Court: APPEALS COURT OF MASSACHUSETTS
Citation: 21 Mass. App. Ct. 47
Parties: RICHARDSON ELECTRICAL COMPANY, INC. vs. PETER FRANCESE &
SON, INC. & another;1 TOWN OF LENOX,
third-party defendant.
County: Middlesex
Hearing Date: September 10, 1985
Decision Date: October 21, 1985
Judges: BROWN, KASS, & WARNER, JJ.
In an action by the electrical work subcontractor on a public works project, seeking payment for excavating a trench across rocky terrain to accommodate a telephone cable as an extra not in the contract, the judge was warranted in concluding that the plans and specifications used to obtain bids for the project failed to give notice that the electrical subcontractor would be required to dig a trench to accommodate telephone cable, that the subcontractor could reasonably assume that the telephone lines would hang, as they generally did, along the power lines, and that, consequently, the subcontractor was entitled to payment for the extra work. [50-52]
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court Department on October 19, 1979.
The case was heard by Alan J. Dimond, J.
A motion for summary judgment on a third-party complaint was heard by Peter F.
Brady, J.
The case was submitted on briefs.
David O. Burbank & Ronald E. Oliveira for Peter Francese & Son, Inc.,
& another.
Hugh C. Cowhig, Town Counsel, for the town of Lenox.
Sally A. Corwin & Jon C. Mazuy for Richardson Electrical Company, Inc.
KASS, J. Four parties are involved in these consolidated appeals, but, as
the cases were presented in the briefs and argument, the controversy devolves
into one in which the town
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1 The Hartford Accident and Indemnity
Company.
Page 48
of Lenox, as owner of a water pumping station, and Richardson Electrical
Company, Inc. (Richardson), an electrical work subcontractor, are the
disputants. The question to be decided is whether the construction plans and
specifications used by Lenox to obtain bids for construction of the pumping
station failed to put Richardson on notice that the electrical subcontractor
would have to dig an 11,000-foot trench across rocky terrain to accommodate a
telephone cable.
Richardson's complaint against the general contractor, Peter Francese &
Son, Inc. (Francese), sought payment for extra work and materials. Conformably
with G. L. c. 149, Section 29, Richardson named the bonding company, The
Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company (Hartford), a codefendant. Francese
impleaded Lenox as a third-party defendant, and Lenox, in turn, brought in
Whitman & Howard, Inc. (Whitman & Howard), the engineers who prepared
the bid documents, as a fourth-party defendant. After trial in the Superior
Court without a jury, Richardson obtained a judgment of $34,112.05 against
Francese and Hartford, from which both appeal. Francese obtained a judgment of
$53,803.38 against Lenox, from which Lenox appeals.2
A summary of the facts found by the judge who heard the primary case3 follows:
Richardson's subbid, dated May 17, 1978, undertook to furnish all the labor and
materials required by Section 29 ("Electrical Work") of the
specifications. Those specifications included
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2 The third-party complaint by Francese
and the bonding company against Lenox was severed for trial. That aspect of the
case was disposed of by a hearing on a motion for summary judgment against the
town by Francese and the bonding company. Essentially, Francese looked to the
town for indemnification. The judgment in the case against the town is larger
by some $19,000, mainly because of legal fees and costs of the third-party
plaintiffs (Francese and Hartford) in defending the action against them by
Richardson and in prosecuting the action against the town.
On the records before us, the fourth-party action by Lenox against Whitman
& Howard is unresolved and perhaps is in abeyance pending final
determination of liability among Richardson, Francese, and Lenox.
3 The facts were developed in the trial
of Richardson's claim against Francese and the bonding company.
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trenching for an "[e]mpty telephone conduit from contact pole to telephone
terminal cabinets." The plans showed a contact pole about fifty feet from
the pumping structure. Section 29 (s) 11 of the specifications called upon the
subcontractor to make arrangements with New England Telephone (NET) for
extension of their telephone line to the station site, and Section 29 (s) (9)
(a) required the subcontractor to arrange with Western Massachusetts Electric
Company (WMEC) for extension of primary power lines "from their nearest
three phase supply (near the Richmond town line) to the station site. Western
Massachusetts Electric Co. will install the pole line, last contact pole and
the pad mounted transformer."
Before bidding, Richardson did, indeed, make inquiries of the respective
utilities. NET told Richardson it would make no charge to bring in telephone
service.4 That was pertinent to
Richardson's bid because the specifications required the electrical
subcontractor to pay charges and fees levied by the utilities. WMEC informed
Richardson it would charge $28,906 to bring power to the contact pole. Nothing
on the plans or in the specifications showed precisely how NET would bring its
service to the contact pole, although Richardson could reasonably assume that
the telephone lines would hang, as they generally did, alongside the power
lines. NET's "no charge" response to Richardson was consistent with
that assumption.
An essential premise, however, was faulty. The town of Richmond, from which
WMEC was extending power lines, was not served by NET, but by an independent
local company. NET lines did not run on the power line poles in that town;
consequently, there were no NET telephone wires to extend.5 Whitman & Howard, the project engineer preparing the
bid documents, had known that there was some uncertainty about
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4 That response appears to have been
based on an assumption by NET that it would bring service in by microwave to an
antenna on the contact pole. The town, as appears below, rejected that
solution.
5 Whatever may be the actual
circumstance, so far as the record stands, the inability to bring in phone
lines by the same access as power lines was highly unusual -- contrary to the
experience of the subcontractor in "well over a thousand" similar
jobs.
Page 50
the source of telephone service. It had made inquiry of NET on March 27, 1978,
but received no reply until November 20.
There were choices for telephone transmission: overhead lines, underground
lines, or microwave. Whitman & Howard, on behalf of the town, opted for
underground lines after the town rejected a microwave link. That decision was
made late in 1978, well after Richardson had submitted its bid. Richardson,
when directed to excavate the necessary trench for an underground line, did so
under protest, i.e., claiming that the work was not in the contract and that it
would file a claim for it as an extra. As matters developed, some of the
terrain contained ledge whose removal was beyond Richardson's technology. The
general contractor had to complete the trench and back charged Richardson
accordingly. Richardson had not visited the project site before making its bid,
as required by Section 12 (1) of the general conditions of the contract, but,
the trial judge remarked, "there is nothing to indicate that a visit to
the station site by Richardson would have overcome the insufficiency."
The judge concluded that the specifications were "hardly sufficient to
convey to bidders the information that they needed to make intelligent bids.
Failure by Whitman & Howard to resolve the questions about telephone
service left the specifications seriously inadequate and unjustifiably
indefinite."
As to facts we, of course, accept the findings of the trial judge unless
clearly erroneous. Mass.R.Civ.P. 52(a), 365 Mass. 816 (1974). First Pa.
Mortgage Trust v. Dorchester Sav. Bank, 395 Mass. 614, 621 (1985). C.C. &
T. Constr. Co. v. Coleman Bros., 8 Mass. App. C. 133, 135 (1979). Whether the
terms of the construction contract were impermissibly vague is a mixed question
of fact and law. Cf. Markell v. Sidney B. Pfeifer Foundation, Inc., 9 Mass.
App. Ct. 412, 429 (1980); Patry v. Harmony Homes, Inc., 10 Mass. App. Ct. 1, 6
(1980). There is implied in a set of construction plans and specifications a
warranty that they are accurate as to descriptions of the kind and quantity of
work required. See M.L. Shalloo, Inc. v. Ricciardi & Sons Constr., 348
Mass. 682, 686-688 (1965); Alpert v. Commonwealth, 357 Mass. 306, 321 (1970).
Contrast D. Federico Co. v. Commonwealth, 11
Page 51
Mass. App. Ct. 248, 251-252 (1981), in which the contract expressly stated that
estimates of quantities of excavation and replacement fill required on the job
were not guaranteed, thus precluding warranty of, or reliance on, the furnished
estimates. Contrast also Daniel O'Connell's Sons v. Commonwealth, 349 Mass.
642, 644-648 (1965) (contract disclaimed accuracy of "limited geologic
data" and warned that reliance on the information furnished would be
solely at the bidders' risk).
No disclaimer or warning of corresponding force bearing on the telephone line
needed appears as part of the contract documents in the instant case. To be
sure, the information for bidders provided that "[t]he bidder . . . shall
visit the site and shall satisfy himself as to the type and quantity of the
work to be done," but, as the judge found, a site visit would not have
raised an alarm that a telephone contact pole would not be available, as the
drawings suggested and as inquiry of NET seemed to confirm. Lenox can expect to
fare no better on another general provision in the invitation to bidders:
"The locations of all utilities are . . . to be considered as approximate
insofar as size, location and elevation are concerned." An approximation
means coming close. We may observe with confidence that allowance for some
deviation does not cover in excess of two miles.
Lenox, conceding that construction documents may be taken to contain implied
warranties about technical information, argues that such warranties may be
implied only if the owner or general contractor affirmatively sets forth facts
upon which bidders on those documents rely. Silence, however, can,
paradoxically, speak. See, e.g., Sharratt v. Housing Innovations, Inc., 365
Mass. 141, 142-145 (1974); Bendetson v. Coolidge, 7 Mass. App. Ct. 798, 801-803
(1979). Cf. Nei v. Burley, 388 Mass. 307, 310-311 (1983). Moreover, the
documents were more than merely silent on how telephone service was to come to
the site. The reasonable inference was that they would come to the contact pole
via the power lines, as telephone service generally did. That the means of
providing telephone service were not resolved was information which Whitman
& Howard never divulged to bidders.
Page 52
If a contractor or a subcontractor is presented with an obvious omission,
inconsistency, or discrepancy, he should take steps, by way of his own
investigation, or by putting questions to the owner (or owner's
representatives), to bridge gaps in the documents. John F. Miller Co. v. George
Fichera Constr. Corp., 7 Mass. App. Ct. 494, 499 (1979). If, as here, "a
person furnishing labor and materials, who examines the specifications
reasonably conscientiously, might miss a requirement which is out of sequence
or ineptly expressed, the burden of the error falls on the issuer of the
specifications . . . ." Id. at 498. That issuer is usually the owner, but
may be a person who uses the specifications to secure a secondary level of
bids, such as a prime contractor who invites bids from subcontractors. Id. at
498. The failure of the owner to state in its specifications that the method of
telephone connection had not yet been worked out constitutes that sort of inept
expression concerning a significant aspect of the electrical work on the job.
Judgments affirmed.
Page 53
END OF DECISION