Carter v. Franklin County Road Improvement District

238 S.W. 69, 152 Ark. 302, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 6, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 238 S.W. 69 (Carter v. Franklin County Road Improvement District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Franklin County Road Improvement District, 238 S.W. 69, 152 Ark. 302, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 55 (Ark. 1922).

Opinions

McCulloch, C. J.

The plaintiff, H. B. Carter, sued in the circuit court of Franklin County as the survivor of a copartnership, - composed of himself and another professional engineer, to recover for services performed for the defendant, Boad Improvement District No. 2 of Franklin county, preliminary to the improvement of a public highway in accordance with the purpose of the organization of the district, which was formed under general statutes. (Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 5399, et seq.) The cause was transferred to the Chancery Court by agreement of the parties, and the plaintiff has appealed from a final decree for the recovery of a sum less than that claimed in the complaint.

Preliminary surveys, plans and specifications were furnished by the State Highway Commission as provided in the statute (Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 5400), to be used in the organization of the district, but, after the organization had been completed by proper orders of the county court, the commissioners employed plaintiff’s firm to do the engineering work.

There was a written contract entered into between the commissioners and plaintiff’s firm of engineers to do all the engineering work, both preliminary and supervisory, for a compensation of 5 per centum of the actual cost of the construction of the road, 50 per centum of the entire amount of compensation to be paid when the plans and specifications were completed, and the balance in installments during the progress of the work. The form of the contract was precisely the same as that involved in other eases on this subject which have heretofore been before us for consideration. Morgan Engineering Co. v. Cache River Drainage District, 115 Ark. 437; Gould v. Toland, 149 Ark. 476; Bowman Engineering Co. v. Arkansas-Missouri Highway District, 151 Ark. 47. In each of those cases it was decided that this form of contract did not constitute a separate contract for services performed in preliminary work of the district, and it was also decided that the specification for payment of a given percentage when the plans and specifications were completed did not constitute a contract fixing the price for those services, but merely constituted a specification of the time of payment.

Upon the ascertainment of the estimated cost of the improvement according to the plans and specifications furnished by plaintiff, it was decided that the improvement could not be made, and the project was abandoned. There was no assessment of benefits ever made in this instance, and as the contract was premature and never became effective, the plaintiff’s right of recovery is not based on the contract, but his recovery must be on the quantum meruit. In this respect the case is controlled by Gould v. Toland, supra, rather than by the other cases cited. It was held, however, in Gould v. Toland, supra, that the method and amount of payment fixed by the terms of the contract, while not determinative of the rights of the parties, might be considered as of evidentiary value in determining the amount to be recovered for the services rendered. So the question left for us to determine is one of fact concerning the proper amount to be allowed to the plaintiff for the value of the services rendered by his firm.

The plaintiff sued for the sum of $3,667.75, which is one-half of 5 per centum of the estimated cost of the improvement. This claim was resisted by the commissioners of the district on the ground that the services rendered were not worth that sum, and that the claim was excessive. The proof was adduced before the chancellor in the form of oral testimony and properly brought into the record, and the chancellor awarded the plaintiff the sum of $7'50 as compensation for the services rendered.

We are of the opinion that the conclusion of the chancellor in fixing the amount of compensation was on a wrong basis and is erroneous, and that the allowance is inadequate as compensation for the services shown to have been rendered.

The conclusion reached by the chancellor, as expressed in his opinion ¡brought into the record, is that the proper allowance should be on a per diem basis of $25 for a period of thirty days. This is a wrong basis, for it fixes the compensation for one man for the given period, whereas, according to the undisputed testimony, the work was done by numerous employees of plaintiff’s firm, some of them doing field work and others office work. The conclusion of the chancellor takes no account of any profits to which the engineers were personally entitled to over and above the expense of doing the work, nor of their own skill and business ability in being able to properly supervise the work and construct adequate plans and specifications sufficient to guide the commissioners in preparing for the improvement contemplated.

Accepting the testimony in the light most unfavorable to the plaintiff, we are convinced that he is entitled to the recovery of a sum considerably in excess of that allowed by the chancellor.

The road which was to be improved was slightly over 16 miles in length, in Franklin County, and the improvement was estimated by the engineers to cost the sum of $146,709.97. In the estimate made and furnished by plaintiff it is shown that there was to be 10 acres of clearing and grubbing, 7,060 rods of fences to be moved, 67,320 cubic yards of earth embankment, a certain amount of loose rock excavation and a certain amount of solid rock excavation, and an amount of concrete work, drainage and bridge work. The estimate is itemized, showing the amount of the cost of each item of the work and the material.

Plaintiff testified himself as a witness and stated that the field work was done by his brother, who was an experienced engineer, and that the office work was done by Ms corps of assistants in the office, nine in number, who were engaged about thirty days in doing the office work. He testified in detail as to the method of doing the office work, making the estimates and calculations of the amount of work to be done of each kind, and the cost of the work and the material. He stated that the field work only consisted of running the lines and levels and notations of the acreage of clearing and rods of fences and the distances across streams, and that the •calculations of the cost of these things were made in the office.

Plaintiff did not claim to be personally familiar with the extent of the field work further than what was shown by the reports of Ms assistants in the field and his general knowledge of the character and topography of vthe country. He stated, as an estimate, that two or three weeks’ time was consumed in doing the field work.

Plaintiff’s brother, W. E. Carter, who had charge of the field work, and is shown to have been an experienced engineer, testified that two or three weeks’ time was consumed in doing the field work; that, after excluding the days of inclement weather, during which the expenses of the party continued, it took about ten days actual work to complete the field survey. He testified that the cost of labor amounted to $30 to $40 per day.

It is not stated by any of the witnesses whether an account was kept of the amount of days and hours consumed in doing the field work and cost of the work, nor was any witness interrogated on this subject. Plaintiff himself was not asked whether or not such an account was kept, and he was not asked to produce the account.

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Related

Carter v. Bradley County Road Improvement Districts 1 & 2
246 S.W. 9 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1923)
Stripling v. Rudy
254 S.W. 448 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
238 S.W. 69, 152 Ark. 302, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-franklin-county-road-improvement-district-ark-1922.