New England Foundation Co. v. F. H. McGraw & Co.

113 F. Supp. 246, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2557
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedMay 6, 1953
DocketCiv. A. No. 1369
StatusPublished

This text of 113 F. Supp. 246 (New England Foundation Co. v. F. H. McGraw & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New England Foundation Co. v. F. H. McGraw & Co., 113 F. Supp. 246, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2557 (D.R.I. 1953).

Opinion

GIBSON, District Judge.

■The plaintiff has moved for a summary judgment against the defendant of $10,-705.30, together with interest thereon from August 21, 1951, and costs. The complaint in this case alleges that on August 8, 1950, the plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract providing for the construction of certain pile and caisson foundations at the Bucklin Point Sewage Treatment Plant in East Providence, Rhode Island. The plaintiff’s complaint alleges complete performance on its part of all its obligations under the contract.

An analysis of the contract which was executed between the parties shows that, as far as this dispute is concerned, $18,732 was to be paid by the defendant to the plaintiff for the erection of the pile and caisson foundation for the “By-Pass and Effluent Channel”.

The plaintiff alleges, in its complaint, that under the terms of the contract, the defendant was entitled to deduct from the $18,732 the sum of $5,801.09 for linear feet of piles and caissons, estimated as necessary in the specifications but, in fact, found not necessary or, in fact, not constructed by the plaintiff.

It also alleges that the defendant has paid the plaintiff a total of $1,359 on account of work on the piles and caissons of the “By-Pass and Effluent Channel”, but, though often requested, has refused to pay the balance of $11,571.10. (It is to be noted that certain figures used in the plaintiff’s complaint were not correct.)

The defendant, in its answer, denied that the plaintiff had completed all of its obligations under the contract; denied the plaintiff’s allegation of the price agreed upon and the plaintiff’s allegation of the amount defendant was entitled to for deductions. It admitted the payment of $1,360.50, and then followed by denying all other paragraphs of the plaintiff’s complaint.

The defendant, for an affirmative defense, plead payment in full. Thereafter the plaintiff filed requests for admissions, and the defendant filed a statement of the defendant upon plaintiff’s request for admission. Following this, the plaintiff filed its Motion for Summary Judgment, and submitted with this motion affidavits of two witnesses. The defendant filed counter affidavits in opposition to the plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment, together with a Motion for Summary Judgment for the defendant.

The case came on for hearing before this Court on the 20th of April, 1953, on the plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment and the defendant’s counter Motion for Summary Judgment.

From a reading of the files, from statements made by counsel for both parties at the oral argument, and from consideration of briefs filed, the Court finds the following facts:

The plaintiff and defendant entered a written contract on August 8, 1950, and in accordance with that contract, plaintiff received a contract order, No. 752-114, dated August 8, 1950.

The contract order of August 8, 1950 provided, amongst other things, that “the following unit prices are to apply for additions and deductions as follows:

Item 8a — 18" cast-in-place concrete piles @ Twelve and no/100 Dollars ($12.00) per linear foot

Item 8b — 24" cast-in-place concrete piles @ Fourteen and no/100 Dollars ($14.00) per linear foot

[248]*248Item 8c — 30" concrete-filled caissons • @ Fifteen and no/100 Dollars ($15.-00) per linear foot

Item 8d — 36" concrete-filled caissons @ Eighteen and no/100 Dollars ($18.00) per linear foot

Item 8e — 40" concrete-filled caissons @ Twenty-Four and. no/100 Dollars ($24.00) per linear foot

Item 8f — 44" concrete-filled caissons @ Twenty-Six and no/100 Dollars ($26.00) per linear foot

Item 8g — 54" concrete-filled caissons @ Forty-Four and no/100 Dollars ($44.00) per linear foot”

On December 21, 1950, the defendant, in accordance with its original contract, issued a further contract order to the plaintiff, entitled “Change Order No. 2”. Part of this “Change Order No. 2” provided as follows:

“Item No. 4
By-pass and Effluent Channel:
34 — 18" piles
18 — 24" piles
4 — 30" caissons
4 — 48" caissons
Outfall: 230 — 24"piles
6 — 30" caissons
3 — 36" caissons
For The Sum Of $64,782.00”

Thereafter, on May 4, 1951, the defendant issued another ■ contract order entitled “Change Order No. 3”, the material part of which read as follows:

“Eliminate the following:
“All caisson and pile work in the Outfall Conduit and Outfall Chamber in accordance with your letter of April 18, 1951, for a total deduction from contract price of .....:...... $46,050.00”

Thus, Change Order No. 2, in Item 4, provided for the erection of certain piles and caissons in both the “By-Pass and Effluent Channel” and in the “Outfall”, all for the sum of $64,782. Change Order No. 3 eliminated the caisson and pile work in the “Outfall”, which elimination amounted to $46,050. Thus, by the contract and Change Orders Nos.- 2 and 3, there was left a contract price of-$18,732 for the “ByPass and Effluent Channel” work.

The Court further finds that during the construction of the piles and caissons in 'the “By-Pass and Effluent Channel”, a substantial part of the work contracted to be done by the plaintiff was eliminated by the defendant, with the result that the plaintiff actually built 46.5 linear feet of 18" piles, as against the original contracted total of 286.05 linear feet; no 24" piles, as against an originally contracted total of 204.1 linear feet; 53.5 linear feet of 30" caissons, as against an originally contracted total of 57.4 linear feet; and no 48" caissons, as against an originally contracted total of 33.45 linear feet. If the elimination of a substantial number of these caissons and piles is a deduction under the terms of the contract, then the defendant is entitled to have deducted from its contract price the sum of $6,666.20. As heretofore stated, the Court finds that the contract price for piles and caissons for the “By-Pass and Effluent Channel” and “Outfall” was $64,782; that the contract price for the piles and caissons in the “Outfall” was $46,050; thus that the contract price for the piles and caissons in the “By-Pass and Effluent Channel” was $18,732; that there has been paid $1,360.-50; that the defendant is entitled to a deduction of $6,666.20 for the elimination of the piles and caissons ordered not to be constructed by Change Order No. 3; and that there was due and unpaid as of August 21, 1951, $10,705.30.

Conclusions of Law

This claim seems one that is aptly fitted for a motion for summary judgment. There is no genuine issue of material fact in this case. The motions for summary judgment strike at the heart of the claim and of the cross-claim. A motion for summary judgment is proper where it is simply a matter of a question of law and there is no issue of material fact. Bartle v. Travelers Ins. Co., 5 Cir., 171 F.2d 469.

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Bluebook (online)
113 F. Supp. 246, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-england-foundation-co-v-f-h-mcgraw-co-rid-1953.