Sgarlat v. Griffith

36 A.2d 330, 349 Pa. 42, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 400
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 12, 1944
DocketAppeal, 235
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 36 A.2d 330 (Sgarlat v. Griffith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sgarlat v. Griffith, 36 A.2d 330, 349 Pa. 42, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 400 (Pa. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Drew,

This suit was brought by plaintiff upon a written contract, to recover extra compensation provided therein for the removal of rock in course of excavation. The case was heard by the court without a jury; and a judgment rendered for defendant was affirmed by the Superior Court. This appeal was by special allowance.

Joseph Pessari engaged appellee (defendant) as general contractor to construct a building. Appellee then made a contract with appellant (plaintiff) to do the excavation and concrete work in accordance with the plans of the architect. The contract provided for the payment of a lump sum of $3,050.00 for all of the construction work, and when the work was finally completed in March 1936 this amount was paid in full.

This contract provided further that “In excavating if rock be found which would require removal by blasting $1.10 per cu. yd. will be paid for by measurements of the architect and certificate furnished by him.” This suit was brought to recover compensation alleged to have been earned under this part of the contract. Rock was found in the excavation, and in large quantity, which required removal by blasting or some equally powerful medium. The property to be excavated was at the corner of Grove and Prospect Streets, in a built up section of the City of Wilkes-Barre. Because of the proximity of buildings and two streets appellant feared possible damage to property and injury to persons if he used dynamite to blast the rock. The uncontradicted testimony shows there was a building ten to twelve feet from the excavation, and another three to five feet away, and that the excavation was twenty-four feet deep, well below the foundations of these buildings. Appellant *44 feared if he blasted in sufficient force to remove the rock he would damage or knock down the buildings. He had purchased the dynamite and brought it on the job when he concluded that it would be best to remove the rock by a jack hammer operated by compressed air. This he did although the expense to himself was much greater than it would have been if the rock were removed by blasting. One of the workmen testified it took four or five weeks to remove the rock by the method used, whereas the same manpower would have taken it out by blasting in two weeks.

Appellant estimated that he had removed 1,120 cubic yards of rock and demanded his compensation as fixed in the written contract. Appellee refused to pay until Pessari paid him, and the latter denied liability on the ground that the rock had not been removed by blasting. Appellant sought a certificate from the architect, who urged him to straighten the matter out with the owner and appellee. When this could not be done appellant engaged counsel, who requested the certificate, and almost four years after the work was done, the architect wrote in a letter to appellant’s counsel as follows: “Regarding the Pessari job and the amount of rock excavation for the same . . ., I find that the total yardage of rock as excavated amounted to 820 cubic yards . . . Regardless of in what manner this material was removed, whether by jack hammer or dynamite, nevertheless it was rock. Consequently, I hereby certify to the removal of the above material, to-wit: 820 cubic yards of rock excavation and leave it to others to adjudicate the terms of the contract for payment or non-payment of the same.” This certificate was attached to the statement of claim.

While appellant claimed 1,120 yards of excavation, the architect certified to the removal of 820 cubic yards of rock. The court found as a fact that 820 cubic yards of rock had been removed by appellant, and this it could only have done on the basis of the architect’s certificate. *45 While it is true that the rock was not removed by blasting, still the architect certified and the court found that 820 cubic yards of rock were removed, and the uncontradicted evidence is that the rock was of such character that it would ordinarily require removal by blasting, which was not resorted to because of the danger to life and property. The lower court held that appellant could not recover because the rock had not been blasted. The Superior Court took the same position.

Appellee sought to make the owner an additional defendant but failed, and he thereupon brought an action against him which is still pending. The result of appellant’s claim to date is, the owner has his building, his contract for its construction has been fully carried out, all the rock in the excavation Avas removed by appellant, as certified by the architect, and the consideration for his labor and materials fixed in the written contract, noAV f902.00 and interest for about eight years, is denied him. No wonder the learned judge of the lower court in his opinion admitted that “greater equity might perhaps be done”, if payment were allowed.

Appellant contends that the literal construction of the contract adopted by the lower court, and the Superior Court, is unfair, unreasonable and oppressive. He contends that the clear intention of the parties was “to pay extra if rock be found regardless of the method of removal.” The loAver court held tenaciously to the dictionary definition of the Avords “require” and “blasting” and held that those words were used in their ordinary and popular sense, and as so used in the contract made it appear that the parties thereto intended that any rock found in the excavation should be removed by the use of dynamite and blasting, and that the rock could not be removed in any otfier way. The Superior Court felt the same Avay about it.

We must say Ave think this is a forced and strained construction of the contract. We are certain, at the time the contract Avas made, the architect, the general con *46 tractor, and the subcontractor, this appellant, did not give any consideration to the method of removal of the rock and made it clear that appellee should only pay extra for the removal of that kind of rock which usually requires blasting. There is no doubt that the quick and cheap way to remove such rock is by blasting; and it must be admitted that this rock would have been removed in that way except for the danger incident to blasting in that place. Since appellee got full and complete performance of his contract, as is demonstrated by the certificate of the architect, he has no reasonable ground of complaint and he should have long since paid to appellant the contract price for his work. Any other view would result in the forfeiture of appellant’s labor and materials for what at most can only be regarded as a trivial or inappreciable variation in the contract. The law is not so harsh as to put such a penalty upon an innocent person for a minor defect which did not damage the other party or cause him to lose a single cent.

If this judgment stands, what becomes of the doctrine of substantial performance, which Judge Cardozo (Jacob & Youngs v. Kent, 230 N. Y. 239, 129 N. E. 889) said “has been developed by the courts as an instrument of justice”? This court has always turned its face against forfeitures. We said in Morgan v. Gamble, 230 Pa. 165, 79 A.

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Bluebook (online)
36 A.2d 330, 349 Pa. 42, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sgarlat-v-griffith-pa-1944.