J. N. H. Cornell & Co. v. Virginia Air Line Ry. Co.

202 F. 390, 120 C.C.A. 518, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1602
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 7, 1912
DocketNo. 1,103
StatusPublished

This text of 202 F. 390 (J. N. H. Cornell & Co. v. Virginia Air Line Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. N. H. Cornell & Co. v. Virginia Air Line Ry. Co., 202 F. 390, 120 C.C.A. 518, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1602 (4th Cir. 1912).

Opinion

ROSE, District Judge.

The Virginia Air Line Railway Company is the appellee. It will be called “the company.” It is a Virginia corporation. It was formed to build and operate a railroad to connect the tracks of the main line and of the James River division of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad system. The new road was to cross Fluvanna county, Va., from north to south. It was required to have its line in operation from either one end or the other to a point within V/2 miles of the county courthouse at Palmyra not later than May 1, 1908. Trains were to be running over the entire road by December 1st of that year. J. N. H. Cornell & Co., Incorporated, is the appellant. It will be referred to as “the contractor.” It is a New Jersey corporation.

On December 3, 1906, the contractor and the company entered into a written agreement. Such agreement will be spoken of as the December contract. By its terms the contractor was to locate and design the railroad, which was to extend from the.Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad at or near Lindsey to a connection with the tracks of the James River Division of that company at or near Bremo Bluff, a distance of about 29 miles. The company was to pay the contractor the actual cost of engineering, locating, designing, and constructing, and, in addition, a fixed fee of $91,250. The contractor guaranteed that such cost, including the fee, should not exceed $656,000. The guaranty was conditional, not absolute. It was not to be binding should the total length of the line exceed 30 miles, or if the aggregate amount of material moved exceeded 700,000 cubic yards classified as specified in the contract. In the latter event the guaranteed cost was to be raised. -Certain unit prices were stated in the agreement in accordance with which was to be determined the excess, if any, over the guaranteed cost to which the contractor might be entitled. In no event was that cost to [392]*392exceed $706,000. None of the figures named were to include extra work. For that the contractor was to be paid 12% per cent, more than it cost him. The company could not call on the contractor to expend more than $41,600 on station buildings, sidings, water stations, road-crossings, and accommodation works, nor “in excess of $888.88 per mile for placing ballast in the track.” The company had the right within those limits to direct as it saw fit the distribution of such sums. By the specifications it was agreed that “tracks shall be brought to true surface and line on the ballast as provided for in the contract.” The contractor bound itself in any event to have the railroad constructed from either terminal as it might elect to within 1% miles of the courthouse at Palmyra, by May 1, 1908. It was to finish the entire work by that day unless delayed “by strikes, fire, flood, riot, lightning, violence of the elements or other causes beyond” its “control.” The company had the right at any time before February 1, 1907, to adopt another route. If it exercised this privilege, the contractor was no longer bound by the guaranties as to costs or quantities of work, material, and time. Various things happened, both before construction actually begun and afterwards, which the contractor said amounted to a change of route fay the company. The court below was of opinion that this contention could not be maintained. It is not made here. It is mentioned because that it was once made and strenuously insisted upon throws light upon the attitude in which the parties stood to each other at the time of subsequent negotiations, agreements, and transactions between them.

As time went on and the work progressed, the relations' between the president of the company and the contractor became strained. They had a number of disputes. Some of these were settled to the satisfaction of the one; some in accordance with the views of the other. A number of the most serious remained open at least as late as April, ,1908. As the year 1907 drew to a close, and in the early months of 1908, the president of the company became much exercised. He and the contractor could not agree as to the exact location for the southern terminal. The precise kind of ballast to be used, where it was to be bought, and how much was to be pa'id for it had not been determined. At first both parties had hoped that suitable ballasting material could be found along the line of the road-in quantities and under conditions which would make its use wise and economical. At a later period the contractor thought that such material would have to be purchased elsewhere and for an appreciable distance hauled over other railroads. If this belief was correct, the $888.88 a mile, which was the maximum the company could call upon the contractor to expend for placing the ballast in the track, would not suffice to pay the price of enough ballast and of delivering it in the track, to say nothing of the expense of properly aligning and surfacing the track upon it. The company said the contractor was bound to do the surfacing’ and aligning without having any right to charge the cost of doing it against the $888.88 per mile. The contractor asserted that the true meaning of the contract was that the $888.88 a mile was to cover all the expense of ballasting the road, using the word “ballasting” in its [393]*393most comprehensive sense. The company called attention to the fact that the specifications provided that the track should be brought to true surface and line on the ballast, and claimed that the limitation of $888.-88 per mile applied only to the expenses of placing the ballast in the track. It said that the work of getting the ballast under the ties and rails, and of surfacing and aligning the track on the ballast, was not accurately described by the words “placing ballast in the track.” It claimed that practical railroad men would understand the contract as it did. It argued that $888.88 per mile was but a little more than half the sum required to provide the right kind of material in sufficient quantities and to ballast the road for the kind of traffic which both parties knew would use it. The contractor said that the entire work of ballasting a railroad was not inaccurately or inaptly described by the words “placing ballast in the track”; that while.it was true that the specifications required that tracks should be brought to true surface and line on ballast, those words were limited by the phrase “as provided for in the contract”; that the contract said nothing about ballasting other than to limit the expense to which the contractor should be put for placing ballast in the track to $888.88 per mile; and that, therefore, the words in the specifications could have had no other meaning than to make clear that the contractor’s obligation to line and surface was restricted to the expenditure of-a sum not exceeding $888.88 per mile for ballasting. It had its practical men to indorse its understanding of the contract phraseology. It claimed that the contract itself was necessarily entered into in haste; that neither party at that time did or could know where the ballast could be obtained or how much it would cost. It now says that the meaning of the limitation in the agreement cannot be read in the light of subsequent events.

The quarrel was a serious one as it stood. It was likely to delay the completion of the road, if it had not already done so. The contractor wanted to buy expensive ballast elsewhere, and to place it at once in such parts of the line as were ready for it.

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Bluebook (online)
202 F. 390, 120 C.C.A. 518, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-n-h-cornell-co-v-virginia-air-line-ry-co-ca4-1912.