H., E. & W. T. R'y Co. v. Trentem

63 Tex. 442, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 107
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1885
DocketCase No. 2036
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 63 Tex. 442 (H., E. & W. T. R'y Co. v. Trentem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H., E. & W. T. R'y Co. v. Trentem, 63 Tex. 442, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 107 (Tex. 1885).

Opinion

Stayton, Associate Justice.

The first clause of the contract which is made the basis of this suit expresses fully what the appellee agreed to do, and is as follows:

“ The second party hereby agrees and binds himself to the first party to do the following work:
“ To construct seven rock culverts, more or less, as directed by the engineer, in accordance with the plans and specifications thereto attached, and forming a part and parcel of this contract, and to furnish all material, lime, cement, rock centers, and lay all foundations, and all and everything required for the full completion of said work, and ready for the acceptance of the engineer of the Elouston, East &, West Texas Bail way Company at the following price, to wit: Ten (10) dollars per cubic yard.”

It will be observed that this contemplates the doing of all stone work necessary to complete seven culverts, more or less, and the compensation therefor provided is §10 for each cubic yard of stone work embraced in the culverts contemplated.

We find in the record as part of the contract, and designated “Specifications,” eight several articles, but no one of these can justly be so considered.

The first simply provides that the work shall be done under the supervision of the company’s engineer, or his assistants.

The second provides who may receipt for payments made on the work, and receive orders.

[445]*445The third provides that the work shall not be sublet, unless with the consent of the engineer, and that money will not be paid to a subcontractor without authority from his contractor.

The fourth provides that the work shall be so promptly done as not to retard or interfere with other contracts or work on the railway.

The fifth contains the following language: “ The quantities of the various kinds of work contracted for is declared and recognized to be only approximate;” and then declares that the work shall be at the risk of the contractor until accepted by the company, and that in case of advances made on work done or material delivered, the same should be the property of the company. The sixth is: “ The second party shall conform to all line, time or other stakes placed to denote the work to be done, and all plans and directions of the engineer, and any departure from or refusal to comply with his instructions, made in accordance with this contract, shall be considered a violation of the contract, and the engineer shall have full power to remove, or cause to be removed, at second party’s expense, any work which may be performed in a manner contrary to those specifications, which shall not have been approved of during the construction, or may have the wTork properly done at the expense of the second party.”

The seventh declares that a failure to disapprove of bad work or material at time of monthly estimates provided for should not be construed as an acceptance.

The eighth was as follows: “No claim for extra work or for work not provided for in the contract will be made or allowed unless a written order to perform such work shall be given by the engineer, and in case of extra work so performed the engineer shall determine its value.”

None of these articles contain a particular description of the structures to be erected or of any of their parts.

In the law of contracts, the word “specification,” denotes a statement of the details of the thing to be constructed, referred to or made part of the more general parts of building contracts. Following the parts of the contract referred to is found what is called “Masonry Specifications;” these contain particular directions as to how the work shall be done; but do not give the dimensions of any one of the culverts, nor declare whether the foundations shall be the surface of the earth, or masonry below the surface. Some of the witnesses speak of “ plans,” but none are found in the record as a part of the written contract or otherwise, and in this state of the [446]*446record, which purports to give the entire written contract, the presumption is that these were made by the engineer when the work began, or at least after the contract was made; if so, they might be changed by him from time to time if he deemed proper; for the same power which would authorize him to give a plan or plans to construct by, not contained in the written contract, would authorize him to change such plans whenever in his judgment it became necessary to do so, and with those changes the sixth article referred to required the appellee to comply.

The evidence is conflicting as to the number of cubic yards in all the culverts as constructed, but the preponderance of the evidence probably'tends to show that this is as claimed by appellee. It appears that, in constructing the culverts, the engineer directed the foundations of three of them to be placed further under the surface of the ground than was at first intended, and that it became necessary, under the direction of the engineer, to make one of the culverts longer than was at first contemplated, and that to do these things it required one hundred and twenty-two cubic yards of stone work more than would otherwise have been necessary.

The parties, in the pleadings and at the trial, seem to have treated this as extra work; and it is claimed that the appellee was not entitled to recover therefor, unless he showed that it was done under a written order from the engineer.

It is also urged that the court erred in the charges given, which were as follows:

“ By a clause in the contract sued on, it is provided that no extra work, etc., shall be done or charged for, save when the engineer, in writing, ordered same; therefore as to such extra work, etc., if any, you will disallow, unless the proof satisfy you that with the knowledge and by the order and authority of defendant company or its engineer in charge, such extra work was done; in that case you may allow for so much extra work, etc., according to the stipulations of the contract sued on as to prices so far as the work can be traced. But, if extra work is done, not provided for in such contract, and to which provisions as to prices cannot be applied, the contractor to do the work may recover therefor for so much as same reasonably was-worth. A deviation by consent may be treated as a new contract, so far as the deviation is concerned, and a modification in that respect where the circumstances required it. It is a question of fact for you to determine from the evidence, whether or not any extra work, etc., was done under the order and direction of the defendant’s engineer in charge. Merely not objecting to its being done [447]*447will not entitle plaintiff to recover, nor would the acceptance of said work, etc., by the engineer of the company entitle plaintiff to compensation therefor. But plaintiff must establish to your satisfaction that such extra work was ordered by the engineer in charge, and that ordering such extra work was within the scope of his authority.”

The court also gave the following charge:

“ ETo work is extra work that is called for by reasonable construction of the contract, to be done as a part of the work on culverts to be constructed. You will not, therefore, allow plaintiff for any extra work, except such work as was outside of and independent of the contract between the parties, and that would not have been required under the contract.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 Tex. 442, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-e-w-t-ry-co-v-trentem-tex-1885.