Barr & Martin v. Johnson

155 S.W. 459, 170 Mo. App. 394, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 347
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 7, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 459 (Barr & Martin v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barr & Martin v. Johnson, 155 S.W. 459, 170 Mo. App. 394, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 347 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

STURGIS, J. —

The plaintiffs as partners sued the defendants herein for labor performed and for money paid out by them for defendants under an oral agreement relative to building a certain private roadway. The defendants were the owners of separate tracts of land in the suburban resident district of Springfield, Missouri, known as Meadowmere, and desired to build a road or driveway in front of same. There is no dispute but that plaintiffs were employed to and did do this work. • There is, however, a dispute as to the exact terms of the contract and its -modifications under which the work was performed and the money expended, and as to whether the work was performed and completed according to such contract. There was a counterclaim filed by defendants for damages for failure to complete the road as agreed for an amount which is alleged to have been necessarily expended in completing the road after plaintiff’s failure to do so.

The cause originated in a justice of the peace court, where it was tried and plaintiffs prevailed. The defendants suffered the same fate at the hands of a jury in the circuit court. Hence this appeal.

It is sufficient to say in the counterclaim that the jury found against it, as was necessarily the case, when it found that plaintiffs had complied with their contract in doing the work of building this road and that defendants owed them $77.45 for labor, and a balance of fifty dollars for money expended by plaintiffs in building the road. Under the facts in this case it would not be possible for a jury to find for plaintiffs [399]*399on tlie theory that they had complied with the contract and yet award damages to the defendants for their failure to comply with such contract. It will therefore only be necessary to examine the alleged errors in permitting a recovery by plaintiffs.

As defendants challenge the verdict as being unsupported by the evidence, a statement of the case is properly made from the standpoint of plaintiffs’ evidence. [McGee v. Railroad, 214 Mo. 530, 114 S. W. 33; Riggs v. Railroad, 216 Mo. 304, 115 S. W. 969; Merritt v. Matchett, 135 Mo. App. 176, 115 S. W. 1066.]

The road 'to be bnilt, and which was built, is variously given as being 1335 to 1350 feet in length. The road was to be built by excavating the same twelve feet wide to a depth of at least six inches. This was to be filled with rock or “field stone,” broken down levél with sledge hammers to the thickness of at least four inches, and then two inches of crushed rock placed over that, and then thoroughly rolled with a heavy roller. The plaintiffs contracted for and defendants Milligan and Johnson, acting for themselves and the other defendants, agreed to pay plaintiffs six cents per square foot, or seventy-two cents per lineal foot, for doing this work. On this contract plaintiffs made preparations • to commence the work, assembled their tools, and were making arrangements for material with which to construct the road. The defendant Johnson seems to have been more active in looking-after this work and generally acted as spokesman for all the defendants. He claimed to have ascertained from another contractor, which fact was denied by that contractor, that the work could be done for the price of sixty cents per lineal foot, and in the presence of Milligan told the plaintiffs of this fact and said they had agreed to pay too much and that he must have been asleep when he made the first contract. The plaintiffs said thay could not do the work for that [400]*400price and offered to quit the job. The defendants wonld not agree to this and Johnson directed the plaintiffs to continue with the work and said that if they “did not make a profit, I would see that they did not lose anything.” The plaintiffs agreed to this and went ahead with the work until it was completed. This contract, as thus modified, is somewhat out of the ordinary and to some extent indefinite; but both parties agree to substantially the same facts as to making the first contract at seventy-two cents per lineal foot; of defendants’ complaint that that was too high and that it could be done for sixty cents; and that plaintiffs continued the work under the agreement that if they could not make a good thing or profit at that price, the defendants would make it up or see that plaintiff did not lose anything. -

The evidence further shows that plaintiffs were three weeks in constructing the road, during which time they employed a considerable force of men and teams, contracted for and used considerable material and procured and used a heavy roller. The defendant Milligan for the most part acted as paymaster, and at the end of the first week the pay roll of that week, amounting to $150, was presented to him and he paid this amount to plaintiffs, which was used' in paying for the men and teams. At the end of the second week he also paid to plaintiffs the amount of the pay roll of that week, amounting to $150, and this was expended in the same manner. And again at the end of the third week, when as plaintiffs say the work was completed, the pay roll for that week was presented- to him and he gave plaintiffs an order on defendant Meyer for $100, which was paid; and one on defendant Keet for $100, one-half of which was paid. The .record does not disclose why defendant Keet paid only one-half of this order but there is nothing to show that he questioned the correctness of the amount. Plaintiffs used their own money to make up this deficiency of [401]*401fifty dollars, in paying for the labor of the last week, and sued for this amount by the second connt of the petition.

The plaintiffs then demanded settlement and defendants raised objections on the ground that the road was rough and not altogether level and that it needed to he filled up in some low places. Plaintiffs insisted that they had completed the work according to the contract, had already exhausted the sixty cents 'per lineal foot, and that the road was finished and in good condition; and in this they are corroborated by other witnesses. The evidence then is that defendants, speaking through Johnson, in order to settle the controversy, proposed that they would pay plaintiffs ten per cent of the amount expended for labor and materials as plaintiffs’ profit on the job and “let them go.” Plaintiffs accepted this proposition. Later some dispute arose as to the correctness of some of the bills for labor and material which plaintiffs claim to have expended. It may be said that defendants insist that a material part of this ten per cent agreement was that plaintiffs would present itemized statements and receipts showing what they had expended, and that they failed to do this. Plaintiffs contend that this was not a material part of the agreement, but merely a means of ascertaining how much had been expended and that they did in fact present the bills and their pay roll showing the amounts expended. The evidence also shows that defendants did not question the amount of the bills for material purchased and paid them without question. The evidence produced at the trial shows, and the jury found, that plaintiffs had expended for labor and material $774.50; ten per cent of which is $77.45, which, with the fifty dollars found to have been paid by the plaintiffs for labor over and above the amount which defendants had repaid to them, made the amount of the verdict, $127.45.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 459, 170 Mo. App. 394, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barr-martin-v-johnson-moctapp-1913.