Court Opinion

ID: 8828277
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 15:54:41.591231+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:04:50.510910
License: Public Domain

KNAPPEN, Circuit Judge.
On November 17, 1915, the parties contracted in writing for the building by the Pitt Construction Company for the city of East Eiverpool of the superstructures for a pumping station and filter plant — such superstructures to be completed within a certain number of weeks after the foundations therefor should be completed. The city had, with plaintiff’s knowledge, previously contracted with Gillespie & Co. for the construction of the foundations for these two superstructures, such foundations to be completed by April 28, 1916. The foundations were not completed until a considerable time thereafter, and plaintiff was thereby delayed in building the superstructures. The city consented to a delay by Gillespie & Co., but, as contended by plaintiff, without its consent. It brought this suit to recover damages for such delay in having the foundations ready fob the superstructures. There were verdict and judgment for plaintiff.
Defendant concedes that plaintiff duly performed its contract and that it was entitled to the entire contract price. The contract between the parties hereto did not specify the- time when the foundations were to be ready for the superstructures. It is conceded by counsel, and was so held by the trial judge, that as resulting from this condition the city will be deemed to have contracted with plaintiff that the foundations should be ready for the superstructures within a reasonable time, what is a “reasonable time” depending upon the circumstances of the individual case. Allegheny Co. v. Raymond Co. (C. C. A. 2) 219 Fed. 477, 480, 135 C. C. A. 189, 192. For the purposes of this review, the case is not taken out of the general rule by the fact that the plaintiff was not a party to the Gillespie contract. The only question presented relates to the charge of the court as given, and the refusal to give certain instructions requested by defendant, upon the subject of “reasonable time.”
The general instruction was in substance that in determining what was reasonable time the jury should consider all the facts and circumstances, including th'e conditions as existing when the contract was made, the discussions between the parties as to what was reasonable time, as to what the time was within which the other contractor had agreed to have the foundations completed, and all the conditions then known to either of the' contracting parties, or which, by the exercise of *238reasonable foresight, the contracting parties ought to have known, as such conditions “appear in the case and as they subsequently developed, so far as they are matters that were, within the contemplation of the respective parties, or ought to have been foreseen by the respective contracting parties,” and that the jury should ■ determine from such con siderations “what was a reasonable time within the contemplation oi both parties as to the date within which the structure should be furnished and delivered in a condition of substantial completeness.” The court further said; by what we shall call a “supplemental instruction”:
“But tlie reasonable time winch you are to ascertain, as was mutually contemplated by the parties in the light of the facts and circumstances then known or reasonably to be anticipated by them, when once ascertained and fixed by you, becomes an immovable date for the admeasurement of the respective rights and obligations of the plaintiff and the defendant, * * * and is not to be changed or moved forward from time to time, in view of the difficulties, or the accidents, or what hot, that may have hindered or impeded the work of excavating and constructing- the foundations, so as tc have them in that state of reasonable and substantial completeness.”
Defendant introduced substantial testimony tending to show that the foundations were completed within a reasonable time, under the conditions existing during the course of performance. There was, however, substantial evidence to the contrary. Defendant complained that weather and flood conditions and labor shortage contributed at least to the delay.
The weather and flood difficulties were three in number: On November 15, 1915, due to several days of rainy weather, the water released the earth and caused it to pile more heavily against the “Lackawanna steel arch rib” around the pump pit,’ the thrust thereof on the land side (which was 20 feet higher than on the river side) causing the sheeting to collapse, although the river did not overflow, but was in fact low at the time. On January 3, 1916, the river rose to a 35-foot stage above pool elevation, thereby flooding the pump pit excavation, as well as the suction pit, and on the next day the piling of the pump pit again collapsed and allowed further cave-in, extending under the side of the pumping station and causing further damage. Further injury is also said to have been caused by the presence of “winter springs” at the side of the excavation when the surface of the ground was frozen.
As to the labor shortage: There was testimony 'that during the months from March to December, 1916, both inclusive, the average force employed by Gillespie & Co. ranged from time to time between 25 as a minimum and 60 as a maximum (the minimum and maximum for each month being separately given); that in the latter part of April, 1916, Gillespie & Co. were unable to get union carpenters at East Liverpool (because they were all busy there), and was obliged to send from time to time to Pittsburgh for men, who sometimes would stay but one day; and that there was a general difficulty in getting men “after the spring and early summer of 1916.”
The criticism of the charge is directed to the asserted exclusion (both by the refusal of request to charge and by the charge as given) of testimony of the situation as developed subsequent to the making of *239the contract, and as existing at the time the foundations were actually under construction, and in limiting, as is contended, the definition of reasonable time to what the parties contemplated at the time the contract was made would be such reasonable time. The refused instructions were to the effect that, in determining what was a reasonable time for such work, there must be considered “all the circumstances at the time the work was being performed, including any material difficulties and hazards attending it and frustrating attempts at performance, if the same are disclosed by the evidence,” and that if, after the Gillespie contract was let, the construction of the foundations “proceeded and was completed with reasonable skill and diligence, in view of all the circumstances existing at the time the work was being done,” the plaintiff could recover no damages by reason of the noncompleiion of the foundations until after “on or about May 1, 1916.”
In our opinion, what we have spoken of as the “general instruction” is a correct statement of the broad and general rule, except so far as it may contain statements inconsistent with what is later said in -the opinion regarding the “supplemental” instruction. In the normal case, one test of reasonable time is the time within the contemplation of the parties in making the contract.
“If they then talked it over and understood it alike, while that fact would not fix the exact limit, it would show about what they understood it would be.” Eppens v. Littlejohn, 164 N. Y. 187,193, 58 N. E. 19, 22 (52 L. R. A. 811).
The time contemplated by the parties when the contract was made is not, however, necessarily the sole and final test. It is usually but one element in such determination.
The question whether the time taken for performance was reasonable or not must take into account all the circumstances and conditions encountered at the time the contract was being performed, provided, at least, that the one charged with such performance, in preparing therefor, and in meeting the conditions when they did occur, exercised the reasonable care which an ordinarily prudent person would have exercised under like conditions. The Richland Queen (C. C. A. 2) 254 Fed. 668, 166 C. C. A. 166; Empire Transportation Co. v. Philadelphia, etc., Co. (C. C. A. 8) 77 Fed. 919, 23 C. C. A. 564, 35 L. R. A. 623.
“In deciding whether an undertaking has been performed within reasonable time, the material difficulties and hazards attending it, the amount of diligence used, and frustrated attempts at performance should be considered.” 13 Corpus Juris, § 782, pp. 685, 686.
We think, however, that the jury was quite likely to be misled by what we have termed the “supplemental instruction,” in its declaration that the “reasonable time” actually contemplated by the parties, when once ascertained by the jury, “becomes an immovable date for the admeasurement” of the rights and obligations of the parties, “not to be moved forward from time to time, in view of the difficulties or the accidents, or what not, that may have hindered or impeded the work of excavating and constructing the foundations.” This instruction not only seems incorrectly to assume that the jury could' ascertain with reasonable certainty a fixed and immovable date as within the *240contemplation of the parties when the contract was made, hut it apparently leaves out of question the foreseeable difficulties actually met in the performance of the work, even though in anticipating and preparing for them there had been exercised the reasonable care above mentioned. This error was, we think, emphasized by the refusal to give the requested instructions, whose substance we have above stated, and which we think should have been given, but qualified by the consideration of due care in preparing for and meeting the situation encountered, and, in our opinion, this error was not necessarily cured by the fact, if such it was, that the labor and weather difficulties encountered should have been foreseen by the exercise of due care.
Conceding, for the purposes, at least, of this opinion, that upon the record as presented on the trial there was no substantial evidence that the labor and weather conditions encountered by Gillespie & Co. were nGt reasonably to be anticipated by the parties tó the contract m suit when the same was made, it does not, in our opinion, follow that these conditions must be laid out of account in determining what was a reasonable time for the completion of the foundations, unless there was an absence of evidence to support a conclusion that Gillespie & Co., in preparing to meet the same, exercised the measure of care and diligence to which we have referred.
Upon a careful consideration of all the testimony, and interpreting it, as we must (for the purposes of this review), most favorably to defendant, we are unable to say that there was no substantial evidence in favor of a conclusion that Gillespie & Co. did exercise such care and diligence. We therefore cannot say that defendant was not prejudiced by the charge and refusal to charge complained of.
For the errors in that respect the judgment of the District Court must be reversed and a new trial ordered.