Westcott Construction Co. v. Barber

113 A.2d 638, 83 R.I. 105, 1955 R.I. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 29, 1955
StatusPublished

This text of 113 A.2d 638 (Westcott Construction Co. v. Barber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Westcott Construction Co. v. Barber, 113 A.2d 638, 83 R.I. 105, 1955 R.I. LEXIS 19 (R.I. 1955).

Opinion

Capotosto, J.

This action in assumpsit was brought against the defendant in his official capacity to recover the balance due under a completed contract in writing for the renovation of and addition to a school in the town of [107]*107Charlestown in this state. It was tried in the superior court before a justice thereof sitting with a jury and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $10,058.10. The defendant’s motion for a new trial was heard and denied. The ease is here on his exceptions to that decision, to the denial of a motion for a directed verdict, and to certain rulings made during the trial.

The declaration sets forth the written contract and also the common counts. However, during the course of the trial plaintiff waived the common counts and relied wholly on the written contract. The gist of the basic issue is whether a certain letter relating to an extra charge for the excavation of ledge, if such work became necessary, was to be treated as part of the contract.

It is undisputed that a building committee, consisting of five members with James A. Whitman as chairman, was duly appointed and empowered to proceed with the construction specified in the contract here in question; that Frank B. Perry of the city of Providence, an experienced architect and engineer, was engaged by the committee to prepare plans for the proposed building, to draft contracts for the parties, and to supervise the construction work; and that, with the exception of the charge for ledge excavation, both the contractor and Perry had carried out their respective obligations to the satisfaction of the committee. If, in the circumstances that we are about to relate, such charge was to be treated as part of the contract, then defendant concedes that plaintiff would be entitled to $8,987.50 in addition to the $1,070.60 that was admittedly due under the contract. The verdict of $10,058.10 represents the total of those two sums.

The evidence on the determinative issues in the case was extensive, at times was not clear, and was replete with details which we need not refer to in this opinion. Perry usually met with the committee in Charlestown. What occurred at the meetings on the evenings of Saturday, Sep[108]*108tember 9, and Monday, September 11, 1950, furnishes the original point of disagreement between the parties.

Perry, a witness for plaintiff, testified that when the bids for the work were opened on September 9 it was noted that all bids with the exception of the one from plaintiff contained an extra charge for excavation of ledge; that this omission was later attributed to oversight by the plaintiff; that after discussing plaintiff's bid as it then stood, the committee desired to make certain modifications in the terms thereof; and that Perry telephoned the suggested changes to Simeon Lavigne, president of the plaintiff company, and later reported to the committee that such changes were acceptable. Thereupon plaintiff was selected as the contractor.

On Monday, September 11, Perry asked plaintiff to submit to him two bids for reference to the committee at a meeting to be held on the evening of that same day, that is, the original bid with the changes requested by the committee and the other which concerned the charge for ledge excavation, if it became necessary. This the plaintiff did. The bid for the excavation, which is dated September 11 and is the only part of the contract in controversy, was as follows:

“For the excavation of all ledge encountered on the above named job we submit the following prices.
Open Ledge $15.00 per cu yd
Trench $25.00 per cu yd”

On its face there is a stamp which reads: “Received Sep 12 1950 Frank B. Perry Engineer & Architect By 9/22/50,” the latter date being noted in pencil. Perry testified that he received the bid late in the afternoon of September 11 when he was about to leave for Charlestown and therefore did not stamp it as received on that date; that the following morning his secretary stamped it as above indicated; and that he did not change the date since he did not think it was incorrect. He explained that the pencil notation represented the day when he issued his purchase [109]*109order to the contractor to proceed with the excavation, which order shortly thereafter was filed with the committee.

Perry further testified that when he met the committee in Charlestown on the evening of September 11 he had with him the revised bid for the construction work, the bid for ledge excavation, and a general contract prepared by him which had been signed by plaintiff on that same day in Providence. While the typewritten portion of the contract made no specific reference to an extra charge for excavation of ledge, yet article 15 of the printed general conditions attached thereto and made a part thereof provided, among other things, that “no extra work or change shall be made unléss in pursuance of a written order from the Owner signed or countersigned by the Architect, or a written order from the Architect stating that the Owner has authorized the extra work or change, and no claim for an addition to the contract sum shall be valid unless so ordered.” It further provided that the value of any such extra work or change shall be determined: “(b) By unit prices named in the contract or subsequently agreed upon”; and that “Should conditions encountered below the surface of the ground be at variance with the conditions indicated by the drawings and specifications the contract sum shall be equitably adjusted upon claim by either party made within a reasonable time after the first observance of the conditions.” The contract also provided for arbitration in case of dispute between the parties.

What happened when Perry met with the committee on September 11 is the subject of conflicting evidence. He testified in substance that he presented to them for their consideration the two above-mentioned bids, one of which was the contract signed by plaintiff and the other was for ledge excavation; and that after discussing the entire matter the committee signed the contract with full knowledge that the cost of ledge excavation, if undisclosed conditions made such work necessary, was to be in addition to the sum stipulated in the typewritten part of the contract.-

[110]*110On the other hand, James A. Whitman, chairman of the committee, testified that the excavation bid was not brought to their attention at that time; that when the contract was signed by the committee it was his understanding that the contract price covered whatever work was to be done on the job; and that, on or about October 2, he received by mail from the contractor a copy of the bid and a bill for the ledge excavation. William P. G. Barber was the only other member of the committee to testify. His testimony as to the circumstances under which the contract was signed was substantially the same as that of Whitman. There is no explanation in the record for the absence, as witnesses, of the remaining three committee members.

The conduct of the parties after September 11 is enlightening. It appears in evidence that ledge was encountered and notice thereof was given to Whitman about the middle of that month; that he went to the site with the architect; and that after observing the condition then appearing he ordered the work of excavating the ledge to proceed as he wanted ím delay in the erection of the school building.

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Bluebook (online)
113 A.2d 638, 83 R.I. 105, 1955 R.I. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westcott-construction-co-v-barber-ri-1955.