Alexander v. Grenada Bank

2 Tenn. App. 580, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 58
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 15, 1926
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Tenn. App. 580 (Alexander v. Grenada Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Grenada Bank, 2 Tenn. App. 580, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 58 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

Complainant are James Alexander and W. W. Wessell, partners under the name of Alexander Construction Co. located in Memphis, Tennessee. The defendant is the Grenada Bank, with its chief offices in Grenada, Mississippi, but with numerous branch banks throughout the State of Mississippi, one of the branch banks being located at Charleston, Mississippi, and another at Moorehead, Mississippi.

“The original bill averred the contract between the parties for the construction by the complainaUts of a two story bank building at Moorehead and a two-st.ory bank building at Charleston, with two stores at the left of it and two stores in the rear of it, accord *582 ing to plans and specifications prepared by Hanker & Cairns, architects of Memphis; that during the progress of the work the defendant insisted upon so many additions to and alterations in the work as to constitute a departure from the original plan and to entitle the complainants to recover on a cost-plus basis without regard to the limitations of cost fixed by the original contract.

“The defendant, in its answer, denied the theory of the original bill as to the cost-plus plan. "With its answer defendant filed a cross-bill seeking recovery on account of defects and delays in the work.

“Defendant denied that it owed the complainant $79,000 but admitted that it was due a balance of $11,193.14 under the original contract price. However, the defendant claimed that this was entirely offset by defects in the work and delays. It charged that the delay had caused the defendant loss of rents of $5,416 at Charleston, Mississippi, and $3,040 at Moorehead, Mississippi.

“The answer and cross-bill further set up that the defects in the buildings at Charleston amounted to $7,500 and the defects in the building at Moorehead amounted to $5,000.”

To this cross-bill the complainants filed an answer making a general denial. With the issues thus formed, a number of depositions were taken, accompanied by numerous exhibits, and upon hearing the Chancellor sustained the complainants’ bill and allowed the complainants to recover the cost or amount the complainants had paid in the erection of two buildings, plus ten per cent (10%).

In other words, the Chancellor held that the parties had abrogated the written contract executed between the parties by reason of there having been so many alterations, additions and changes from the original plan. The Chancellor allowed the defendant credit for two small items in defective concrete in the basement in one of the buildings and for defective plastering. All the other credits for delay and inferior work, amounting to several thousand dollars claimed by the defendant, were disallowed and complainants were granted a decree against the defendant for $75,323.33, with interest from the date of the decree.

The complainants excepted to the decree of the Chancellor in not allowing interest from date of the filing of its bill. The bill was filed on August 6, 1921, seeking to recover $79,000.

The defendants excepted to the decree of the Chancellor in holding that the contract as executed July 4, 1919, between the complainants and the defendant, had been abrogated by so many alterations and changes, and the defendant also excepted to the action of the Chancellor in not permitting it to, recover as an offset damages due to defects in the marble used by the complainants in the interior finishing of the two buildings. All the other credits insisted on be *583 low by the defendant for delay and inferior workmanship have been abandoned.

Therefore, the complainants presented one assignment, that is, that the Chancellor erred in not allowing interest from the date of filing complainants’ bill on the amount of the judgement recovered.

The defendant has four assignments of error, as follows:

1. In sustaining the cost-plus theory of the bill and in not ap-pljdng the maximum limit of cost fixed by the contract between the parties.

2. In entering a judgment for complainants in any sum instead of dismissing the bill.

3. In not sustaining defendant’s exceptions to the testimony of several witnesses to the effect that Mr. Hanker, the architect, declared, about September, 1920, that this work had or was about to become a “percentage job.’’ (The original assignments meet the rule of this Court as to assignments of this kind by quoting the testimony, etc.)

4. In not allowing a recovery to the defendant for defects in the marble work.

"We are presented with a large record in this cause consisting of seven volumes. We are informed that the record is only one-half as large as it was in the lower court, counsel by stipulation and agreement having eliminated certain portions of the record pertaining to the delay in the construction of the two buildings and in regard to certain defects in work and construction of said buildings. We are thankful for this elimination and stipulation of counsel, but we still have 1684 pages of testimony, more than 200 exhibits, consisting of letters and telegrams, and two volumes of original papers and documents sent up as an accompaniment or escort with the other five volumes of testimony, pleadings, orders and decrees.

It appears that during the progress of this trial, Mr. James Alexander, one of the complainants, died, and the suit is now being prosecuted by W. W. Wessell, surviving partner.

The moving spirit of the defendant is Mr. J. T. Thomas, President of the Grenada Bank in Grenada, Mississippi. Mr. Thomas also had co-operating with him a building committee. The plans and specifications for these two buildings were drawn by Hanker & Cairns, prominent architects of Memphis. It appears that Mr. W. J. Hanker was the real architect in charge. The work of construction on the two buildings was carried on simultaneously. It ap'-pears that Charleston and Moorehead are about thirty miles apart. '

The contract called for the construction of a two-story bank building at Moorehead, the upper story to be used for offices, and a bank building with four stores adjoining at Charleston. Later by mutual agreement, reduced to writing, a fifth store was added to the *584 Charleston part of the contract. The contract, which is in the record in its original form, in its general provisions appears to be the standard document adopted by the American Institution of Architects. "We quote as follows from some of the various sections of the contract:

“Article 9 is headed “The Architect’s Status,” and provides that he shall have general supervision and direction of the work and that “he is the agent of the owner only to the extent provided in the contract Documents, and when in special instances he is authorized by the owner so to act, and in such instances he shall, upon request, show the contractor written authority. ... As the architect is, in the first instance, thé interpreter of the conditions of the contract and the judge of its performance, he shall side neither with the owner nor with the contractor, but shall use his powers under the contract to enforce its faithful performance by both.”

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Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. App. 580, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-grenada-bank-tennctapp-1926.