DocketNumber: No. 6179.
Citation Numbers: 211 S.W. 251, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 486
Judges: Moursund
Filed Date: 4/2/1919
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The Gonzales Water Power Company, a corporation, on December 16, 1916, sued H. C. Gass to recover damages for delay in constructing, and for failure to complete, in accordance with a written contract between plaintiff and Gass and plans and specifications made part thereof, a reinforced concrete dam across the Guadalupe river at Gonzales, Tex., on the site of the old dam belonging to the plaintiff, which had been partly washed away. The contract was signed on August 26, 1914, and on the same day the American Surety Company of New York, as surety, and said Gass, as principal, executed a bond for $5,000, payable to plaintiff, the plans and specifications above referred to being made a part of such bond, for the erection, construction, and completion of a dam in accordance with the contract and specifications. The plaintiff also sued on such bond, and the 'Surety Company adopted the pleadings of the defendant Gass. The trial resulted in a judgment for plaintiff against Gass for $36,242.28, and against the Surety Company for $5,000 with interest thereon from November 18, 1915, and in favor of the Surety Company against Gass for such sum as it might be compelled to pay on the judgment against Gass. Only the Surety Company appealed. The findings of fact are lengthy, and cover issues not relied on upon this appeal. We will therefore, for the sake of brevity, copy, or state briefly, those deemed appropriate to an opinion on the issues presented in the assignments. The court found:
“The written contract of August 26, 1914, obligated the defendant to build and complete a reinforced concrete dam, for the plaintiff, across the Guadalupe river, at Gonzales, Tex., on the site of the old dam belonging to the plaintiff, and which dam at its western end *252 was to be joined to a bulkhead of the old- dam already in existence and belonging to plaintiff, which ^old bulkhead was to be slightly raised on account of the greater height of the new dam, and to be completed in four months from the date of the contract, with the proviso that such additional time might be added to said four months as might be equal, in the opinion of the engineer, to the time lost by excessive floods or other conditions not within the control of the defendant, and that time, when mentioned in the agreement, was to be of the essence of the contract.
“The contract also provides that the defendant should so prosecute the work that no damage might accrue to any of the completed work of the plaintiff by or through reason of the defendant's operations, and that the defendant should exercise reasonable engineering ability in keeping with the character of the work to properly take care of the flow of the river, and to avoid damage to the adjacent property, or to the rights of those having rights in the premises.
“So far as it is here necessary to notice the specifications, they provide, among other things, that they cover the material, construction, labor, machinery, apparatus, and appurtenances necessary to erect, construct, and complete the construction of a reinforced concrete dam across the Guadalupe river at Gonzales, Tex., on the site of the old dam owned by the Gonzales Water Power Company at their plant in said city, arid the plans and specifications are intended to cover everything necessary to build the dam in a thorough and workmanlike manner, including cofferdam, pumping and excavating machinery of whatsoever nature required by the conditions, and protecting the property during construction ; that any omissions in either the plans or specifications covering any of the work essential to the purpose and intent of the plans and specifications should be considered as much thereof as if specifically set forth therein; that there should be no claims allowed for extra cost under the conditions of the specifications, whether on account of the difliculties of high water, accidents, or delay, except that for any time lost on account of floods or delay in the arrival of material, not within the defendant’s control, there should be additional time added to the period allowed for completion, and provided that, when any direction for extra work should be made to the contractor in writing, then such work should be executed by the contractor, and price and time for such work should be fixed and agreed upon between the plaintiff and the defendant before the execution, except where unit prices governed possible extra work, and the Surety Company or persons acting on its bond should take notice that any such extra work shall not relieve or limit their liability in the premises; that the bill of material furnished to each bidder with the specifications should not be taken as an estimate of quantities of various material and appliances necessary for the construction and completion of the work comprehended in the specifications, but is furnished merely as convenient data for construction, without entailing upon the plaintiff or engineer any responsibility therefor; that the contractor should be responsible for all the quantities of material and the amount of labor necessary to construct and complete the dam, leaving the same in perfect condition acceptable to the engineer.
“Under the heading ‘Description of Suggested Methods,’ it is provided that the piles should be driven until an 1,800-pound' hammer falling 8 feet drives a pile less than one-half inch, and that driving should begin on west side of the river. Under the heading ‘Time of Completion,’ the specifications provide that the work of construction should begin within 10 days after the signing of the contract, should be diligently prosecuted, 'constructed, completed, and accepted within 4 months after date of contract; that materials required should be accumulated in advance of operation in sufficient quantities and of qualities approved by the engineer to insure the prosecution of the work without break of continuous construction; that the defendant should also provide men and means to accomplish said continuous construction to the satisfaction and approval of the engineer;. that in case of any interruption breaking the continuity of the work of construction, or delaying the completion of the same, the plaintiff should have, at its option, the authority, after 7 days’ notice in writing to the defendant by the engineer, to enter the premises take possession and charge of all material, machinery, apparatus, and whatever property 'and appliances owned, rented, used, or controlled by the defendant, and to use said material, machinery, property, and appliances to prosecute the work to its completion and acceptance by the engineer, and to pay all just claims and the cost of construction, and charge the same to the account of the defendant, and pay the remaining part of the contract price to the defendant after such charges are made to the balance due him under the contract. If the cost of construction should exceed the contract price, the balance of such cost should be paid to the plaintiff by the defendant. Other parts of the contract and specifications it is unnecessary to note here, there being no issue raised in regard to their interpretation or application. Indeed, there are really but two controverted points as to the interpretation or application of the contract, and these points will be stated and the facts in regard thereto be found further on in these findings. * * * ”
The court further found that shortly after the execution of the contract Gass commenced work on the dam and continued such work intermittently until November 6, 1915, when he discontinued the work until the 13th day of the month, at which time he notified plaintiff that he considered the contractual relations between them at an end; that, Gass having waived the 7 days’ notice provided by the contract, the plaintiff took charge of the work, -and of the materia], apparatus, and machinery on hand, and completed the dam at a cost of $34,702.99, which sum was found to have been the reasonable cost of such completion; that the dam should have been completed on February 14, 1915, and that plaintiff was damaged by delay in the sum of $9,018.75; that plaintiff paid the engineer $4,554.79 after the dam should have been completed, for which Gass was liable; and that Gass was entitled to *253 a balance of $7,483.70 of the contract price, and to $4,550.55, the value of machinery, etc., which plaintiff failed to return to him after completing the work.
The court also found that on November 6, 1915, plaintiff gave the Surety Company written notice that operations on the dam had been suspended by Gass, and on November 18, 1915, gave said Surety Company notice that the work had been abandoned by Gass, and that plaintiff had taken charge thereof and would complete the same according to the contract, plans, and specifications, at the cost and expense of Gass and the Surety Company; that on November 21, 1916, plaintiff gave to the Surety Company a written statement, showing the sums paid Gass on the contract and the additional cost of completing the dam, and demanding payment of the amount of the bond.
Upon the events leading up to the termination of work by Gass the court found as follows:
“I futher find that during the latter part of September, 1915, a rise in the Guadalupe river at the site of the dam undermined and washed away a part of the west bank of the river, and caused a portion of the old bulkhead and protecting wing Walls on said west bank to fall, destroying same, and causing said bank to crumble and slough off and wash away, until the current caused a portion of the bank where the bulkhead and wing wall had stood to be in the river, thereby making it necessary for additional work and material to be used to complete the dam across the river in accordance with the contract; that after the flood the engineer of plaintiff prepared plans for the prosecution of the additional work made necessary by the washout and delivered the same to the defendant, with directions to proceed with the work under the contract. At this point occurred the serious difference between the parties — the defendant contending that the completion of the dam under the contract was made impossible by the flood, and that he was entitled to extra pay for the additional work and material made necessary by such flood; and the plaintiff taking the contrary view, and also contending that the consequences of the flood, making necessary the additional work and material for the com-jjletion of the dam, were owing to defendant’s negligence. I find that the contract provides for a complete dam across the entire width of the river on the site of the old dam, and that, while the consequences of the flood rendered a literal compliance with the terms of the contract impossible, still the dam could have been completed substantially as agreed upon, and that the defendant by the terms of his contract was bound to so complete it. Further, the damage done by the flood was owing to the negligence of the defendant, and would not have occurred had he prosecuted the work with reasonable diligence, which he did not do, and exercised reasonable engineering ability in prosecuting the work, which he did not do, and had he properly protected the west bank from washing, which it was his duty to do, and which he did not do; that the work made necessary by the consequences of the flood was not extra work within the meaning of the contract, hut was merely additional work made necessary thereby, and for which the defendant was not entitled to additional pay, both because such contingency is not provided for in the contract; on the contrary, he is made responsible therefor by the terms of the contract, and because the conditions making such additional work necessary were caused by his own negligence in the respects already mentioned. In this connection, it may be well to substantially recite two paragraphs of the specifications: First, that the contractor should protect all finished work during construction, and any injury to same from any cause shall be repaired or paid for by the contractor; and, second, that there should be no claim allowed for extra costs under the conditions of the specifications and plans, whether on account of difficulty with high water, accidents, or delay, except that for' any time lost on account of floods or delay in arrival of material, not within the contractor’s control, there should fie additional time allowed for completion,” etc.
The appellant’s main contention is that the plaintiff breached the contract, and not Gass, and that therefore appellant was released from liability on its bond. In this connection it is contended that the contract was not an agreement to construct an entire dam, but only to construct the deck and spillway portion of the dam to be built between and connecting with existing concrete bulkheads and abutments which were a part of the old dam which had previously broken; that therefore the work provided for in the supplemental plan was extra work within the meaning of the contract, and the plaintiff’s failure and refusal to agree to compensate Gass for the same constituted a breach of the contract such as authorized Gass to abandon the same, and therefore released the Surety Company from its obligations by virtue of the bond. It is further contended that, even if the contract obligated Gass to construct a completed dam without regard to the continued existence of the old bulkhead, the plaintiff was not entitled under the agreement to the remedy it sought to enforce. Appellant admits that, if an obligation becomes impossible of performance by reason of the obligor’s default, he must respond in damages, but contend that this does not mean that the injured party can elect to require something else in place of the contract obligation, and that this was done by plaintiff in preparing the supplemental plans and demanding that the work called for thereby should be performed by Gass.
We conclude that there is no merit in any of the assignments of error, and that the judgment should be affirmed.
<&wkey;>For other oases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
Northwestern Engineering Co. v. Ellerman , 71 S.D. 236 ( 1946 )
Nunn v. Brillhart , 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 281 ( 1921 )
New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v. Bettes , 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 2113 ( 1966 )
McKnight v. Renfro , 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1730 ( 1963 )
Clem Lumber Co. v. Marty , 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 212 ( 1930 )
Super-Cold Southwest Co. v. Green , 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 526 ( 1946 )
Freeman v. Shannon Construction, Inc. , 560 S.W.2d 732 ( 1978 )