Cortner v. P'Pool

86 So. 2d 877, 227 Miss. 709, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 746
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1956
DocketNo. 40151
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 86 So. 2d 877 (Cortner v. P'Pool) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cortner v. P'Pool, 86 So. 2d 877, 227 Miss. 709, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 746 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

McGehee, C.J.

This suit is one wherein the plaintiff, Oscar P’Pool, a contractor, agreed in writing to build a concrete swimming pool for the defendant, George Y. Cortner, at an original contract price of $3,500.00 on June 22, 1954, and where there was a supplemental agreement entered into between the parties on September 1, 1954, to cover certain changes and extras not contemplated in the original contract. The supplemental agreement discloses that the changes and extras provided for therein were to cost defendant the additional sum of $911.60, which the defendant admits that he still owed the plaintiff, less a payment of $400.00 thereon, at the time this suit was filed by the plaintiff to recover of the defendant the sum of $4,026.31, representing a balance of $856.10 on the original contract price, the sum of $511.60 balance admitted to he due for extras, and other amounts, not covered by the supplemental agreement, on account of the changes and extras agreed upon by the parties during the course of construction.

The defendant contended upon the trial that the changes and extras had been made and furnished by the plain[712]*712tiff under oral agreements between tbe parties between tbe dates of tbe execution of tbe original contract and tbe supplemental contract. There was a motion filed by tbe defendant to strike from tbe plaintiff’s declaration claims for compensation for tbe work in excess of tbe $1,367.70 on tbe ground that all of tbe oral conversations and agreements of tbe parties were merged into tbe written supplemental contract of September 1, 1954. Tbis motion to strike was overruled, and that action of tbe court is one of tbe alleged errors assigned on tbis appeal.

Tbe defendant filed a cross-claim against tbe plaintiff for tbe sum of $2,582.30 alleged to be due because of alleged defective workmanship in tbe building of tbe swimming pool and due as damages to tbe defendant because of tbe sums necessary to be expended in repairing tbe alleged defects in workmanship.

Tbe plaintiff recovered a judgment, based on tbe verdict of a jury for tbe sum of $2,500.00, and obtained a lien against the swimming pool and one acre of ground for tbe enforcement of tbe collection of tbe $2,500.00 judgment and all costs. From tbis judgment tbe defendant appeals, and tbe plaintiff does not cross-appeal.

Tbe original written agreement of June 22, 1954, merely provided that Oscar P’Pool was to build tbe swimming pool on tbe property of George Y. Cortner for tbe sum of $3,500.00, tbe sum of $2,500.00 of which was to be paid as tbe work progressed and tbe remaining $1,000.00 to be paid on or before October 1, 1954. That agreement did not provide any plans and specifications as to tbe manner in which tbe swimming pool was to be built, nor as to tbe dimensions thereof. There is a drawing prepared by tbe plaintiff contained in tbe record designated as Plan No. 100, but which was not made an exhibit to tbe original written contract.

Tbe plaintiff testified that tbe walkway around tbe outer edge of tbe pool was increased in width, by oral agreement of tbe parties, from about 2 feet to 8 feet and [713]*7138 inches in order that the defendant might have room thereon to place tables and chairs for the commercial nse by patrons of this pool; that the wall which was understood by oral agreement to be built on a slant was subsequently changed to a vertical wall, necessitating the use of double forms and considerable additional expense to the contractor; that the dimensions of the pool both as to width and length were considerably increased at the request of the defendant and subsequent to the original contract; and that there were other substantial changes made as to the building of the pool at increased expense to the contractor. Whereas the defendant contended that all of these verbal agreements as to changes and extras were merged into the supplemental written agreement of September 1, 1954, at an agreed additional cost of $911.60, as shown by an itemized statement attached as an exhibit to the supplemental agreement as a part thereof, and that therefore the testimony offered by the plaintiff as to the cost to him in making the changes and furnishing the extras was incompetent and inadmissible as tending to alter, vary and contradict the supplemental written agreement into which the prior conversations and verbal agreements had merged.

The supplemental agreement provides that the ‘ ‘ swimming pool is to be constructed by P’Pool, who is to furnish all labor and materials for a complete, workmanlike job according to plan No. 100, as agreed upon between the parties hereto with the following alterations, to-wit:

“A. The apron or drain running all the way around the outside edge of said swimming pool, except on the dam end thereof, is to be increased in width to eight feet and eight inches measured from the edge of the pool to the inside edge of the side wall consisting of a poured concrete slab four inches in thickness. The said apron will be constructed with the necessary expansion joints and with a two inch fall from the pool to the [714]*714gutter in said apron which, is to be located adjacent to the side wall.
“B. The said side wall is to be located at the outside edge of the said apron, running the entire length of the apron except on the dam end of the said pool and be two feet high above the surface of the said apron.
“It is agreed that the balance due the contractor on the original contract price for the construction of the pool, the above amendments and all extras furnished, is as shown on the last page hereof, which is attached to and made a part of this agreement. It is further agreed that Mr.- Cortner will furnish materials needed to complete the apron and pay the balance of Pour Hundred Dollars ($400.00) for the apron upon its completion. The balance of the contract price as amended on the attached page to be paid upon completion of the pool in accordance with the said plan, as amended by this agreement, to the satisfaction of the parties. Any disputes or differences arising under these arrangements shall be determined by submitting them to a registered engineer to be selected by agreement of the parties.
“It is further understood and agreed that the contractor will complete the said pool and all additions and extras in accordance with the plan, as amended, with all leaks eliminated, within thirty working days from this date. ’ ’

It is to be noted that in the next to the last paragraph above quoted it was agreed that the balance due the contractor on the original contract price and for the “amendments and all extras furnished is as shown on the last page hereof, which is attached to and made a part of this agreement.” The page attached to the supplemental agreement and made a part thereof shows that on the original contract price of $3,500.00 the sum of $2,643.90 had been paid, leaving a balance of $856.10, and that the additions and extras were to cost $911.60, making a total balance of $1,767.70 on which there had [715]*715at that time been paid the sum of $400.00, which represented the compensation to the contractor for increasing the width of the apron around the pool, and which left a net balance admittedly due the contractor of $1,367.70.

Plan 100 provided that the pool should be roughly horseshoe shaped, its concrete walls were to be laid on the surface of the ground, slanting just as the concrete of a driveway is laid.

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Related

Hollingsworth v. Central Oil Co.
112 So. 2d 518 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 So. 2d 877, 227 Miss. 709, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cortner-v-ppool-miss-1956.