American Oil Co. v. Ratliff's Sheet Metal Works

125 So. 249, 155 Miss. 779, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 358
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1929
DocketNo. 28247.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 So. 249 (American Oil Co. v. Ratliff's Sheet Metal Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Oil Co. v. Ratliff's Sheet Metal Works, 125 So. 249, 155 Miss. 779, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 358 (Mich. 1929).

Opinion

MeGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellees, Ratliff’s Sheet Metal Works and other materialmen and laborers, exhibited their bill in the chancery court of Lincoln county against the appellant American Oil Company, Lee McD'avitt, and the First National Bank .of Bróokhaven, Mississippi, seeking to recover from the American Oil Company, upon a contract for the erection of a garage entered into by it, as owner, and Lee MeDavitt, as contractor and builder, the cost of material and labor furnished therefor.

The contract price was ten thousand twenty-three dollars and thirty-seven cents, for which price MeDavitt was to furnish all the material and labor used in the construction of the building. The contract provided further that he was to pay for any extras, and that he was to be paid eighty-five per cent for the material and labor as the work progressed, fifteen per cent of which was to be retained for the protection of the American Oil Company until the building was completed. In addition to the stipulation in the written contract that MeDavitt was to furnish all material and labor for, and do all things necessary to, the completion of the building for the stipulated contract price, there was this clause in the contract: “It is further agreed that, the contractor shall furnish bond to. the owners in an amount equal to the amount of the contract price of said building, which said bond is to protect the owners hereof against any and all claims that may arise against the contractor or against the building in any manner whatsoever. ’ ’ The contract was executed on the 23d day of February, 1928. In the notice to the bidders it was. stated that a bond would be required, together with the contract, within fifteen days after the' letting. On the 6th day of March, *786 1928, the contract was by McDavitt assigned to the First National Bank of Brookhaven, Mississippi. After" the execution of the contract, McDavitt proceeded with the erection of the building, but never executed nor tendered to the American Oil Company any bond whatsoever. In the course of the construction of the building several materialmen furnished material amounting, in the aggregate, to more than six thousand dollars, and the money with which material was bought and labor paid by MoDavitt was borrowed by him from the First National Bank of Brookhaven.

The bill charged that McDavitt and the American Oil Company had represented to the complainants that, there was a solvent bond, which they knew, under the statute, protected the materialmen; that they acted upon this representation in furnishing the material used by the contractor, McDavitt, in the building; and that the representation was untrue. Complainants also alleged, in substance, that because of the failure to give this 'bond, the contract never became effectual, charging that the arrangement whereby McDavitt, the contractor, was permitted to- proceed with the erection of the building without executing bond, operated as a fraud and an estoppel upon their rights. The bill asserted a lien by virtue of section 2580, Hemingway’s Code 1927 (chap. 150, Laws 1926), as amended by chapter 137, Laws of 1928.

On or about June, 1928, when the building was at least seventy or probably eighty per cent completed, the several complainants served notice on the American Oil Company of their claim for material furnished to Mc-Davitt, requiring the American Oil Company to withhold any further payment on the contract, asserting that they were entitled to payment of same, at which time there was an unpaid balance on the contract of four thousand five hundred twenty-three dollars and thirty-seven cents. Thereafter the owner of the building, the *787 American Oil Company, proceeded to buy material from some of the complainants, paid therefor, and completed the erection of the building; but in so doing it employed McDavitt to take charge of the construction of the building after several weeks’ delay in the negotiation for the completion of same at a time when it knew that his bills for material contracted formerly had not been paid. The bill charges in general terms that this condition of affairs constituted a fraud upon the rights of the appellees, and, if not a fraud, the failure to take a bond and the course generally of appellant’s dealing with McDavitt constituted an estoppel.

The bill further charged that the assignment of the contract to the First National Bank of'Brookhaven was void, and that the American Oil Company had wrongfully paid money on that assignment to the bank for McDavitt. There was also an allegation that there were changes in the contract and in the plans and .specifications.

The bill prayed for the enforcement of a lien on the building and lot owned by the American Oil Company, that the property be sold for the enforcement of the lien and an adjustment of the equities between the parties be had, and that the American Oil Company account to them with reference to all dealings with McDavitt.

The answers of McDavitt and the American Oil Company deny that any representations that either of them 'had executed bond was made. They further deny all charge of fraud and estoppel, and, in substance, the appellant company said that the contract was the usual one; that it completed the building only when McDavitt became unable to proceed with the same because of the notices served by the complainants; that at the time McDavitt became unable financially to proceed with the •building, it had paid to him the sum of five thousand five hundred dollars; and that the balance on account of *788 said contract was four thousand five hundred twenty-three dollars and thirty-seven cents. Defendant, the appellant company, further said that McDavitt having notified it that he was unable financially to complete the said building in accordance with the contract, thereupon it took charge of the construction of the building and completed it as economically as was possible to. do, and in doing so expended the sum of t,wo thousand seven hundred twenty dollars and thirty-two cents, leaving a balance due on said contract of one thousand 'eight hundred three dollars and five cents.

It is further alleged in the answer of the appellant company that the building was to have been completed within a reasonable time, and that according to the understanding between the contractor and itself, the building should have been completed by the 1st day of May, 1928, but that McDavitt did not complete the building, and owing to the unnecessary delay, the building was not ready for occupancy until August 1, 1928. The appellant company also, claims as damages the rental value of its property for three months at two hundred thirteen dollars per month, a total of six hundred thirty-nine dollars, on account of the breach of this contract; and deducting this amount from one thousand eight hundred three dollars, ■the balance due on said contract, the difference or balance due on the McDavitt contract, one thousand one hundred sixty-four dollars and five cents, was tendered into court by it.

The First National Bank made its answer a cross-bill, alleging that there was one thousand two- hundred dollars due it, which money was furnished by it, to. Mc-Davitt for the purchase of material used in the construction of the building, and sought a decree for the balance due it against the American Oil Company and McDavitt.

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Bluebook (online)
125 So. 249, 155 Miss. 779, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-oil-co-v-ratliffs-sheet-metal-works-miss-1929.