Sun Dredging, &c., Co. v. Ottens

87 A. 1003, 84 N.J.L. 740, 55 Vroom 740, 1913 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 18, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 87 A. 1003 (Sun Dredging, &c., Co. v. Ottens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sun Dredging, &c., Co. v. Ottens, 87 A. 1003, 84 N.J.L. 740, 55 Vroom 740, 1913 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 62 (N.J. 1913).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Vredenburgh, J.

The plaintiff corporation sued to recover the sum of $2,253, with interest, being the balance claimed to be due it under the terms of a written contract between it and the defendant, dated October 31st, 1911, for the filling with sand of defendant’s lots, including the sidewalks adjacent thereto, in the borough of North Wildwood, Cape May county, New Jersey.

These lots were located upon and bounded by certain streets as laid down on a map of the borough entitled, “Ocean Front Tract,” and were designated thereon by numbers and described by dividing lines bounded upon the streets.

[742]*742The total contract price for this filling was $7,580, being at tl^e rate of twenty (20) cents per cubic yard of sand fill which -was to be pumped in by dredging machines, and was to be in quantity not less than thirty-seven thousand nine hundred cubic yards.

It was not disputed at the trial that all the work contracted for, had been done by the plaintiff, and it was admitted that the defendant had, at various times, during the progress of the work, (which had been begun in December, 1911, and finished in March, 1912), paid the plaintiff on account thereof the sum of $5',327, leaving a balance unpaid of the said sum of $2,253.

This balance the defendant claimed the right to set off, or recoup, as damages which he insisted, under his pleaded counter claim, and in his defence at the trial on the merits, he had suffered through the non-performance by the plaintiff of certain provisions of the contract next hereinafter quoted.

The provisions of this contract (of October 31st, 1911), which the defendant asserts have been broken by the plaintiff, are therein thus expressed, viz.:

“It is expressly agreed and understood by and between the parties hereto that this agreement is not to be binding upon either of the parties hereto unless the Sun Dredging and Construction Company shall secure the contract for filling in the streets binding on said lots and blocks hereinbefore enumerated; provided, however, that the said estimate for said filling of the streets shall not exceed the sum of 20 cents per cubic yard” * * *
“In the event of the contract for filling said streets being secured by the Sun Dredging and Construction Company, then and in that ease this agreement shall be in full force and virtue; otherwise to be null.and void and of no effect.”

The evidence shows that subsequently to the execution of this contract, on November 16th, 1911, a third party (McLinden & Company) bid for and secured from said borough a separate contract for filling with sand the streets in question at the,price of thirty-five (35) cents per cubic yard, and that no bid was made to the borough by the plaintiff for that work, [743]*743and that no contract therefor with the borough was secured by the plaintiff, but that thereafter, on December 1st, 1911, the plaintiff secured from said McLinden & Company, a subcontract for filling said street^ with sand at the sum of twenty (20) cents per cubic yard.

The borough thus became bound to pay to McLinden & Company, for this street improvement the price of thirty-five (35) cents per cubic yard, of sand filling, and admittedly, had the legal right to assess and enforce against the defendant, and his said adjacent lots, by appropriate proceedings, payment for the cost of this filling at this price of thirty-live (35) cents. Consequently the defendant is liable to pay the borough fifteen cents more a cubic yard for the work than be claims he would have been obliged to pay, if the plaintiff had secured from the borough a contract for the same work at the sum of twenty (20) cents a cubic yard. It is this extra cost to him which fie seeks in this action to recoup in damages against the plaintiff.

At the close of the evidence the defendant moved the trial court to instruct the jury to find a verdict in his favor, arguing in support of his counter claim, that the plaintiff had not fulfilled its contract with him, in that it had neglected to bid for and secure from the borough any contract for filling in the said streets.

This motion was denied, and instead, the court directed the jury to render their verdict against the defendant for the amount of the unpaid balance claimed.

IVe think the defendant’s motion was properly refused, and that he has misconstrued the legal effect of the plaintiff’s obligation under the above-quoted provisions of its contract with him; all they required of the dredging company was that it should secure a legal contract giving it the right to fill in ilie streets binding on the said lots, with sand, at a price which should not exceed the sum of twenty (20) cents per cubic .yard. Such a contract the evidence shows the plaintiff in fact secured from McLinden & Company, who had the undoubted right to grant it to the dredging company. The [744]*744plaintiff lias therefore complied with, and conformed to, the quoted provisions of the contract.

It may, very likely, have been the expectation of the defendant when he entered into the contract of October 31st, 1911, that the dredging company would bid for and secure directly from the borough (and not through the intervention of a third party) a contract for filling the said streets with sand, because he would naturally prefer there should be competition in bidding, probably resulting in lower contract bids and less cost for the work to the municipality, and hence to himself as a lot owner assessable for the cost of the improvement.

But, however this may be, the defendant now insists that we read into the agreement of October 31st, 1911, words not contained in it — namely, that it should not become effective unless the plaintiff would bid for and secure a contract directly with the borough. It is sufficient to answer that to express in the paper such an unexpressed intent of the parties, would require us to do violence to its terms, and interpolate therein after the word “contract,” the additional words of substance, viz., “with the borough.”

. It will be perceived by reference to his answer filed in the record by way of counter claim, that the defendant’s construction of this contract there, negatives the soundness of his position now. He there states that the plaintiff secured from McLinden & Company, a contract to do said filling (to use his own words) “in order to comply with the letter of contract sued on.” He thus concedes the plaintiff had complied literally with the said provisions of its contract with him.

But even if this difficulty with the defendant’s case could be overcome, we think, his counter claim for damages lacks all merit for other reasons.

He testified he knew, as early as the 17tli or 18th of November, 1911, that the plaintiff had not secured from the borough an award of a contract for filling the streets binding on the lots, and that he also knew that McLinden & Company had secured a contract with the borough to fill in the streets át [745]

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Bluebook (online)
87 A. 1003, 84 N.J.L. 740, 55 Vroom 740, 1913 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-dredging-c-co-v-ottens-nj-1913.