Snyder v. Reading School District

166 A. 875, 311 Pa. 326, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 546
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 23, 1933
DocketAppeal, 44
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 166 A. 875 (Snyder v. Reading School District) 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
Snyder v. Reading School District, 166 A. 875, 311 Pa. 326, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 546 (Pa. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Schaffer,

Plaintiff entered into a contract with defendant school district to construct a schoolhouse. After partly proceeding with the work, he alleges he was unwarrantably discharged from the job and his contract was cancelled. He brought this action to recover damages for injuries to his credit and reputation, for loss of profits which he would have made, and for the cost of labor and materials which he had furnished. The jury found a verdict in his favor for $44,775.60, representing only the cost of the labor and materials contributed by him to the undertaking, and interest thereon. The court reduced the award to $40,100.53, the amount of the reduction covering the cost of removing certain defective work. From the judgment entered for the reduced amount the school district appeals.

The main dispute turns upon the construction of the contract; whether the certificate of the architect is conclusive upon the question of substantial violation of the provisions of the contract by the plaintiff and warranted defendant in terminating his employment, or whether the reasonableness of the architect’s determination that defaults existed may be inquired into by a jury and whether they may determine the correctness of his conclusion.

*331 The pertinent provisions of the contract appear in the Reporter’s notes.

The theory of plaintiff’s case was that the defendant had unjustifiably terminated his employment when the contract was partly performed when he was not intentionally at fault and when he was endeavoring to comply with the terms of his contract and to remedy correctable mistakes.

It is .argued by appellant that because plaintiff admits that he had not complied with the terms of the specifications in certain respects — in one instance, in not putting footings under a wall, and in another, by omitting “integral waterproofing” from a second wall — that these omissions, and his failure to employ a competent superintendent, justified the architect’s certificate of dismissal and the school board’s action of discharge from the job.

So far as the absence of footing is concerned, plaintiff testified that this was a mistake which he was in the act of correcting when he was discharged. As to the absence of waterproofing, he averred, and the correspondence bears out his testimony, that he had offered to arbitrate this matter in accordance with the terms of the contract and the defendant had acquiesced in an arbitration before he was discharged. As to the superintendent, plaintiff testified that the man he had employed was a proper person and was so recognized by the architect, but his discharge was demanded by a member of the school board.

Appellant contends that article XXII of the contract is controlling so far as the powers to be exercised by the architect are concerned; that the architect is the final judge of whether substantial violations of any provision of the contract have occurred; that he is not only the final judge of such alleged violations, but is also the judge of whether, if such violátions exist, they constitute sufficient cause to justify the termination of the contractor’s employment. This contention involves too close *332 a reading of section 22 and disregards the contract as a whole. To reach a proper interpretation, the whole contract must be considered: Vulcanite Paving Co. v. Phila., 239 Pa. 524; Moran v. Bair, 304 Pa. 471.

A construction of article XXII of the contract which would give to the architect the right to say conclusively whether or not one of the conditions set forth therein does or does not exist must be rejected if upon examination of other provisions of the contract it appears that such right or power is limited. Article XXXIX provides that the architect’s decisions, in matters relating to artistic effect, shall be final (which to a degree at least negatives the idea that it was to be so on other matters), and that “except as above or otherwise expressly provided in the contract documents, all of the architect’s decisions are subject to arbitration.” Article XXXVIII provides that the “architect is in the first instance the judge of the performance of the contract.” This provision would be unnecessary if the architect’s decisions under article XXII are to be final. It would seem that those instances where the architect’s decisions are to be final are found in article XIV, which provides that the superintendent shall be satisfactory to the architect, and in the general provisions of the contract, where it is provided that the architect’s decision as to the true construction and meaning of the drawings and specifications shall be final. Our view of the contract is that the parties intended that the conditions recited in article XXII prior to the mention of the architect’s certificate should exist and be proved as a fact. In view of the conflict in the testimony as to this the question was for the jury. The receipt by the owner of the architect’s certificate is no protection to him, if in fact there had been no substantial violation by the contractor. Some of the conditions mentioned in article XXII are obviously not a matter of judgment of the architect, such as the bankruptcy of the contractor, or the appointment of a receiver on account of insolvency. Had the intent of the *333 parties been to give to the certificate of the architect the effect of discharging the contractor, under any circumstance and for any cause, the parties could have clearly so stipulated. This, however, they did not do. Discharging a contractor after he has expended money- for materials and labor, and partly proceeded with the work, is a very drastic act and can be sustained only in cases where the power to do so is clear and the performance by the. contractor plainly not in accordance with his undertaking.

We are here considering a contract which speaks of a “substantial violation of any provision.” By these words it would seem to us the parties had in mind a wilful and intentional noncompliance with the plans or specifications and such a course of conduct does not appear. As to the waterproofing, the plaintiff could not be said, to be in default so long as he acted honestly and was led to believe by the defendant’s acquiescence in his request for arbitration that the correcting of this alleged defect could be held in abeyance until the arbitrators had passed on it. The architect himself testified the waterproofing could have been satisfactorily done in a different manner from that provided by the specifications, but that the school board decided against him as to this. Under these circumstances, it would seem to have been a fair matter for arbitration. Evidently the school board so concluded, because they agreed to the arbitration and designated the President of the Bar Association to name the arbitrator. They could not lull the contractor into a sense of security by leading him to believe they were willing to arbitrate and then change position, contend that the contractor had violated the provision of the contract requiring waterproofing, and terminate the contract with him on this ground. Having agreed to arbitrate, they could not insist upon the forfeiture.

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Related

Harris & Harris Construction Co. v. Crain & Denbo, Inc.
123 S.E.2d 590 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1962)
Commonwealth v. Snyder
187 A. 254 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1936)
McClelland v. New Amsterdam Casualty Co.
185 A. 198 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1936)
School District No. 1 v. Howard
52 P.2d 421 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
166 A. 875, 311 Pa. 326, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-reading-school-district-pa-1933.