Burns Bros. Plumbers, Inc., and Cross-Appellant v. Groves Ventures Company and S. J. Groves & Sons Company, and Cross-Appellees

412 F.2d 202, 22 Ohio Misc. 154, 50 Ohio Op. 2d 180, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11885
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 18, 1969
Docket18372, 18373
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 412 F.2d 202 (Burns Bros. Plumbers, Inc., and Cross-Appellant v. Groves Ventures Company and S. J. Groves & Sons Company, and Cross-Appellees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burns Bros. Plumbers, Inc., and Cross-Appellant v. Groves Ventures Company and S. J. Groves & Sons Company, and Cross-Appellees, 412 F.2d 202, 22 Ohio Misc. 154, 50 Ohio Op. 2d 180, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11885 (6th Cir. 1969).

Opinion

O’SULLIVAN, Circuit Judge.

This case presents an appeal and a cross-appeal from a judgment entered on November 3, 1967, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, Western Division. The judgment awarded to Burns Bros. Plumbers, Inc., plaintiff-appellee and cross-appellant, the sum of $28,832.55 in Burns’ suit against Groves Ventures Company and its subsidiary, S. J. Groves & Sons Company (treated together here as Groves), defendants-appellants.

Burns’ suit against Groves asserted claims totalling $130,000 arising out of work connected with a subcontract that Burns had made with Groves in June, 1959. Groves, in May, 1959, had entered into a contract with the United States Corps of Engineers for construction of the Meldahl Locks in the Ohio River between Clermont County, Ohio, and Bracken County, Kentucky. The price for the entire work was $25,000,000 and Burns’ subcontract, covering certain work on the piping and mechanical systems for the locks, originally called for payment of about $387,000.

This suit, first brought in the Southern District of New York, was transferred to the Southern District of Ohio pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). By agreement of the parties, the Court appointed a Special Master, D. G. Aron-berg, to hear the evidence and make proposed Findings of Fact. Aronberg, who was not a lawyer but an engineer with fifty years of experience in the construction industry, filed an initial report on November 4, 1966, after taking evidence. Upon objection filed by both parties, the District Court resubmitted the matter to the Master who considered interrogatories and answers submitted by both parties and made a supplemental report on June 20, 1967. The District Court on November 3, 1967, pursuant to Rule 53(e) (2), Fed.R.Civ.P., determined that the Master’s Findings were not clearly erroneous, accepted them, and ordered that Burns recover from Groves the sum of $28,832.55, plus interest.

Groves appeals from three parts of that decision: (1) an award of $4,541.-41 in payment for the cost of Burns’ sectional testing of pipe which was demanded by Groves but which had not been stipulated in the subcontract; (2) $6,150 awarded to Burns as damages alleged to have been suffered because of 41 days delay in the completion of the project caused by the flooding of the Ohio River, and (3) $18,141.14 awarded to Burns as damages alleged to have ac-curred because of Groves’ failure to supply Burns adequate electricity. Burns cross-appeals from part three of the decision, claiming that the award was inadequate.

We affirm the judgment entered upon the above items (1) and (3), but reverse as to item (2).

1. Sectional testing.

Burns’ work of installing the piping and mechanical systems for the locks was initially carried on inside the cofferdam. 1 During the course of the work, Burns, at the request of Groves, did what is referred to as separate or sectional testing of the various component installations making up the hydraulic system. Burns’ position is that its only obligation under the subcontract was to carry out such testing at the conclusion of its work, and that the interim sectional testing added to its cost in the amount of $4,541.41. The prime contract between Groves and the Corps of Engineers provided in Sections 16-14 and 16-16 in part as follows:

“16-14 Hydraulic Oil.
Upon completion of the installation and cleaning of oil lines, hydraulic oil *205 shall be added to the system to fill all hydraulic lines and equipment including all hydraulic operating machinery
* * *»
“16-16 Operating tests.
Upon completion and prior to acceptance of the installation, the contractor shall subject the hydraulic system to such operating tests as may be required by this contracting officer to demonstrate satisfactory functional and operating efficiency. * *

Groves seemed to concede that the above provisions did not explicitly require any testing prior to the completion of the hydraulic system. While there is sharp dispute on the point, Burns claimed that Groves agreed that the work of interim sectional testing, made necessary by the progress of the work, should be considered as an extra for which Burns should be paid. Testing of the hydraulic system was done by introduction of oil. Burns showed that if it could do this work in one final operation, it would bring the oil to the site of the work by an oil tanker and the pumping of oil from such tanker into the system would be a much more economical operation — both from handling and the price of the oil — than the piecemeal testing which required transporting and handling the oil in barrels. The Special Master found that Groves had agreed to pay for the involved work as an extra, and awarded Burns $4,541.41 —the amount which he found the cost of the sectional testing exceeded the cost of testing in the manner provided for in the subcontract. There was evidence from which such a finding of fact could be made, the finding was adopted by the District Judge and we are satisfied that it was not clearly erroneous. It is binding on us. Rule 52(a), Fed.R.Civ.P.

Appellant Groves argues that Section 28 of the subcontract is controlling. This section provides:

“It is agreed that the terms and conditions of this agreement are fully covered in the foregoing and that any verbal statements made by either party or agents claiming to represent either party are to be considered of no effect whatever.”

In disposing of this contention, the District Judge said:

“We do not consider that Section 28 amounts to a ‘contract in writing not to make any other contracts except in writing.’ * * * In any event, the finding of fact of the Master was that a new contract was in fact made covering something not covered by the original contract.”

Groves also argues that the parol evidence rule was offended by permitting the establishment of a term not in the original subcontract, and employing parol evidence to do so. Notwithstanding the many efforts to expand the parol evidence rule so as to foreclose contracting parties from making new oral agreements relating to the general subject matter of a written contract, it is now well established that the rule does not foreclose what was agreed upon by Burns and Groves as found by the Master.

“This [the parol evidence rule] does not preclude parol evidence from being introduced to prove the making of a contemporaneous contract which does not cover the same ground [as the written contract] * * *. Nor does the rule preclude the admission of evidence of the subsequent modification of the integrated agreement by parol or written contract.” 4 Williston on Contracts, § 631, pp. 948-951.

The alleged oral agreement in the case at bar was entered into subsequent to the signing of the subcontract and the Master found it to cover terms not covered in either the prime contract or the Burns-Groves subcontract. In Grandcourt Land Co. v. Raymond, 4 *206

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412 F.2d 202, 22 Ohio Misc. 154, 50 Ohio Op. 2d 180, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burns-bros-plumbers-inc-and-cross-appellant-v-groves-ventures-company-ca6-1969.