Bryan and Sons Corp. v. Klefstad

237 So. 2d 236
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 27, 1970
Docket2384, 2620, 69-128
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 237 So. 2d 236 (Bryan and Sons Corp. v. Klefstad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryan and Sons Corp. v. Klefstad, 237 So. 2d 236 (Fla. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

237 So.2d 236 (1970)

BRYAN AND SONS CORP., a Florida Corporation, and Hubert E. Bryan, Appellants,
v.
Sivert KLEFSTAD, Albert R. Kreck and Grace Kreck, His Wife, Appellees.
Sivert KLEFSTAD, Albert R. Kreck and Grace Kreck, His Wife, Appellants,
v.
BRYAN AND SONS CORP., a Florida Corporation, and Hubert E. Bryan, Appellees.

Nos. 2384, 2620, 69-128.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.

May 27, 1970.
Rehearing Denied August 5, 1970.

*237 John A. Gentry, III, of Moyle, Gentry & Jones, West Palm Beach, for appellants as to Case No. 2384 and for appellees as to Case Nos. 2620 and 69-128.

Guy W. Held, of Winters, Brackett & Lord, West Palm Beach, for appellees as to Case No. 2384 and for appellants as to Case Nos. 2620 and 69-128.

OWEN, Judge.

Mr. Klefstad and his associates brought suit against Mr. Bryan and his corporation to foreclose a chattel mortgage. The corporate defendant counterclaimed to foreclose a mechanic's lien for work it had performed on plaintiffs' lands under a land clearing contract. The plaintiffs then amended their complaint to allege additionally that the defendant had breached the land clearing contract resulting in damages to the plaintiffs as owners. The non-jury trial resulted in a final judgment which apparently satisfied neither party, as defendants appealed and assigned error to certain findings, and plaintiffs filed cross assignments of error to other findings.

The issues were somewhat complex and the evidence in substantial dispute on most of these issues. The court's burden was materially increased by the fact that the written agreement between the parties for the clearing, ditching and "bedding" of the land in preparation for citrus planting was, as stated by the trial court, "replete with ambiguity and contradiction". The final judgment itemized the sums found by the court to be due to each of the parties from the other and after offsetting these, awarded the corporate defendant a net recovery of $2,291.01 on the counterclaim. Although the court found that the corporate defendant had breached the land clearing contract (by virtue of which the court had allowed the plaintiff owner damages of $5,000 as an offset), the final judgment awarded the corporate defendant its attorneys' fees and costs under the mechanics' lien statute. On this appeal the corporate defendant complains of the finding that it breached the land clearing contract, the award to plaintiff owners of $5,000 in offset damages consequent upon such breach, and the failure to award the corporate defendant damages for certain "extra work" performed in digging two main canals on plaintiffs' lands. The plaintiffs complain that the allowance to them of $5,000 for the corporate defendant's breach of contract was substantially less than the damages sustained by the owners as a result of such breach.

The foregoing appeal was No. 2384, and while it was pending the court entered its order fixing the amount of attorneys' fees and costs to be allowed the corporate defendant pursuant to the final judgment. Mr. Klefstad and his associate thereupon brought an interlocutory appeal from that order, which is No. 2620. Still later the court entered an order correcting the final judgment nunc pro tunc to show that the corporate defendant had a lien for the amount awarded by the final judgment, which lien was against the fund the plaintiff owners had earlier deposited into the registry of the court in order to release *238 the land from the lien which the corporate defendant had filed against it. Plaintiffs' interlocutory appeal from that order is No. 69-128. Both interlocutory appeals have been consolidated with the full appeal for disposition.

Under the agreement the owners hired the contractor to prepare approximately 677 acres of land in Palm Beach County, Florida for the planting of citrus trees. The work contemplated included clearing the land by removing brush, trees, trash, rocks, stumps, and other impediments to cultivation, and thereafter leveling, grading, ditching, diking, draining, filling and "bedding" in accordance with plans and specifications prepared by the owners' engineers. Appropriate provision was made for periodic progress payments on the basis of work completed upon invoice being submitted to and approved by the engineers. The agreement provided for a lump sum contract price for the project "generally based on" certain unit prices specifically set forth therein. The agreement also provided that certain itemized work was not included within the specifications under the contract but would be considered as "extra work". Included in this latter category was provision for clearing "heads" with a dragline at $14 per hour, filling "heads" with a pan at $15 per hour, and dozer work in "heads" at $12 per hour. The parties understood "heads" to be bay heads or slough areas, and provided by interlineation in the agreement that if the clearing of "heads" was performed by a dragline at $14 per hour as "extra work", the owners would receive a credit of $75 per acre, which was the unit price of clearing an acre set out in the schedule of unit prices upon which the "contract price" had been based. The original agreement was modified several months later by the parties signing a written amendment which expressly specified that the contract price was a firm price for the work called for under the contract specifications.

Among the ambiguities which the court found in the written agreement was the question of whether the contract between the parties called for a firm contract price for all of the work on the project (other than extra work), or whether the land clearing, canal excavations, bedding, culvert installations, and related work was to be performed and paid for on the unit prices mentioned in the agreement. The court resolved this by finding that the contract did provide for a firm contract price, and in the final judgment the corporate defendant received credit for such amount. We agree with the court's findings in this regard. We conceive the effect of it to be that irrespective of the amount of work the corporate defendant performed on the job site, it was covered under the firm contract price unless the work could clearly be shown to be "extra work".

The court found that the corporate defendant had breached the contract by gradually withdrawing its equipment and personnel and finally abandoning the project. Our review of the record convinces us that this finding is contrary to the evidence in two respects, which we will discuss briefly.

In the first place, but of minor significance to our conclusion, we think the evidence establishes that the owners' conduct would have justified the contractor's electing to terminate the work. The agreement expressly permitted the contractor to terminate further work under the contract in the event the owner should fail to abide by any of its covenants and agreement contained therein. The evidence established without dispute that prior to the time the corporate defendant withdrew its equipment and personnel from the job site, the owners had failed to pay for two items of "extra work", the invoices for which had been properly submitted to and approved by plaintiff engineers in accordance with the procedure prescribed by the agreement. This breach by the owners would alone have justified the corporate defendant's termination of the *239 work. Carr v. Stockton, 1922, 84 Fla. 69, 92 So. 814; 7 Fla.Jur., Contracts, § 164.

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