City of Atchison v. Rackliffe

96 P. 477, 78 Kan. 320, 1908 Kan. LEXIS 58
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 6, 1908
DocketNo. 15,588
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 96 P. 477 (City of Atchison v. Rackliffe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Atchison v. Rackliffe, 96 P. 477, 78 Kan. 320, 1908 Kan. LEXIS 58 (kan 1908).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mason, J.:

Eackliffe & Gibson constructed a sewer for the city of Atchison under a written contract, one of the provisions of which was that for “rock excavation” they were to receive extra compensation at the rate of $2.40 per cubic yard. They were paid in full except with respect to a claim for 654 yards of rock excavation, which the city denied, contending that the material excavated was not rock, and that in any event the contract made the city engineer the judge of that question and he had so decided. They brought action for the amount in controversy, pleading in two counts, the first declaring in terms upon the contract, the second alleging that in the performance of the work they encountered strata of “rock and solid material of rock substance” which could be removed only by drilling and blasting and was therefore to be “classified . . . as rock excavation,” the reasonable charge for which was $2.40 per cubic yard. They obtained judgment under the second count, upon the basis of $1.50 per cubic yard for the excavation in question, that being the rate of compensation to which the jury, in response to a special interrogatory, found they were entitled. The city prosecutes error, and the contractors file a cross-petition in error claiming that the judgment should be increased so as to allow them the full contract price of $2.40 per cubic yard.

The vital question of law involved is whether by the language of the contract the city engineer was made the judge of the character of the material excavated. The pleadings may be regarded as presenting a claim [322]*322on the part of the city that the engineer had decided that the material in question was not rock, and a contention on the part of the contractors that the engineer acted in bad faith in that regard. The defendant did not plead in so many words that the engineer had made such a decision, and the plaintiffs did not plead in set phrase that he acted in bad faith in so doing. But the petition alleged that he wrongfully, capriciously, without reason, and in collusion with the defendant, refused to measure the rock, and the answer denied this allegation and added that when the engineer was requested to make such measurement “he fully and frankly discussed with said plaintiffs the condition of said pretended rock excavation and called the attention of said plaintiffs to the fact that the same was not in any sense ‘rock excavation.’ ”

The evidence showed a marked difference of opinion as to whether or not the material in controversy was properly to be regarded as rock. Witnesses for the defendant called it “shale,” “soft shale,” “sand shale,” and said it was not rock, and that it could readily be handled by pick and shovel. One of the plaintiffs testified that he understood the term “rock” to mean “any hard substance that does not yield easily, being picked or shoveled or removed easily from its original position,” adding:

“In classifying excavating material it is usually classified as rock and earth, and rock itself is classified as-shale and sandstone or loose rock; different classification of rock itself. ... If there were but two classifications, rock and earth, rock would cover, I should judge, quite a field; it would cover shale, sandstone— several other classifications.”

The city engineer in the course of his examination, said:

“I was called for the purpose of classifying or describing the material they were excavating; to determine the character of this material, whether or not it was to be measured and paid for as rock, and I [323]*323determined it should not be so classified, and so informed plaintiffs’ foreman.”

The court gave this instruction:

“You are instructed that sandstone and shale (shale being sometimes called soapstone) are rock; and if you find and believe from the evidence in the case that plaintiffs in the work of constructing the South Atchison sewer encountered what is designated sandstone and shale in place, that is, in their natural state or position, and in large bodies, that in the performance of their contract with defendant city, in the progress of their work under such contract, the only' practicable way of excavating such sandstone and shale, in order that such work might progress expeditiously and economically, so that it might be completed within the time specified in the contract, was by drilling and blasting with powder and dynamite, owing to the nature and density of the substance, and that plaintiffs stripped the overlying earth from the surface and demanded that the city engineer measure the same, and that the city engineer wrongfully, arbitrarily, capriciously, or by reason of a misconception of the terms of the contract, refused to measure, and the defendant refused to pay for the same, and that plaintiffs nevertheless completed said sewer, and the defendant city afterwards accepted and used the same, then and in such event plaintiffs are entitled to recover from the defendant on the second count of their petition whatever amount you may believe from the evidence such excavation was reasonably worth, not exceeding $2.40 per cubic yard, for the number of yards so excavated by them.”

In view of the context, the nature of the controversy, and the evidence, it is manifest that the phrase used in describing a possible ground of the engineer’s decision —“by reason of a misconception of the terms of the contract” — had reference to a misconception as to what was meant by the word “rock” as used in the contract. At all events it was open to that construction, and no other form of misconception was suggested to the jury, If by the contract the engineer was in fact authorized to settle any dispute as to whether material excavated [324]*324should be classified as rock, his decision made in good faith would be final, and to permit the jury to disregard it upon the ground that he misunderstood the contract in that respect or had a wrong conception of what was meant by the word “rock” as there used would be to allow them to substitute their judgment for his upon the very matter entrusted to his determination. The instruction was therefore erroneous, if this power was actually lodged with the city engineer. The portions of the contract material for the determination of this, question are as follow:

“Eock excavation will consist of rock in place. The contractor will strip off the earth overlying same, so as to expose the surface of the rock, upon which the engineer will take his levels, before the rock is excavated. ... No extra allowance will be made for any class or condition of material excavated except for rock excavation.”
“The engineer is to make all measurements, and to decide as to the amount or quality of the several kinds of work, and as to the quality of all materials. . . . To prevent all disputes and litigation, it is further agreed by the parties hereto, that the engineer shall, in all cases, determine the amount or quality of the •several kinds of work which are to be paid for under this contract, and he shall decide all questions which .may arise relative to the execution of this contract on the part of the contractor, and his estimates and deci,'sions shall be final and conclusive, subject to the approval of the mayor and city council.”
“Whenever the word ‘engineer’ is used, it shall be held to mean the city engineer, or his authorized assistant.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 P. 477, 78 Kan. 320, 1908 Kan. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-atchison-v-rackliffe-kan-1908.