Court: APPEALS COURT OF MASSACHUSETTS
Citation: 3 Mass. App. Ct. 246
Parties: H. PIKEN & CO., INC. vs. PLANET CONSTRUCTION CORP. &
another.
County: Suffolk
Hearing Date: May 23, 1974
Decision Date: April 30, 1975
Judges: ROSE, GOODMAN, & GRANT, JJ.
In a bill in equity by a subcontractor seeking damages for various claims under its contract with a general contractor, it was error to award the subcontractor the cost of wage increases paid to its employees for work it was required to do after a lapse of two years from the start of construction where the contract contained no specific completion date and where there was no finding that the prolongation of the contractor's performance beyond two years was unreasonable. [247-248] Where a party objected to various findings in a master's report on the ground that there was insufficient evidence to support them but did not demonstrate any error of law apparent on the record by filing an affidavit under Rule 46 of the Superior Court containing a summary of the relevant evidence and indicating that it was at least probable that the master's findings were erroneous, there was no abuse of discretion in refusing to recommit the report to the master for summaries of the evidence. [248-249]
BILL IN EQUITY filed in the Superior Court on December 7, 1970.
The suit was heard by Kalus, J., on a master's report.
Ann-Louise Levine (Alvin Jack Sims with her) for the defendants.
Sally A. Corwin (Jon C. Mazuy with her) for the
plaintiff.
GOODMAN, J. The defendants, the general contractor for the construction of the Brockton High School (Planet) and the surety on its bond, appeal from interlocutory decrees denying the defendants' motion to recommit and
Page 247
confirming the master's report and from a final decree awarding to the
plaintiff, Planet's painting subcontractor (Piken), $40,271.35, with interest,
for various claims in its bill in equity against the defendants.
1. Among Piken's claims was an item in the amount of $7,573.30, the cost of
wage increases paid by Piken to its employees (as provided by union contracts)
for work it was required to do after the lapse of two years from the start of
construction, which was apparently sometime after June 22, 1967, the date
Planet entered into the general contract to construct the school. The master
disallowed the charge, but the trial judge included it in the final decree. We
agree with the defendants that the trial judge erred in this respect.
Since the contract contained no specific completion date, Planet was bound to
perform within a reasonable time. See MacDonald & Payne Machine Co. Inc. v.
Metallic Arts of New England, Inc. 324 Mass. 353, 357 (1949). Piken contends
that two years was the outside limit of the period constituting a reasonable
time for Planet's completion of the contract and that since Planet did not
complete the contract within that period, it is responsible for any increased
wage costs incurred by Piken as a result of the delay. But this contention is
not supported by the master's report. There is no finding that Planet's
prolongation of its performance beyond two years was unreasonable, although
such a finding was necessary to Piken's case. Indeed, the inference is to the
contrary, for while the master found that "Piken reasonably could expect
the project would be ready for painting work in a reasonable time after Planet
started construction . . . [he could not find] that Piken had any right to
assume that the project would be finished within two (2) years . . .."
Piken relies on the master's findings that "[w]hen Planet bid the job, one
of the items in the general contractor's bid, was `number of days' it would
take to erect the high school . . . [and that] Planet filled in `730' days
which embraces a two (2) year period." But the master further found:
"When Piken bid the job, (as a filed subbidder) it did not know
Page 248
when the project was to be completed. The specifications, available to
subbidders (whose bids are filed prior to the opening by the awarding authority
of bids of the general contractors) make no reference to any completion
date." See G. L. c. 149, Section 44H. Thus such cases as Alpert v.
Commonwealth, 357 Mass. 306, 320 (1970), which Piken cites and in which
recovery is based on reliance on specifications, are inapposite. It is clear
from the master's report that he did not consider that two years was
"determinative" (as Piken contends) of a reasonable period; and Piken
shows us nothing contrary to the general rule that "[t]he question [of
what is a reasonable time for performance] [i]s one of fact to be determined by
the . . . [master] in consideration of all of the evidence." MacDonald
& Payne Machine Co. Inc. v. Metallic Arts of New England, Inc. 324 Mass. at
357.
2. The defendants filed objections to virtually all the findings in the
master's report which were unfavorable to them, primarily on the ground, stated
variously, that "[t]here is insufficient evidence upon which to conclude .
. . ," that "the evidence does not support such a finding," that
"the evidence to support the finding is insufficient . . . ," etc.
(see O'Brien v. Dwight; 363 Mass. 256, 281 [1973]), and requested that the
master report summaries of the evidence. The master declined to do so1 , and we cannot say that the court abused its
discretion in refusing to recommit for this purpose. "A party cannot
convert a question of fact into one of law by merely asserting that certain
conclusions are required by the law, and thus cause practically all the
evidence in the case to be summarized and reported." Minot v. Minot, 319
Mass. 253, 260 (1946). See Tzitzon Realty Co. Inc. v. Mustonen, 352 Mass. 648,
650 (1967); Milano Bros. Inc. v. Joseph Rugo, Inc. 353 Mass. 767, 768 (1968);
The Cross Co. v. Clermont's, Inc. 361 Mass. 874, 875 (1972); Peters v. Wallach,
366 Mass. 622, 626 (1975).
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1 Also requested were summaries of the
evidence underlying findings as to the applicability of Piken's subcontract.
The defendants' sole contention in connection with these findings is also that
such summaries should have been granted.
Page 249
Any attack by the defendants as of right on the motion to confirm the master's
report and the denial of the motion to recommit must fail because they have not
demonstrated any error of law apparent on the record (Israel v. Sommer, 292
Mass. 113, 119 [1935]; Bumpus v. Church, 302 Mass. 419, 420-421 [1939], and
cases cited) by filing an affidavit under Rule 46 of the Superior Court (1954)
containing a summary of the relevant evidence and indicating that it "was
at least such as to make it probable that his findings or failures to find were
erroneous." Boston Consol. Gas Co. v. Department of Pub. Util. 327 Mass.
103, 106 (1951) (likewise rejecting a contention that "the master made
certain findings not warranted by the evidence . . .").
The interlocutory decrees are affirmed.2
The final decree shall be modified by substituting in paragraph 1 the sum of
$32,698.05 for the sum of $40,271.35 and by making appropriate adjustments in
interest and in the total. As so modified, the final decree is affirmed.
So ordered.
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2 Our disposition in part 1 makes Piken's
motion to correct the interlocutory decree confirming the report immaterial,
and it is denied.
END OF DECISION