Alm Construction Company v. Vertin

118 N.W.2d 737, 1962 N.D. LEXIS 109
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1962
Docket7997
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 118 N.W.2d 737 (Alm Construction Company v. Vertin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alm Construction Company v. Vertin, 118 N.W.2d 737, 1962 N.D. LEXIS 109 (N.D. 1962).

Opinion

TEIGEN, Judge.

The plaintiff, a contractor, alleges it constructed a store building and adjacent parking lot for the defendant Miss Vertin and that the said defendant owes a balance of $15,000 on the contract and $2,500 for extra work. The plaintiff seeks to recover judgment in the amount of $17,500. It also alleges the defendant Miss Vertin deposited with the defendants McCusker and Citizens First National Bank of Wahpeton the sum of $15,000 in escrow, payable to the plaintiff in reduction of the judgment which it is entitled to. It seeks to collect the deposit and to foreclose a mechanic’s lien which it filed against the improved premise for the balance.

The defendant Miss' Vertin admits contract, admits unpaid contract balance of $15,000, and denies the plaintiff’s claim for extra work. She alleges noncompliance with contract provisions, faulty workmanship and materials, prays for a dismissal of the plaintiff’s complaint, and counterclaims for $25,000 in damages because of breach of contract. The defendants McCusker and Citizens First National Bank of Wahpeton deny generally the allegations of the complaint.

The case was tried to a jury and a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant Miss Vertin in the amount of $14,000. Judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of the verdict, plus interest, costs and disbursements. It also decreed the judgment a lien upon the premises and ordered the defendants McCusker and Citizens First National Bank of Wahpeton to turn over to the plaintiff from the funds on deposit an amount equal to the judgment. It dismissed the defendant Marjorie Vertin’s counterclaim.

The defendant Marjorie Vertin moved in the alternative for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or new trial which was denied. She takes this appeal from the judgment and the orders denying judgment non obstante and new trial. The defendants B. P. McCusker and Citizens First National Bank of Wahpeton have not appealed.

Included in the record is a second appeal. It is an appeal from two orders of the district court made after judgment by the plaintiff in this case. The first order denies plaintiff’s application to have judgment enforced against the defendants B. P. Mc-Cusker and Citizens First National Bank of Wahpeton, which application was premised on the theory that the judgment has become final against them because they have not appealed or noticed any motions after the return of the verdict. The other order appealed from allowed the defendant Vertin to file as a part of her supersedeas bond the money deposited with the defendants B. P. McCusker and Citizens First National Bank of Wahpeton.

We will first consider the appeal of the defendant Marjorie Vertin.

The plaintiff is a family corporation engaged as a building contractor with offices at Minneapolis, Minnesota. The defendant *741 Marjorie Vertin is the owner of certain lots located at Wahpeton, North Dakota, upon which she desired to have constructed a building with adjacent parking lot to lease to National Tea Company as a supermarket. Miss Vertin owned another building in the City of Wahpeton which had been leased by National Tea Company for a number of years; however, National Tea had expressed a desire to have a new and more modern building.

During the time involved in this lawsuit, National Tea Company changed its name to National Food Stores, Inc., and, for the sake of convenience, the corporation will hereafter be referred to as National.

A contract was executed between plaintiff and the defendant Miss Vertin for the construction of a building 50 feet by 130 feet with adjacent parking lot for the agreed amount of $50,000. The contract was written on a printed form entitled “THE A. I. A. SHORT FORM FOR SMALL CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS.” It is a form issued by the American Institute of Architects for use when the proposed work is simple in character, small in cost and the stipulated sum forms the basis of the payment. The contract provides that the contractor shall furnish all of the material and perform all of the work for general construction of a building and parking lot as shown on drawings and described in the specifications entitled “National Food Store, Wahpeton, North Dakota, prepared by National Tea Company Engineering Dept.” The section on General Conditions of this contract provides that it should include “the Agreement and its General Conditions, the Drawings, and the Specifications” and provides that two or more copies of each shall be signed by both parties, one signed copy to be retained by each. It also provides that the documents shall be considered as one. No drawings or specifications were signed by either party nor attached to the contract. Each party now claims to submit the intended specifications but the two sets of specifications vary.

The plaintiff contends it was agreed that the building and parking lot were to be constructed like the one built by the plaintiff and occupied by National at Sleepy Eye, Minnesota, in 1958. It claims there were no written specifications; however, near the completion of the construction, plaintiff and a representative of National drew a set of specifications which plaintiff now submits as the specifications intended by the parties under the contract. The defendant denies any such agreement or intention and contends the specifications she offers in evidence, modified to provide a 50 foot building and 60 foot parking lot, were agreed upon as the specifications intended in the contract. This contention is premised on the following background: Before the contract was entered into between the plaintiff and defendant, National had furnished the defendant a set of specifications for a building 60 feet by 130 feet and adjacent parking lot to be constructed on that part of the premises not occupied by the building. At a preliminary negotiation held at Wahpeton, attended by the plaintiff, a representative of National, the defendant and her father, these specifications were considered and the plaintiff at that time made and tendered its bid to construct the premises for the amount of $54,600. The bid was not accepted for the reason that National’s head office in Chicago desired a wider parking lot and would not agree to leasing the premises as described in the plans and specifications. The defendant’s lots were 110 feet by 132 feet and the parking lot would then be 50 feet by 132 feet if a building 60 feet by 130 feet were constructed thereon. No contract resulted. National later indicated it would lease a building 50 feet by 130 feet, allowing for an adjacent parking lot 60 feet by 132 feet. No new specifications were drawn. The plaintiff by letter advised defendant it would be willing to construct a National Tea Company Food Store 50 feet by 130 feet, complete with parking lot, “built to the National Tea Company’s specifications” for the sum of $50,000. Defendant interpreted the offer as an offer to construct a building conforming to National Tea Company’s *742 specifications in her possession, except the building would be reduced in size to SO feet in width and the parking lot increased to 60 feet in width, and testified she so understood the intent when she signed the contract. She testified these were the specifications on which plaintiff formerly bid. The contract was signed and a building and parking lot were constructed.

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Bluebook (online)
118 N.W.2d 737, 1962 N.D. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alm-construction-company-v-vertin-nd-1962.