MacArthur Concrete Pile & Foundation Co. v. Simplex Concrete Piling Co.

230 F. 648, 145 C.C.A. 58, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1484
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 27, 1916
DocketNo. 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 230 F. 648 (MacArthur Concrete Pile & Foundation Co. v. Simplex Concrete Piling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacArthur Concrete Pile & Foundation Co. v. Simplex Concrete Piling Co., 230 F. 648, 145 C.C.A. 58, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1484 (3d Cir. 1916).

Opinion

BUFFINGTON, Circuit Judge.

This case involves the use of ce- ■ ment to form building, piles, and is an instance of one of the many new uses to which cement has lent itself, owing to that plastic capacity by which it may be carried to any desired point, and to its hardening capacity by which it is there converted into a solid "structure. These qualities of temporary plastic movement and permanent solidity led to its substitution for stone masonry to form piers for buildings. To that end holes of a desired depth and area were dug, and into the hole was poured or grouted cement, which at once hardened and formed the pier. If it was desired to carry the pier above ground, a frame pattern of the desired size was used. If walls, instead of piers, were desired, long trenches were dug, and the entire underground foundations of buildings were made from cement. In the same way cellar walls were built, the cement foundation trenches being carried below the cellar floor, and from there upward the outside of the cellar wall was formed, against the earth and the inside against a frame boxing. If the ground excavated was liable to cave, the obvious remedy was to shore it by an interior structure. From the use of cement piers as a foundation to buildings, it was to be expected, the building art would naturally advance to deeper foundations, in "the shape of piles.

Such advance is happily .illustrated in the Journal of the Royal Institute of British Architects for 1894. Before quoting from that article, and leaving the cement art, we may say that the oil and gas drilling art had thoroughly developed the whole subject of underground drilling, and the casing or sheathing of drilled holes for hundreds and [649]*649indeed thousands oí feet underground, so that such wall-protected hole afforded ingress and egress for drilling tools, sand bailers, fishing tools, pump rods, and also for the location within such casing of an inner tubing, which cased or sheathed a hole of still smaller diameter beyond where the casing of the larger dimension ended. The general features of this well-developed drilling art are outlined in a decision in this circuit in 1892, reported in Masseth v. Palm (C. C.) 51 Fed. 824. Returning to the article in question, printed and illustrated below, we see how underground cement piers were made:

“From F. De J. Clore (F.), Wellington, N. Z.
“Though Wellington, N. Z., is one of the best situated capital cities in the world as a commercial distributing center, it has had the great drawback of possessing but little level land for building purposes within reasonable distance of its wharves and jetties. This being the case, reclamation has been resorted to, and the best sites, extending over many acres, were a few years ago covered with the water of the harbor to a depth of from 12 to 15 feet. The material used for reclamation was loose rock and clay taken from the hillsides in the vicinity, and offers a poor foundation for brick buildings. Generally piles of Po-docarpus to tar a (a very lasting timber) have been driven to a solid bottom and then covered with concrete. Some 11 years ago the acting colonial architect, Mr. Burrows, used concrete piles as a foundation for the Supreme Court building, but for some reason or another the experiment was not repeated until a few months ago, when my firm again used the same materials for the foundation of a four-floored brick warehouse for Messrs. Sharland & Co. Whether our modus operandi was the same as that of Mr. Burrows I cannot say; but, feeling that our experience might be of service in other cases, I am venturing to send you this record of the matter. The building we were to erect was a wholesale drug store, 100 feet long by 40 feet wide, and having three floorsl above the ground, the walls being of brick of ordinary thickness, resting on a good concrete foundation, which rested in its turn on concrete piles. The ‘plant’ required to put these'piles in position consisted of two steel ‘cylinders’ as sketched, a wooden ‘dolly’ of Australian iron bark, an ordinary derrick and 25 cwt. monkey, and donkey engine and winch, and for each pile a cast-iron shoe (weighing 72 pounds each), formed as shown in fig. 1.
“After excavating for the concrete footings the shoe of the pile was placed in position, and the cylinder lowered onto it; a small portion of sand was then thrown in to form a cushion for the ‘dolly,’ and a ‘grummet,’ or ring of rope, was placed between the top ring on the ‘dolly’ and the top of the cylinder, in order to prevent the jar burring the latter. The whole pile was then driven in the ordinary way two feet into the solid original bottom of the harbor, and the ‘dolly’ withdrawn from the cylinder and the next cylinder driven. The first cylinder was then pumped, dry and filled with concrete, and by means of a rope passing through blocks hung above it, and carried to winch of donkey engine, the cylinder was drawn, and the semi-liquid concrete loft in the ground in the [650]*650shape of a pile about 13 inches in diameter. The second cylinder was then treated in the same way. The piles in the long stretches of walling were spaced about three feet apart and arranged as in Mg. 2; but when they had to be closer we found it necessary to leave the cylinders in the ground, as the power at the contractor’s disposal was not sufficient to draw them out of the lightly compressed soil.
[649]

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Related

Morrow v. Oelschlager
11 F.2d 524 (Third Circuit, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
230 F. 648, 145 C.C.A. 58, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macarthur-concrete-pile-foundation-co-v-simplex-concrete-piling-co-ca3-1916.