Feldschau v. Clatsop County

244 P. 528, 117 Or. 482, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 174
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 244 P. 528 (Feldschau v. Clatsop County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feldschau v. Clatsop County, 244 P. 528, 117 Or. 482, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 174 (Or. 1926).

Opinion

BELT, J.

The sole question for consideration is whether the amended complaint alleges facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

In February, 1917, plaintiff entered into a written contract with defendant, on the unit basis, to grub, clear, grade and drain approximately four miles of highway in Clatsop County, at stipulated compensation and in accordance with certain plans and specifications. Time was made the essence of the contract and the work was to be completed not later than July 15, 1917. In what is designated for convenience as the “north portion” of the highway or that part thereof between Station 0 plus 00 and Station 164 plus 00 N, there was but little excavation, filling or grading required and “the soil thereof was of a nature favorable to easy excavation and the fills when required were not deep or difficult’ to work upon.” The “south portion” of the road, about 1.2 miles in length, between Station 0 plus *485 00 and Station 63 pins 20 S “was of an extremely difficult nature to excavate, where cuts were required, and extremely difficult to fill where fills were required.”

In the southern part of the project between two large hills was a “Tideland Flat,” over a half mile in length which, during the months of March, April, May and June, 1917, was “inundated or covered with water for a large portion of the said time and when not inundated with water was soggy.” It is alleged that “throughout said months it rained almost continuously and incessantly, and the condition of the hills where the excavations were required to be made, was such that after excavations were begun it was difficult and all but impossible properly and expeditiously to continue thereon because of the wet and slippery condition of same due to the rains and the travel of teams and equipment to and fro”; that in making the fill in this tide-flat plaintiff was forced to do so in layers of dirt of one foot each and “to roll such layers with a heavy roller”; “that by reason of inundation of said Tideland Flat by tides from beneath and by rain from above” the earth was “soft, miry and soggy” and the rolling under such circumstances “would merely cause said earth to be wasted over the sides thereof, and would cause the roller and teams working in the same to mire to plaintiff’s great damage and expense.” Plaintiff avers that notwithstanding that defendant and its roadmaster understood and appreciated said conditions, the latter “in bad faith and for the fraudulent purpose of rendering the contract impossible of performance” compelled him, over his protest, so to work, whereas during such time he could have worked advantageously on the northern part *486 of the road where conditions were more favorable, and which was contemplated under the terms of the contract.

Under the contract it was estimated, for the purpose of comparison of bids, that there would be excavated 35,466.2 cubic yards, of which 22,564 cubic yards would be taken from the southern portion of the road. In this connection, plaintiff charges that he was obliged to excavate 33,000 cubic yards between Station O plus 00 and Station 63 plus 20 S, which is 10,436 cubic yards in excess of the estimated amount.

It is averred that the roadmaster “fraudulently and for the purpose of embarrassing and harassing plaintiff and thereby causing him to abandon the contract” required him to build several private roads leading from the main road under construction, which were not within contemplation of the parties as expressed in their agreement.

Plaintiff charges that the roadmaster, in bad faith and for the purpose of causing an abandonment of the contract, required him, on certain portions of the road, to cut a foot below grade and to “dump the excavation thus taken through a hole in the bridge * * in a slow and tedious manner.”

Plaintiff complains that he was required in bad faith “to excavate and tear up an old macadam road paralleling for half a mile the roadway in the south portion thereof, and in no way pertaining to the contract in question.”

There are other particulars in which it is alleged the roadmaster arbitrarily and in bad faith interfered with and retarded plaintiff in his work, but those mentioned are sufficient for consideration of the legal rights of the parties involved.

*487 Finally, it is averred that the wort performed and the materials furnished are reasonably worth $29,589.83, and that no part of the same has been paid except the sum of $7,974.83.

Plaintiff seeks to recover on quantum meruit because he was compelled to abandon the contract on account of the alleged unreasonable, arbitrary and fraudulent interference and supervision of the road-master in requiring him to do work not contemplated in the contract and to perform certain other work in a manner contrary to the terms and spirit of their agreement. The legal theory upon which this action is brought is stated in 13 C. J. 693:

“Where one party has been prevented from complete performance by. the act of the other party he is * * entitled to regard the contract as broken and sue for the breach, or he may recover on a quantum meruit for the work or material furnished.” Citing numerous authorities in support of the text.

The rule is stated thus in 6 K. C. L. 987:

“In other words, a party who, being prevented by the fault of the adverse party from completing such contract in the time stipulated, goes on with the work after the time until compelled to abandon it, may recover the value of the work done on a quantum meruit, and is not governed by the stipulations of the contract.”

In Hayden v. Astoria, 74 Or. 525 (145 Pac. 1072), it is said:

“It is the rule that in carrying out a contract whether time is of the essence or not, the owner cannot delay or retard the contractor in the progress of the work or prevent performance thereof without liability; and, where the owner under the contract is bound to furnish materials or do any other thing required to be done by him pursuant to the contract, he must do that thing in such a way as not to retard *488 the contractor; and, if through the act or omission of the owner under such circumstances the work is delayed in such a way as to make performance impossible, the contractor can recover upon the quantum meruit.”

Also see Williston on Contracts, Section 1459, and cases cited under note 24.

In McCullough v. Baker, 47 Mo. 401, the plaintiff agreed to do the masonry work of a church for $6,000 but was prevented from completing his job by the unwarranted acts of the other party. The court said:

“In such a case he is not restricted to a pro rata share of the contract- price. He may either sue upon the contract and claim damages for a breach of it, or he may, as in this case, waive the contract and sue for the reasonable value of his work.”

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Bluebook (online)
244 P. 528, 117 Or. 482, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feldschau-v-clatsop-county-or-1926.