Beck v. J. M. Smucker Co.

561 P.2d 623, 277 Or. 607, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1175
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1977
DocketNo. 92183, SC 24438
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 561 P.2d 623 (Beck v. J. M. Smucker Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beck v. J. M. Smucker Co., 561 P.2d 623, 277 Or. 607, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1175 (Or. 1977).

Opinion

BRADSHAW, J., Pro Tempore.

This is a suit to foreclose a mechanic’s lien based on labor and material furnished in an attempt to correct a condition of sand in the water of a well owned by defendant. Defendant counterclaims alleging that plaintiff did not perform according to the contract and seeks to recover a partial payment made in advance to the plaintiff. The trial court entered a decree dismissing plaintiff’s complaint and awarding defendant judgment against the plaintiff upon defendant’s counterclaim.

Plaintiff appeals, assigning as error first that the trial court’s general finding was not supported by the evidence, and second that the trial court erred in receiving testimony, over objection, by two officials of the defendant’s company that it was defendant’s intent in accepting plaintiff’s proposal not to pay the agreed contract price in the event plaintiff’s proposal did not produce the desired result. This evidence was directed to defendant’s contention that plaintiff’s offer was in fact a guarantee of the results. Plaintiff denies this, contending that his offer was only a possible solution to the problem and not a guarantee.

The defendant operated a berry packing plant in the Woodbum area. A well located on the premises from which water was used in the packing process became practically unusable due to large quantities of sand in the water. In 1973 a Mr. Anderson of defendant company contacted the plaintiff in an attempt to eliminate the sand problem. The plaintiff has been in the well drilling business since 1946, and prior to that time he had been around well drilling operations all of his life. He had drilled over 4,000 wells and considered himself an expert in well drilling. He was familiar with the sand problems in wells in the Woodbum area and was one of the persons who knew all of the facts about wells in that area. The plaintiff had originally drilled the well for defendant in the early 1960s. At that time the plaintiff had prepared a well log which [610]*610indicated, the depth of the well and the level of various earth strata or layers of dirt, gravel, rock and sand through which the well was drilled. The plaintiff had lost his copy of this log when his home had burned. During the first discussions with Anderson plaintiff requested that the defendant’s copy of the log be furnished to him. Anderson was unable to find that copy in the office. At the time of originally drilling the well the plaintiff did not personally file the log with the state engineering office but did prepare a log and deliver it to an employe of the defendant, who promised to have it filed.1 The plaintiff, when first contacted about the problem, without "too thorough a search,” failed to find the log on file. Plaintiff’s independent recollection was that the well was 140 feet deep.

The defendant’s personnel who were involved in dealing with the plaintiff in regard to the sand problem had not been employed at that plant when the well was originally dug, nor did they have any knowledge of the depth or conditions of the well, nor did they have any experience or knowledge whatsoever regarding wells generally.

Plaintiff first attempted a pumping process of the well to eliminate the sand, which was unsuccessful. At a subsequent time Anderson again contacted the plaintiff and discussed the well problem. The plaintiff again asked Anderson for a copy of the log and again Anderson couldn’t find it. The plaintiff asked for the log and stated:

1* * * I had asked that because the texture of the [611]*611sand I couldn’t tell exactly where it was coming from and I didn’t remember.”

Plaintiff thereafter offered a solution to the problem. Anderson requested a letter verifying the proposal and the price therefor. The plaintiff submitted such a letter, as follows:

"In regards to the sand problem with the twelve inch well I am offering the following as a solution and the cost.
"To drill a 6” well along side the existing well to the gravel stratum. Then gravel pack with % to % pea gravel by means of serging [sic]. After placing as much gravel as possibal [sic] by this method I will pump the well at its maximum capacity with a gas powered turbine pump capacity one thousand G.P.M. This I beleave [sic] will eliminate the sand problem.
"I will do this work for a total cost of four thousand dollars ($4,000.00).
"Trusting this meets with your approval.”

The defendant accepted the proposal or offer, and plaintiff commenced work shortly thereafter. The first two days of work by the plaintiff were spent in removing the pump and cleaning out the well. During that process the plaintiff determined that the depth of the well was in fact 220 feet and not 140 feet as he had previously assumed. The plaintiff did not immediately make this discovery known to the defendant, but immediately thereafter proceeded to carry out the process described in his proposal of drilling the six-inch well to a depth of 112 feet to a sand and gravel layer.

At one time the plaintiff asked Mr. Icenogle, who was in charge of operations at the plant, for a copy of the well log. The plaintiff testified this was seven days after starting work. Icenogle testified it was three or four days. Icenogle immediately thereafter located the log in his office and delivered it to the plaintiff. The log indicated the well depth to be 220 feet and also that there were sand levels at three deeper locations, considerably below the 112 foot level.

[612]*612Upon completion of the proposed work, the plaintiff determined that the sand condition in the well remained unchanged and that the process which he had proposed and carried out was entirely ineffective in correcting the problem because the sand was not getting in the water at that level. The plaintiff thereafter attempted some other pumping and moving of pipes in the well in an attempt to do everything possible while he was there to get clear water. He was unsuccessful, and finally plaintiff ceased all work on the well, having determined that the sand problem might be unsolvable, and in any event it would cost more to try to eliminate the sand condition than it would to start from scratch and drill an entire new well. The plaintiff had conversations with Anderson during this time, and explained to him the problems and his final conclusion. Anderson thereupon took the plaintiff to Mr. Icenogle and the plaintiff explained to Mr. Icenogle that to make further attempts to correct the sand condition might not be effective and at least would cost more than drilling a new well. At that point the defendant decided to use city water, and plaintiff discontinued any further work.

The plaintiff testified upon cross-examination as follows:

"Q Without that log, would you have made a different proposal if you had known the well to be 220 feet instead of a hundred forty feet?
"A Yes.”

Laying aside the question of whether or not the offer made by plaintiff was a guarantee, the basic purpose of the contract between the parties was to at least try to solve the sand problem by the method proposed by the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
561 P.2d 623, 277 Or. 607, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beck-v-j-m-smucker-co-or-1977.