Ragonese v. United States

120 F. Supp. 768
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMay 4, 1954
Docket49364
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 120 F. Supp. 768 (Ragonese 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
Ragonese v. United States, 120 F. Supp. 768 (cc 1954).

Opinion

WHITAKER, Judge.

On and after November 2, 1942, Frank P. Ragonese and Joseph V. Scaravelli were partners doing business as the Square Construction Company. The partnership will be hereafter referred to as the Square Construction Company, and for the purposes of this opinion will be treated as an entity. It sues for excess costs incurred by reason of encountering quantities of underground water, in the construction of a sewer under a contract with the defendant, in an amount which it says it had no reason to expect.

Plaintiff says, first that by reason of this it is entitled to an equitable adjustment under article 4 of the contract, because of an unknown condition; or, in the alternative, that it is entitled to its excess costs incurred on account of it, because the defendant concealed from it the existence of this water and thus prevented plaintiff from including in its bid an amount to take care of it.

1. As to whether or not plaintiff is entitled to an equitable adjustment under article 4 of the contract. Article 4, which refers to “Changed Conditions,” *769 provides that the contractor is entitled to an equitable adjustment if he “encounter [s], or the Government discover [s], during the progress of the work subsurface and/or latent conditions at the site materially differing from those shown on the drawings or indicated in the specifications.” Did the existence of this water materially differ from the subsurface conditions shown on the drawings or indicated in the specifications?

The defendant employed the Raymond Concrete Pile Company, Gow Division, to make 16 Gow test borings along the proposed sewer line. The plans and specifications set out the character of the soil disclosed by these borings, but said nothing one way or the other about subsurface water. It, therefore, cannot be said that the contractor encountered subsurface or latent conditions materially differing from those specifically shown on the drawings or indicated in the specifications.

It is true that the consulting engineers had made two borings with an earth auger along the proposed sewer line, and that in one of them they had encountered wet clay, but the consulting engineers had abandoned undertaking to make any further borings and had employed the Raymond Concrete Pile Company to ascertain the subsurface conditions. The drawings and specifications made no specific representation as to subsurface water discovered by the Raymond Concrete Pile Company. Since the borings made by this company were the borings which purported to show conditions along the sewer line, and since they did not indicate whether or not there was subsurface water, it cannot be said that the conditions encountered were different from those shown on the drawings or specifications.

However, article 4 further provides that if the contractor encounters “unknown conditions of an unusual nature differing materially from those ordinarily encountered and generally recognized as inhering in work of the character provided for in the plans and specifications,” then in that event the contractor is entitled to an equitable adjustment. Do the conditions encountered come within this clause of article 4?

The sewer line was 5,400 feet long. It commenced on the north with its junction with a sewer in Patapsco Avenue, in Baltimore, Maryland, and ran westerly about 360 feet; thence southerly about 2,750 feet; thence southwesterly approximately 1,400 feet; thence southerly about 370 feet; and thence westerly about 600 feet, where it joined a sewer at Curtis Avenue. Where the sewer line joined the Patapsco Avenue sewer it was less than 100 feet from an open body of water, known as Stonehouse Cove, which is an arm of Chesapeake Bay. For about one-half of its length it ran parallel with Stonehouse Cove and so close to it that when the tide was abnormally high, water from the cove overran about 200 feet of the route of the sewer.

The bottom of the sewer was from 20 to 45 feet below the surface of the ground, and for 4,800 feet of its total length of 5,400 feet it was below the level of the nearby sea. The only portion of it that was above sea level was the last 600 feet where the sewer turned westerly and ran uphill to Curtis Avenue.

The location of the sewer so close to Chesapeake Bay tends to indicate the probable presence of water in the line of the proposed sewer; but the proof shows that this is not necessarily so. Many times subsurface water is encountered where no body of surface water is nearby, and often it is not encountered when open water is nearby. Clay strata often interposes a wall which diverts water from its expected course.

However, the other three contractors who bid on this job expected to encounter water and included substantial sums in their bids to take care of it.

On the other hand, this plaintiff had constructed another sewer line in this general vicinity, at Wagner’s Point, where it had encountered only a small *770 amount of subsurface water. This sewer line was only about 2,000 feet farther away from the Bay then the site of the one under consideration in this case.

Again, the defendant’s report of the findings of the Raymond Concrete Pile Company on the borings made by them showed no subsurface water, whereas it is customarily, shown by them when they encounter it, and this fact was well known to contractors, including plaintiff.

When these things are balanced one' against the other, it is hard to say whether or not unusual conditions were' encountered materially differing from those ordinarily encountered. It is true the consulting engineer and defendant’s construction engineer found that such conditions had been encountered, and so wrote the contracting officer on January 29,1944; but their finding was never approved by the contracting officer.

2. Although it is not easy to determine whether or not article 4.condi-tions were encountered, it is nevertheless true that defendant did withhold from' plaintiff information in its possession which would have warned plaintiff that it was apt to encounter large quantities of excess water. The summary report of the Raymond Concrete Pile Company showed that in boring No. 1 a water level' was reported at 9 feet below ground surface. As heretofore stated, the sewer line was from 20 to 45 feet below ground surface. In boring No. 3 a water level' was reported at 10 feet below ground surface. In boring No. 7 a water level was reported at 7 feet 3 inches below ground surface. In boring No. 15 a water level-was reported at 19 feet below ground surface, and in boring No. 16 a water level was reported at 12 feet 6 inches below ground surface. No water level was shown on the summary report for the other 11 borings, because when this company came to take the water level at these borings, the holes had caved in so that the water level could not be accurately measured. In driving many of the other 11 holes, however, subsurface water was encountered.

None of this information was furnished plaintiff. Had plaintiff had this information, that the water level in 5 of the 16 borings was much above the depth at which the sewer was to be laid, and had it been advised that water was encountered in many of the other 11 borings, but that the accurate water level at them could not be taken because the holes had caved in, 1

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120 F. Supp. 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ragonese-v-united-states-cc-1954.