Wood v. Foster & Creighton Co.

235 S.W.2d 1, 191 Tenn. 478, 27 Beeler 478, 1950 Tenn. LEXIS 461
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 235 S.W.2d 1 (Wood v. Foster & Creighton Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Foster & Creighton Co., 235 S.W.2d 1, 191 Tenn. 478, 27 Beeler 478, 1950 Tenn. LEXIS 461 (Tenn. 1950).

Opinion

*480 Mr. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The property owner, Wood, and contractor, Foster & Creighton Co., have heretofore applied to this Court for writs of certiorari which have been granted. The parties have briefed and argued the case before this Court.

The property owner, Wood, sued Foster & Creighton Co., and the City of Chattanooga to recover damages for the unlawful cutting and removing from Wood’s property certain shade trees and the taking of soil from his property. Judgment was rendered against the contractor and in favor of the City. On appeal the Court of Appeals affirmed this judgment.

On July 15, 1946, the State of Tennessee made a contract with the. City of Chattanooga for the widening of Bossville Boulevard, as authorized by Code Section 3242 et seq. by which the City obligated itself, among other things, to procure easements for right of way as shown by blue prints accompanying the proposal. The blue prints were drawn by the City engineer due to the fact that the State engineering office was short of manpower at the time.

The State of Tennessee contracted with the defendant, Foster & Creighton, to perform the work in widening Bossville Boulevard.

The plaintiff’s property abutted on Bossville Boulevard and was some three or four feet higher than the *481 street after it was paved making it necessary to either build a retaining wall in front of the plaintiff’s property or slope the property back so that the dirt etc. from the plaintiff’s property would not wash off on the sidewalk. The plans made no particular reference to this property, did not designate either method, that is, the building of the retaining wall or the sloping of the property back, and no easement was acquired within the plaintiff’s front line beyond the uniform width of the street. About six feet inside his property line were several shade trees which he had placed there some twenty-five years before.

The State engineer went on the lots and placed stakes indicating the removal of the trees and the removal and sloping of the bank. The contractor followed the instructions of the State engineer but made no inquiry of the City engineer and did not refer to the plans and specifications. The contractor merely followed the directions of the State engineer under whom he was working.

The building of a retaining wall would have been somewhat more expensive than the sloping of the bank.

The State engineer testified that he acted under both a general provision to be found in all contractors’ general specifications and under a general provision attached to the plans and specifications for this project to the effect that where a retaining wall is not indicated expressly, the earth shall be cut and sloped. The general specifications of contractors were not introduced in evidence.

The City engineer, testifying for the City, differed with the State engineer as to the interpretation of the actual contract and testified that it contained no authority for sloping; that they always expressly show when a tree is *482 to be removed or a bank sloped, or a wall to be bnilt, bnt that nothing was shown on these plans.

The contractor, Foster & Creighton Co., was doing the work under contract with the State, and the City was not a party to this contract. This contractor did what the State’s representative in charge of the project ordered it to do. The contractor was clearly entitled to rely on such orders without being required to make an independent check, at its peril, on the State’s authority to give the order. The contractor was guilty of no negligence in the manner in which it did this work, and the damage done to the plaintiff resulted from the work being done rather than from the contractor’s negligence in doing it. There is no claim in the record that the work was done negligently. The only claim of negligence, insofar as the contractor is concerned, is that the contractor was negligent in not specifically examining the plans to find whether or not the plans showed that the property was to be sloped back. This is the basis of the two lower courts holding that the contractor was negligent.

It seems to us that as a practical matter, in the construction of public improvement, that the contractor should be relieved from checking every order given it by the public authority. The State for whom the contractor works does the engineering, stakes out the project, tells the contractor what to grade and what to do and so long as the contractor complies with these instructions by its superior then the contractor is fulfilling its obligation. If the contractor was required, at its peril, to check and double check all plans given it and required to keep an engineering force for the purpose of interpreting these plans, and was not permitted to follow the *483 orders of the engineering force of its superior, then the costs of public improvement would be so increased as to make them almost prohibitive. The purpose of having the State engineering department for these public improvements is to lay out these projects and to tell the contractor where to do its work. The contractor’s work is not the engineering job of laying out the project but is merely in doing what it is instructed to do. So long as it does this work as it is instructed to do by its superior in a workmanlike manner, not negligently, then the contractor is not liable.

The contractor had no discretion as to whether it would build a retaining wall or slope the bank. That was a matter for the State engineering department to determine and the State having made the determination to slope the bank, the contractor had no alternative but to follow the State’s orders.

It is a well settled rule in this State that a contractor constructing a public improvement for a public authority is not liable to a private property owner for the resulting damage where the contractor acts in accordance with the public authority’s orders and is not itself guilty of negligence in the manner in which it does the work. 43 Am. Jur., 827-8, Public Words & Contracts, Sec. 83; Iron Mountain Railroad Co. v. Bingham, 87 Tenn. 522, 531, 11 S. W. 705, 4 L. R. A. 622; Chattanooga T. R. Power Co. v. Lawson, 139 Tenn. 354, 369-370, 201 S. W. 165; Lebanon v. Dillard, 155 Tenn. 448, 295 S. W. 60; Newberry v. Hamblen County, 157 Tenn. 491, 495, 9 S. W. (2d) 700, 701 and Trigg v. H. K. Ferguson Co., 30 Tenn. App. 672, 209 S. W. (2d) 525, 529 (certiorari denied).

In Newberry v. Hamblen Co., supra, it was said: “If the injury is a necessary incident of necessary blasting in *484 construction of the highway, the damages are chargeable to the condemnor, here the county. But if the injury is not such a necessary incident, but is the result of negligence of the contractor, then the damages are chargeable to him.”

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Bluebook (online)
235 S.W.2d 1, 191 Tenn. 478, 27 Beeler 478, 1950 Tenn. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-foster-creighton-co-tenn-1950.