City of Orange v. Moore

246 S.W. 1099
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 10, 1922
DocketNo. 872. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 1099 (City of Orange v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Orange v. Moore, 246 S.W. 1099 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

O’QUINN, J.

Appellee sued appellant for damages for breach of a written contract growing out of the erection of a creosoted timber wharf and bulkhead by appellee for appellant in the Sabine river near said city.

The damages claimed were alleged to have been caused by appellant wrongfully rejecting the creosoted timbers, which had been prepared and were to be used in the building of said wharf, and for a period of two months refusing for them to be used, and then accepting said timbers and permitting them to be used. The timbers were rejected for the reason that the city engineer of the city of Orange claimed they were not up to the specifications stipulated in the contract. After two months of delay, during 'which time the entire work was stopped and appel-lee’s employSs and equipment were idle, the matter was adjusted, and said timber accepted and work resumed and continued until the completion of the wharf. Various other elements of damages were sued for, but, as they were remitted after judgment, they will not be further discussed.

Appellant answered by general demurrer, special exceptions that appellee’s cause of action was barred by both the two and four year statutes of limitation, by general denial, and special pleas of the two and four year statutes of limitation.

All the exceptions, general and special, were overruled by the court, and the case went to trial before a jury upon special issues, upon the answers to which judgment was rendered in the sum of $7,107.08. Ap-pellee filed a remittitur in the sum of $1,-233.05, leaving the sum of $5,874.03 as the amount to be recovered by appellee of appellant, which said sum constituted the damages claimed by appellee for the delay caused by appellant’s temporary rejection of said creosoted timbers.

[1] Appellant asserts that the court erred in overruling its special exception and plea of two-year limitation, because, it insists, thht the damages claimed by appellee did not arise out of and had no connection with the contract between appellee and appellant, but that appellee’s cause of action was founded in tort arising out of the alleged wrongful act of appellant’s engineer in wrongfully and ■willfully rejecting temporarily, the creosoted timbers offered by appellee to be used in the building of said wharf, insisting that the contract between appellant and appellee was pleaded only as an inducement showing ap-pellee’s right to do the work, and that the cause of action was for the wrongful and tortious act of the engineer, and hence the action sounding in tort was barred by the two-year statute of limitations. We cannot agree to this contention. Appellee’s suit was founded on a' written contract with appellant, fully pleaded, and the damages claimed were for a breach of said contract. Therefore the action was not barred within two years, but comes within and is controlled by subdivision 1 of article 5688, Vernon’s Sayles’ Civil Statutes. Robinson v. Varnell, 16 Tex. 382; Hillman v. Gallagher, 103 Tex. 427, 128 S. W. 899; Elder, Dempster & Co. v. Railway Co., 105 Tex. 628, 154 S. W. 975; Davies v. Railway Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 133 S. W. 295.

The damages awarded appellee were based upon the finding of the jury in answer to *1101 special issues Nos. 16 and 18, botii of which, related to appellant’s alleged wrongful rejection of the creosoted timbers, causing the delay of two months in operations. Special issue No. 16 -was as to what damage appellee suffered by reason of the loss of the use of his tug, barges, pile driver, tools, and appliances held in idleness for said tim'e, and the wages of the men employed by appellee for said two months, which the jury found to be $4,450. Special issue No. 18 was as to what damage appellee sustained by reason of the work being delayed and prolonged into hot weather, which the jury found to be $1,-424.03. These two items compose the judgment of appellee, from which appeal was taken.

Appellant says that if the action be not one in tort, but is one for breach of contract, then that the items of damage awarded for labor were barred by the four-year statute of limitation (article 5688, R. S.), because the same were set up for the first time in appellee’s amended petition, more than four years after the cause of action accrued. The contract was dated October 31, 1916. The timber was rejected December 20, 1916. The matter was adjusted, and work resumed February 24, 1917. The original petition was filed, June 30, 1919. The amended petition was filed 16, 1921. In the original petition, appellee alleged:

“Plaintiff further alleges that by reason of the rejection of said creosoted material, rejected by defendant in the manner as stated aforesaid, the said plaintiff was delayed in the completion of said contract for a period of two months, whereas, if he had been' permitted to use said rejected material, as tiy the terms of said contract, and in right and in justice lu should have been permitted to use, at the time same was ready for use, and but for the arbitrary conduct of said defendant, same would have been used and said contract completed for a period of more than two months prior to the completion of same, and by reason of the loss of two months’ time, directly and proximately caused by defendant, by reason of the breach of its contract hereinbefore alleged, said plaintiff was deprived of the rental and use of his barges, pile driver and tugboat for two months’ time, and in this connection plaintiff alleges that for use in the performance of said contract, he had assembled and had in use one pile driver, three barges, and one tugboat, called the Nancy O. That the loss and rental of use of said pile driver, barges, and tugboat, Nancy 0, for said two months is as follows: For said pile driver No. 1 rental $500 per month, for two months, $1,000, for said barge No. 2 rental value $300 per month, for two months, $600, for said barge No. 4, rental $300 per month, for two months $600, for said barge No. 6 rental $200 per month, for two months $400, for the tug Nancy O, rental $300 per month, for two months $600; aggregating the sum of $3,200 loss to plaintiff by reason of the breach of contract by defendant here-inbefore alleged, which said amount of loss to plaintiff is reasonable, and; as before stated, resulted to plaintiff by reason of the delay of two months’ time in the completion of said contract, which said delay and the loss incident thereto directly and proximately resulted by reason of the breach of contract of defendant as hereinbefore alleged.
“Plaintiff further alleged that at the time of the breach of contract by defendant, hereinbe-fore alleged, he had assembled the necessary labor to perform said contract with said defendant, and but for the breach of-contract by defendant would have completed the work at a- scale of wages, at that time paid to the organization of labor used by plaintiff, but that the breach of contract, by defendant, prolonged the work into the summer months of the year 1917, and thereby increased the scale of wages paid by plaintiff for labor, and increased the cost of construction of said work; * . * * that’the increase in cost, due to the delay in the completion of said contract, amounted to the sum of $4,000 and the further sum of $2,-000 for labor and overhead expense.”

[2]

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 1099, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-orange-v-moore-texapp-1922.