Dare v. . Construction Company

67 S.E. 37, 152 N.C. 23, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 197
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 25, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 67 S.E. 37 (Dare v. . Construction Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dare v. . Construction Company, 67 S.E. 37, 152 N.C. 23, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 197 (N.C. 1910).

Opinion

On 9 December, 1903, the commissioners of Dare County, North Carolina, contracted with the defendant in the above-entitled cause to build a courthouse for the county at Manteo, according to the plans and specifications then adopted and made a part of the contract between the parties, for which building the county agreed to pay to the defendant the sum of $16,500 in its bonds of the denomination of $500 each, except in the case of the last bond, which was to be for $1,500.

Among other things, the contract expressly required that the (24) commissioners of the county should "appoint a committee competent to judge as to the quality and character of the material and work," to "inspect and report upon the work and material during the construction of the building"; and the committee was also required by the terms of said contract, when "any material was furnished therefor or work done which, in their opinion, was not in accordance with the plans and specifications, to notify all the parties to the contract, and the work affected by said notice was to cease and not be resumed until the matter had been settled by competent authority"; and it was further provided that if the said committee "permitted any part of the work to be completed without objecting thereto and giving notice as provided, it should be considered as an approval thereof." *Page 23

It was still further provided that if a disagreement arose between the parties to said contract, in reference to the work or material, or both, the matter should be referred to a board of arbitrators, whose decision should be final, as provided in the contract; and, lastly, it was provided that "upon final completion of the work, the party of the second part (who were the commissioners of the county) should examine the same, and if completed according to contract, they should accept it and make final settlement with the party of the first part (who is the defendant in this cause).

In accordance with the terms of said contract, plans and specifications, the defendant thereafter promptly began work upon the courthouse, and continued the same until the building was finally completed in the fall of 1904; the board of commissioners, upon the execution of the contract, promptly appointed a building committee whose duty it was to inspect all material and work supplied during the construction of said building, and to ascertain whether the same was in accordance with the plans, specifications and contract, and to report to the commissioners. The committee duly inspected the materials and work as the same were supplied by the contractor, and never objected thereto, and when the building was finally completed the commissioners then examined and accepted and paid for the same, that is, on 10 October, 1904, as required by the terms of the contract. During the progress of the work the commissioners made payments to the defendant from time to time, upon the recommendations of the building committee that the material and workmanship were in accordance with the terms of said contract.

Some time after the work had been completed, accepted and paid for, the roof, which was made of metal shingles, was found to be leaking, and the defendant was notified thereof. That was the first and only notice, before the bringing of this suit, of any defects whatsoever which was given to defendant, and he immediately went to Manteo, had the roof examined, and it was agreed between the said (25) board of commissioners and the representative of the defendant that a metal-shingle roof was not practicable for that particular locality, owing to its close proximity to the ocean and the salt air, and it was then agreed to substitute for the metal-shingle roof a slate roof, it being also agreed that the county should pay to the defendant the difference between the cost of the metal-shingle roof and a slate roof; while the slate roof was being put on, the material and workmanship was likewise inspected from time to time by the building committee, and after it had been completed, it was likewise examined, approved, accepted, and the amount due was paid by the then existing board of commissioners *Page 24 on 15 May, 1905, the defendant giving bond whereby he guaranteed said slate roof against leaks and defects for the period of one year thereafter.

From 15 May, 1905, to 21 February, 1908, a period of nearly three years, no further complaint was made to the defendants that the roof or any portion of the said building was not in every respect satisfactory and as required to be under the contract and guarantee made by the defendant. On 21 February, 1908, the defendant was sued by an entirely new board of commissioners, and the county of Dare claimed that it had been damaged in the sum of $6,000 by reason of the defendant's fraud, deceit and corruption, and breach of contract, as alleged in the complaint filed in said cause. That suit was the only other notice the defendants received of any defect in the building, it being nearly four years after the completion of the building and nearly three years after the slate roof had been completed, accepted and paid for. A change of venue was taken to Perquimans, where the case was heard.

Between 9 December, 1903, when the contract was made, and 10 October, 1904, when the building was accepted and paid for, the personnel of the board of commissioners remained the same; but in the fall election of 1904 some of the members of the old board were retired and new ones elected, and such was the situation when the slate roof was finished and accepted on 15 May, 1905; but when this suit was brought an entirely new board had been elected, so that none of the old members of the board who entered into the contract, supervised and accepted the work thereunder and paid therefor, formed any part of said new board.

The board which brought this suit had nothing whatever to do with the making of the contract or the supervision or acceptance of the building or the payment therefor, and yet in the complaint which was filed it is charged that by fraud and deceit and corruption on the part of the defendant, the old board was influenced to make the contract set (26) up in this suit, and the county paid some $6,500 more than the building was reasonably worth, and that, by said fraud and deceit, improper advantage was taken of an incompetent building committee, and the commissioners themselves were thereby induced to accept a defective building and pay the alleged exorbitant price therefor. The deceit and fraud charged against the defendant in the complaint is of the grossest character, and such is made the basis of the right of the plaintiffs in this case to disregard the final acceptance and payment for the building by the old board of commissioners, and also to make such deceit and fraud the basis of its alleged claim for damages. *Page 25

The court, on motion of the defendant, entered a judgment of nonsuit, and the plaintiff appealed. We find not the slightest testimony in the record tending to show any fraud or deceit on the part of the defendant. It is not sufficient merely to charge fraud. Vituperative epithets do not prove it, but the party who alleges any corruption in the making or execution of a contract must establish his allegation by evidence, not beyond a reasonable doubt, nor even by clear and convincing proof, but by a preponderance of the testimony and to the satisfaction of the jury. There being no fraud shown by the plaintiff, the case depends for its just decision upon the ordinary principles applicable to such contracts. It was placed within the power of the plaintiff to inspect the building as the work progressed, and, moreover, it was given the authority to appoint the committee of inspection itself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 S.E. 37, 152 N.C. 23, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dare-v-construction-company-nc-1910.