City of Chicago v. Weir

46 N.E. 725, 165 Ill. 582
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 46 N.E. 725 (City of Chicago v. Weir) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Chicago v. Weir, 46 N.E. 725, 165 Ill. 582 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was an action of assumpsit brought by appellees, who compose the firm of Weir, McKechney & Co., against the city of Chicago, to recover money alleged to be due for work done in the construction of a water tunnel and shafts in the city of Chicago under a written contract. The items of plaintiffs account, as appears from the record, (deducting fifteen per cent which does not fall due, under the contract, until the completion of the work,) are as follows:

1. Rock excavation within the cross-section lines of the

tunnel..............................................$13,530.50

2. Removal of rock taken from outside said cross-section

lines.................................................. 3,503.70

3. Back masonry put in during July, 1896................. 4,492.25

4. Erroneous deduction from previous back masonry

(third ring of brick)............................_...... 3,952.50

5. Rock excavation in shafts............................. 524.45

6. Extra work caused by error in city surveys............ 3,878.60

Total............................................$29,882.00

In the circuit court a stipulation was entered into by counsel for the respective parties, to the effect that on the trial any evidence might be introduced under the common counts, and any relief granted and recovery had by plaintiffs, which would be competent if the matters in issue were specially pleaded; also, that defendant might plead the general issue and introduce any competent evidence material to the matters involved. It was further stipulated:

“A written contract, bearing date October 19, 1895, was entered into between the said parties for the construction of section 3 of the north-west water tunnel and shafts, as per contract, specifications and proposal or bid, copies of which are hereto attached and made a part of this stipulation. Under the contract the plaintiffs have constructed about 3000 feet of tunnel, and all the portion of the tunnel so constructed has been through solid rock, where blasting has been required. The drilling and blasting have created cavities outside of the regular dimensions or cross-section lines of the tunnel, which cavities the city has required the contractors to fill with solid brick masonry. In the interpretation of the said contract and the carrying out of the work, various contentions and differences have arisen between the parties. The points upon which the differences have arisen may be stated hs follows:
“First—Whether or not the contractors are entitled to compensation at the rate of two dollars for rock excavation per cubic yard within the cross-section lines of the tunnel over and above the cost per lineal foot of tunnel or shaft, where the work is wholly in rock.
“Second—Whether or not the contractors are entitled to compensation for the removal of rock which breaks outside of the cross-section lines as indicated by the engineer.
“Third—Whether the contractors are entitled to compensation for filling in with solid brick masonry outside the cross-section lines of the tunnel, called technically ‘back masonry. ’
“Fourth—Whether any allowance in respect to the third ring of brick mentioned in the contract, where such third ring is omitted by the permission of the engineer, should be made either in favor of the contractors or of the city.”

In the circuit court, on a trial without a jury, the court disallowed all the items contained in plaintiffs’ account except the last, $3878.60, for which judgment was entered. To reverse the judgment the plaintiffs appealed to the Appellate Court, and there it was held that plaintiffs were entitled to recover the first, fifth and sixth items of the account, amounting to $17,933.55, but judgment was rendered for $12,003 only, the deduction being made on account of money which had been paid plaintiffs for “back masonry.” To reverse the judgment of the Appellate Court the defendant, the city of Chicago, has appealed, and plaintiffs complain of the deduction made by the Appellate Court, by assigning cross-errors.

The contract contained this provision: “That the said parties of the first part, for and in consideration of the payments to be made by the said city of Chicago, as hereinafter set forth, hereby covenant and agree to build and construct a water tunnel and shafts in said city, from a point on North Green street near Grand avenue, in a northwesterly direction, to a point in section 35, township 40, range 18, east of the third principal meridian, according to the terms, conditions and directions set forth in the plans and specifications hereto attached and made a part hereof, same being designated in said specifications as ‘3d section, eight feet internal diameter.’”

The contract provided as follows: “The said city of Chicago hereby covenants and agrees, in consideration of the covenants and agreements in this contract specified, to be kept and performed by the said parties of the first part, to pay to said parties of the first part when this contract shall be wholly carried out and completed on the part of said contractors, and when said work shall have been accepted by the said commissioner of public works, the following prices, to-wit: Shafts, ten feet internal diameter, $69.50 per lineal foot; tunnel in earth, eight feet internal diameter, $16.65 per lineal foot; tunnel in rock, eight feet internal diameter, $15.90 per lineal foot; rock excavation over and above cost of lineal foot of tunnel or shaft, $2.00 per cubic yard; cast iron in covers, etc., five cents per pound.”

The principal question presented for our consideration by the record is, whether the plaintiffs were entitled to recover two dollars per cubic yard for rock excavated from the shafts and tunnel within the cross-section lines, as declared in the fourth clause of the contract as above set out, providing for payment, or whether that provision of the contract is limited to cases where the tunnel is partly in earth and partly rock. The disposition of this question involves a construction of the contract. It will be observed that the contract provides for only two kinds of tunneling,-—one through earth, the other through rock. There is no clause in the contract fixing any price whatever for tunneling through a mixture of rock and earth or a mixture of any other substance. Moreover, it is a significant fact that the price per lineal foot fixed by the contract for rock excavation is seventy-five cents less than the sum to be paid for earth excavation, the former being $15.90 per'lineal foot while the latter is $16.65. What explanation can be given of the fact that a less price is provided for digging through hard rock than earth, unless that clause giving two dollars per cubic yard for the rock to be excavated was intended to make up the difference? It needs no evidence to establish the fact that it costs more to tunnel through rock than earth. But if such evidence is required it will be found in the record.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.E. 725, 165 Ill. 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-weir-ill-1897.