Irwin v. Smith

1 Wilson 544
CourtIndiana Superior Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Wilson 544 (Irwin v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irwin v. Smith, 1 Wilson 544 (Ind. Super. Ct. 1874).

Opinion

Newcomb, J.

The defendants, with divers other parties not served with process in this case, were a firm of railroad contractors, under the partnership name of B. E. Smith andassociates; and, as such, contracted with the proper railroad cempany to construct the Indianapolis, Bloomington, and Western Railway. The plaintifis took a contract from B. E. Smith and associates, to grade a portion of said railway, according to certain specifications annexed to the contract. This suit was brought to recover compensation for work alleged to have been done under that sub-contract. There was a jury trial at Special Term, which resulted in a verdict of $11,549.28, in favor of the plaintiffs. The defendants moved for a new trial. The motion was overruled, and [545]*545judgment entered on the verdict, from which judgment the defendants appealed to the General Term. The question in the case arises on the construction to be given to a clause of the contract relative to earth excavated from “borrowing pits ” to construct embankments. In the specifications, to which reference is made in the contract, is this clause :

“ All material will be measured in excavation only, whether taken from the cuts upon the line, or from ditches and borrowing pits to form embankments, and no allowances of haul will be made unless the material excavated is required to be taken beyond the limits of the section upon which it is found.” Of the lengthy contract the following are the additional provisions that have any importance in the case.
“ The earth from the excavations shall form the embankment as far as the Engineer of said railway shall direct, and the surplus earth shall be distributed so as to widen the embankment uniformly, or formed into spoil banks at such places as the Engineer of said railway shall direct, with evenness and regularity.
“ When the excavations do not furnish materials sufficient to make the embankments, the deficiency shall be made up by widening the excavations uniformly, or by borrowing from such points as the Engineer shall designate, which shall be estimated and allowed as excavation.”
“ The Engineer of said railway shall estimate the work done by the party of the first part — Irwin and Williams— “ under the contract, and the value of any extra work not herein provided for, and the estimates so made shall be final and conclusive between the parties.”
“ And the said party of the second part does hereby consent and agree to pay to the said party of the first part, in manner hereinafter mentioned, for the work agreed by this contract to be done as follows; ***** * For earth excavation and grubbing, and clearing, fifteen cents per cubic [546]*546yard; and for embankment, including the grubbing and clearing, twenty-four cents per cubic yard. * * * And it is further agreed, that in case any dispute, or differences, shall arise between the said parties as to the construction, or true meaning and intent of this agreement, or the sufficiency of the performance of said work, that such disputes, and differences shall be considered and decided by the Chief Engineer for the time being of said railway, whose determination shall be final and conclusive between the parties, and said parties do hereby submit all and singular the premises, to the award, arbitration, and decision of said Chief Engineer, and agree that the same shall be final and conclusive between them to all intents and purposes whatsoever. And it is further agreed, that the submission to said Chief Engineer, touching all matters herein contained, agreed to be submitted to him, shall be deemed, considered, and taken as an essential part of this agreement, and not revocable by either of the parties hereto.”

The question presented by the appeal is, whether the plaintiffs were entitled to fifteen cents per cubic yard for earth excavated from borrowing pits, for the purpose of making embankments, or whether their pay should, for such earth, be limited to the price agreed upon for embankment.

If the plaintiffs are entitled to be paid for earth from the borrowing pits, both as excavation and embankment, the verdict was right; otherwise it cannot be sustained.

It was stipulated in the contract, that monthly approximate estimates of the work done by the plaintiffs, should be made by the Engineer in charge, and that within ten days thereafter such estimates should be paid by B. E. Smith and associates, less twenty per cent, which they were entitled to hold until the completion of the work.

The plaintiffs claim that the words, “which shall be estimated and allowed as excavation,” mean that all dirt taken [547]*547from borrowing pits shall be paid for as excavation at fifteen cents per cubic yard, and paid for again as embankment at twenty-four cents per yard. The defendants, on the contrary, insist that these words only prescribe a rule of measurement ; that they are but a repetition, in different language, of the rule of measurement defined in the specifications, and have no reference to compensation. The Judge who presided at Special Term, adopted the construction claimed by the plaintffs, and instructed the jury, after reciting the clauses of the contract in reference to excavations, embankments, borrowing pits, and the rates of compensation provided for the different classes of work, as follows: “ Under these provisions the excavating of the deficient material spoken of in the first clause quoted,” (concerning borrowing pits) “ is to be paid for at fifteen cents per cubic yard, as well as the excavation in the line of the road ; but before the plaintiffs can recover for such deficiency, they must use all the excavations in the line, or prism of the road, on any section, to make the embankment in such section, unless the Chief Engineer of the railroad company, having the road in charge, permitted the plaintiffs to waste in spoil banks, excavation in the line, or prism of the road on such section, and to borrow the deficiency.”

It was conceded in the argument, and the evidence shows, that except as to a few yards of embankment, the verdict was rendered solely for earth taken from borrowing pits to construct embankment, at fifteen cents per yard for the excavation thereof, it having been paid for as embankment at twenty-four cents per yard, and which was not carried into the monthly estimates, nor the final estimate, as excavation.

Evidence was admitted on the trial, over the plaintiffs objections, tending to show that the parties, during the progress of the work, each construed that part of the contract relating to deficient material taken from borrowing pits, as not [548]*548entitling the plaintiffs to payment therefor as excavation, but as simply establishing a rule by which the quantity of earth to be taken for embankment should be measured and estimated as to quantity. The instruction from which we have quoted withdrew this evidence from the jury, and required them to find in the plaintiffs favor for this deficient material as excavation, at fifteen cents per cubic yard. We think it by no means clear that the construction given the contract, by the Judge at Special Term was correct, construed by its own terms, for these reasons:

1st.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Wilson 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irwin-v-smith-indsuperct-1874.