Shea v. Sewerage & Water Board

50 So. 166, 124 La. 299, 1909 La. LEXIS 467
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 30, 1909
DocketNo. 16,856
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 50 So. 166 (Shea v. Sewerage & Water Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shea v. Sewerage & Water Board, 50 So. 166, 124 La. 299, 1909 La. LEXIS 467 (La. 1909).

Opinion

PROVO STY, J.

The plaintiff, T. J. Shea, was awarded contracts O -and F of the numerons contracts for the laying of sewers and their appurtenances in the city of New Orleans. He completed contract F, and had constructed the sewers under contract C, and had cleaned the most of them, ready for inspection, when differences arose between him and the defendant board, over the responsibility for failures which had developed in the sewers, which led him to abandon' the contract and bring this suit. He avers that he fulfilled these contracts, and demands $145,483.60, which, he alleges, is the balance due him. The claim is divided into amounts for regular work under the contracts, for extras, and for damages. The claims for extras and damages are itemized in exhibits annexed to the petition.

The defenses are a general denial and the special defenses: that plaintiff was paid all that was due under contract F; that he abandoned contract C incomplete; that there was to his credit at that time on the books of defendant $79,607.28; but that defendant [305]*305has since then completed the sewers at the expense of plaintiff, as it had. a right to do under the contract, at a cost of $54,-014.92, and has, moreover, expended, in repairing damage caused by plaintiff and in other extra work, as set forth in detail, $1,564.26; that these expenses offset pro tanto the said credit of plaintiff; and that, plaintiff owes, in addition, $41,100, liquidated damages for delay in the completion of said contract, being 411 days at $100 per day, as stipulated in said contract, which more than offsets the balance to the credit of plaintiff, leaving him - indebted to defendant in the sum of $16,318.90, for which defendant prays judgment.

Defendant filed in this court an exception of no cause of action based on the grounds that plaintiff has annexed and made part of his petition the contract upon which his suit is brought, and yet has failed to allege that the work for the price of which he sues has been completed to the satisfaction of defendant’s general superintendent, or that said officer, in withholding his approval, has been actuated by fraud or bad faith, although said contract provides that no payment shall be due until the work contracted for is completed to the satisfaction of said officer; and, also, that plaintiff is asking payment for extra work, and yet has not alleged that such extra work was ordered in writing, although said contract provides that no extra work shall be paid for unless ordered in writing.

It is needless to consider what merit this exception might have had if filed in limine, while the suit stood on the naked petition. 'Perhaps defendant might have then contended that it had the right to withhold payment until plaintiff had shown that he had completed the work to the satisfaction of the engineer, and that.it owed nothing for extra work not shown to have been ordered in writing; but in its answer defendant alleged that it had forbidden plaintiff to go on with the work, and had, itself, completed it at the expense of plaintiff, and that it had done so under and by virtue of clause 265 of the contract. If so, plaintiff certainly has-a cause of action for whatever balance may be left of the money earned by (him under-the contract after deduction of the expense of completing the work. By going into possession of the work, thereby accepting the benefit of it so far as beneficial, defendant most unquestionably incurred liability to the extent of such benefit; that is to say, to the amount due plaintiff for work done after deduction of the expense of completing the work. More than this, the said clause 205' expressly provides that any balance left over after completion of the work must be paid to the contractor. The suit is for this balance. Whether there is one, and how large it is, is the matter in litigation. In other words, the- suit, as it stands on this appeal,, is simply one in settlement of accounts.

So far as the petition not showing a cause of action for failure to allege that the extra work was ordered in writing is concerned,, the answer expressly admits that more than $10,000 is due for extra work, and it intimates that a further admission will in all probability be made later. After such an admission there is not much room for an exception of no cause of action.

Touching the necessity of a written order for these extras, we may say here, once for all, that most of the claims are for damages and repair work, and work necessary for the construction of the sewers, such as plaintiff had no discretion about, but had to do, or else abandon the work of construction. For all such extras no written order can be necessary. If among the extras there are some for which a written order would have been necessary, we are not aware of it. The case was not tried on that line in the lower court, and such claims, if any there are, are [307]*307not specially noted in the briefs. If any such there be, perhaps written orders could have been produced for them, if called for in the lower court.

The main dispute is over the expense of repairing the failures. Of course, responsibility for these expenses follows responsibility for the failures themselves. Hence we pass at once to that question. Plaintiff can be held responsible for the failures only in so far as they appear to have resulted from fault in his work. In that connection we' will allude to some general features of the case before coming to the details. Even before mentioning these general features, however, it might be well to give a word of explanation touching the manner of constructing the sewers.

The sewer pipe is laid 12 or more feet underground, and is constructed by joining sections of pipe end to end. These sections are 2% feet long, and, of course, of the diameter which it is desired the sewer should be of. The section of pipe is of uniform diameter, except at one end, where it flares, or, rather, has a collar, or enlargement, of sufficient inside diameter to admit freely the end of the section of pipe that is to be joined to it. This collar, or enlargement, gives to that end of the pipe, for a space of about five inches, a greater outer diameter of about four inches, or two inches all around. This collar, or enlargement, is called “the bell.” The other end of the section of pipe is called “the spigot.” And we may add that the space between is called “the barrel.” These sections of pipe we shall hereinafter call “pipes.” Preparatory to excavating the trench along the bottom of which the sewer is to be laid, sheeting is driven into the ground, and the earth is then removed from between the two lines of sheeting. As the excavating proceeds, a rail, or ranger, is added to each side of the trench, and from the rail on one side of the trench to the rail on the other side of the trench braces are inserted across the trench. The sewer pipe starts from a manhole and ends in a manhole, of which there is one at every cross street. The manhole is an independent construction, and, being of heavy masonry, is always provided with a foundation. The sewer pipe is lighter, than the soil it displaces. Hence no foundation is necessary for laying it, unless the bottom of the trench happens to be soft. At about every 30 feet occurs what is called a “tee,” by which is meant a section of pipe provided with an opening to serve for making connection with the sewer. The opening in this tee is by means of a neck added to the side of the section of pipe. The tee derives its name from its supposed, or real, resemblance to a capital T. When in position, it is inverted, thus A.

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Bluebook (online)
50 So. 166, 124 La. 299, 1909 La. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shea-v-sewerage-water-board-la-1909.