C. W. Regan, Inc. v. Parsons

411 F.2d 1379
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 13, 1969
DocketNos. 12335, 12336
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 411 F.2d 1379 (C. W. Regan, Inc. v. Parsons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. W. Regan, Inc. v. Parsons, 411 F.2d 1379 (4th Cir. 1969).

Opinion

McMILLAN, District Judge:

PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

Parsons, Brinckerhoff, Quade & Douglas (“Parsons”), defendants, and C. W. Regan, Inc. and Nager Electric Company, Inc. (“Regan”), plaintiffs, both appeal from judgments and final orders entered in the District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, Norfolk Division, by Judge Oren R. Lewis following split trials on liability in June, 1966, and on damages in July, 1967. The final judgment was in favor of the plaintiff, Regan, a tunnel building contractor, and against the defendant Parsons, a firm of consulting and supervising engineers, for property damage in the amount of $157,454.-50. The defendant appellee Bernard F. Diamond, trading as Diamond Construction Company (“Diamond”), another tunnel building contractor on the same job, was found by the jury not to be liable to the plaintiffs.

The suit, filed in 1965, arose out of the partial flooding on Ash Wednesday, March 7, 1962, of the new or second midtown tunnel under the Elizabeth River between Norfolk, Virginia, on the east, and Portsmouth on the west.

THE PHYSICAL FACTS

The Elizabeth River Tunnel Commission in 1960 contracted with various contractors to build the tunnel, about 4,300 feet long. The tunnel had three generally separate sections: (1) the “tube” section; (2) the “cut and cover” sections; and (3) the “open approaches.” The open approaches are simply the access roads and supporting structures leading to the portal or tunnel mouth where the tunnel first goes underground. The cut and cover sections slope through the river banks into the river. They were built by cutting a sloping shaft and putting the tunnel tubes in the shaft and re-covering the shaft. The tube portion was built by digging a ditch under the river (to a maximum depth of about 100 feet below water level); by constructing sections of tunnel about 300 feet long and 30 feet in diameter with each end sealed by a steel bulkhead; by floating these sealed sections into place and filling their hollow walls with concrete or by some other method sinking them into place and sealing them together in the ditch to form one continuous tube. Thereafter the temporary steel bulkheads at the end of each section were removed, leaving one continuous tube through which the road runs. A ventilating building or tower was built near each end about 200 feet offshore from the portal.

The defendant Parsons was employed without written contract to prepare overall plans and specifications and to act as consulting and supervising engineer for the Tunnel Commission.

The defendant Diamond was employed under a written contract for a base fee of $11,631,669 to “rough in” the tube section and the cut and cover sections and to build the foundations of the ventilating buildings.

The plaintiff Regan was employed under a written contract for a base fee of $3,574,000 to build the open approaches and' certain retaining walls; to install a roadway through the tunnel; to finish off the ventilating buildings and to finish off the entire tunnel and approaches and install electrical and drainage systems.

One of Regan’s jobs was to run electrical cables within the tunnel between the two ventilating buildings. This work ultimately required portal to portal access to the tunnel by Regan.

At the east or Norfolk portal there was installed a steel tide gate which could be raised for access and lowered to seal off possible flooding through the open cut. However, the ground level on the Portsmouth side was higher than the Norfolk side, and the plans called for retaining walls and approaches, to be built by the plaintiff Regan, above the level of any recorded or anticipated tide [1382]*1382or flood; and therefore a tide gate was not planned for the Portsmouth side.

In November, 1961, the moveable steel tide gate was in place in the east or Norfolk end, and the only remaining metal bulkhead was inside the tunnel about 500 feet from the Portsmouth portal and about 300 feet offshore from the ventilating building. This metal wall was interfering with the work of both Diamond and Regan. Specifically, it was preventing Regan from pulling cables through from one ventilating building to the other; and it was time for it to be removed.

Diamond sought permission in November, 1961, to cut out the steel bulkhead, and to build a wooden bulkhead at the portal, between the ventilating building and the shore, where the open approach to the tunnel ended. The purpose of the wooden bulkhead was to keep out water; ground water and seepage were the water sources anticipated; a flood tide was not anticipated. Diamond drew the plans for this wooden bulkhead. Parsons examined the plans and made certain recommendations for changes in the plans so that the bulkhead would be structurally stronger. The plans themselves as drawn by Diamond called for a “sandwich” of aluminum foil and layers of felt between wooden timbers, and for felt packing around the edges “to provide seal against concrete.” Caulking the edges of the wooden bulkhead if needed, and fitting its edges against the masonry to prevent leakage were, on the uncon-tradicted evidence, field construction details which were the contractor’s — not the engineers’ — responsibility. As approved, the wooden bulkhead was constructed, and the steel bulkhead which had been blocking Regan’s electrical work was removed.

By March 7, 1962, Diamond had almost completed its basic heavy structural work. The tube section and the cut and cover sections had been installed; the foundations for the ventilating buildings had been built by Diamond and turned over to Regan for completion; and the tunnel was open from end to end except for the wooden barricade at the Portsmouth or west portal and the moveable steel partition or tide gate at the Norfolk or east portal. Regan, the plaintiff, was the chief contractor then on the job. Regan was finishing off work including installing electrical cables between the ventilating buildings in the tunnel. Re-gan, however, was several months behind the contract schedule and had not installed the retaining walls on the Portsmouth side.

On March 7, 1962 an unprecedented combination of moon, winds and high tides produced a water level in the river of 10.2 feet above mean low water, more than three feet above any previous recorded spring tide. Shortly before 8:00 A. M., flood water began pouring into the tunnel from three sources — the Norfolk end, the Portsmouth end, and the Portsmouth ventilating building. Apparently it started first at the Portsmouth end.

At the Portsmouth portal the wooden, felt and aluminum bulkhead held without structural failure against a 30-foot head of water. However, the plaintiff Regan had drilled some small holes in the bulkhead through which water came under pressure; and water leaked into the tunnel around the edges of the bulkhead.

At the Norfolk portal, Parsons’ engineers, upon telephone request from Re-gan, closed the steel tide gate as far as it would go. However, they could not close it all the way. A four-inch water discharge line and a two-inch air line, both belonging to Diamond, and a one-inch steel water line belonging to Regan all entered the Norfolk end under the steel gate and were being used by Regan. Diamond’s people refused to remove or cut these lines because they served air lines and pumps inside.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
411 F.2d 1379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-w-regan-inc-v-parsons-ca4-1969.