Gellatly Construction Co. v. City of Bridgeport

182 A.2d 625, 149 Conn. 588, 1962 Conn. LEXIS 219
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 26, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 182 A.2d 625 (Gellatly Construction Co. v. City of Bridgeport) 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
Gellatly Construction Co. v. City of Bridgeport, 182 A.2d 625, 149 Conn. 588, 1962 Conn. LEXIS 219 (Colo. 1962).

Opinion

*590 Murphy, J.

The plaintiff, as the successful bidder, was awarded the general contract for the construction and site improvement of the Bridgeport Longfellow elementary school by the city, acting through the board of education. The plaintiff completed its obligations under the contract, the work has been accepted by the city, and the plaintiff has received payment in accordance with the terms of the contract. The plaintiff claims, however, that it is entitled to an additional payment of $28,527.65 to reimburse it for extra expense incurred in removing excess fill from the site. In the present action to recover for this expenditure, the court concluded that the removal of the excess fill was called for by the contract specifications and that the plaintiff was not entitled to additional compensation. The plaintiff has appealed from the judgment rendered for the defendant.

The complaint contains four counts. In the first count, the plaintiff claims the expense of removing the excess fill as an extra under the contract; in the second, it alleges that it removed the fill on the instructions of the architect, although it was only required to grade the fill on the site; in the third, it seeks to recover in quantum meruit; and in the fourth, it alleges that the city denied it the use of a nearby public dump, thereby causing it to incur the extra expense. The defense, in effect, is that the removal of the excess fill is part of the work required under the general contract and that no extra compensation is due. The city also pleaded governmental immunity as a special defense to the fourth count. The facts found by the court have not been challenged by the plaintiff. The conclusions reached by the court are the subject of the plaintiff’s attack.

*591 These are the facts essential to the determination of this appeal: The plaintiff is a general building contractor in Bridgeport. Prior to March 14, 1958, when the bids were opened, it submitted a bid, accompanied by a bid bond of $129,840, for the construction and site improvement of Longfellow School. The bid bond represented 10 percent of the bid price and was conditioned on the plaintiff’s executing the contract if awarded it. The plaintiff and the defendant signed a written construction contract on April 1, 1958. The plans and specifications had been prepared for the defendant by Toby Voce, an architect. They were made an integral part of the contract. Section 1.09 (B) of the specifications provided that “[i]n the event there is an excess of fill the Contractor shall grade same on the site where directed by the Architect. The cost of disposing of any excess fill on the site shall be included in the Contractor’s price and bid.” The school site was a former dump. Within 300 yards of the site, the city, in 1958, maintained the only public dump in the city. The entrance to it was two blocks away. The dump was under the supervision of the department of public works. Dumping elsewhere in the city was prohibited. On April 1, 1958, prior to the signing of the contract on that day, the plaintiff was informed for the first time that it could not use the city dump for the deposit of excess fill, as it had expected to do. Faced with the forfeiture of its bid bond if it did not sign the contract, the plaintiff executed it, hopeful that the facilities of the city dump would be made available. The hope did not materialize, although the plaintiff continued to seek permission to use the dump. Through arrangements made by the president of the board of education, acting as a private citizen, 7000 cubic *592 yards of excess fill were disposed of by the plaintiff by depositing it on private property adjacent to the site. No claim is made for the cost of this operation. As additional excess fill accumulated, the plaintiff sought instructions from the architect on its disposition. The plaintiff was willing to grade it on the site, but Vece refused authorization to do so because it would create an embankment. Vece had previously stated that he thought that the city should provide a dump for the material. Nevertheless, twice thereafter, he directed the plaintiff in writing to remove all excess fill from the site at its own expense, and his instructions were ratified by the board of education. The plaintiff, after notifying the defendant that it would seek extra compensation for the cost of removing the fill, caused 23,000 cubic yards of it to be removed to sites in Fairfield at a cost of $28,527.65, the sum it seeks to recover.

It is undisputed that at the time the plaintiff submitted its bid it knew from the site plan that it would be necessary for the contractor to remove approximately 33,000 cubic yards of excess fill. The site plan, which was made a part of the contract, and the specifications governing rough and fine grading, which required the contractor thoroughly to inspect the site to determine the existing conditions and base his proposal on them, not only alerted all bidders concerning the amount of fill which would be left over after excavations were made and grading was completed but alerted them to the fact that they must ascertain for themselves just what could be expected. The plaintiff does not claim that it was misled as to either the kind of excess fill which would be unearthed in digging into an old dump site or the quantity which would remain after grading *593 was completed. See E. & F. Construction Co. v. Stamford, 114 Conn. 250, 260, 158 A. 551; Construction Aggregates Corporation v. State, 148 Conn. 315, 326, 170 A.2d 274.

The argument of the plaintiff stems from the failure to include in § 1.09 of the specifications a specific direction that the contractor would have to remove from the site the fill not needed for grading and dispose of it elsewhere. At first blush, there seems to be some merit to this contention. This isolated section of the specifications, however, should not by itself govern the interpretation of the contract. To consider this one section as controlling would do violence to the oft-repeated rule that, in the construction of a written instrument, the entire document, and not just excerpts culled from it, must be considered in the light of the situation of the parties and the circumstances connected with the transaction. Foley v. Foley, 149 Conn. 469, 471, 181 A.2d 607; Sturtevant v. Sturtevant, 146 Conn. 644, 647, 153 A.2d 828; Mahoney v. Hartford Investment Corporation, 82 Conn. 280, 284, 73 A. 766. Section 1.09 of the specifications deals with “excess or shortage of fill and top soil.” If additional fill or topsoil was required to complete the grading, the contractor was to provide it and include the cost in his bid. Similarly, if there was a surplus of fill after the site was graded, it was the duty of the contractor to arrange for its disposition and to include the cost of doing so in his bid.

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Bluebook (online)
182 A.2d 625, 149 Conn. 588, 1962 Conn. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gellatly-construction-co-v-city-of-bridgeport-conn-1962.