Snead & Co. Iron Works v. Merchants Loan & Trust Co.

80 N.E. 237, 225 Ill. 442
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 80 N.E. 237 (Snead & Co. Iron Works v. Merchants Loan & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snead & Co. Iron Works v. Merchants Loan & Trust Co., 80 N.E. 237, 225 Ill. 442 (Ill. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Chibs Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the court:

The transcript of the record in this cause contains 1881 pages. The printed abstract filed by plaintiff in error contains 529 pages. Defendants in error complain of the abstract as being incomplete and misleading, but as they have not filed a further abstract, the one on file will be taken by us “to be accurate and sufficient for a full understanding of the questions presented for decision.” (Rule 14 of the Rules of Practice of this court.)

The principal controversy is over a claim presented by . plaintiff in error for work which it deems to be extra work performed upon the elevator screens and stairway balustrades in the annex to the Marshall Field building in Chicago, which is used as a retail store.

• The document originally signed by the plaintiff in error provided that the work should be executed “according to drawings and specifications prepared by D. H. Burnham, * * * signed by contractor hereto and made a part hereof.” Those drawings are referred to as scale drawings, and were used as a basis for the bid. They were drawn upon the scale of one-half inch to the foot and showed the outline of designs for screens and balustrades for the first story only, and showed that there were to be at certain indicated points ornamental features, such as leaf work, but did not show the character, quality or extent of such work, and the specifica= tions did not help the drawings in this respect.

At and before the time of the signing of the contract as originally drafted, there were in the office of Burnham, the architect, photographs of elaborate ornamental iron work that had been executed in Europe, also a sample section of highly ornamental iron grille work. Mr. Perkins, superintendent for Burnham, acted as the agent of Field in negotiating with plaintiff in error a contract after the bid had béen accepted. These negotiations extended over several days, and the contract as originally drafted covers nine pages in the printed abstract. After plaintiff in error, by William R. Snead, its general manager, had signed it and had signed the drawings and specifications, Perkins presented to Snead certain of the photographs and asked that he sign the photographs as illustrative of the ornamental iron work that was to be done on the balustrades and elevator screens. The general manager refused to do this. It is contended that plaintiff in error, by its agents, had, prior to the time it made its bid, inspected the photographs and the grille with the understanding that they were of the same general character as the ornamental work which the successful bidder would be required to do on the screens and balustrades. As to whether or not this statement is true the evidence is conflicting, but the contention of plaintiff in error in that respect finds substantial support in the fact that the work which the architect finally required it to do was much less expensive and less elaborate than that shown by the grille and photographs in question. It is entirely manifest, moreover, that when the photographs were presented to Snead to be signed by him for the purpose of identification, as showing the character of the work required, he, Snead, said he did- not bid on elaborate work like that, and that if the architect required work of that kind, he, Snead, would have nothing to do with it.- These photographs showed iron work ornamented with garlands of fruit and figures of cherubs. When Snead first refused to sign, Perkins said the “fruit and babies” could be eliminated, but Snead protested that the work would then be more elaborate than that which he had understood would be required.

With the negotiations in this state, Snead having, for his company, signed the contract as originally drafted and having signed the drawings and specifications and having refused to sign the photographs, left Burnham’s office and went to luncheon with Perkins. After they left the office negotiations continued between them. Snead stated to Perkins the amount that he had figured in the bid to cover the balustrades and elevator screens, as he understood they were to be constructed in accordance with the scale drawings, and said, in substance, that if balustrades and elevator screens were to be required that could not be furnished at those figures he did not desire to enter into the contract. They separated without coming to any agreement, and on the sanie day Snead wrote to Perkins, and on that day or the next morning Perkins received, the letter which is set out in the foregoing statement.

Shortly after the original draft of the contract had been signed by Field, plaintiff in error entered upon the performance of the contract and furnished the balustrades and elevator screens in accordance with full-sized detail drawings thereafter furnished him by Burnham, protesting, from time to time, however, that the character of the work was more elaborate than the contract contemplated, and that it was not covered by the contract and for that reason should be regarded as extra work. The ornamental features consisted of leaves, buds, fruits, vines and various artistic figures which were not indicated by the scale drawings, and some of which necessitated hand work by skilled iron workers.

It is plain that the scale drawings were too indefinite to enable the contractor to determine what was required, and that the contract as originally drawn was in that respect ambiguous and uncertain. Had the photographs or specimen of grille work been made a part of the contract, by reference or otherwise, the ambiguity would have been removed, or if the letter of November 23 is to be regarded as a part of the contract, then, for the purpose of this litigation, the ambiguity is likewise removed, because in that event the value of the stairway balustrades and the elevator screens as they were made and placed in the building by plaintiff in error, in so far as they exceed in value the amounts stated in that letter as being the value of that work as contemplated by the bid, is recoverable by plaintiff in error from defendants in error, on the theory that the amount of that excess is the value of extra work on the screens and balustrades.

Defendants in error first contend that the grille and photographs should be considered for the purpose of enabling the court to understand what the parties wrote in the contract, as they understood it at the time. This cannot be, as it is evident that plaintiff in error never consented that the photographs or grille were illustrative of the work that was to be furnished or had any connection therewith, and such consent was a necessary preliminary to their being so regarded.

Defendants in érror also argue that it is almost impossible to make the scale drawings and specifications show the details of the work or even indicate fully its character and value, but that they always need to be, and are, supplemented, and that they may be supplemented by enlarged sketches on the margin of the scale drawings, or by reference to known and existing specimens of similar work, or by reference to photographs of such work. This reasoning is sound, but where specimens or photographs are relied upon to supplement the scale drawings they should be identified as a part of the contract or as illustrative thereof, so that there could be no question that they were used to supplement the scale drawings. In this case there was no such marginal sketch and no such specimen or photograph was so identified.

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Bluebook (online)
80 N.E. 237, 225 Ill. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snead-co-iron-works-v-merchants-loan-trust-co-ill-1907.