Monto v. Gillooly

147 S.E. 542, 107 W. Va. 151, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 55
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1929
Docket6356
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 147 S.E. 542 (Monto v. Gillooly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monto v. Gillooly, 147 S.E. 542, 107 W. Va. 151, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 55 (W. Va. 1929).

Opinion

Hatcher, Judge:

The defendant is the surviving partner of Marshall and Gillooly, contractors. They entered into an agreement with the 'State Road Commission to grade and pave with a bituminous macadam surface 6.8 miles of a state road, identified as State Project No. 3325, Barbour county. They then sublet to plaintiff the quarrying of all the stone for the napped stone base course of the project, the fine grading and the construction of the base course, to the satisfaction of the Road Commission. The plaintiff was to receive $1.00 per cubic .yard for quarrying the stone, and a like sum for constructing the base course. It was specified that the prices named included all work and labor incident to both the quarrying and the construction. The plaintiff seeks in this action to recover *153 damages alleged to have been occasioned him by a certain breach of the contract; payment for certain work alleged to have been performed by him under the contract; and compensation for certain work alleged to have been performed by him at the direction of the partnership which was not included in the contract.

The items in his demand are as follows:

T. Damages for change of 9600 feet in the pavement of the road from macadam to concrete — .$ 3,234.00
2. Payment for stone quarried on Talbott farm at the direction of the partnership, but condemned by the Road Commission. 300.00
3. Compensation for cost of clearing away the soil to get to the stone of a rock quarry at “Century No. 2”. 234.00.
4. (a) Compensation for heavy grading from station 0 to station 336+50, amounting to 18,815 cu. yds. 18,815.00
(b) Compensation for construction of 20,400 lin. ft. of berms at 10c per ft. 2,040.00
(c) Compensation for construction of ditches 2,024.46
$26,647.46

The defendant contested each of the above items, but the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $13,426.29, which was confirmed by the trial court. The items will be discussed in the order named.

1. During the progress of the work the partnership secured a modification of its contract with the Road Commission, whereby about 9600 feet of the project was paved with concrete instead of macadam. This change eliminated the use of napped stone as a base. The plaintiff testified that this modification was made without his consent, and that he would have made a profit under his contract of about 80 cents per cubic yard on the stone which he would have quarried and used in the construction of the base course of the 9600 feet, had the contract not been changed. "Witnesses for defendant testified that plaintiff knew in advance that the change was contemplated, and that he not only consented to the change, *154 but expressed gratification because it was made. Tbe defendant admits that so far as tbe evidence conflicts, it is a jury question, but contends tbat as tbe evidence shows no protest or objection by plaintiff to tbe change, prior thereto, be is now precluded by bis passivity from claiming damages because of tbe change, citing 9 C. J., p. 855, section 192, and Wait on Eng. and Arch. Juris., section 580, p. 507. Tbe citations refer to a situation where tbe contractor waives tbe original contract by performing it as changed, without objection. They might apply here bad tbe -plaintiff constructed the concrete pavement on tbe 9600 feet, but be did not do so. In asserting tbe modification of tbe contract tbe defendant has tbe burden of proof. He must show tbat tbe partnership and tbe plaintiff definitely agreed to tbe change. This burden is not sustained, as a matter of law, by merely showing tbe failure of plaintiff to protest tbe change. 13 C. J., p. 762, section 950.

We find no error in plaintiff’s instruction, or in tbe exclusion from tbe jury of tbe contract between tbe partnership and tbe Road Commission, relative to tbe change. Tbe plaintiff was not a party to tbat contract, and could not be bound by its recitals. 4 Ency. of Ev., p. 184, sec. C. Besides, tbe manager of tbe partnership was allowed to testify fully as to tbe matters leading up to tbe modification.

2. Three hundred cubic yards of stone quarried by plaintiff on tbe Talbott farm were rejected as too soft by an inspector of tbe Road Commission. Tbe plaintiff testified tbat over his protest be was directed by tbe manager of tbe partnership to quarry this stone with tbe express assurance of payment. Tbe manager testified tbat there was hard as well as soft stone, easily distinguishable, at the Talbott quarry, and tbat be expressly instructed plaintiff to quarry only tbe bard stone there. This was a jury question.

3. At Century No. 2 quarry, tbe plaintiff says the stone was overlaid with about ten feet of soil, and that be refused to remove tbe soil until payment therefor was expressly promised him by the manager of tbe partnership. This alleged promise is denied by tbe manager. There is no evidence tbat tbe depth of soil at this quarry was so unusual, *155 as to be entirely without the contemplation of the parties when they contracted. The removal of the soil necessary to get to stone is ordinarily an incident of quarrying. “The doing of any work necessary for the proper and convenient use of the pit, such as the removal of earth, debris, water, ice, or snow, would be working the quarry as truly as the blasting and removal of the slate.” Miller et al. v. Chester State Co., 129 Pa. St. 81; Freston v. Cement Co., 30 N. Y. Supp. 144-5. Therefore, the giving of plaintiff’s instruction authorizing recovery for removing the soil at this quarry was error.

4. (a). The plaintiff testified that the “fine grading” specified in the original contract required grading by him not to exceed an average of about four inches; that the rough grading which was done by the partnership was so incomplete that in addition to the fine grading he was compelled to move by “actual measurement”, (records of which were introduced in evidence) an average of fifteen inches of soil and rock over his entire construction in order to bring the road to grade, and that for this additional work he was expressly promised remuneration by the partnership. According to his claim he moved 18,815 cubic yards, not included in the contract, for which $1.00 per cubic yard is a reasonable charge. The defendant denied any such promise and produced . an imposing array of evidence . controverting the plaintiff’s statement as to the incompleteness of the rough grading except in a few specified places. As to these places the defendant admitted a special promise to pay and the plaintiff admitted receiving payment therefor. Despite the very substantial arguments against the propriety of plaintiff’s claim with which defendant supports his evidence, we are of opinion that this claim is a jury question, and that there is no error in the instruction submitting it to the jury.

(b). Under plaintiff’s interpretation of the contract he was not obligated to construct the berms (shoulders) which support the base course.

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.E. 542, 107 W. Va. 151, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monto-v-gillooly-wva-1929.