Gillioz v. Missouri State Highway Commission

169 S.W.2d 901, 350 Mo. 1077, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 669
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 6, 1943
DocketNo. 38316.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 S.W.2d 901 (Gillioz v. Missouri State Highway Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gillioz v. Missouri State Highway Commission, 169 S.W.2d 901, 350 Mo. 1077, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 669 (Mo. 1943).

Opinions

Action to recover $32,500 held back by defendant as liquidated damages under a contract for the reconstruction of the intercity viaduct between Kansas City, Missouri, and Kansas City, Kansas. Verdict and judgment went for plaintiff in the sum of $42,829.50, including interest. Motion for new trial was overruled and defendant appealed.

The cause was originally filed by plaintiff in three counts. The contract was executed February 29, 1936, and count I was to recover the $32,500 held back as liquidated damages, with interest, for failure of plaintiff to have the viaduct ready for vehicular and pedestrian traffic by August 15, 1936, as the contract provided. The liquidated damages was $500 per day, excluding Sundays and legal holidays. There is no question on the amount of recovery, if the delay was substantially caused by defendant. Count II was to recover $57,515.67 as damages claimed to have been sustained by plaintiff by reason of delays in the work alleged to have been caused by defendant, and count III was to recover, as assignee, $28,609.80 as damages to plaintiff's subcontractor alleged to be due to same causes claimed in count II. In the first trial, the trial court directed a verdict for defendant as to count III and plaintiff let it go at that. And in the first trial the jury found for defendant on counts I and II, and plaintiff appealed. That appeal resulted in affirmance as to count II, but as to count I, the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. See Gillioz v. State Highway Commission, 348 Mo. 211, 153 S.W.2d 18.

Back again in the trial court, the venue was changed from Cole County to Washington County, where plaintiff filed an amended petition which is substantially the same as count I in the original petition. The answer is a general denial and pertinent provisions of the contract.

Defendant, appellant here, assigns error: (1) On the refusal of its demurrer to the evidence at the close of the case; (2) on the refusal of its offered instruction No. 11; and (3) on argument of counsel.

Plaintiff's case is bottomed on the proposition that the delay was substantially the fault of defendant and not his, and that defendant therefore had no right to withhold, as liquidated damages, the amount sought to be recovered. The petition alleged that defendant was at fault in several particulars, but plaintiff went to the jury on the allegations that the delay was caused by the failure of defendant (1) to approve shop drawings within a reasonable time after submission by plaintiff; and (2) by defendant's failure to establish, within a reasonable time, grades and levels to which the roadway of the viaduct was to be finished.

On the prior appeal, plaintiff, as to count I, went to the jury on the same grounds of alleged delay, among others, as here. And on the prior appeal, defendant did not claim that plaintiff's evidence did *Page 1081 not tend to show such delay, but claimed [153 S.W.2d l.c. 22] that plaintiff, absent compliance with an arbitration clause in the contract, could not sue.

The evidence at the second trial was substantially the same as it was at the first trial on count I. We could not improve on the statement in the prior opinion. It is sufficient here, and we adopt it in so far as it concerns count I, the cause here:

"Plaintiff's contract was executed February 29, 1936. It provided that plaintiff was to commence work within 15 days after notice to proceed. Notice which was given in the latter part of March (after he already had commenced work) required him to begin work on or before April 5. The contract provided for reconstruction of the intercity viaduct, between Kansas City, Missouri, and Kansas City, Kansas, which was the route of U.S. Highway No. 40. (The Missouri part was 4,286 feet, and plaintiff also had another contract for the part in Kansas, made with the Kansas Highway Commission.) The old concrete roadway was to be demolished. Some of the old steel framework was to be removed and replaced with new steel and a new concrete pavement laid. The contract set August 15, 1936, as the date for sufficient completion for opening to traffic and required final completion by October 1, 1936. It provided for liquidated damages at the rate of $500 per day for failure to open for traffic within the time specified. The viaduct was open for traffic on November 4, 1936, and the entire contract fulfilled on January 25, 1937. It is conceded that the contract was fully performed; that there was no disagreement as to the amount due plaintiff for the work done; and that the only dispute was the right of defendant [903] to withhold from the amount due plaintiff under the contract, the amounts claimed for liquidated damages.

"Although the contract was let by the State Highway Commission, the money was all furnished by the United States government and the plans were prepared by the firm of consulting engineers employed by the City of Kansas City, which had built the original viaduct. This old structure had settled so that some of the steel framework was tilted and out of position. No bench mark appeared on the plans and it was necessary to have a grade established to which the new structure should be built. To fix this grade, it was necessary for defendant's engineers to determine with their surveying instruments how much the various parts of the old steel work had sunk below the elevation to which it was originally constructed. This was necessary in order to make the new steel fit so as to bring the new structure up to a level upon which the pavement could be finished on an intended smooth grade line. Plaintiff commenced the work of demolishing the old slab on March 13th, and by April 3rd, had demolished more than 1,000 feet or about one-fourth of it. It was all removed by June 2nd. Plaintiff claimed that the grade line could have been *Page 1082 established from the ground by the inverted rod method before the pavement was removed. Defendant claimed that it was only possible to do this accurately by surveying over the top of the structure after removal of the pavement. The evidence was that defendant's engineer did some of the surveying on April 3rd and 4th and then did not begin again until April 18th; that the first information furnished plaintiff as to the level on any part of the structure was on April 9th; that this determination of levels of various parts thereafter was delayed long after the pavement was removed from such parts; and that final information was not furnished until June 6th.

"It was necessary to have the elevations in order to make the drawings for shims (metal plates of different sizes used to bring the steel work to the proper elevation) which were the first materials it was necessary to have on the ground to begin the reconstruction of the steel work of the viaduct. Shop drawings had to be prepared for these shims and for all other steel work to be fabricated. Plaintiff sublet a contract to the Builders Steel Company for preparing all shop drawings. The first sheets of these drawings were submitted to the Highway Department which did not pass on them but forwarded them to the consulting engineers employed by Kansas City. There was evidence that there was a misunderstanding between defendant and the consulting engineers about this matter; that defendant understood it was to pass on the drawings, but the consulting engineers insisted on passing on them; and that there was quite a little delay on the start before a system was worked out; so that it took at least three weeks to get the first shop drawings approved, when normally four or five days ought to have been enough.

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Related

Bernard McMenamy Contractors, Inc. v. Missouri State Highway Commission
582 S.W.2d 305 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 S.W.2d 901, 350 Mo. 1077, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillioz-v-missouri-state-highway-commission-mo-1943.