Rocell Construction Co. v. State

208 Misc. 364, 141 N.Y.S.2d 463, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2539
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedJanuary 4, 1955
DocketClaim No. 31844
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 208 Misc. 364 (Rocell Construction Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rocell Construction Co. v. State, 208 Misc. 364, 141 N.Y.S.2d 463, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2539 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1955).

Opinion

Lambiase, J.

On or about November 9,1950, claimants entered into a contract with the State of New York, the latter acting by and through its Department of Public Works, for the construction of a portion of North Goodman Street, a length of 0.03 miles, which constitutes contract SSC 50-7, and for the construction with Federal aid of a portion of North Goodman Street, a length of 0.75 miles, and the North Goodman Extension, a length of 0.86 miles, a total length of 1.61 miles, which constitutes contract FASS 50-8, a total combined length of 1.64 miles in the County of Monroe, New York as set forth in Exhibit 3 and as shown in the plans.

The contract provides, among other things, for the construction of a sewer beneath the proposed pavement approximately between stations 1+89 and 31+04. Prior to preparing and submitting their bid for said contract, Alvin Petrossi, secretary and treasurer of claimant A. E. Petrossi, Inc., and Romolo Celli, president of Rocell Construction Co., Inc., visited the office of the district engineer of the New York State Department of Public Works in the city of Rochester, New York, which office was in charge of the execution of the work under the proposed contract. There they examined borings and soil test findings pertaining to the contract site. These borings and soil test findings had been made in 1947 by the State of New York and had been made at a point about 20 feet to the left or west of the center line of the existing right of way and more particularly at stations 24+50 and 12+00 of the contract site. (Exh. 10.) The borings at both of these stations were made to a depth of 15 feet below the natural grade. The report of said borings indicated that no rock was found above the fifteen-foot depth at said stations. When Alvin Petrossi aforesaid examined Exhibit 10, he did not notice that the borings had been made 20 feet to the left or [367]*367west of the center line of the highway right of way, and he assumed that they had been made on ‘ the center line thereof. Mr. Romolo Celli, however, at the time that he examined the borings noted and was fully aware of the exact place of the borings as shown on Exhibit 10.

Claimants testified that they assumed that there would be no rock in the excavation for the sewer, and that they prepared and submitted their bid on the basis of such assumption. (S. M. 21-25, 70.)

After the making of said contract and on December 4, 1950, claimants commenced their work thereunder. During the course thereof, and particularly through trench excavation operations undertaken from March 9, 1951, until August 22, 1951, and generally between stations 1+89 and 31+04, they found rock present within required excavation depths. They protested continuation of their work — in the presence of said rock — at the unit price of $1.40 per cubic yard, the price bid by them for excavation under Item 5 — “ Trench, Culvert and Bridge Excavation ” (Exh. D, “ Public Works Specifications ” of Jan. 2, 1947, p. 194, and Itemized Proposal, p. 3, Exh. 3), but were required to by the State of New York, its officers and employees, and they did continue with the contract.

The claim alleges: “ 8. That the aforesaid borings and soil tests purported to have been made by the State of New York were negligently and carelessly made and the purported records and findings thereof exhibited to claimants were inaccurate and misleading, whereby claimants Avere wrongfully induced to enter into said contract in the manner aforesaid.” And it is further alleged therein: “ 9. That by reason of the matters aforesaid claimants were wrongfully compelled to expend large sums of money for labor, equipment and materials in excavating the aforesaid trench and removing rock therefrom and were thereby also greatly delayed and interfered with in the prosecution of the progress of their construction work and in the completion of their entire contract. That after credit and allowance to the State of New York for $1.40 per cubic yard for excavation in the aforesaid trench claimants also sustained damages on account of the foregoing, amount to the sum of $42,448.03.” The claim as filed also sets forth the following cause of action: “10. That on or about March 11,1953, the State of Nbav York submitted to claimants the proposed final estimate, dated November 12, 1952, wherein the State included on quantities of work performed and materials placed the contract prices, and set forth and conceded that at such contract prices there remained a final [368]*368estimate due and payable to claimants in the sum of $19,071.82, which estimate claimants signed under protest in reservation of right to file this claim. Claimants claim herein from the State of New York the set sum of $19,071.82, with interest thereon, in addition to all other claims herein.”

However, subsequent to the filing of the claim and prior to the trial, claimants accepted the final estimate figure of $19,071.82 for the cause of action alleged in paragraph 10 above set forth, and that cause of action in the amount represented by the final estimate was severed and the amount thereof was awarded and paid to claimants. However, the payment and receipt of said sum was without prejudice to claimants’ rights, if any, to recover interest thereon upon the trial of the remaining claims alleged in the notice of claim ” and was “ without prejudice to the rights of any of the parties herein to raise any issue or defense pertaining to the allegations of the notice of claim untried and undetermined.” (Judgment dated June 11, 1953, entered in office of the clerk of the N. Y. State Ct. of Claims.) There was litigated, therefore, before us only the matter of the reserved interest hereinabove mentioned; and the demand for the sum of $42,448.03 (par. 9 of the claim), and as to that claimants’ position is that Either the test borings at Station 12+00, the findings of which Claimants’ Exhibit 10 is purportedly a report, were not in fact taken by the State of New York, or if taken, the results and findings of these test borings were not truthfully and in good faith set forth in the report which is in evidence as claimants’ Exhibit 10.” (Claimants’ proposed finding No. 26); and that the borings report (Exh. 10) failed to disclose the presence of rock, the existence of which the State of New York, its officers and employees, knew or should have known, and that knowledge of its employees is to be deemed knowledge of the State. In short, the State is charged with bad faith.

The State of New York, on the other hand, contends that it did not conceal from claimants any facts in its possession with reference to subsurface conditions at the location of the borings; that it was not guilty of bad faith in its dealings with claimants; and that the encountering of rock by claimants in their trench digging operations and other subsurface operations is part of the risk which the contractor assumed.

In the contract papers, Exhibit 3, “ Information for Bidders ”, there appears, among other things, the following:

No Misunderstanding. The attention of persons intending to make proposals is specifically called to Article 3 of the Agree[369]

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Bluebook (online)
208 Misc. 364, 141 N.Y.S.2d 463, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rocell-construction-co-v-state-nyclaimsct-1955.