Ball-Carden Co. v. Ridgell

171 S.W. 509, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 920
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 4, 1914
DocketNo. 7157.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 171 S.W. 509 (Ball-Carden Co. v. Ridgell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ball-Carden Co. v. Ridgell, 171 S.W. 509, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 920 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

Appellee Ridgell brought this suit against appellants, Ball-Carden Company, a partnership firm composed of George A. Carden and P. D. C. Ball, alleging that appellants had contracted to buy from ap-pellee 26,000 yards of gravel and sand to be used in the construction of locks and dams numbered 2 and 4 on the Trinity river for the United States government, the total consideration for said gravel and sand being $2,600. It is charged that the appellants, after having taken and used $249.59 worth of gravel, had failed to take the balance of the gravel, as contracted for, and judgment was sought and rendered for the unpaid portion of the contract price for the gravel, the judgment being for $2,350.31, with interest. The contract sued on is in writing, is dated February 26, 1909, and' the portions thereof material to this controversy are as follows:

“Know all men b^ these presents, that I, R. R. Ridgell, for and in consideration of the sum of twenty-six hundred ($2600.00) dollars, to be paid to me as hereinafter set forth, do hereby sell, assign and convey unto Ball-Carden Company, a firm composed of P. D. C. Ball and George A. Carden, twenty-six thousand (26,000) yards of gravel, or gravel and sand, or rock and sand, hereinafter called material, in such proportions as may be desired by Ball-Carden Company ; said material being embraced within and on or under the ground selected by Ball-Carden Company, a part of the premises of the above named seller, situated about two miles in a southerly direction from the town of Kle-burg in Dallas county, Texas. The conditions of this sale are as follows: Said Ball-Carden Company shall not be bound to pay for any material, which is not usable under the terms of their contracts with the United States government on locks and dams Nos. 2 and 4, as the same is or may be interpreted by the United States engineer in charge, nor for any material which, not having been used in such locks and dams, has been washed away or made unavailable for said use by floods or overflows, or otherwise, but the said Ball-Carden Company shall be bound to pay unto said seller, only for said material used in the construction of the said locks and dams, the sum of eleven (11) cents per cubic yard, measured in place as concrete in said locks and dams, and the same shall be paid for according to the estimate of the government, monthly, on the 15th day of each month succeeding the month for which such measurement and estimate is made: For so much of said material as is not used in said . liocks and dams Nos. 2 and 4, and used elsewhere or sold by Ball-Carden Company for such use, but the same is to be used; if material offered comes up to specifications of government, but same must be- offered so as not to delay the use thereof, the said Ball-Carden Company are to pay unto the said seller the sum of ten (10) cents per cubic yard, measured on cars, until said payments, together with the payments made for said material, measured as concrete in place in said locks and dams, as aforesaid, shall equal the sum of twenty-six hundred ($2600.00) dollars, when this contract shall be considered by the parties hereto to have been completely fulfilled. * * * It is understood, as aforesaid, the basis of measurement of the material used in said locks and dams shall be the concrete in place in said locks and dams, but if any party hereto shall be dissatisfied with the measurement of same by the engineer of the United States government in charge, then they shall co-operate together for the purpose of securing an absolutely correct measurement.”

The defendant P. D. C. Ball, not having been- served with citation, did not appear and answer, but the defendants Ball-Carden Company and George A. Carden answered by general and special demurrers, a general denial of the material allegations of plaintiff’s petition, and specially, among other things, that the effect and meaning of the contract which was entered into was that the defendants were not required to accept the sand and gravel offered by plaintiff unless the same should come up to the specifications promulgated by the United States government, whereunder said locks and dams were to be constructed, and were not to be used or paid for unless said sand and gravel were usable by the defendants under the terms of their contracts with the United States government for the construction of said locks and dams Nos. 2 and 4, as said contracts should be interpreted by the United States engineer in charge, that defendants tendered the sand and gravel of the plaintiff to the said engineer in charge of the construction of said locks and dams, and that said engineer decided that said sand and gravel was not usable under the terms of said contracts with the government, and refused to allow defendants to use same in the construction of said locks and dams, and therefore defendants, under the terms of their contract with plaintiff, were not obligated to and did not use said sand and gravel. These defendants also pleaded the statutes of limitation of two and four years in bar of plaintiff’s action. A trial by the court without a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the firm of Ball-Carden Company and George A. Carden individually, and they appealed.

[1] The leading question arising on the appeal, and one that controls the decision of the case, is whether or not the gravel claimed to have been purchased by appellants from appellee came up to or complied with the specifications of appellants’ contract with the United States government and “usable,” *511 as contemplated by tbe terms of appellants’ contract with the appellee, in the construe-' tion of the lochs and dams in question. Appellants contracted to take 26,000 yards of gravel and sand from appellee’s land and to pay him therefor 11 cents per cubic yard, or $2,600 for the whole. They took only about 2,269 yards, paying therefor the sum of $249.59, and appellee’s suit is bottomed upon appellants’ failure to take all the gravel and sand which they agreed to take under the contract of purchase. Appellee testified:

“Mr. Carden paid me for all that he got. My complaint is that they did not take the gravel that they contracted to take.”

The contract for the purchase of appel-lee’s gravel and sand was made after appellants had contracted with the United States government to construct locks and dams Nos. 2 and 4, and for the purpose of enabling them to carry out that contract. Their contract with the United States government specifically regulated the proportions of the sand, gravel, and cement which were to be used in the construction of the work thereby undertaken, and particularly stated that the gravel should be clean and of a satisfactory quality, and that not less than 50 per cent, of it should be composed of pebbles not less than one inch in diameter. As has been seen, appellants purchased appellee’s gravel and sand upon condition that they were not bound to pay for any of it which was—

“not usable under the terms of their contract with the United States government on locks and dams Nos. 2 and 4, as the same is or may be interpreted by the United States engineer in charge, nor for any material which, not having been used in such locks and dams, has been washed away or made unavailable for said use by floods or overflows or otherwise.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 S.W. 509, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-carden-co-v-ridgell-texapp-1914.