McGuire v. UNITED BROTHERHOOD ETC.

314 P.2d 439, 50 Wash. 2d 699
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1957
Docket33807
StatusPublished

This text of 314 P.2d 439 (McGuire v. UNITED BROTHERHOOD ETC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGuire v. UNITED BROTHERHOOD ETC., 314 P.2d 439, 50 Wash. 2d 699 (Wash. 1957).

Opinion

50 Wn.2d 699 (1957)
314 P.2d 439

JOHN E. McGUIRE et al., Appellants,
v.
UNITED BROTHERHOOD OF CARPENTERS AND JOINERS OF AMERICA, LOCAL NO. 470, et al., Respondents.[1]

No. 33807.

The Supreme Court of Washington, Department Two.

August 15, 1957.

Binns, Cunningham & Fletcher, for appellants,

Arthur R. Paulsen, for respondents.

DONWORTH, J.

This action was commenced by appellants, as partners, for the purpose of foreclosing two liens for architectural services rendered respondent union, aggregating the sum of $2,954.84, together with attorneys' fee for foreclosure in the amount of eight hundred fifty dollars. The Bank of California, N.A., was joined as a defendant, as a mortgagee of the real property involved, for the purpose of having appellants' liens declared to be paramount and superior to the mortgage lien held by the bank. It was stipulated by all parties that the bank, at the time of making the loan, had knowledge that appellants had begun to perform the architectural services.

The union and its officers (herein referred to as respondents) answered, admitting the existence of the contract for, and the performance of, the architectural services, and cross-complained, alleging that, as a "direct and proximate result of errors and defects in the plans and specifications prepared by the plaintiffs" (appellants herein), a certain retaining wall, designed by appellants, and hereinafter described, cracked and deflected abnormally from its designed vertical and horizontal position. The union sought five thousand dollars damages for the correction of structural weakness in the retaining wall and two thousand dollars for depreciation caused by the alleged necessity of constructing reinforced concrete abutments to keep the *701 wall in place. Appellants' answer to the cross-complaint consisted of a general denial.

The facts giving rise to this controversy may be summarized as follows:

The union owned certain property having a total of two hundred feet of frontage on the west side of Fawcett street between south Thirteenth and south Fifteenth streets in the city of Tacoma, upon which it desired to construct a union hall. The ground immediately to the west of Fawcett street rises abruptly from east to west. The alley to the west is approximately level with the top of the union hall, a two-story reinforced concrete building which was subsequently erected by the union on the south half of the property. Immediately to the north of the building a vertical retaining wall, approximately twenty feet in height, was designed and constructed on respondents' property parallel to the easterly edge of the alley for a distance of approximately ninety-five feet for the purpose of supporting the alley. The north half of the property was leveled near the base of the wall and paved for automobile parking use.

In January, 1954, appellants were retained by respondent union to prepare plans and specifications for the design of the union hall and the retaining wall.

Pursuant to this contract, plans and specifications were prepared by appellants, and a contract for construction was let June 3, 1954. Construction proceeded in due course; the building was completed and occupied by respondent union in March, 1955, the final inspection being made the following month.

The matters here in dispute relate only to the retaining wall.

In connection with the designing of the wall (and building), appellants engaged the firm of Smith & Murray, consulting structural engineers in Tacoma, who furnished engineering details which were incorporated into the plans and specifications prepared by appellants.

These plans and specifications called for the construction of a cantilever type vertical wall of reinforced concrete, which would deflect uniformly across the entire easterly *702 (open) face of the wall as the load which it was intended and designed to retain was applied and compacted behind its westerly face. Such normal and uniform deflection would vary, theoretically (according to all of the testimony of experts adduced on this point), approximately three quarters of one inch, or less, and allow the wall to retain its intended appearance of straightness in alignment, both horizontally along its uppermost edge and vertically across its easterly face.

The base, or foundation, of the wall was first poured; the vertical section, which was keyed to the base and fused to it by means of steel reinforcing bars extending upwards from the base and into the vertical wall forms, was poured subsequently, on July 1, 1954.

During the pouring of the concrete for the vertical section, some difficulty with form slippage was experienced, and shoring by means of two-by-four inch braces against the form panels covering the easterly face of the wall was necessary to return the form panels to alignment. The evidence discloses that this corrective shoring returned the forms to within approximately one half inch of alignment, but resulted in a bulge on the easterly face of the wall, and a misalignment of the uppermost edge of the wall, noticeable upon observation of the vertical plane of the wall by sighting along and downward from the top of the wall after removal of the forms.

About October 1, 1954, two diagonal cracks appeared on the easterly face of the wall, one at each end, commencing near the base of the wall and running upwards and inwards, toward the center, intersecting the top of the wall. (Shortly before these cracks appeared, a substantial portion of the backfilling material had been applied.) At that time the wall appeared to bow out, or arc, toward the east, approximately midway between its north and south ends. The top of the wall was out of horizontal and vertical alignment, with the upper edge of the wall overhanging the parking area immediately below and to the east.

Measurements were taken shortly after the cracks appeared and at different times thereafter under various *703 conditions as the weight was increased behind the wall. Between October, 1954, and January, 1956 (shortly before trial), the bow to the east had increased from approximately two and one half inches to approximately four inches at its maximum point. During the same period, the deviation of the wall from true vertical increased from approximately two and one half inches to in excess of three inches at its maximum point.

The evidence clearly shows that these deviations from the designed horizontal and vertical positions are abnormal. A part of the vertical deviation, however, consists of the normal and anticipated "deflection," together with a minor allowance for form slippage. The horizontal bow in the wall is entirely foreign to its intended appearance, but is partially due to form slippage occurring in the course of construction. Practically all of the deviations from alignment, both vertical and horizontal, are caused by the fact that the wall was constructed immediately against the existing building on the north end, and by the fact that respondent union's hall was subsequently erected against the south end of the wall. When the backfill was applied behind the wall, these restraints upon the ends of the wall caused the center to bow out, resulting in the cracking of the concrete at each end. These cracks and deviations from the designed alignment give rise to respondents' cross-complaint.

Numerous expert witnesses were called by the contending parties on this issue.

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314 P.2d 439, 50 Wash. 2d 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcguire-v-united-brotherhood-etc-wash-1957.