Storrie v. City of Pensacola
Opinion of the Court
This was a suit in the Circuit Court (now the District Court) of the United States, by Robert C. Storrie against fhe city of Pensacola, to recover certain amounts alleged to be due him for work done as contractor in building or putting in a certain sewerage or drainage system in the city of Pensacola. The amount originally agreed to be paid Storrie for this work was $309,-640, and he was given 350 days for the completion of the-work, exclusive of Sundays and legal holidays. It was provided in the contract that, should the amount of work be diminished, the time specified for completing the whole work should be diminished by the number of days represented by the relation which the cost of the work deducted bore to the cost of the whole work. The contract also provided for $25 liquidated damages for each day occupied in completing the contract over and above the time allowed by the contract. It was subsequently agreed that the total cost of the work, the plans having been modified accordingly, should be $217,000. This reduced the number of days in which Storrie was to do the work to 247. The completion of the contract was delayed very much, so that it occupied 831 days, according to the engineer in charge. The city was holding up, at the time the contract was completed, $14,875. Storrie failed to recover, there being a verdict and judgment against him.
We do not find any ground for interfering with the judgment, except as to one matter, and that is as to the number of days that Storrie
The judgment is reversed and the case remanded to the District Court, with instructions, as appellee may elect, to enter a judgment for the plaintiff for the sum of $875 with legal interest thereon from •May 21, 1909, and costs, or award a trial de novo.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STORRIE v. CITY OF PENSACOLA
- Status
- Published