Eastham Bros. v. Blanchette

94 S.W. 441, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 205, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 225
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 1, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 94 S.W. 441 (Eastham Bros. v. Blanchette) 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
Eastham Bros. v. Blanchette, 94 S.W. 441, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 205, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 225 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

The appellants, who are judgment creditors of D. P. Kaufman in the sum of $410.23, sued out a writ of garnishment against the appellee.

In his answer the garnishee denied any indebtedness to Kaufman, but admitted the execution of a contract by the terms of which he had employed Kaufman to prepare plans and specifications and supervise the construction of a brick building in the City of Beaumont, and agreed to pay therefor the sum of $900; $400 of said sum to be paid on the acceptance of the plans and specifications and the remaining $500 when the building was completed in accordance therewith. It is then averred in said answer that the $400 was paid prior to the service of the writ of garnishment, and the balance of $500 was never earned by Kaufman because said building was not constructed in accordance with the plans and specifications; that said Kaufman failed to comply with *207 his contract to supervise the construction of the building and see that same was constructed in accordance with the plans and specifications and the contract entered into with the contractors who erected the building, and by his failure to comply with his said contract the garnishee had been damaged in the sum of $700. The answer asks that Kaufman be made a party and that upon a hearing garnishee have judgment cancelling said contract, that he be adjudged to owe said Kaufman nothing and be discharged as garnishee on his answer.

Appellant filed an affidavit controverting this answer in which it is alleged that the garnishee “was indebted to said D. P. Kaufman in the sum of $500 for services rendered by said Kaufman as architect, in preparing the plans and superintending the construction of a certain brick building in Beaumont, which $500 was to become due upon the completion of said building, and that said building had been completed and accepted and taken possession of by garnishee, and was being used by him; that if there were now any objections to said building they were fraudulently made for the purpose of defeating this garnishment, and that the garnishee had waived any objections, and they prayed for judgment against the garnishee for $500, with interest from the 2d day of January, 1903, and costs of court.”

Kaufman replied to the answer of garnishee by general and special exception and adopted as his own the allegations of the controverting affidavit filed by appellants.

The cause was tried by the court without a jury and judgment rendered that plaintiffs and Kaufman take nothing against the. garnishee and that the latter be discharged and recover of plaintiffs all costs of the proceeding including an attorney’s fee of $25.

The evidence shows that about the 1st of May, 1902, appellee entered into a verbal contract with D. P. Kaufman for the preparation by said Kaufman of plans and specifications for the erection of a brick building, and the supervising of the construction of said building. By the terms of this contract Kaufman agreed to furnish said plans and specifications and to oversee and supervise the construction of the building for the sum of $900. Thereafter about May 7, 1902, Kaufman presented appellee with plans and specifications which were accepted by him and for which he paid Kaufman $400, it being then agreed between them that the balance of $500 would be paid when the building was completed in accordance with the plans and specifications. On the day that this agreement was made appellee entered into a contract with H. D. Apple-gate for the construction of the building in accordance with the plans and specifications at the agreed cost of $20,100. It was expressly provided in this contract that Kaufman was to superintend the construction of the building, and that all payments made to the contractor during the progress of the work should be made on estimates furnished by Kaufman, and that in case of any disagreement between appellee and the contractor as to the proper construction of the plans and specifications the matter should be left to the decision of Kaufman and his decision should be final.

We copy from the findings of fact by the trial court the following additional facts which are sustained by the evidence:

“4. I find that the said Applegate, in furtherance of said written *208 contract with the said Blanchette, within a reasonable time did commence the construction of said building, but that he never did, nor did anyone else complete said building in accordance with said written plans and specifications furnished by the said Kaufman.
“5. I find that the said Kaufman did not comply with and carry out his said verbal contract with the said Blanchette, in that he did not supervise, superintend or direct the construction of said building, but on the contrary, absented himself a greater part of the time while said building was being constructed, and most of the time was in the city of Houston, about 83 miles away, and that the said Kaufman did not see that said building was constructed in accordance with said plans and specifications in very material particulars, and that by reason of his said failure to so comply with and carry out his said verbal contract with the said Blanchette, the said Blanchette was caused to suffer damages in approximately the sum of $700; in other words, I find that said building, when finally abandoned by the said Applegate and the said Kaufman, and was turned over to said Blanchette, was not finished and •completed in accordance with said contract, but that the workmanship and material used in said building were deficient and defective in all the particulars specified and alleged in the supplemental answer of the garnishee, Blanchette, and that the difference in value between the building called for by said written plans and specifications, as originally made and afterwards changed by the parties in writing, is approximately $700, and that it would cost the said Blanchette said amount, which would be a reasonable amount for the work necessary to finish and complete said building in accordance with said written plans and specification, and the subsequent written changes thereof by the parties.
“6. I find that the said Blanchette has taken possession of the said brick building, and that the said is occupied by his tenants, and that he himself has an office therein, but I also find that it was expressly understood between the said Blanchette and the said Applegate and said Kaufman, that the said Blanchette did not accept the same as completed according to contract, but has all the time insisted that the said building was not completed according to contract and specifications, and that therefore he owed the said Kaufman nothing.”

Appellee has paid to Applegate on estimates furnished by Kaufman all of the contract price of the building except the sum of $100.

The appellant attacks the judgment of the court below upon the following grounds:

1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 S.W. 441, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 205, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastham-bros-v-blanchette-texapp-1906.