Frank v. Allegheny County

119 F.2d 614, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4652
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 7, 1941
DocketNo. 7519
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 119 F.2d 614 (Frank v. Allegheny County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frank v. Allegheny County, 119 F.2d 614, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4652 (3d Cir. 1941).

Opinion

GOODRICH, Circuit Judge.

Appellant, plaintiff below, was the successful bidder upon a road construction contract let by the defendant County. The primary purpose of the work was to reduce the degree of curvature along a certain section of highway in Harrison Township, Allegheny County. The relocation of the highway required a change in the channels of Bull Creek and Little Bull Creek and the construction of a new bridge over Little Bull Creek. At the site of the work Harrison Township owned and maintained a sewer-syphon system. Sewage flowed into a syphon inlet chamber from which it was carried in pipes under the old channel of Bull Creek to a syphon outlet chamber on the opposite shore, from which point it was carried away in an outlet pipe. The syphon outlet chamber being situated in the path of the new channel of Bull Creek, certain alterations were necessary. Briefly, the old outlet chamber was to be removed, a new one was to be constructed on the new shore of Bull Creek, and the necessary new piping was to be installed. The contract plans did not show the details of this construction but the “Supplemental Instructions to Bidders and Specifications” stated: “Details of the new construction shall be similar to that of the existing construction”. About two weeks prior to plaintiff’s submission of his bid the Board of Commissioners of Harrison Township had adopted a resolution approving the County’s plan for the alteration of its sewer-syphon system.

Apparently all of the parties have been of the view that under the statutes of Pennsylvania it was necessary to obtain the approval of the Pennsylvania State Board of Health for the work on the sewer-syphon system.1 However that may be, the contract specifically required that the alteration to the sewer-syphon system meet the approval of the Commissioners of Llarrison Township and of the Pennsylvania State Board of Health. The State Sanitary Water Board (evidently the division of the Board of Health in charge of such matters as those involved here) issued its permits only to the municipal authorities having charge of the sewage system in question, in this case Harrison Township.

Plaintiff was directed by the County to commence work on December 24, 1938, and he did so. Shortly thereafter the Township decided that it was not satisfied with the existing system and that it would not accept the County’s plan for the installation of a similar system. During most of the month of January, 1939, negotiations took place between the Township and the plaintiff with respect to the cost of the changes which the Township desired, but no agreement was reached. Meanwhile the Township had not applied for a permit from the State Board. Upon the plaintiff’s then applying for a permit from the State Board, he was informed that it was necessary for the Township to make application. This the Township did on March 1, 1939, but the application was not accompanied by plans showing the details of construction, and there were certain defects in the existing system which the Board required to be corrected. These defects were corrected sometime between March 20 and March 27. At [616]*616the request of the Township the County prepared the drawing required by the Board and the Township’s application was finally completed on March 29, 1939.

By letter dated March 30, 1939, the Township was advised by the chairman of the Sanitary Water Board that, pending the next meeting of the Board, it had ad interim permission to proceed subject to certain conditions relating to the construction and the control of sewage during construction, the ad interim approval not to be effective until the receipt by the Board of its fee of $20. Plaintiff received a photostatic copy of this letter from the County on April 13, 1939.

Meanwhile the plaintiff had done some initial work on the job including some construction for the new syphon outlet chamber. But he had not done very much work, since it was necessary to complete the alteration to the sewer-syphon system before any other work could be done, or, if not absolutely necessary, it would at least have been highly impracticable to have done any other major part of the work first.

The contract provided that the work was to be completed within 150 days from the starting date and for liquidated damages of $25 per day for failure to complete on time. Plaintiff twice wrote to the County requesting an extension of time because of the delay in obtaining the permit, to which the defendant replied that the matter would be given due consideration at or shortly prior to the completion date set in the contract. The same position was taken by the County with respect to the plaintiff’s request for damages arising out of the delay. On April 10, 1939, the contractor notified the County “that at the end of ten (10) days from this date the contract which I have with the County of Allegheny in the above entitled proceeding will be terminated by reason of the action of the Public Health Department failing to grant a permit for a period of more than three months.”2 On April 12, 1939, the County sent officers to the job site who prevented the plaintiff from removing his materials therefrom.

Plaintiff’s complaint is in three counts. Damages are sought on the ground that the County is liable for breach of the contract (including the conversion of the materials at the job site), or for deceit, or in quantum meruit for the value of the work performed. At the trial judge’s suggestion plaintiff submitted his evidence on the question of the defendant’s liability and then rested temporarily so that the court could consider a motion by the defendant to dismiss the action. The motion was granted and plaintiff appeals from the order of dismissal.

The breach of contract claim will be considered first. In what way did the County fail to keep any agreement it made? Plaintiff complains of the County’s failure to provide sufficient plans and the right-of-way. The contract provision as to plans is as follows:

“The Contractor will be supplied free of cost to him such copies of Contract Plans and Specifications'as reasonably may be required for his use during the execution of the work. The plans will show the forms, dimensions, arrangements and materials, and also the location and elevations of the various parts forming the improvement. Plans for steel work will show the stresses to which the various members of the structure are to be subjected, the makeup of the members and their form and general arrangement.
“These plans may be supplemented from time to time as the work progresses and as may be required to further illustrate the work. When so stated on the Contract Plans or in the Supplemental Specifications, the County will furnish full size detailed drawings for specified portions of the work.”

We are unable to see how this provision of the contract is involved. The County bound itself to furnish the contractor with such plans as reasonably might be [617]*617required “for his use during the execution of the work,” and plaintiff states that so far as he was concerned he could have reconstructed the syphon from his own examination of it. Even if the contract were so construed as to place a duty upon the County to furnish the plans necessary to accompany the Township’s application to the State Board for a permit, the failure to perform that putative duty was not the cause of the delay.

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Bluebook (online)
119 F.2d 614, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-v-allegheny-county-ca3-1941.