Droppelman v. Port of Seattle

166 P. 248, 97 Wash. 177, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 1051
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1917
DocketNo. 14087
StatusPublished

This text of 166 P. 248 (Droppelman v. Port of Seattle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Droppelman v. Port of Seattle, 166 P. 248, 97 Wash. 177, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 1051 (Wash. 1917).

Opinion

Morris, J.

In May, 1913, Hans Pederson entered into a contract with the port commissioners to erect the superstruc[178]*178ture of the Smith Cove terminal. The contract provided that the work was to be completed in two hundred and ten days from the date of notification to commence work, and in case not so completed, the contractor agreed to pay as liquidated damages $100 for each day the completion was delayed beyond the two hundred and ten days. Pederson was notified to commence work June 2, 1913, and his time within which to complete the contract expired December 29, 1913. The work was not completed until August 5,1914. On March 10, 1914, the work was approximately only sixty per cent completed, and Pederson was one hundred and fifty-five days behind in his contract. To settle any dispute as to the cause and responsibility for this delay, the following contract was then entered into:

“This memorandum of agreement entered into this 10th day of March, 1914, between the port commission of the Port' of Seattle, party of the first part, and Hans Pederson, the contractor, party of the second part;
“Witnesseth: That, whereas, under date of May 28, 1913, the port commission entered into a contract with the contractor for furnishing all material and performing all labor for the Smith Cove Improvement, subdivision No. 2;
“Whereas, the work so to be performed has not been performed within the time fixed in the contract for the performance of the same and a dispute has arisen between the port commission and the contractor as to the responsibility for such delay, the contractor not claiming that the delay is due to the port, but that it is due to causes which, under the terms of the contract, excuse him for the delay, and the port commission claiming that the contractor alone is responsible for the delay;
“It is now agreed between the port commission and the contractor as follows:
“First—-That the period of delay in dispute is thirty days and the liquidated damages therefor is three thousand dollars.
“Second—That the contractor shall proceed with the work under the contract, and the time for the completion of the contract is hereby extended up to and including the thirtieth day after the work on said improvement under subdivision one shall be completed.
[179]*179“Third—That the sum of three thousand dollars shall be deducted from the estimate now about to be paid, the date of said estimate being February 28,1914, and the amount thereof $21,663.13, and that said sum of three thousand dollars shall be retained by the port commission until the final settlement with the port commission under said contract, at which time the matter shall be determined between the port commission and the said contractor as to the cause of the delay, as aforesaid, and if it shall be determined that the contractor is responsible for such delay, the port commission shall retain such sum of three thousand dollars out of such final settlement, otherwise it shall be included in such final settlement with the contractor.
“Fourth—Nothing herein contained shall impair other provisions of the contract or affect the rights or remedies of the port under the contract as the work shall proceed.”

After the completion of the contract, Pederson presented a claim to the port commissioners for $3,000, claiming he was in nowise responsible for the delay. The claim was denied, Pederson assigned his interest therein to appellant, and this suit was commenced. The lower court found that Pederson was responsible for delay in excess of thirty days prior to March 10th, and denied recovery.

Appellant’s first contention is one of fact, claiming that, under the evidence, the delay was caused (a) by the Puget Sound Bridge & Dredging Company, having the contract for dredging and filling in connection with the terminal structure; (b) by delaying notice to the dredging company to commence work; (c) by the act of an inspector in rejecting materials. The second contention is one of law, that, on March 10, 1914, the date of the agreement fixing liquidated damages, the Port of Seattle had waived all claims for damages growing out of delay. Section 27 of the specifications for the work provides that:

“The Port of Seattle shall not be answerable to one contractor for any damage or loss he may suffer through the fault of any other contractor or subcontractor of another contractor.”

[180]*180If this clause is to be given effect, it is evident that Pederson cannot, as against the Port of Seattle, claim liability for any loss sustained by him from the dredging company. As a matter of law, this is not disputed, but the claim is advanced that this provision was not in the specifications sent to Pederson upon which he based his bid, and that he had no knowledge of its existence until it was called to his attention later on by the commissioners. Whatever may be the fact as to whether or not this provision was in the specifications upon which Pederson based his bid, it was unquestionably a part of the contract when he signed it, and, as such, he was bound by it. Irrespective of this, we fail to find any warrant in the evidence for finding that the dredging company delayed Pederson. Under his contract, Pederson was to construct sheet piling bulkheads from the inner end of the pier outward to a point twenty feet below city datum. The dredging company was then to fill in between the bulkheads to á required elevation, upon which the superstructure was to be erected. Pederson was dilatory in complying with this provision of his contract and had not completed it when the dredging company was ordered upon the work. The delay in notifying the dredging company to commence its work in no manner injured Pederson, as his part of the work was not ready when the port commissioners notified the dredging company to proceed with its contract.

As to the claim of delay by reason of the unwarranted rejection of materials by an inspector, the only answer necessary is found in the agreement of March 10th, wherein it was expressly decided that the port commission was not responsible for the delay. The only dispute between the parties is as to whether or not Pederson’s delay is excusable.

The last contention is that of waiver in law. There is neither fact nor law upon which this claim can be sustained. Appellant relies upon Erickson v. Green, 47 Wash. 613, 92 Pac. 449, and Wright v. Tacoma, 87 Wash. 334, 151 Pac. 837. In each of those cases the payments held to constitute [181]*181waiver were made after the completion of the contract. In this case the port commissioners refused to make estimates and payments to Pederson subsequent to December 29, 1913, until after the agreement of March 10, 1914, when, as recited in the agreement, the estimate made to February 28th, amounting to $21,663.13, was paid. Under these facts there can be no waiver. Up to December 29th, Pederson was within the time fixed in the contract, though backward in his work. Any waiver, therefore, must have been by reason of payments subsequent to that date.

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Related

Erickson v. Green
92 P. 449 (Washington Supreme Court, 1907)
Wright v. City of Tacoma
151 P. 837 (Washington Supreme Court, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 P. 248, 97 Wash. 177, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 1051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/droppelman-v-port-of-seattle-wash-1917.