Reiman Co. v. Board of Commissioners

3 La. App. 663, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 77
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 15, 1926
DocketNo. 9246
StatusPublished

This text of 3 La. App. 663 (Reiman Co. v. Board of Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reiman Co. v. Board of Commissioners, 3 La. App. 663, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 77 (La. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

CLAIBORNE, J.

This is a suit on a building contract.

The plaintiff alleged that on January 31, 1922, it entered into a contract with the defendant for the sum of $34,187.52 for the erection on the river front of the Robin Street shed and of the Bienville Street shed extension, as appears by a letter of J. H. Walsh, general manager of said board, in lieu of the contract entered into by petitioner and the defendant on February 15, 1921, for the Poydras Street end extension; that the board fixed 200 feet long by 55 feet wide for the Bienville Stfeet shed, and 480 feet long by 100 feet wide for the Robin Street shed, and pointed out and designated the same on the blueprints as the work to be performed for said price; that petitioner performed his contract and earned the $34,187.52; that, in addition thereto, he performed extra work stated in the annexed itemized account amounting of $3182.26, making the total sum of $37,369.78; that he has received on account thereof $35,587.69, leaving a balance due of $1782.09, which he claims from defendant.

The defendant admitted that it entered into a contract with the plaintiff but denied the correctness of the. construction placed upon it by plaintiff; it denied that it fixed the dimensions of the Bienville Street and Robin Street sheds mentioned on the blueprint as the work to be performed for the price of the contract; but that said dimensions were merely for the purpose of showing the lines which the Pensacola steel would reach- on the shed; that the defendant paid to the plaintiff [664]*664$1000.00 in settlement of all expenses incurred by the plaintiff and resulting from the change of one shed to another, but that -it was agreed that the plaintiff should carry out the original contract of February 15, 1921, with the understanding that the work contemplated therein would be performed on the Robin Street and Bienville Street shed extensions, and that in all other respects the contract as executed would remain in full. force and effect; the defendant further averred that the work was bid in on a unit price and that the plaintiff had to perform the same quantity of work to obtain the unit price of so much per square yard on the new shed, under the new agreement of January 31, 1922, which they would have performed on the Poydras Street shed under the old agreement of February 15, 1921, the original contract remaining the same except as to location; it annexed a list showing the area and quantity of work actually performed by the plaintiff; that the plaintiff has performed less work than was contemplated, and that on the basis of a unit price the balance of the work to make up the equal quantity on the unit price according to the agreement amounts to the exact amount for which plaintiff sues.

There was judgment for plaintiff and defendant has appealed.

The whole controversy between the plaintiff and defendant is whether the contract called for the erection of the Poydras Street shed for the flat sum of $34,187.52 mentioned in the contract, or whether it intended that it should be built on a unit basis price according to the estimated amount of work to be done and probable cost, the plaintiff asserting the first proposition and the defendant the latter.

The history of this contract is as follows:

The defendant proposed to erect sheds at the foot of Canal street as a continuation of the Poydras Street sheds. For that purpose they invited proposals from contractors for the furnishing, erecting and painting the material in accordance with specifications prepared by the chief engineer of the board.

The proposals 'provided:

“That said work shall be done for the full unit price and estimated total lump sum as stated below * * *:
“I. Siding to be removed, lump sum $48; approximately 19 squares;
“II. Siding to be furnished in place: Unit price per sq. ft. or net area $20.66, lump sum $3102.00, estimated quantity 160 sqs.
“III. Roof sheathing, lump sum $9310.00, approximate quantity 115 M ft.
“IV. Painting woodwork, lump sum $2624.00.
“V. Roofing to be furnished in place, unit price per sq. ft. of net surface 19,295, total $12,580.00, estimated quantity 622 sqs., using Barrett specification roof.
“VI. Sheet metal work, lump sum $3422.00.
“VII. Doors 13, unit price each $11.00, total $Í43.00.
“VIII. Doors 11, unit price each $32.00, total $352.00.
“IX. Sash lights, lump sum $730.00.
“X. Downspouts, unit price each $35.00, total $490.00.
“XI. Electric, lump sum $685.00.
“XII. Miscellaneous lump sum $500.
•‘Grand total $34,187.52.
“The said contractor shall be paid for said work in accordance with method B, [665]*665specified in said specifications and accepted by it, as follows: Method ‘B’: Once a month the engineers shall cause to be made an estimate of the work in position, applying the unit prices to the quantity of work erected. The contractor shall then be paid 90% of this amount. When the work is completed to the satisfaction of the chief engineer of the board and accepted by him, a survey of the work shall be made to determine the exact quantities in place, to which unit prices shall be applied; the contractor shall then be paid in full for the work done under the contract.’
“It is agreed and understood that the quantities given in the proposal as ‘approximate’ are only approximate and are to serve as a guide to the bidder in fixing his lump sum bid for such item. The board does not hold itself responsible for the correctness of said quantities. Quantities given in the proposal as ‘Estimated’ are estimated and shall serve as a guide to the bidder in fixing his unit cost bid for such items; final quantities of these items under unit cost will be determined as follows: Sidings and roofings: Net area covered. Doors and cast-iron downspouts. As called for the proposal.”

The plaintiff became the successful bidder under those specifications. But neither the plaintiff nor the defendant has offered the bid in evidence. The officers of defendant swear that the bid was a unit bid and not for a lump sum. They have no interest in the matter. Nowhere in the testimony does plaintiff deny this. The letter of the specification supports, the defendant’s interpretation. They are different from ordinary building contracts. Why are they different and why are all these estimates as to price and quantities given, if the shed were to be erected for a flat price?

The best rule of interpretation is that prescribed by Article C. C. 1956 (1951): “When the intent of the parties is doubtful the construction put upon it, by the manner in which it has been executed by both, or by one with the express or implied assent of the other, furnishes a rule for its interpretation.”

It is in evidence that when more work was done by the plaintiff than was mentioned in the approximate estimate contained in the specifications, the plaintiff was paid more for it, and that when less work was done, the difference was deducted.

Samuel Young is the Chief Engineer of the defendant Board. He testifies:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jackson Brewing Co. v. Canton
43 So. 454 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1907)
Jeanerette Rice & Milling Co. v. Durocher
48 So. 780 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1909)
Bradshaw v. Knoll
61 So. 839 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1913)
Bright v. Metairie Cemetery Ass'n
33 La. Ann. 58 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1881)
New Orleans, Baton Rouge & Bayou Sara Packet Co. v. Brown
36 La. Ann. 138 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1884)
Police Jury v. Mayor of Monroe
38 La. Ann. 630 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1886)
Reynolds & Henry Construction Co. v. Police Jury
44 La. Ann. 863 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1892)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 La. App. 663, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reiman-co-v-board-of-commissioners-lactapp-1926.