Orino v. United States

77 F. Supp. 938, 111 Ct. Cl. 491, 1948 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 57
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJune 1, 1948
DocketNo. 46063
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 77 F. Supp. 938 (Orino v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orino v. United States, 77 F. Supp. 938, 111 Ct. Cl. 491, 1948 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 57 (cc 1948).

Opinion

LittRetoN, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff seeks to recover on three separate items of claim arising out of a contract for the construction of an irrigation canal on. the Deschutes River near the city of Bend, Oregon.

[513]*513In the bidding documents the contract work was described as “Earth Work and Structures Station 28+24 to Station 110+00 North Unit Main Canal.” The work was divisible into two parts, namely, the portion consisting of the approach channel and headwork structures at the upstream or river end of the canal to station 28+24 and the portion consisting principally of the unlined canal downstream to station 110+00.

The headworks, at the upstream or river end of the canal, consisted primarily of all excavation of rock and common material upstream in the direction of the Deschutes River from a point designated as station 32+63.94 required for the construction of the headworks, including an approach channel to the trash rack and fish screen portion of the headworks structures, the installation of concrete structures to contain the trash rack, fish screens, and gate, installation of these and other specified appurtenances, and the construction of a concrete-lined channel downstream from such structures to station 32+63.94.

The work in the canal downstream from station 32+63.94 xo station 110+00 consisted principally of the excavation of rock and common material necessary to the construction of an unlined canal, varying in width at the bottom from 20 to 60 feet, according to the nature of the ground.

Payment for the contract work, except with respect to a temporary cofferdam for unwatering the foundation for the lieadworks, was not on a lump-sum basis, but was on the basis of the quantities of work or material supplied, at specified unit prices. The greater part of the material, including sand, gravel, and cement for the concrete, was to be supplied by defendant. The contract work was completed within the required time and was accepted by defendant.

For the work performed, other than that comprising the basis of the three items of claim involved in the present suit, the contractor was paid the agreed unit prices. Likewise, for the work comprising plaintiff’s first item of claim, namely, certain subaqueous rock excavation performed upstream from station 28+24, to wit, between stations 28+24 shown in the contract and a new station designated as 27 + 24, which the: contractor was required to perform in order to [514]*514fully and completely connect the full width of the headworks portion of the canal with the Deschutes River, the contractor was paid, under his protest, the unit price of $1.25 per cubic yard, fixed in the bid schedule for rock excavation for head-works. Plaintiff seeks to be paid the reasonable cost and price for this work, rather than the aforesaid unit price, which the contractor contended, and which the executrix now contends, was inapplicable to the work in question.

Plaintiff’s second and third items of claim involve, respectively, certain rock excavation beyond the neat lines of. the side walls of the unlined portion of the canal, and the placing of certain concrete below the neat lines of the foundation subgrade in a portion of the headworks section, of the canal. For these two items of work the contractor was paid nothing, nothwithstanding his conception that they were part of the contract work required under the specifications, for which an agreed unit price of 80 cents per cubic yard, and $15 per cubic yard, respectively, was provided in the bid schedule.

Item 1. claim for $25,704 for extra subaqueous rock EXCAVATION

The substance of plaintiff’s complaint with respect to this item of claim is that the contractor was compelled to perform a substantia! amount of subaqueous excavation outside the limits of the canal project as fixed by the contract documents, and that for such work plaintiff is entitled to be paid-a fair and reasonable price for this work which is substantially more than the unit price fixed by the contract for dry rock excavation in the headworks section of the canal. The facts are fully set forth in findings 5 to 17, both inclusive, to which reference will be made in discussing this item of claim, in lieu of a detailed restatement of the facts here.'

The- excavation for which plaintiff seeks this additional compensation was performed entirely upstream from station 28 + 24, the station point indicated both in the specifications and on the face of the various contract documents as the upstream extremity of the project upon which the contract work was to be performed (finding 5).

Paragraph 17 of the specifications, entitled “The requirement,” reads:

[515]*51517. The requirement. — It is required that there be constructed and completed, in accordance with these specifications and the drawings listed in paragraph 20 hereof, the earthwork and structures from station 28+24 to station 110+00, North Unit main canal, Deschutes project, Oregon. The work is located at Bend, Oregon, as shown on the location map.

The stations there indicated are at intervals of 100 feet. The figures on the plans after the station number indicate the number of feet beyond the numbered station. The total distance from station 110+00 (the downstream end) to station 28+24 (the upstream end) was 8,176 feet. The unlined channel extended from station 110+00 to station 32+68.94. The concrete-lined channel and concrete headworks extended from the latter station to station 28+58. Station 28+24, 34 feet upstream from the upstream extremity of the concrete headworks, was the point of intersection of the center line of the canal and the bank of the Deschutes River, the source from which water was to be diverted into the canal. This 34-foot section was an approach channel to the concrete headworks. The work in this 34-foot portion of the canal consisted entirely of excavation of rock and common material to the lines and grades specified.

Because the end of the canal above the headworks to station 28+24 approached the river at an acute angle, the excavation of the canal to grade and to its full width of 50 feet at station 28+24 brought a part of the work out beyond the water line of the river (and involved to some extent excavation of material from below the surface of the river) on that half of the width of the canal lying nearest the river. Because of this same physical circumstance the excavation of the canal to station 28+24 did not bring the other half of the canal width up to the water line of the river. This fact was fairly disclosed on the drawings listed in paragraph 20 of the specifications (see findings 6 and 8). The work called for by the contract between stations 28+24 to station 110+00 was designated as the “Schedule” of work to be performed.

Notwithstanding the designation of the contract work as “earthwork and structures from station 28+24 to station [516]*516110+00,” in paragraph 17 of the specifications, as well as in the heading of the schedule of units and prices, the contractor was required by defendant to excavate the canal a further distance of 100 feet upstream, not indicated in the contract documents, on the land side from station 28+24, and to where the bottom of the channel met the bed of the river within a radius of 100 feet from station 28+24 swung outward from the land side of the canal.

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Related

Clemens Construction Company v. United States
288 F.2d 483 (Court of Claims, 1961)
Clemens Construction Co. v. United States
153 Ct. Cl. 170 (Court of Claims, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 F. Supp. 938, 111 Ct. Cl. 491, 1948 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orino-v-united-states-cc-1948.