Woodruff v. Rochester & Pittsburgh Railroad
Woodruff v. Rochester & Pittsburgh Railroad
Opinion of the Court
The corporation defendant was organized November 30, 1881, by the consolidation of certain New York and Pennsylvania railroad companies, and it entered into contract with Brown, Howard & Go., a construction company, to construct and complete the unfinished portion of its road. On the 1st of August, 1882, that ■ company entered into a contract with George H. Thompson & Go. to build the Buffalo division of the road; and on the 18th day of August, 1882, Thompson & Go. entered into a contract with the plaintiffs to - construct a portion of the Buffalo division. The two contracts were in all essentials alike, except as to the amount of work to be performed and the prices to be paid therefor, the price in the former contract for excavation being twenty-seven cents per cubic yard, and in the latter contract twenty cents per cubic yard. The plaintiffs’ contract with Thompson •& Co. and the contract of Thompson & Go. with Brown, Howard & Go., both alike required the contractors to “ construct and finish in the most substantial and workman-like manner, to the satisfaction and acceptance of the chief enigineer, etc., the graduation, etc., and such other work as may be required, etc., the said work to be finished as described in the following specifications, and agreeably to the directions from time to time ” of the engineers. • Among the specifications was the following:
“ Gradation. — Under this head will be included all excavations and embankments required for the formation of of the road-bed, cutting all ditches or drains about or contiguous to the road; the foundations of culverts, bridges, walls, trestle-work and foundations of buildings ; the excavations and embankments necessary for reconstructing turnkpikes or common roads, in cases where they are destroyed or interfered with in the formation of the railroad, and all other
“ Extra Work. — ¡Nor shall any claim be allowed for extra work, unless the same shall be done in pursuance of a written order from the engineer in charge, and the claim made at the first settlement after the work was executed, unless the chief engineer, at his discretion, should direct the claim, or such part as he may deem just and equitable, to be allowed.”
In pursuance of their contract with Thompson & Co. the plaintiffs entered upon their work, and at a certain point upon the road they cut through a considerable elevation, and after they had substantially completed the cutting, a large amount of earth from one of the sides caved into the cutting at four different times in the months of December, 1881, and January and February, 1882, and this earth the plaintiffs excavated and removed each time. It is for the expense of this work mainly that this action was brought, the plaintiffs claiming that they did it under contract with the defendant and for its benefit. The defendant interposed to the complaint a general denial and an allegation of payment.
To maintain their action, it was incumbent upon the plaintiffs to show, by satisfactory evidence, that they did the work for the defendant under an express or implied contract with it; and this, from a careful perusal of the evidence, we think they failed to show. The contract between the defendant and Brown, Howard & Co. was not produced, and precisely what its terms were we do not know. But it appears beyond question that. Brown, Howard & Co. were under some sort of contract with the defendant to construct and complete its road. All the work was, in a general way, under their supervision, and they hired and paid all the engineers and entered into sub-contracts for the performance of the work. The proof on the part of the plaintiffs tends to show that they did this work for which the action was brought upon the request of the engineers in charge of the work, and under an agreement made with them by which such work was taken outside of their contract with Thompson & Co., and was to be paid for at
the evidence of Brown, Howard & Co., or of any of them, and thus obtain some knowledge of their contract with, the defendant; and it was incumbent Upon them to show that the relations between that company and the defendant were such as to make the defendant responsible for the acts of the company’s engineers.
ISTor is there any sufficient proof that the defendant in any way ratified the agreement alleged to have been made by the plaintiffs with the engineers. It is not shown that it had any knowledge of the alleged agreement made by these engineers,
It is not needful or profitable for us here to comment upon all the evidence with the view of showing how we reach our conclusion, as upon a new trial further evidence may be given and the deficiency which we think fatal may be supplied.
But we will go still further. If it be assumed that Brown, Howard & Co., in some general and undefined way, could be treated as the general agents of the defendant for the construction of the road so that it would be bound by their contracts with Thompson & Co., we should still reach the same conclusion. In that event the defendant would be responsible to Thompson & Go. for all the work embraced within their contract according to the terms thereof and in no other way. Under that contract Thompson & Co. were bound to make “ all the excavations or embankments connected with or incident to the construction of said raih'oad ” on the Buffalo division thereof, and that, we think, included all the excavation which might be necessary until the road was turned over to the defendant as a completed road. If, after a cutting was made the embankment on either side caved in, the contractors would be obliged to excavate and remove the earth at the contract prices. The plain purpose of the contract was to have the road completed and turned over to the defendant in a finished state. And it may well be doubted whether such an excavation would even be extra work. But if extra work, not covered by the precise terms of the contract, then it is provided in the contract that no claim should be allowed for such work “unless the same should be done in pursuance of a written order from the engineer in charge, and the claim made at the first settlement
We are, therefore, of opinion that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Horace B. Woodruff v. The Rochester and Pittsburgh Railroad Company
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published