Massachusetts Bonding & Ins. Co. v. Ray Dilschneider, Inc

203 F.2d 556
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 9, 1953
Docket14644_1
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 203 F.2d 556 (Massachusetts Bonding & Ins. Co. v. Ray Dilschneider, Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Massachusetts Bonding & Ins. Co. v. Ray Dilschneider, Inc, 203 F.2d 556 (8th Cir. 1953).

Opinion

JOHNSEN, Circuit Judge.

A general contractor sued a surety company upon the performance bond' executed by- it for a subcontractor, to recover the damages alleged to have resulted from the subcontractor’s attempted cancellation of his contract to provide the aluminum window structures for two buildings being erected by the general contractor at the Southeast Missouri State Teachers College in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. A jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, on which the court entered judgment, and the defendant has appealed. The case is admittedly ruled by Missouri law.

The first contention urged for reversal is that the subcontractor’s refusal to furnish the windows could not under the terms of the contract be claimed to constitute a renunciatory breach but was required as a matter of law to be held to represent a rightful cancellation of the agreement, and that the trial court therefore erred in not granting defendant’s motion for a directed verdict.

The cancellation clause of the contract was the subject of a sharp dispute in interpretation by the parties on the trial. The court concluded that, on the language used, the circumstances shown, and the other extrinsic evidence adduced, it was a question for the jury to say what the contract should be found to be, as a matter of whether the parties had provided for such a right of cancellation as the subcontractor claimed or whether the attempted cancellation was in fact a wrongful repudiation of the obligation of the agreement.

The cancellation clause was in the following language: “Contract may be can-celled by Sub-Contractor if Architect does not approve our standard construction, as per sample submitted.” The architect’s specifications had called for windows of various series types, “as manufactured by the General Broñze Corporation of Long Island City, New York, or an approved equal.” The windows of General Bronze Corporation were a patented structure. *558 The subcontractor here involved .was engaged in the business of selling an unpat-ented aluminum window structure, which he had manufactured for him by various factories and which he marketed as his own trade product.

Under the architect’s general specifications, shop drawings and sample of such make of window, other than that of General Bronze Corporation, as the general contractor might desire to use, were required to be submitted to the architect for approval. ■ And the contract entered into between the subcontractor and the general contractor was conformingly made to provide that the subcontractor should , submit shop drawings and “also a full-sized sample of Double Hung Window”, for the architect’s examination and approval. Both a heavier and a lighter type of the double hung window was to be used in the buildings, and the subcontractor promised to submit a sample structure of each.

Shop drawings and a construction sample of the heavier type of window were thereafter submitted by the subcontractor, although not by the date called for in the contract. In the form and condition in which the sample was submitted, the architect refused to approve, it as satisfactory or as representing a compliance by the subcontractor with the obligation of his contract. Testimony for the plaintiff showed that the corner welds of the sample were' “crude and had not been polished or rubbed down.;” that felt had been used in the structure for weatherstripping instead of stainless steel, which the subcontractor had represented in his trade advertising, 1 as well, as indicated in the shop drawings furnished.by him, constituted part of his window construction; and that the workmanship involved in' the placement of the lock in the sample had been such that the window of the structure could not be made to fasten securely.

All of these objections were pointed out by the architect to the subcontractor, and the subcontractor unprotestingly agreed to have them remedied and to re-submit the sample for approval after this had been done. He also agreed at the architect’s request to change the balances on the window from spring to spiral type, though this detail is not claimed to be of any significance here.

The subcontractor however never made any correction or resubmission of the sample, as he had agreed. A sample structure of the lighter type window to be used, which he also had promised to submit and which he had had another factory make up for him, was within a short time transmitted to the architect. This sample too the architect refused to approve, until two or three things were corrected. Thus, for example, just as in' the case of the heavier-window sample, felt had been used in part for weather-stripping instead of Stainless steel. Upon receipt of these criticisms from the architect, the subcontractor sent the general contractor the following telegram: “ * * * we hereby cancel the contract because of the failure of the architect to approve sample submitted.”

It was the subcontractor’s position, and also that of the surety company here, that the contract gave the subcontractor an absolute right of cancellation, if the architect failed to approve any window sample which he might submit. The general contractor on the other hand contended that *559 the cancellation clause did not grant the subcontractor the right to cancel the contract, except where he had submitted and the architect had refused to approve a sample of his window construction, which was of course to be within the architect’s general specifications and his own indicative shop drawings, but which beyond this also would embody the standards of his regular trade product in matters of workmanship and other construction details not attempted to be set out in the specifications and shop drawings; that, unless he undertook to submit a sample reflective of these general standards of his product and capable of being considered by the architect for approval or disapproval on this basis, he would not have complied with the condition of the contract, on which alone the right to invoke the cancellation clause was intended to rest; that it was not and could not be claimed in the situation that the rough corner welding, the use of felt for stainless-steel weatherstripping, and the placing of the window lock in the structure so that it was incapable of being securely fastened, constituted the submission of a sample of the “standard construction” of his regular trade product; and that thus no such sample submission and disapproval had occurred as the contract had made the foundation or condition of a right in the subcontractor to cancel.

The issue between the parties thus in effect was whether or not the language, “if Architect does not approve our standard construction, as per sample submitted,” was required to be held as a matter of law to mean that the subcontractor was free to embody any standard or quality of workmanship and construction detail which he saw fit, without any relationship to his regular trade product, in such samples as he submitted, and was entitled to have the architect make approval or rejection on this basis. We do not believe that the subcontractor’s interpretation 1 — “My standard construction was what I wished to put in the sample, that was the idea of the sample” — was one which it could be said was necessarily compelled in the situation.

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Bluebook (online)
203 F.2d 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massachusetts-bonding-ins-co-v-ray-dilschneider-inc-ca8-1953.