Clover Manufacturing Co. v. Austin Co.

125 A. 646, 101 Conn. 208, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 109
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 11, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 125 A. 646 (Clover Manufacturing Co. v. Austin Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clover Manufacturing Co. v. Austin Co., 125 A. 646, 101 Conn. 208, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 109 (Colo. 1924).

Opinion

Beach, J.

Appellant pursues reasons of appeal six to eleven inclusive. The questions thus raised are whether the Superior Court erred in overruling the plaintiff’s remonstrance to the report of the State Referee in the particulars pointed out in an amendment to the reasons of appeal filed March 24th, 1924, and in rendering judgment for the defendant upon its counterclaim and cross-complaint.

Reason of appeal six is that the court erred in overruling paragraph B-l of the plaintiff’s remonstrance, to the effect that the report should not be accepted for the reason apparent on its face that “on page 17, the committee finds that the report of Dane was inadequate, erroneous and not warranted by the contract, but there is no hint of dishonesty, fraud or bad faith, and therefore the effect of the decision by him cannot be avoided.” The report of Dane, the plaintiff’s engineer, related to the amount due the defendant. The contract required the owner to provide a competent engineer. Mr. McElroy, the engineer originally appointed, was takefi ill, and on or about August 22d plaintiff appointed Mr. Dane in his place. The con *212 tract also provided that “payments shall be made by the owner as follows: A sum equal to ninety per cent (90%) of the amount, as estimated by the builder, and approved by the engineer, of work completed and material furnished during each month shall be paid on or before the 5th of the following month.”

On September 2d, the defendant sent its estimate claiming $33,486 as the amount due and payable on or before September 5th. Mr. Dane would not accept these figures, but reported to the plaintiff that the buildings were not more than one half completed, and upon that basis recommended a payment of $17,140. The referee finds that Mr. Dane’s report did not correctly state the contract price, nor the amounts of payments already made, that it ignored an allowance of 10% due for overhead and profits; that the buildings were in fact substantially more than one half completed, and that a balance of $26,714.85 was due the defendant, assuming that there were no offsets for defective construction or material; and in summing up the matter the referee finds that the method of ascertaining the amount due adopted by Mr. Dane, who had actually been upon the ground only some five or six days, “was inadequate, erroneous, and not warranted by the contract.” It is further found that “Mr. Dane was greatly in fault in certifying as he did, that the work was only about one-half completed, and that the plaintiff was equally blamabie in accepting and claiming said certificate to be correct.” Nevertheless the plaintiff claims that Mr. Dane’s report must be accepted at its face value because there is no finding that it was the product of fraud, dishonesty or bad faith.

In the first place, it is to be noted that the contract, although it contemplates that the builder’s estimate of the amount of work done and 'materials furnished during each month shall be approved by the engineer *213 before payment, does not in terms authorize the engineer acting alone to fix the amount due, and does not in terms provide that his estimate of the amount due shall be conclusive. But even if the contract had so provided, we are of opinion that the law requires something more of an engineer to whom such authority is given than the mere negative virtue of not acting dishonestly, fraudulently or in bad faith. By accepting the position of an umpire upon whose decisions the parties agree to rely, an engineer assumes a positive responsibility, and impliedly agrees that in making his decisions he will exercise the care to be expected of his calling to ascertain the facts, and will be governed by the terms of the agreement between the parties. In this instance the referee explicitly finds that Mr. Dane has not done either of these things, and is blamable for not having done them. The contract has now been terminated, and on the referee’s findings the court did not err in refusing to hold that the defendant is concluded in this action by Mr. Dane’s hasty and uninformed estimate made in violation of the contract.

We do not intend in any way to question the authority of our previous decisions holding, in effect, that where, in building contracts, payments are to be made upon the issuance of an architect’s or engineer’s certificate, the issuance of the certificate is in the nature of a condition precedent, and that the certificate cannot be attacked, if made in good faith; or, as we have said in some cases, cannot be attacked except by showing that it was made in bad faith. O’Loughlin v. Poli, 82 Conn. 427, 74 Atl. 763; Beattie v. McMullen, 82 Conn. 484, 74 Atl. 767; Chatfield Co. v. O’Neill, 89 Conn. 172, 93 Atl. 133; Lenox Construction Co. v. Colonial Construction Co., 93 Conn. 234, 105 Atl. 467. We do say that the term “bad faith” as used in such cases may be evidenced by conduct falling short of fraud or dis *214 honesty. The parties bargain for some reasonable degree of expert knowledge of the facts and the contract, and an engineer who fails to give the parties what they bargained for, to the extent indicated by the referee’s findings in this case, may justly be said to have acted in “bad faith” as regards the performance of his contractual obligations. It should also be said that the engineer’s estimate was not received at the defendant’s New York office until September 17th, and on September 26th the defendant was ejected from the premises; so that no adequate opportunity was given to obtain a revision of the estimate before the contract came to an untimely end.

Reasons of appeal seven and eight are directed to the claim that the referee went outside of the issues raised by the pleadings in finding that the plaintiff wrongfully ousted the defendant from the premises on September 26th. This claim will be best answered by quoting paragraphs twelve of the second defense, seven of the reply and two of the rejoinder:

“12. By reason of the plaintiff’s default the defendant has been prevented from performing the covenants and conditions of the contract on its part to be per-' formed. Except to the extent aforesaid and to the extent that it was prevented by the plaintiff from so doing, the defendant has duly performed the covenants and conditions of the contract on its part to be performed. 7. Paragraph 12 is denied, and the plaintiff further says the defendant failed, refused and neglected within three days as provided in said contract and notice to supply a sufficient number of properly skilled workmen or sufficient materials of the proper quality, and the plaintiff thereafter entered upon the premises and took possession and employed other persons to complete the work and provided proper materials therefor. 2. As to paragraph 7 of the reply, *215 it is denied that the defendant failed, refused and neglected within three days, as provided in said contract and notice, to supply a sufficient number of properly skilled workmen, or sufficient materials of a proper quality.” These affirmations and denials plainly put in issue the truth of the matters alleged by the plaintiff in justification of the ouster set forth in paragraph seven of its reply.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 A. 646, 101 Conn. 208, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clover-manufacturing-co-v-austin-co-conn-1924.