Bingham Coal & Lumber Co. v. Board of Education of Jordan School Dist.

211 P. 981, 61 Utah 149, 1922 Utah LEXIS 87
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1922
DocketNo. 3819
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 211 P. 981 (Bingham Coal & Lumber Co. v. Board of Education of Jordan School Dist.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bingham Coal & Lumber Co. v. Board of Education of Jordan School Dist., 211 P. 981, 61 Utah 149, 1922 Utah LEXIS 87 (Utah 1922).

Opinion

FRICK, J.

The plaintiffs, hereinafter called respondents, commenced this action against the board of- education of the Jordan school district of Salt Lake county, hereinafter styled appel[151]*151lant, in tbe district court of Salt Lake county, to recover for extra services and materials in addition to tbe contract price for tbe erection and completion of a certain school building for appellant, and also to recover damages for alleged breaches of the building contract entered into between appellant and respondent Con West and to which the plaintiff Jacob Jensen became a party by agreement. It is not necessary to state how the plaintiff Bingham Coal & Lumber Company and George E. Chandler became interested as parties to this action.

In the complaint four causes of action were set up. The only cause of action, however, that is in question here is the third, in which a recovery for damages was sought for certain alleged breaches of said building contract. Judgments were entered on the other causes of action, all of which have been satisfactorily settled.

Con West was made a party defendant for the reason that he refused to join with the other plaintiffs as a plaintiff.

It is not necessary to go into further details respecting the relationship of the parties to the transactions involved on this appeal. Nor is it necessary to set forth the allegations of the complaint. A mere reference to them is sufficient.

The appellant answered the complaint, and in its answer pleaded various defenses to some of which special reference will hereinafter be made. Appellant also set up counterclaims against the respondents, or, at least against some of them.

The case was tried by the court without a jury. ' The court made its findings of fact and conclusions of law on the third cause of action. It found, among other things, that the respondents Con West and Jacob Jensen, as contractors, had suffered damages to the extent of $2,000 by reason of loss of time, etc., in the completion of said school building, which loss of time, the court found, was occasioned through the fault of the appellant. Judgment was entered in favor of Con West and Jacob Jensen under the prayer of the third cause of action. This appeal is^from that judgment.

A number of errors are assigned. The first one to be [152]*152considered is that the facts stated in the third cause of action are insufficient to constitute a cause of action in that said third cause of action is predicated upon a breach of the building contract which was entered into between appellant and respondent West and was executed by West and Jensen as partners and that the contract is not set forth either in substance or effect, nor by reference, in said third cause of action to any other cause of action. Ordinarily, no doubt, where one brings an action alleging the breach of the terms of a contract, he must plead the terms of the contract and in appropriate language allege the breach or breaches if more than one is relied on. In the third cause of action the breaches claimed by West.and Jensen are fully specified, but the terms of the contract' are not mentioned. This, no doubt, was due to the fact that in the first cause of action the terms of the building contract were fully pleaded, and the pleader evidently, by inadvertence, failed to refer to that part of the first cause of action when he attempted to make certain facts pleaded in that cause of action a part, by reference, of the third cause of action. The omission was, however, not referred to, nor was any objection upon that ground urged either before or at the trial. The appellant in its answer referred to the contract, and in one of its counterclaims pleaded the terms thereof very fully. It also pleaded some of the conditions set forth in the specifications which were made a part of the contract as though they had been incorporated therein as a defense to the third cause of action. Moreover, the case was tried and determined in the district court as though the terms of the contract had been fully pleaded by respondents in the third cause of action. Under these circumstances the appellant cannot now, for the first time, be heard to complain in this court. A mere formal objection or suggestion in the court below no doubt would have caused respondents to amend the third cause of action so as to incorporate therein, by reference at least, the terms of the contract. In view, however, that the appellant had pleaded the terms of the contract and has tried the case as though the same had been [153]*153formally pleaded by tbe respondents, this assignment is not tenable, and hence must be overruled.

A more serious question, however, is raised by other assignments of error. Appellant, in several assignments and in different ways, insists that the court’s findings are not supported by the evidence, that some of the findings are inconsistent and contradictory, and that the conclusions of law and judgment are contrary to the findings of fact.

In order to fully appreciate the effect of the several assignments, it becomes necessary to refer to some of the provisions of the building contract. The court found ' $hat one of the articles of the contract provides that—

“The contractor upon receiving from the architect written notice, and within such reasonable .time as may he named therein, shall remove from the premises all material, whether worked or unworked, and take down and remove from the premises all portions of the work condemned by the architect as unsound or improper, or in any way failing to conform to the contract; and the contractor shall properly replace'and re-execute his work in accordance with the contract and without expense to the owner, and shall bear the expense of making good all work of other contractors destroyed or damaged by such removal or replacement.”

Another article, the court found, is as follows:

“Should the owner fail to provide all labor and material not included in this contract, but essential to the conduct of this work in such manner as not to delay its reasonable progress, or should the contractor be damaged by any act or omission of the owner, the right of the contractor to compensation for the damages suffered, whether in the form of unusual or protracted services or otherwise, is conceded, and the amount of such compensation shall be determined and awarded by the architect (subject to arbitration); but no allowance shall be made unless a claim .therefor is made in writing or by telegraph to the architect within 48 hours of the occurrence of such damage.”

Another article of the contract reads as follows:

“Save only in cases in which an appeal to arbitration is permitted by these general conditions, the final decision of all questions arising under this contract shall be made and given by the architect, and both the owner and the contractor shall be bound thereby, and such decision shall be a condition precedent to any right of legal action by either owner or contractor.”

The court in substance found that the contractors pro[154]

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Bluebook (online)
211 P. 981, 61 Utah 149, 1922 Utah LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bingham-coal-lumber-co-v-board-of-education-of-jordan-school-dist-utah-1922.