United Thermal Industries, Inc. v. Asbestos Training & Employment, Inc.

920 F.2d 1345, 1990 WL 205486
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 30, 1991
Docket89-3769
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 920 F.2d 1345 (United Thermal Industries, Inc. v. Asbestos Training & Employment, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Thermal Industries, Inc. v. Asbestos Training & Employment, Inc., 920 F.2d 1345, 1990 WL 205486 (7th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

CUDAHY, Circuit Judge.

Words, we are reminded by Humpty Dumpty, mean what parties want them to mean — neither more nor less. Our task in this contract interpretation case, like that of Alice, is interpreting words without knowing with certainty what the parties meant by them.

This action is an appeal in diversity for breach of contract. The magistrate found ambiguity in the terms of a contract and looked at the negotiating history to determine what the parties meant by the terms. The plaintiff-appellant, United Thermal Industries, Inc., argues that the contract terms are unambiguous and that parol evidence should have been excluded under the “four corners” rule. Because we find that the contract terms are ambiguous, we affirm the magistrate’s use of parol evidence and his interpretation of the contract’s obligations.

I.

Asbestos Training & Employment, Inc. (ATEI), a firm which provides labor for asbestos removal projects, entered into a subcontract with the general contractor, United Thermal Industries, Inc. (UTI), to provide labor for removing asbestos from a boiler assembly at Indianapolis Power and Light’s (IPL’s) plant in Martinsville, Indiana. During negotiation the parties agreed to a price of $17.92 per man hour. They discussed the magnitude of the job, scheduled to last from December 9, 1987, to January 30, 1988, and mentioned that thirty to forty workers would likely be required. Tr. at 401 (testimony of Louis Arona, vice president of ATEI). The parties signed the agreement, drawn by ATEI, on December 9,1987. Provision VII, at the center of the current dispute, states:

VII. IMPLEMENTATION:
ATEI will:
(1) furnish and include to Contractor [UTI], as comprehended in the bid price, a trained labor force meeting or exceeding all threshold requirements of safety, knowledge and facility set by applicable state and federal laws, duly licensed or certified where incensure or certification are required, to perform the project described herein;
(2) retain responsibility for payment of wages to the supplied labor force....

Pleading Vol., item 5, at 2 (reproduced in Appellant’s Br. at A-3).

ATEI began work on December 15, 1987. The project quickly revealed more difficult and time-consuming work than originally assumed. Both ATEI and UTI had expected the boiler to contain soft, powdery material which would be relatively easy to remove. Instead, the workers encountered:

five separate layers of material [that] covered the boiler itself. The first layer was a canvass material; inside that was a layer of insulating mud with wire reinforcement; followed by a layer of insulating block which was wired in; then another layer of insulating mud reinforced with a chicken wire-like material; and finally a layer of refractory material.

Mem. and Order at 3. Neither party anticipated finding this material, and both parties now agree that originally projected levels of manpower were inadequate. The removal work slowed considerably, the originally anticipated completion date of January 22, 1988, became unrealistic and *1348 UTI was forced to seek additional tools and manpower to complete the more difficult work.

UTI first asked ATEI to supply the workers. By January 11, 1988, ATEI had forty-five workers on the job. According to ATEI, UTI requested that ATEI supply an additional sixty workers; UTI contends that the request was for ten to twenty more laborers. Mem. and Order at 5; Tr. at 166-67 (testimony of R. Richey, vice president, UTI). Apparently ATEI could not meet the request, and UTI contacted labor halls in Indianapolis and Charleston, Illinois, for additional workmen. UTI trained the recruits and gave them physical examinations. The wage paid the new workers was higher than the contract provided for payment to ATEI. In sum, non-ATEI workers provided 7,375.5 of the 18,-404 hours required for the project. Mem. and Order at 5-6. UTI paid $3,720 for non-ATEI physicals, $32,924.86 in late charges to IPL and $47,523.45 in labor back charges in excess of costs (the incremental cost incurred by UTI for hiring non-ATEI workers above the contract price).

UTI seeks recovery of these costs. The basis of its claim is that the contract language requiring ATEI to provide “a trained labor force ... to perform the project” obligated ATEI to supply a labor force sufficient to complete the entire project. ATEI denies that the contract should be read to impose this obligation and counterclaims for $55,206.45 for unpaid work performed.

UTI argued below that the “four corners rule” obligates the trier of fact, in the absence of ambiguity in the contract’s terms, to look only within the “four corners” of the agreement for meanings of the agreement’s terms. The magistrate, however, found ambiguity in the meaning of the disputed terms, 1 referred to the parties’ negotiating history, concluded that ATEI met its obligation under the agreement and denied relief to UTI while granting ATEI its request for compensation for services substantially completed.

On appeal, UTI claims that the magistrate erred by finding ambiguity in the contract language and by looking outside the contract’s terms. ATEI argues that the contract’s terms are ambiguous in defining the size of the required labor force, that the magistrate correctly considered the extrinsic evidence and that ATEI's substantial completion of its obligation under the contract entitles it to compensation for services performed.

II.

Indiana law governs here. The forum state’s choice of law rules apply. Klaxon v. Stentor Manufacturing Co., 313 U.S. 487, 496, 61 S.Ct. 1020, 1021, 85 L.Ed. 1477 (1941). And in Illinois a contract dispute obligates the courts to apply the law either of the state with the most significant relationship or of the state where performance is to occur. Both tests point toward Indiana law. Under the first, performance was at the IPL plant in Indiana. Under the second, although the parties have some connection to states other than Indiana, the balance tips toward application of Indiana law. UTI is a Kentucky corporation with its principal place of business in Marion, Illinois. ATEI is an Indiana corporation with its principal place of business in a state other than Kentucky or Illinois. IPL’s plant is at Martinsville, Indiana. When there are competing relationships to different states, the place of performance can be determinative. Feldman Assocs. v. LinGard & Assocs., 676 F.Supp. 877, 882 n. 3 (N.D.Ill.1988) (“When a contract is to be performed primarily in one state, and when the other ‘most significant contacts’ factors prove inconclusive, the law of the place of performance governs any litigation arising from the contract.”). We therefore apply Indiana law.

The only legal question this case presents is whether the contract provision *1349 concerning the labor force is ambiguous.

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Bluebook (online)
920 F.2d 1345, 1990 WL 205486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-thermal-industries-inc-v-asbestos-training-employment-inc-ca7-1991.