Mayor & City Council of Baltimore v. M. A. Talbott Co.

105 A. 149, 133 Md. 226, 1918 Md. LEXIS 124
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 9, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 105 A. 149 (Mayor & City Council of Baltimore v. M. A. Talbott Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor & City Council of Baltimore v. M. A. Talbott Co., 105 A. 149, 133 Md. 226, 1918 Md. LEXIS 124 (Md. 1918).

Opinion

*227 Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The suit in this ease arises out of a written contract made on the 22nd day of September, 1909, by The M. A. Talbott Co., Incorporated, with the City of Baltimore, executed on behalf of the city by the members of the Sewerage Commission and J. Barry Mahool, its Mayor, for the building and construction of a section of the Sanitary Sewer in said city, known as Section No. 1 of Jones Palls, Interceptor.

The amended declaration, filed June 20th, 1912, sets out the contract signed by the parties thereto, not including the specifications which were by the contract made a part of it, but as stated in the brief of the appellee, the parties to this suit have agreed that such specifications shall be considered and treated as embraced within the declaration.

The declaration then charges the defendant with a breach of the contract in that

“It did wrongfully require the plaintiff to do the rock excavation provided for in said contract and specifications in a manner materially different from that called for hy said contract and specifications, by changing the person or persons designated in said contract to act as inspectors of blasting, over the protest of the plaintiff, and by compelling the plaintiff to use such small charges and radically different methods in the blasting operation, contrary to said contract and specifications, as to seriously and wrongfully hinder and delay the plaintiff from carrying on the rock excavation required under said contract to be performed.”

A demurrer filed to the declaration being overruled, a bill of particulars was asked for and filed, in which the amount of six hundred and forty-two dollars and thirty-six cents ($642.36) was claimed for “unpaid balance of contract price certified by the engineer, designated in said contract as due by the defendant- to the plaintiff,” in addition to items of loss alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff.

Exceptions were filed to the bill of particulars but these were overruled. The defendant then pleaded: (first), that it *228 never promised as alleged; (second), that it was never indebted as alleged; and (third), that the contract, which is set forth in the declaration, provides as follows:

“44. In all operations connected with the work, all ordinances of the City of Baltimore and all laws of the United States and the State of Maryland, which shall be or become applicable to, and control or limit in any way the actions of, those engaged in any way as principal or agent, must be respected and strictly complied with.
“The contractor shall keep himself fully informed of existing and future State and national laws and city ordinances and regulations in any manner affecting those engaged and employed in or on the work, or in any way affecting the conduct of the work; and of all orders or decrees of bodies or officials having any jurisdiction or authority over the same. He shall himself at all times observe and comply with, and cause any and all persons, firms and corporations employed by him or under him, to observe and comply with, all such laws, ordiúances and regulations, orders and decrees.” * * #
“Ordinance Ho. 229, approved March 21st, 1905, which was in full force and effect prior to the award of the same contract, provides:
“ ‘76 A. Ho person shall blast rock or stone or other material or thing with gunpower, giant powder, dynamite, gun cotton, nitro-glyeerine, or any other explosive compound within the limits of the City of Baltimore, without the written consent of the Board of Public Safety, for the time being.’
“The rules and regulations of the Board of Public Safety, regulating blasting to be done within the city limits, provide that all blasting must be done under the supervision of inspectors of the Board of Public Safety, and that such inspectors shall regulate and control the amount of explosives to be used in said blasting, and that all persons, firms and corporations engaged in such blasting work must comply with the orders of said inspectors.
*229 “In view, therefore, of the said provisions of the contract, ordinance, rules and regulations of the City of Baltimore, the plaintiff agreed with the defendant that all Hasting operations of the plaintiff should be subject to the control and authority of the Board of Public Safety and its inspectors.
“And the defendant further says that the said Board of Public Safety and its inspectors duly and properly exercised the authority committed to them under the law, for the safety and protection of the public.”

A demurrer filed to the third plea was sustained, and the case went to trial upon the first and second pleas. The trial resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff for the sum of twenty-six thousand dollars ($26,000.00). From that judgment this appeal was taken.

The specifications, provide that “the work to be done shall be undea" the general supervision of the engineer”; and the use of the term engineer, “whenever not qualified, shall mean the Engineer of the Commission.” He “may exercise such general control over the conduct of the work, at any time or place., as shall be required, in bis. opinion, to safeguard the interests of the city”; and “all methods of tunnelling shall be satisfactory to the engineer and subject to Ms approval, and shall be changed from time to time, at the cost of the contractor, if in the judgment of the engineer, the conditions so require.” “Drilling and blasting shall be conducted with all possible care,” and “explosives shall be used of such character and strength as. may be permitted by the engineer,” and “all necessary precautions must be taken to prevent accident and injury or damage to adjacent buildings; * * * and blasts shall be made only during such hours as shall be designated by the engineer.”

Under these provisions, the engineer of the Commission assumed supervision of the work, and on October 22nd, 1909, O. W. Comnet, the division engineer, acting under his chief, Calvin W. Hendrick, wrote to the plaintiff calling its attention to the specifications which requires the method of tun *230 nelling to be satisfactory to the engineer and subject to his approval, and asked that it submit to the chief engineer “a drawing showing the methods you propose to- use, for his approval, so that there will be no delay when you reach the tunnel.”

On October 29th, Connet again wrote the plaintiff and called its attention to the specifications for rock excavation, especially “with reference to blasting and the precautions to be taken to- prevent accident and damages.”

So far as the record discloses, these letters were never answered, but Wm. B. Thomas, assistant engineer,, in charge of the work of The M. A. Talbott Ob., testified that he, about the time these letters were written, discussed with E. H.

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Bluebook (online)
105 A. 149, 133 Md. 226, 1918 Md. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-city-council-of-baltimore-v-m-a-talbott-co-md-1918.