Asimos v. T. L. Reynolds & Sons, Inc.

429 S.W.2d 102, 244 Ark. 1042, 1968 Ark. LEXIS 1458
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 27, 1968
Docket5-4505
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 429 S.W.2d 102 (Asimos v. T. L. Reynolds & Sons, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Asimos v. T. L. Reynolds & Sons, Inc., 429 S.W.2d 102, 244 Ark. 1042, 1968 Ark. LEXIS 1458 (Ark. 1968).

Opinion

J. Fred Jones, Justice.

T. L. Reynolds & Sons, Inc., an excavation contractor, obtained judgment in tbe Garland County Circuit Court against Mr. and Mrs. John G-. Asimos for $19,817.40 as balance due on an excavation contract, and Mr. and Mrs. Asimos have appealed.

The appellants were the owners of the De Soto Hotel in Hot Springs, as well as Lots 13 and 14 in Block 127 on a steep mountainside across Canyon Street from the hotel. In order to construct a parking lot for the hotel, appellants entered into an agreement with the ap-pellee under which the appellee agreed to excavate and remove the dirt from Lots 13 and 14 for a contract price of $56,000. The pertinent part of the agreement giving rise to the litigation is as follows:

“Contractor agrees to excavate and remove dirt, etc., from the premises known as Lots 13 and 14 of Block 127 of the United States Hot Springs Reservation, as follows:
(A) All of Lots 13 and 14 with exception of the Northwesterly two feet of said Lots to a grade on the Southeasterly line of said Lots equal to that of Canyon Street which border said lots at said point and from said grade rising in a Northwesterly direction, so as to have the grade along the Northwesterly line of said Lots 5 feet above the Canyon Street grade.”

The agreement provided for payments to be made as the work progressed and the last paragraph provided as follows:

“The Parties hereto agree that the cost of removing any stuff or cave-in materials shall be borne by the Contractor during the period of excavation, but that the cost of removing any sluff or cave-in materials shall be borne by the Owner at all times other than during the period of excavation.”

Appellants subsequently requested that additional work be done in lowering the grade level of the floor of the excavation and this work was performed. Appellants paid a total of $33,000 on the contract and upon failure to pay anything further, appellee sued for $26,659 as the balance due on the contract. This amount included $1,159 for additional work on the side-agreement for change in the grade of the floor of the excavation. The appellants answered by general denial, except as to the execution of the contract, and appellants counterclaimed for damages in the amount of $45,000 for breach of the contract.

The ease was tried in the circuit court before the-judge sitting as a jury, and the judgment in favor of appellee for $19,817.40 was rendered on the findings of the trial court, as follows:

“1. The plaintiff, T. L. Reynolds & Sons, Inc. entered into a contract with the defendants, John G. Asimos and Jane A. Asimos to excavate certain portions of Lots 13 and 14 of Block 127 of the United States Hot Springs Reservation for a total consideration of the sum of $56,000.00; that of that sum $33,000.00 was paid by the defendants to the plaintiff.
2. That the plaintiff performed the contract to the extent possible; that the plaintiff was unable to excavate a ninety degree vertical line due to the nature of the rock formation, which necessitated slope-age to protect against sloughage and cave-in of the adjoining property; that plaintiff and defendants acquiesced in the demand of the National Park Service to refrain from excavation that would undercut National Park property or permit slides that would affect the surface of National Park property.
3. That the amount of slopage remaining on said lots contemplated to be excavated amounted to 2,-412 cubic yards; that the cost of excavating said cubic yards, based upon contract price, would have been $1.80 per cubic yard; that the defendants are entitled to a set-off in the sum of $4,341.60 for the materials not removed as contemplated in the contract.
4. That the defendants, by causing the lot to be immediately paved and using same for parking purposes and by making additional payments to the plaintiff after the plaintiff had ceased work and left the job, waived and abandoned any claim against the plaintiff for completion of the work.
5. That the undisputed evidence proves that the plaintiff excavated into certain areas of the lots deeper than was required under the contract in order to provide a proper surface for paving purposes ; that the work was done at the request of the defendant, John G. Asimos; and that the plaintiff is entitled to the sum of $1,159.00 for the extra work done.
6. That the defendants waived any claims for damages against the plaintiff and are estopped by their actions in causing a concrete slab to be poured and using the lot as a parking lot without first demanding that the plaintiff complete the contract; and further, the defendant, John G. Asimos admitted from the witness stand that he owed the plaintiff additional sums of money for the work.”

On appeal to this court, the appellants designate the points upon which they rely for reversal, as follows:

“1. The court improperly considered certain hearsay evidence during the course of the proceeding to arrive at one of its findings of fact.
2. The court permitted recovery based on the contract when the appellee was in obvious breach thereof.
3. The court applied an erroneous formula in arriving at its judgment.”

The evidence reveals that the hack side or end of the excavation was sixty or seventy feet deep where it was cnt into the mountain. The written agreement between the parties is silent as to whether the walls of the excavation were to be perpendicular from within two feet of the property boundary line on the side of the mountain to the floor of the excavation. Appellee based his contract price of $56,000 on the number of cubic yards to be excavated at $1.80 per yard and he estimated the number of yards to perpendicular walls, so this litigation stems from, and involves, the question of whether the walls of the excavation were to be straight up and down when the excavation was completed, or whether some deviation from perpendicular was permissible under the terms of the contract.

When appellee commenced the excavation, it soon learned, from the nature of the ground, that a perpendicular wall of an .excavation sixty to seventy feet deep, would, not support itself, so it sloped the wall from within two feet of the property line at the top of the excavation out to twelve to sixteen feet from perpendicular at the bottom of the excavation.

As to appellants’ first point, they argue that the trial court erroneously considered certain demands made by the Park Service in a letter to appellants, with copy to appellee, the letter having been received in evidence for the limited purpose of showing it had been received. Appellants argue that outside of the contents of this letter, there-is no evidence in the record that the National Park Service had made demands on the parties to refrain from making an excavation that would undercut the National Park property.

We do not agree with the appellants on this point.

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Bluebook (online)
429 S.W.2d 102, 244 Ark. 1042, 1968 Ark. LEXIS 1458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/asimos-v-t-l-reynolds-sons-inc-ark-1968.