White Oak Corporation v. State

365 A.2d 1162, 170 Conn. 434, 1976 Conn. LEXIS 1036
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 23, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 365 A.2d 1162 (White Oak Corporation v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White Oak Corporation v. State, 365 A.2d 1162, 170 Conn. 434, 1976 Conn. LEXIS 1036 (Colo. 1976).

Opinion

MacDonald, J.

The plaintiff, a highway construction contractor, has appealed from a judgment rendered in favor of the defendant state of Connecticut in an action brought pursuant to the provisions of § 4-61 of the General Statutes 1 for damages arising out of a contract for the construction of a state highway. The facts as set forth in the finding are undisputed. The plaintiff bid upon and was awarded by the state a contract in excess of six million dollars for the construction and relocation of a highway known as route 8. The contract, in general, called for building bridges, blasting, relocating utilities, excavating and filling and the *436 plaintiff was. required, among other things, to provide and incorporate into the work various building materials, including sand, stone, loam, gravel and bituminous material. In general, payment was to be for accepted work in place. In addition, the contract contained several special provisions including one entitled “Escalator Clause Pertaining to Changes in Common Carrier Rates,” the interpretation of which constitutes the single issue raised by this appeal.

The special provision in question, which is set forth in full in the footnote, 2 provides, where applicable, for an adjustment in payment to the contractor “to compensate for increases or decreases in cost due to changes in common carrier rates becoming effective after the date of opening of bids and before the date stipulated for completion of the work, as adjusted because of authorized extensions of time.” The plaintiff, in addition to its construction activities, was also duly licensed by the public utilities commission as a common carrier and, at some time after the work called for by the contract began, an increase in the local tariffs charged by the plaintiff as a common carrier for hauling bull?; *437 materials by damp tracks was anthorized by the commission. The haaling of most of the balk materials for the highway project involved here, inclading sand, stone, gravel, loam and bitaminoas concrete, was performed by tracks owned by the plaintiff, althoagh some also were haaled by tracks owned by Connectieat Sand and Stone Corporation, a closely related corporation which had the same main office and practically the same officers and directors as the plaintiff bat which was not a common carrier.

Approximately two years after completion of the project, the plaintiff sent a letter to the defendant reqnesting an adjastment ander the so-called escalator claase becaase of an increase in the haaling rates for common carriers effective Jane 7, 1965, which it claimed entitled it to additional sams -with respect to the transportation of balk materials in its own tracks as well as in the tracks of its affiliate corporation, Connectieat Sand and Stone Corporation. Accompanying this reqaest, in addition to correspondence between the two corporations with respect to the rate increase, was a doeament appearing to be an invoice or bill from Connectieat Sand and Stone Corporation to the plaintiff for “additional charge for haaling materials to the above project . . . dae to increase in tariff rates.” Althoagh that invoice or bill appeared to be marked “paid,” no money actnally changed hands between the two corporations; rather, mataal book entries were made. The trial coart foand that these mataal book entries were circaitoas and woald cancel each other and that the plaintiff did not actnally incar an increase in cost dae to changes in common carrier rates within the meaning of those words in the escalator claase, and this finding was not dispated.

*438 Upon the foregoing faets, the trial court concluded that the plaintiff had failed to show that there was an increased cost to it due to changes in common carrier rates; that in hauling materials to the project in its own trucks the plaintiff was performing services for itself and not as a common carrier; that the hauling performed by Connecticut Sand and Stone Corporation does not qualify for additional compensation under the escalator clause because it was not a common carrier and a receipted bill from it, accordingly, was not a bill from a common carrier; that the escalator clause applies only to services performed for the plaintiff by another common carrier; and finally that the plaintiff was not entitled to the additional compensation claimed. The plaintiff’s assignment of errors attacks only the validity of the foregoing conclusions and not that of the facts found, squarely raising as the issue to be determined by us whether the court arrived at a fair and reasonable interpretation of the escalator clause in the contract in concluding that it applied only to hauling services performed for the plaintiff contractor by another common carrier and not to such services performed by the plaintiff for itself nor to hauling services performed for it by another carrier which was not a common carrier.

“The court’s conclusions which have been attacked are to be tested by the finding. . . . These conclusions must stand unless they are legally or logically inconsistent with the facts found or unless they involve the application of some erroneous rule of law material to the case.” Cedo Bros., Inc. v. Feldmann, 161 Conn. 265, 271, 287 A.2d 374; Johnston Jewels, Ltd. v. Leonard, 156 Conn. 75, 79, 239 A.2d 500; Craig v. Dunleavy, 154 Conn. 100, 105, 221 A.2d 855; Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc. § 166. One *439 of the rules applicable to the determination of a dispute over the meaning of a contract is that pertaining to determination of the intent of the parties. “The oft-repeated rule is that the intent of the parties is to be ascertained by a fair and reasonable construction of the written words in the light of the circumstances surrounding the execution of the writing and in the light of the object of the parties in executing the contract.” New Haven Sand Blast Co. v. Dreisbach, 102 Conn. 169, 180, 128 A. 320. And, as we recently stated in Anderson v. Pension & Retirement Board, 167 Conn. 352, 354, 355 A.2d 283: “The intention of the parties to a contract is to be determined from the language used interpreted in the light of the situation of the parties and the circumstances connected with the transaction. The question is not what intention existed in the minds of the parties but what intention is expressed in the language used. . . . The words used by the parties ‘must be accorded their common meaning and usage where they can be sensibly applied to the subject matter of the contract.’ Beach v. Beach, 141 Conn. 583, 589, 107 A.2d 629; Sturtevant v. Sturtevant, . . . [146 Conn. 644, 647, 153 A.2d 828

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Bluebook (online)
365 A.2d 1162, 170 Conn. 434, 1976 Conn. LEXIS 1036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-oak-corporation-v-state-conn-1976.