Strobel Steel Construction Co. v. Sanitary District of Chicago

160 Ill. App. 554, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 927
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 7, 1911
DocketGen. No. 15,416
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 160 Ill. App. 554 (Strobel Steel Construction Co. v. Sanitary District of Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strobel Steel Construction Co. v. Sanitary District of Chicago, 160 Ill. App. 554, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 927 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff, Strobel Steel Construction Company, appellant in this court, brought an action in the Municipal Court of Chicago against the Sanitary District of Chicago, appellee, to recover a balance alleged to be due for the construction of a dam known as the ‘ ‘Emergency Butterfly Dam” located in the drainage canal of the Sanitary District of Chicago. The plaintiff claimed a balance due on the contract appearing by the final certificate of the engineers, amounting to $12,915.92, and in addition thereto damages occasioned by various acts of interference of the defendant with the execution of the contract by the plaintiff, thus causing delay and expense to the plaintiff in completing its .contract.

The amended declaration contained 24 counts in which the claims and causes of action are set up in various forms, but inasmuch as no question is made as to the sufficiency of the averments to authorize the introduction of evidence in support of the plaintiff’s claim, we do not think it necessary to recite the substance of the declaration or any count thereof.

The contract set forth in the declaration under which the dam was constructed was dated July 25, 1906, and by its terms the plaintiff agreed to begin work within fifteen days after the execution of the contract and to complete the main structure of the dam so as to be able to move and close it by March 1, 1907. For a failure on the part of the plaitiff to complete the work on that date, it was agreed that the plaintiff should pay $100 per day as liquidated damages for as many days as the completion should be delayed beyond the time fixed by the contract. Other parts of the dam, including operating machinery, shaft house, etc., on the abutments were required to lie completed by June 1,1907, under a penalty of $25 per day as liquidated damages for failure to complete the work in the time mentioned by the contract. This latter penalty of $25 per day has been waived by the defendant, and no point was made thereon in the court below or is made here. The defendant claimed, however, that the completion of the dam proper was delayed by the plaintiff until about August 1, 1907, and that the defendant thus became entitled to off-set the liquidated damages or penalty of $12,000 against the plaintiff’s claim.

The bid of plaintiff for the construction of the dam was accepted on July 25, 1906, and the contract was awarded to it. The contract was not for a gross sum of money, but was awarded on the principle of “unit prices,” so-called, by which the plaintiff was to receive a certain price per cubic yard for the excavation and concreting and a certain price per pound for the steel construction, etc. The exact location of the dam had not been fixed upon and determined at the date of the contract, and it appears from the record that it was not until July 31st, that the exact location of the dam was determined by Mr. Bandolph, Chief Engineer of the Sanitary District. When the site was thus fixed upon, a considerable portion of it was still unexcavated and not cleared by the Sanitary District; some of it was still covered by the solid rock which had to be blasted out, and over other portions of it was strewn loose rock, which had been blasted out and not yet removed. The workmen of the Sanitary District were engaged on portions of the site in loading and removing this earth and rock by means of cars run upon tracks laid in the bed of the channel, and afterwards by means of a derrick and tracks upon the banks of the channel.

It appears from the record that although the site was thus fixed and determined upon on July 31, 1906, it was not marked and staked out so that work could be commenced until a later date. Under the contract, it was for the engineers of the Sanitary District to furnish lines, marks and grades, for all parts of the work included in the contract, so that the location of the various parts could he definitely ascertained and determined before work should be started. This was done from time to time after July 31, 1906, as the site was gradually cleared by the Sanitary District. The site of the south pier was staked out on August 24th and that of the center pit on the next day, August 25th. The site of the north pier was cleared and staked out somewhere from October 26th to November 6th and 7th, 1906, although blasting was still going on in the breast rock in close proximity to this pier at this date and for some time afterwards. The site of the east abutment was staked out about November 1, 1906, and that of the west abutment about November 27, 1906. The site of the west abutment was not cleared at the time it was staked out, and the portion of the solid rock which impinged upon this site and also upon the site of the tunnel, under the northwest quadrant, was not removed until early in the month of March, 1907.

As originally planned, a tunnel was to be built underneath the channel, extending from the west shore straight across to the north abutment. This tunnel was to have a shaft at each end, and was large enough for a person to go through for the purpose of communication between the shore and the parts of the dam located in midstream. Shortly after the work was begun it appears that the location of this tunnel was changed, so as to run diagonally from the north pier to the west abutment, and through the site of the west floor.

The removal of the rock at the site of the west abutment and the northwest quadrant was not completed until April 20, 1907. The work of concreting the west floor of the tunnel could not be completed until this rock had been removed and the site cleared. This, it will be noted, was after the date fixed by the contract for its completion, to wit, March 1, 1907; that is to say, that while the plaintiffs were under contract to complete the entire work by March 1, 1907, a portion of the site, according to the evidence, was not cleared, ready for the work, until a month and twenty days after that date. The work of erecting a steel superstructure necessarily awaited upon and followed the excavation and concreting.

On the trial of the case there was no dispute as to the amount which would be due the plaintiff in case no penalty was assessed for delay under the clause in the contract. It was agreed upon the trial that the amount of' the reserved percentage in the hands of the defendant on previous certificates, due and unpaid to the plaintiff, was $3,223.93.

The final estimate of McCartney, Assistant Engineer of the District, dated December 12, 1907, shows a balance due on that date of $6,003.35. In addition to this it was admitted by counsel for the defendant that there was due and unpaid for extra work and material furnished under the contract the sum of $3,688.64, making the total amount due on the contract and for extras $12,915.92. The amount of the verdict was $4,665.95,- and inasmuch as the only defense offered in the court below was based upon the clause of the contract providing for liquidated damages of $100 per day, the difference between the amount of the verdict and the amount due to the plaintiff according to the certificates of the engineers and the agreed amount for extras, can only be accounted for by the allowance by the jury of substantially $100 a day for 82% days to the defendant as liquidated damages.

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Bluebook (online)
160 Ill. App. 554, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 927, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strobel-steel-construction-co-v-sanitary-district-of-chicago-illappct-1911.