Carozza v. Williams

57 A.2d 782, 190 Md. 143, 1948 Md. LEXIS 263
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 17, 1948
Docket[No. 103, October Term, 1947.]
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 57 A.2d 782 (Carozza v. Williams) 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
Carozza v. Williams, 57 A.2d 782, 190 Md. 143, 1948 Md. LEXIS 263 (Md. 1948).

Opinion

Markell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by plaintiffs from a judgment for them for $2,391.96, admitted by defendants to be due, in an action to recover $5,400 claimed by plaintiffs under a contract for the sale of dirt or “borrow” by plaintiffs to defendants. The case was tried without a jury.

By a contract dated April 24, 1942, plaintiffs agreed to sell to defendants dirt or “borrow” from a certain hill, to be dug and removed by defendants within eighty-two days, and defendants agreed within that period to dig and remove at least 90,000 cubic yards, in such a manner that the hill should be “left substantially smooth and regular and no deep and unsightly holes or depressions left unfilled and in an irregular condition.” Defendants agreed to pay six cents ($.06) per cubic yard for all dirt or borrow dug and removed, in any event not less than $5,400, in monthly payments for yardage and the balance at the end of the eighty-two days if less than 90,000 cubic yards were actually dug and removed. The purpose of removing the dirt or borrow was to furnish “approved materials” for performance by defendants of a certain State Roads Commission contract in accordance with plans and specifications. “In the event the dirt or borrow should at any time be rejected by the State Roads Commission or its duly constituted engineers or other representatives, on the ground that” it “does not meet the requirements” of the commission as set forth in its plans and specifications, the right was reserved to defendants “to discon *146 tinue digging and hauling away dirt or borrow” and the obligation of defendants to make payment therefor should extend “only to such yardage thereof as theretofore shall have been actually accepted by the Commission or its engineers or other duly constituted officials” for use in the construction of the road.

Defendants began digging on or before the date of the contract and discontinued on May 27 or 28, 1942. They dug and removed 39,866 cubic yards, for which they tendered payment of $2,391.96, but their check was returned. Plaintiffs claim $5,400. Defendants contend,, and the lower court found, but plaintiffs deny, that plaintiffs’ dirt or borrow was “rejected” by the State Roads Commission and defendants were therefore entitled to discontinue. This issue of fact is the substantial question presented on this appeal. On this issue plaintiffs and defendants each contend that their opponents have the burden of proof. We agree with the lower court that the facts are sufficiently presented to make the question of burden of proof unimportant. At this stage it is important that “the judgment of the trial court shall not be set aside on the evidence, unless clearly erroneous, and due regard shall be given to the opportunity of the trial court to judge of the credibility of the witnesses.” Rules of Practice and Procedure, pt. 3, subd. 3, Trials, Rule 9.

Plaintiffs’ witnesses were plaintiff himself, his son, and Mr. Nunn, former Construction Engineer for the State Roads Commission. Defendants’ witnesses were one of defendants, their superintendent, Gott, their engineer, Baber, four State Roads Commission engineers, Robbins, French, Campbell and Heil, and its inspector Owens. The commission’s inspector in charge of defendants’ road contract, an engineer, Day, died before the trial. A diary kept by him contained an entry, dated May 27th or 28th, “Shut down borrow pit at 8 o’clock and moved to another location”. The commission furnishes the engineer in charge of jobs a book for such records.

*147 The commission’s contract called for dirt of quality-A-3 or better; the initial samples from- plaintiffs’ land were A-3 or better. Chemical tests are made at the laboratory, but engineers can tell pretty closely by inspection whether material is up to specifications. Several days before defendants discontinued they struck clay, which is lower quality than A-3, viz., A-5 or A-7, and is unsuitable. The commission’s engineers complained, and defendants had to move their steam shovel several times a day to find satisfactory dirt. Campbell, District Engineer, told Day “to be very careful in his inspection of the material that was going into the fill, and if it continued to be bad, as he had reported to me it was, he would have to shut down the work and not permit that type of material to go into, the fill.” The day before defendants discontinued, Day sent for French, whose duties were, among others, “to sample borrow pits”. French says, “The material had been running bad, and I came out there and made several test holes. When I would find a good location, the shovel would be moved to that location—where the material would meet the specifications.” The shovel was moved about five times in quest of good material. In some sections there was “right smart” of clay or Fuller’s earth. Gott says, the day after French’s visit “we hit more clay—we found it several times during the morning, at which time Mr. Day rejected this material for the right-of-way. Finally he came to the pit and closed down operations at that pit, as far as obtaining any more fill for the job was concerned”. Defendant Williams says, before French’s visit, “I kept moving the shovel around and around and then Mr. Day closed down the operations and said that we could not use any more borrow from this pit”. When French came, “we did make other holes and we found other bad material. However, we did find two or three places where Mr. French thought we might get some good material. We tried the remaining place where Mr. French thought we might find some good borrow. Mr. French told us that, if that place *148 developed unsatisfactorily, we could not use this material. We tried it and it also developed unsatisfactorily. In the two or three remaining spots, the material was unsatisfactory for the fill, and Mr. Day again closed us down”.

Some months after defendants discontinued digging on plaintiffs’ land, the commission permitted a contractor, Langenfelder, to mix borrow from plaintiffs’ land, where unsatisfactory soils “predominated”, with satisfactory soil “so that the resultant combination of the two soils mixed” would satisfy the commission’s requirements. Accordingly, Langenfelder did mix 104,471 cubic yards from plaintiffs’ pit with 228,045 better borrow from other land. Nunn testified that after defendants discontinued there was acceptable dirt in plaintiffs’ pit; this statement was based upon the fact that later dirt was taken from the pit and used on the Langenfelder job. At a former trial he testified that defendants “very defintely stopped because the material being excavated wasn’t meeting specification and require- • ments” and defendants then “had to find a source of supply that would give them acceptable material”; they had to go elsewhere. “The thought was” that the material from plaintiffs’ pit “was not acceptable to be used alone but that, if it were mixed or combined with some other source,” then “it would be satisfactory for use.” Later he undertook to explain this testimony as meaning that the material that “wasn’t meeting specifications” was “the material at that particular location within the area of the pit where the shovel was actually being operated.” “There was no definite refusal [by the commission] to accept dirt from [plaintiffs’ pit], but the various locations from which [defendants] were attempting to take the dirt, were proven to be unsatisfactory still.”

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Bluebook (online)
57 A.2d 782, 190 Md. 143, 1948 Md. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carozza-v-williams-md-1948.