Martinsburg & Potomac Railroad v. March

114 U.S. 549, 5 S. Ct. 1035, 29 L. Ed. 255, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1793
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 4, 1885
Docket272
StatusPublished
Cited by192 cases

This text of 114 U.S. 549 (Martinsburg & Potomac Railroad v. March) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martinsburg & Potomac Railroad v. March, 114 U.S. 549, 5 S. Ct. 1035, 29 L. Ed. 255, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1793 (1885).

Opinion

Me. Justige HaklaN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case is within the principles announced in Kihlberg v. United States, 97 U. S. 398, and Sweeney v. United States, 109 U. S. 618.

Kihlberg sued the "United States upon a contract for the transportation of military, Indian, and government stores and supplies from points on the Kansas Pacific Railway to posts arid stations in certain States and Territories. The contract provided for payment for transportation “ in all cases according to the distance from the place of departure to that of delivery, the distance to be ascertained -and fixed by the chief quartermaster of the district of New Mexico, and in no case *551 to exceed the distance by the usual and customary route.” One of the issues in that case was as to the authority of that officer to fix, conclusively for the parties, the distances which should govern in the settlement of the contractor’s accounts for transportation. There was neither allegation nor proof of fraud or bad faith upon, the part of that officer in his discharge of the duty imposed upon him by the mutual assent of the parties. This court said: “ In the absence of fraud or such gross mistake as would necessarily imply bad faith, or a failure to exercise an honest judgment, his action in the premises is conclusive upon the appellant- as well as upon the government.”

This principle was affirmed and applied in Sweeney’s case, in which he sought to - recover from the United States the price of a wall built by-him around a national cemetery. .The contract provided that the wall should be received and become the property of the United States, after an officer or civil engineer, to be designated by the government to inspect the work, should certify that it was in all respects such as the contractor agreed to construct. The officer designated for that purpose refused -to so certify, on the ground that neither the material nor the workmanship was such as the contract required. As the officer exercised an honest judgment in making his inspections, and- as there was, on his part, neither fraud, nor such gross mistake as implied bad faith, it' was adjudged that the contractor had no cause of action, on the contract, against the United States.

Those decisions control the determination of the claim arising out of the contract here in suit, whereby the defendant in error, who was plaintiff below, covenanted and agreed that he would furnish all the material required — which should be sound, durable, and of good quality, and approved by the company’s chief engineer — and perform all the labor necessary to construct and finish, in every respeqt, in the most substantial and workmanlike manner,,the grading and masonry of a certain section of the Martinsburg and Potomac Railroad.

The contract provides that, to prevent all disputes, the engineer of the company “shall, in all cases, determine” the quantity of the several kinds of work to be paid for under the *552 contract, and the amount of compensation that the appellee should earn at the rates therein specified; that he “ shall, in all cases,” decide every question which can -or may arise relative to the execution of the contract, and “ his estimate shall be final and conclusive; ” that in order to enable the contractor to prosecute the work advantageously, the engineer “shall make an estimate from time to time, not oftener than once per month, .as the work progresses, of the work done,” for which-the company “ will pay in current money within twenty per cent, of the amount of said estimate on presentation; ” that, in calculating the quantity of masonry, walling, and excavation, the most rigid geometrical rules should be applied, any custom to the contrary notwithstanding; and that “whenever this contract shall be wholly completed on the part of the said - contractor, and the said engineer shall have certified the same, they [the company] will pay for said work ” the prices in the contract named.

These stipulations • were emphasized by this additional provision in the agreement:

“ And it is further agreed that whenever the contract shall be completely performed on the part of the contractor, and the said engineer shall certify the same in writing under his hand, together with his estimate aforesaid, the said company shall, within thirty dajs after the receipt of said certificate, pay to the said contractor, in current notes, the sum which according to this contract shall be due.”

The plaintiff in his declaration, which is in assumpsit, sets out the written contract in full, and counts specially upon its various provisions. The other count is the ordinary one of in-debitatus assumpsit. • A general demurrer by the company to the whole declaration, and to each count, was overruled. This action of the coprt below cannot be upheld without disregarding the express conditions of the written agreement; for, it does not appear from, the declaration that the engineer ever certified in writing the complete performance of the contract by th¿ plaintiff, together with an estimate of the work done, and the amount of compensation due him according to the prices established by the parties. Until after the expira *553 tion of thirty days from the receipt of such a certificate, the company did not, by the terms of the agreement, 'come under a liability to pay the plaintiff the balance, if any, due to him under the contract. Nor does the declaration state any facts entitling him to sue the company, on the contract, in the absence of such a certificate by the engineer, whose determination was made by the parties final or conclusive. And upon the supposition that the engineer made such a certificate as that provided by the contract, there is no allegation that entitled the plaintiff to go behind it; for, there is no averment that the engineer had been guilty of fraud, or had made such gross mistake in his estimates as necessarily implied bad faith, or had failed to exercise an honest judgment in discharging the duty imposed upon him. The first count of the declaration was, therefore, defective for the want of proper averments showing plaintiff’s right to sue on the contract, and the demurrer to that count should have been sustained.- ’ .

As, for this reason, the case must be remanded for a new trial, it is proper to say that, if the declaration had been good on demurrer, we should have been compelled to reverse the judgment for errors in the- instructions given to the jury. Several instructions were asked by the defendant embodying the general proposition that the final estimate of the engineer was to be- taken as conclusive, unless it appeared¿vfrom the evidence that, in.res^ect thereto,.he was guilty of fraud or intentional' misconduct. These -instructions were modified' by the court by adding after the words “ fraud or intentional misconduct” the words “or gross mistake.” This modification was,' well calculated to mislead the jury, for they were not informed * that the mistake must have been so gross, or of such a nature, , as necessarily implied bad faith ,hpon the part of the engineer.

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Bluebook (online)
114 U.S. 549, 5 S. Ct. 1035, 29 L. Ed. 255, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martinsburg-potomac-railroad-v-march-scotus-1885.