Brown v. College Corner & Richmond Gravel Road Co.

56 Ind. 110
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 56 Ind. 110 (Brown v. College Corner & Richmond Gravel Road Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. College Corner & Richmond Gravel Road Co., 56 Ind. 110 (Ind. 1877).

Opinion

Worden, J.

Complaint by the appellee, against the appellants, in three paragraphs. The first paragraph alleged, in substance, that the plaintiff and the defendants entered into a written agreement, by which the defendants undertook to build the seventh and eighth miles of the plaintiffs road, according to certain plans and specifications, and complete the same by the 1st of January, 1871, for the sum of four thousand seven hundred and eighteen dollars and fifty cents, and that the plaintiff performed all the conditions on its part to be performed. That the defendant Brown was the secretary of the plaintiffs board of directors, and had a knowledge, which the plaintiff had not, of the state of the accounts and payments which had been made by the plaintiff on the work as it progressed, and on October 14th, 1871, represented to the plaintiff, that there was a balance due to the defendants, on the work, of four hundred dollars and three cents, when in fact, as the plaintiff' has since discovered, there was only due one hundred and fifty-one dollars and fifty-three cents. The plaintiff, ignorant of the true state of the accounts and of the payments that had been made on the work as it had progressed, and relying on the representations of Brown, through mistake of fact, then and there paid the defendants the said sum of four hundred dollars and three cents, which was an excess of payment, through mistake on the part of the board of directors of the plaintiff, of two hundred and forty-eight dollars and fifty cents. That the defendants, though informed of the [112]*112mistake as soon as discovered by the plaintiff’, refused to repay, etc.

The second paragraph alleged the entering into the contract for the building of the road, and the performance thereof, on the part of the plaintiff, as in the first paragraph; that at the time the work was finished, and on final settlement between the parties therefor, a mistake occurred between the parties, in this; it was supposed that the defendants had received only four thousand three hundred and eighteen dollars and forty-seven cents, leaving a balance due, as thought, of four hundred dollars and three cents, when, in fact, as has been since ascertained, the defendants had received of the plaintiff, from time to time, as the work progressed, the sum of $456.97, [4566.97?] leaving a balance due of only one hundred and fifty-one dollars and fifty-three cents; and the plaintiff, influenced by the belief that there was due the said sum of four hundred dollars and three cents, paid the same, which was, and is, an excess of two hundred and forty-eight dollars and fifty cents. That the defendants, though advised of the mistake by the plaintiff as soon as it was discovered, refused to repay the money, etc.'

The third paragraph was the common count for money had and received, etc.

The defendants answered in five paragraphs.

Eirst. General denial.

Second. That on the 16th day of October, 1869, the plaintiff and defendants entered into the contract mentioned in the complaint; that the defendants performed their part of the contract, and, at the request of the plaintiff* performed extra work, in building a culvert on the road worth one hundred dollars, and, also, in building another culvert worth fifty dollars ; that on October 14th, 1871, the plaintiff, by her board of directoi’S, called a special meeting, for the purpose of making a settlement with the defendants; that defendants, at said special meeting, duly presented the balance due them on the [113]*113contract and extra work, being the amount of four hundred dollars and three cents; that the board also examined the extra work, and after examination and deliberation, with full knowledge of all the facts, having before them all the books, orders, vouchers, papers, claims, credits, debts, and all dealings whatsoever between the parties, compromised, adjusted and settled all difference and matter between the parties, by paying to the defendants said sum of four hundred dollars and three cents. Wherefore, etc.

Third. That the line of the plaintiff’s road, so to be ■ constructed by the defendants, ran across the land of one Joseph W. Stewart; that the defendants were prohibited by said Stewart from entering on said land, over which the plaintiff had no right of way; that the plaintiff, for the space of five weeks, failed to procure a right of way over said land; that there was no other part of the road on which the defendants could use the teams which they had employed during the time, whereby the defendants were damaged in the sum of one hundred dollars. That, by the contract between the parties, the plaintiff agreed to guarantee to the defendants the right of way over and across the lands of William Smith, for the purpose of hauling materials for the construction of the road; that the defendants demanded of Smith the right of way for that purpose over the land, which he refused. That defendants demanded of the plaintiff' the procurement of said right of way, but this the plaintiff failed to do. That there was no other way, by which the defendants could haul materials for the construction of the road, that would be as convenient and profitable to the defendants; that, by reason of the plaintiff’s failure to procure the right of way, the defendants were delayed, etc., and suffered damages in the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars, which they offer to recoup, etc.

Fourth. That, in drafting the contract between the [114]*114parties, there was a mistake made by the scrivener, in this; that the contract should have been so written as to show an agreement for the construction of four, instead of five, open culverts; that the mistake was not discovered until after the commencement of the suit, and the defendants ask that the mistake be corrected. That the defendants performed extra work for the plaintiff, at its request, beyond the four open culverts, in building two culverts—the particulars of which are set out—of the value of one hundred dollars, which the defendants offer to set off, etc.

Eifth. That a mistake was made in drawing the contract, by the scrivener, substantially as alleged in the fourth paragraph. That the defendants performed extra work, beyond that contracted for, at the plaintiff’s request, in the building of a culvert worth one hundred and fifty dollars, and a part of another culvert worth seventy-five dollars, and did other extra work worth one hundred dollars; that on October 14th, 1871, a special meeting of the board of directors of the plaintiff was called, for the purpose of making a final settlement with the defendants for all labor by them performed for the plaintiff'; that at the meeting the defendants presented an account for balance due on contract and for the extra work; that the board of directors of the plaintiff, recognizing and knowing the mistake in drawing the contract, duly examined the work, and, having full knowledge of the number of culverts constructed by the defendants, allowed the defendants credit for the construction of the extra work aforesaid, and after due examination and deliberation, and with a full knowledge of all the facts, having before them all the books, orders, vouchers, papers, claims, credits, debits, and all dealing whatever between the parties, compromised, adjusted and settled all differences, matters and claims between them, by the plaintiff paying to the defendants the sum of four hundred dollars and three cents. Wherefore, etc.

[115]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 Ind. 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-college-corner-richmond-gravel-road-co-ind-1877.