Limbach Co. v. George B. H. Macomber Co.

258 N.E.2d 548, 357 Mass. 475, 1970 Mass. LEXIS 848
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 8, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 258 N.E.2d 548 (Limbach Co. v. George B. H. Macomber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Limbach Co. v. George B. H. Macomber Co., 258 N.E.2d 548, 357 Mass. 475, 1970 Mass. LEXIS 848 (Mass. 1970).

Opinion

Spalding, J.

This bill for declaratory and other relief seeks a determination of whether a plumbing subcontractor was required to install certain internal piping in the construction of a building at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Both parties moved for a summary judgment pursuant to G. L. c. 231, § 59, as amended by St. 1965, c. 491, § 1. The plaintiff’s motion was granted. Although the case was submitted on affidavits accompanying the motions, the judge, as requested by the defendant, made a report of material facts, based, apparently, on the affidavits. The defendant appealed from a decree awarding the plaintiff $18,484.60.

The facts are as follows. This dispute arose out of a written contract between the defendant and MIT entered into on September 23, 1963, for the construction of a Laboratory for the Life Sciences Building. Prior to that date, the defendant had received a bid from the plaintiff for [477]*477plumbing and heating work described in plans and specifications dated August 16, 1963. On October 16, 1963, the defendant and the plaintiff entered into a subcontract for the plaintiff to do the work upon which it had submitted its bid. Under the terms of the plumbing specifications the plaintiff was required to “furnish all required labor, materials, equipment . . . necessary for complete safe installation of plumbing work” as indicated on drawings or specified.

Specifications required the plmnbing subcontractor to furnish “required valved water and gas, air and drain connections to . . . fume hoods supplied under General Construction Section of Work . . . specified as an ‘ allowance’ item.” The defendant was required by the specifications in the base contract to include a cash allowance of $122,000 in its general bid for fume hoods installed complete. At the time the bids were submitted the final design of the fume hoods had not yet been made. There were thus no drawings or specifications containing detailed information on the internal piping within the fume hoods. The only plans available showed rectangular boxes depicting the fume hoods; circles showing the outlets inside the hoods for water, gas, and air services; and parallel lines showing connections only to the outside of the hoods. Neither the fume hoods nor the outlets were to be furnished by the plaintiff.

In May of 1964 bids were invited on the subcontract for the construction of the fume hoods according to specifications then set out. These specifications did not include the internal piping for the hood. The plaintiff never saw this document until after the present dispute arose. On August 24, 1964, the defendant and another subcontractor, Kewanee Manufacturing Company (Kewanee) entered into a subcontract for the construction of the fume hoods as specified.

Early in 1965 a dispute arose between the plaintiff and the defendant as to whether the plaintiff was required to provide the internal, piping within the hoods. The plaintiff refused to do the piping on the ground that its [478]*478subcontract required piping connections only to the hoods. It was agreed in March, 1965, that Kewanee would do the internal piping and the question would be later submitted to “M IT and its architect.” On March 30 the defendant wrote the plaintiff that “if this dispute continues, the determination will be under our subcontract with you, Article XVII.” 1 Kewanee completed the internal piping in June, 1965. In November, the defendant deducted $15,753.20 from its payments to the plaintiff to cover Kewanee’s work. In December, 1965, MIT took occupancy of the building.

In January, 1966, the plaintiff requested arbitration pursuant to art. XVII, named its arbitrator, but withdrew the request two days later without prejudice because the defendant’s president and the arbitrator were leaving for vacation. In April the defendant wrote the architect requesting an interpretation of whether the internal piping “was a part of the base contract work . . . and whether ... if it was a part of the contract work [it] was included on account of the basic plumbing drawings and specifications.” Although the architect’s reply contained intimations that the plumbing specifications included the internal piping, he expressly refrained from allocating the responsibility for that work (among the subcontractors). His conclusion was merely that the original specifications “demonstrate the [o]wner’s right to internal piping of the fume hoods.” In September, the plaintiff renewed its arbitration request, but the defendant refused.

[479]*479The judge found that the plans available at the time of the subcontract obligated the plaintiff to connect plumbing only to the hoods, and not to provide the plumbing within the hoods. He further found that the arbitration procedure set forth in art. XYII was not followed, nor was the dispute referred to the architect as being “a dispute between the . . . [[defendant] and the . . . [plaintiff].”

The defendant argues: (1) the record did not entitle the plaintiff to a summary judgment in its favor; and (2) the defendant was entitled either to a summary judgment, or a trial on the issue of the architect’s decision.

1. The defendant contends that the record does not support a summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff because, first, it has failed to show that “no genuine issue of material fact exists,” and second, its affidavit is not based “on personal knowledge of admissible facts as to which it appears affirmatively that the affiant would be competent to testify.”

On the question of whether a genuine issue of material fact existed, the defendant argues that the meaning in the trade of the lines and symbols appearing in the plumbing plans created such an issue. An affidavit filed by the defendant asserted that the circles in the plans were valves, and not outlets as claimed by the plaintiff; further, that it is customary in developing plumbing drawings to omit lines showing “the direction and location of piping necessary to run from one point, depicted by a symbol, to another point.” The defendant thus argues that in view of this alleged practice, and a mark in the plans alleged to be a valve, the plaintiff should have been aware that “valved . . . connections ... to the fume hoods” included the internal piping. At the very least, the defendant is arguing that its affidavit has raised a genuine issue of fact about the meaning of those symbols that requires extrinsic evidence for its resolution.

Ordinarily the construction of the meaning intended by the words and symbols employed by the parties in committing their agreement to writing is a question of law. [480]*480Ingalls v. Green, 337 Mass. 444, 447. Where the parties employ a symbol or mark not in ordinary usage, and assert conflicting interpretations of its meaning, then the court must first ascertain what in fact the symbol denotes before determining its legal significance. The meaning of such a symbol would present a question of fact, resolvable by extrinsic evidence. Stoops v. Smith, 100 Mass. 63, 65-66. Atwood v. Boston, 310 Mass. 70, 75. Maxwell-Davis, Inc. v. Hooper, 317 Mass. 150, 152. Contrary to the defendant’s contention, no such factual controversy exists over what the circle in the plans represents, for Plan P-1A specifically defined the circles to be “outlets” for the air, water, and gas services.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 N.E.2d 548, 357 Mass. 475, 1970 Mass. LEXIS 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/limbach-co-v-george-b-h-macomber-co-mass-1970.