions presented by Ames-Ennis.

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Bluebook (online)
340 A.2d 225, 275 Md. 295, 1975 Md. LEXIS 964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bart-arconti-sons-inc-v-ames-ennis-inc-md-1975.