United States ex rel. Bennett v. Carilli Const. Co.

52 F. Supp. 658, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1950
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 27, 1943
DocketCivil Action No. 1992
StatusPublished

This text of 52 F. Supp. 658 (United States ex rel. Bennett v. Carilli Const. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States ex rel. Bennett v. Carilli Const. Co., 52 F. Supp. 658, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1950 (D. Mass. 1943).

Opinion

SWEENEY, District Judge.

In this action, brought under the Miller Act, 40 U.S.C.A. § 270a et seq., the plaintiff William H. Bennett (who will hereinafter be referred to as Bennett) seeks to recover from the Carilli Construction Company (which will hereinafter be referred to as Carilli) the costs of performing certain electrical work claimed by Bennett to have been an extra outside of his original contract. Carilli admits that the work done was done at its request, but insists that it was covered by its subcontract with Bennett. There is no question as to the fair value of the work clone. The sole point to decide with regard to this claim is whether the work was called for under Bennett’s contract with Carilli or was outside the contract, and, hence, an extra.

[659]*659After the original action had been brought, Carilli joined the Raisler Corporation (which will hereinafter be referred to as Raisler) as a third party defendant, alleging, in substance, that Raisler was charged by contract with the responsibility of doing the work for which payment is demanded by Bennett, and Carilli demanded judgment against Raisler for such sum as might be adjudged in favor of Bennett against Carilli. Raisler in its answer denied that the work done by Bennett was called for in its (Raisler’s) contract, and, in turn, filed a counterclaim against Carilli for a balance due under Raisler’s contract with Carilli.

Whether it appears in the pleadings or not, counsel were all in agreement at the trial that Carilli has paid no one for the work in question, and holds funds ready to pay which ever person the court shall decide was chargeable with the work. Carilli takes the position that as a stakeholder it will pay the sum of $2,475 to the Raisler Corporation if the work done by Bennett was chargeable to Bennett under his contract, or, if the court decides that Raisler should have done the work, then the sum of $2,475 is to be paid to Bennett who actually did the work. There is a third alternative; that is, if the court finds that neither Bennett nor Raisler were chargeable with the work, then Carilli owes Bennett $2,475 for the work that he actually performed, and owes Raisler at least $2,475 of the $3,120.90 claimed by Raisler, in its counterclaim. The balance of Raisler’s counterclaim to make up $3,120.90 will be taken up separately as the last item to be covered in this opinion.

Findings of Fact

The contracts and specifications are too voluminous to quote herein, but the gist of the action can be stated in the following facts which are my findings of fact:

In the summer of 1941 Carilli entered into a contract with the War Department to construct and complete four motor repair shops, type SP — 14, and three motor repair shops, type SP-2 and nine other smaller buildings. It is with the SP-14 and SP-2 types that we are concerned. Shortly thereafter Carilli entered into a subcontract with Bennett wherein Bennett agreed to “furnish all labor and materials and equipment and perform all work required for the construction and completion of the electrical wiring and work” for the structures referred to. The drawings and specifications, prepared by the United States War Department, were incorporated into this subcontract. At or about the same time Carilli entered into a subcontract with Raisler wherein Raisler agreed to “furnish all labor, materials and equipment and perform all work required for the construction and completion of the heating and ventilating” for the structures under consideration.

The work for which Bennett now sues, and for which Carilli has joined Raisler as the third party defendant, involves the electrical wiring incidental to the operation of the heater and ventilator units. It is not the ordinary type of wiring which would introduce electrical energy into a building through an appropriate installation, but is electrical wiring designed particularly to effect the operation of the heating and ventilating units. It might be termed all of that electrical work between the boilers themselves and the panels from which they operate.

As between Bennett and Carilli, there does not now seem to be any agreement in the construction of their subcontract. Carilli, on the one hand, asserts that Bennett was bound under his contract to do all the electrical work including the heating and ventilating units, and Bennett, on the other hand, urges that his work was limited to the electrical work incidental to the building itself, and that it did not relate to the installation of the heating electrical work.

Regardless of their present construction of the contract, it is abundantly clear- from the evidence that, at the time the contract was entered into hetween Carilli and Bennett, both parties agreed that the contract did not call for Bennett to install the electrical work in connection with the heating and ventilating units, I therefore find as a fact that a collateral agreement existed between the contracting parties that the electrical work incidental to tying up the heating and ventilating equipment was not included in their subcontract. As a matter of fact, Carilli testified in open court that he, as president and general manager of his corporation, expected Raisler to do the work rather than Bennett, and his conduct at the time that the matter was taken up officially with Bennett and Raisler while the job was progressing proves this point. While this contemporaneous construction of the Bennett-Carilli subcontract by each of the parties must control as between them, McClintic-Marshall [660]*660Co. v. Freedman, 274 Mass. 558, 175 N.E. 55, it is interesting, as bearing on the Raisler contract, that the specifications, in paragraph E-l entitled “General”, provide that the: “Contractor shall furnish all labor and materials necessary for a complete wiring system in each building, as indicated on the drawings and as covered herein.”

As to the claim by Carilli that Raisler was bound to do the wiring in controversy, Raisler points to the above specifications as not only proof that he, Raisler, was not bound to do the work, but that, by the terms of the Bennett-Carilli subcontract, Bennett was bound to do it. I have disposed of the question whether Bennett was bound to do the work under his contract, and have found that he was not.

The Raisler Subcontract

With regard to the Carilli claim that Raisler was bound by his subcontract to do the electrical work in connection with the heating and ventilating system, it is worthy of notice that at the time that Carilli submitted the contract to Raisler it contained in typewriting, after Section 2 of the contract, the following words: “This contract does not include any excavation or backfilling and concrete work. Electric wiring and painting, if same is not called for under the heating and ventilating specification of the project, will be done by others, otherwise by the subcontractor.”

Immediately upon the receipt of this contract, Raisler wrote to Carilli to the general effect that he wanted this paragraph eliminated because it was his understanding “that in no event do we include any excavation, backfill, concrete work, electric wiring or painting”. Upon receipt of this letter of July 11, 1941, Carilli agreed that the contract might be changed so as to exclude all reference to excavation, backfilling, and concrete work.

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Related

McClintic-Marshall Co. v. Freedman
175 N.E. 55 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
52 F. Supp. 658, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-bennett-v-carilli-const-co-mad-1943.