Farm-Rite Implement Co. v. Fenestra Inc.

173 N.E.2d 636, 342 Mass. 427, 1961 Mass. LEXIS 758
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 7, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 173 N.E.2d 636 (Farm-Rite Implement Co. v. Fenestra Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farm-Rite Implement Co. v. Fenestra Inc., 173 N.E.2d 636, 342 Mass. 427, 1961 Mass. LEXIS 758 (Mass. 1961).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

This case was before us in Farm-Rite Implement Co. v. Fenestra Inc. 340 Mass. 276, 2 in which the basic facts are fully stated. After that decision, a judge of the *428 Superior 'Court recommitted the cases to the master to make ultimate findings on stated issues.

Article III (see 340 Mass. 276, 278) of the main contract for the construction of a control tower at Logan Airport provided that the architect “shall decide all questions . . . as to the .. . quality . . . [and] acceptability ... of the . . . materials . . . and . . . as to . . . interpretation of the . . . specifications . . . and his determination .. . shall be final.” Section 8 of the specifications of the main contract was entitled “Metal Windows.” Paragraph 8.01 (a), a part of § 8, directed attention to art. Ill in a manner more fully stated in 340 Mass. 276, 281.

In a supplementary report the master made the following principal findings. “Farm-Bite expressly agreed to be bound to 'Clark by the terms of .. . Article III [of the main contract between the Commonwealth and Construction] by virtue of the purchase order of Clark to Farm-Bite, dated September 10,1954 . . . which contains the words ‘ all materials to be in accordance with plans and specifications.’ Fenestra did not agree to be . . . bound [by art. Ill] either in writing . . . by . . . two purchase orders of August 19 . . . and 'September 24 ... [or] verbally with any representative of Farm-Bite. However . .. specifications were forwarded to . . . Fenestra ... by letter of . . . Farm-Bite . . . dated June 17,1954; also by order of September 24,1954. Fenes-tra had knowledge of” art. Ill from having “received the . . . specifications and also it was conceded . . . that it had ‘submitted a bid for all the work required under section 8 [of the main contract] both times the job was bid.’ . . . Fenestra agreed to be bound by . . . Article III by reference.”

With his supplemental report the master filed the purchase orders from Clark to Farm-Bite and from Farm-Bite to Fenestra and also the main contract and specifications. He also included in his report a copy of the letter from Farm-Bite to Fenestra dated June 17, 1954.

Fenestra filed objections to the supplemental report and (see Cantor v. Cantor, 325 Mass. 719, 721; Rule 46 of the *429 Superior Court [1954]) a motion to recommit the supplemental report, supported by an affidavit of counsel that the master’s summaries of evidence, relating to two disputed findings, were “not fair or accurate ... in ... [certain] particulars.” Fenestra also presented a motion to establish the truth of the affidavit. Another judge of the Superior Court, by an interlocutory decree confirming the supplemental report, impliedly denied the motion to recommit. From this interlocutory decree, and from a final decree that Fenestra owed Farm-Bite $11,642.88 with interest and costs, Fenestra appealed. The Superior Court judge declined to file a report of material facts found by him with respect to his interlocutory decree confirming the supplemental report, saying that he “heard this matter upon the report of the master” and that “no testimony was introduced.”

1. The master, in summarizing the evidence upon which he relies to justify each finding disputed by Fenestra, has not conveniently set out, in a compact summary relating to that finding alone, the substance of such evidence or specific references to other statements of such evidence in his reports or summaries. In his reports and summaries viewed as a whole, however, there was stated ample evidence to justify each crucial finding. The master did refer, although in general terms, to this evidence in his summaries prepared in connection with Fenestra’s objections to his supplemental report. In these summaries, he purported to set out only “new evidence that does not already appear either in . . . [his] original report or in the supplementary report.”

The most significant finding of the master was that “Fe-nestra agreed to be bound by the terms of Article III by reference.” These last two words we interpret as meaning that, although Fenestra signed no document in terms embodying or incorporating by reference art. M, it did contract with Farm-Bite in the light of the specifications, including by reference art. Ill, and impliedly incorporated that article by reference In its undertaking.

*430 The purchase orders issued by Farm-Bite to Fenestra were expressed in general terms (see 340 Mass. 276, 277-278). The August 19 order said merely, “Furnish galvanized and painted Steel Windows for the Control Tower — General E. L. Logan Airport .... In accordance with verbal quotations . . . Hodges to . . . Smith 6-30-54 $11,564 .... Bush drawings for approval. Architects drawings . . . being sent to you today. ‘Order placed subject to performance bond which will meet contractor’s requirements.’ ” The bond is dated August 19, 1954, and recites that Fenestra “has entered into a contract with” Farm-Bite, dated August 19,1954, “for furnishing steel windows for Control Tower ... Logan Airport, East Boston, Massachusetts. Purchase Order #4549 in accordance with the terms and conditions of said contract, which is hereby referred to and made a part hereof. ’ ’ The order from Farm-Bite to Fenestra dated 'September 24, covering the same windows, was in essentially the same terms up to and including the statement of the price. The price was altered by the addition of the words “Less 4% on net. ” This September 24 order also said “All other instructions and specifications remain unchanged.”

In the circumstances, the reasonable implication of these purchase orders, as the master, in effect, has inferred, was that the windows were to be in compliance with the requirements of the control tower contract. The windows would be of no use to Clark or Farm-Bite otherwise. This interpretation of the purchase orders finds support in the references to “approval” of drawings, to “ [a]rchitects drawings,” and to “bond which will meet contractor’s requirements. ’ ’

From the purchase orders and other evidence, the master was justified in finding that Farm-Bite and Fenestra knew that the windows were for use in a State public works project as to which Clark, as a subcontractor, would be bound by the usual public contract procedures and provisions. “Fenestra . . . was an original bidder twice on this same job, and . . . necessarily familiar with all specifications.” *431 The original master’s report summarizes an affidavit made on August 17,1955, by one Bunting, treasurer of Fenestra, that all Fenestra’s “operations and applications of . . . bonderite and paint were done in strict and full compliance with .Section 8 of the specifications in relation to such Control Tower.” This was an admission that, in performing the obligation of the two purchase orders, Fenestra was proceeding under § 8. ¡Section 8 in turn incorporated art. Ill by reference.

The whole course of the transaction, as revealed in evidence sufficiently summarized in the record (see 340 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
173 N.E.2d 636, 342 Mass. 427, 1961 Mass. LEXIS 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farm-rite-implement-co-v-fenestra-inc-mass-1961.