Fenner v. Murray
This text of 92 Pa. Super. 567 (Fenner v. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Opinion by
On the 20th day of September, 1924, W. D. Fenner made a contract to furnish all the materials and labor for the cement and concrete work on twenty-four dwellings and forty-eight garages to be erected by one of the defendants, John F. Basford, as contractor, but upon ground owned by Cecilia R. Murray, the other defendant.
W.' D. F'enner died and Ms executrix is the plaintiff in the present-case. The contract was in writing and *569 it contained a stipulation that no extra charge or claim should he made for any work done upon, or for materials furnished or supplied for the said buildings, whether called for in the contract or not, unless an agreement with respect thereto shall have been first reduced to writing and signed by the parties and approved by the Keystone Company, the guarantor of mortgages to be placed upon the. properties.
The present claim is for additional work which was not included in the contract or shown on the plans and specifications which accompanied it. Mr. Baxter, the attorney for the deceased contractor appeared in the case and testified on behalf of the plaintiff, the executrix of the deceased client. Mr. Woolford, the attorney for Brennan who had furnished some of the materials also testified.
Mr. Baxter testified that he went to Mr. Basford’s office and this is the substance of his testimony. “I asked Mr. Basford why he and Mr. Fenner could not settle their differences between them. ‘Mr. Fenner tells me that you and he have agreed upon these articles amounting to $1,852.38,’ — ‘yes,’ he says, ‘They have been agreed to.’ Well then, I said to Mr. Basford, ‘If these articles have been agreed to, then there is nothing remaining, it seems to me, between you and Mr. Fenner, excepting to determine what measurements are, with reference to the second plan, or claim, amounting to $1,200 or $1,300.’ ” Then Mr. Baxter suggested that Basford should get Fenner’s measurements and if he were not satisfied with them, he should get a man to go over and measure them himself. Mr. Fenner should get a man and they could measure them together and compare results. Then the witness continues, “he said that was a very good idea and I said, ‘If it is a very good idea, why then, cannot you and Mr. Fenner settle this question.’ 1 said, ‘Inasmuch as the $1,852.38 of these extras have *570 been agreed upon, it seems to me comparatively easy to’ — then Basford said, he only agreed to the $1,852.38 tentatively and then I said, ‘What do you mean by tentatively?’ and he said, ‘Simply if Mr. Fenner did not produce any further claim for extra work.’ Then I said to Mr. Basford, ‘You want to pay Mr. Fenner all you owe him? And ‘Yes,’ he said. I asked Mr. Basford if he was willing in any way to add to the $1,400 — I am willing to admit that the plans did not contain exactly the extra space and area he says, under these conditions I am willing to add a hundred or a hundred and fifty dollars, and I said, is that the best you can do, and he said that is positively all that I will do, as I remember the conversation.”
Mr. Woolford testified that he called Mr. Basford on the telephone and told him that he represented Mr. Brennan, a man who was furnishing all the sand, stone and cement for the operation 'and that he told Basford that he had been informed that Mr. Basford had a sum of money in his possession belonging to Mr. Fenner and he said “I have $1,445, belonging to Mr. Fenner,” and that he was willing to pay that to Mr. Fenner. I told him, “You are willing to pay it to me representing Mr. Brennan provided that was accepted in full settlement of Mr. Fenner’s claim for work done?” The conversation was on the telephone “and was to the effect he was willing to pay $1,445, but he would only pay it if Fenner would accept it in full for his claim, but he was not willing to pay it on account.”
The jury found in favor of the plaintiff, but the court entered judgment n. o. v. holding that these statements of Basford’s were made in an effort to settle the ease and were conditional upon the acceptance of the sum in full payment and that not being accepted they were not binding upon the defendant. As far as the conversation with Baxter is concerned, he states that the offer was “tentatively” made. The *571 admission that he had $1,400 belonging to Fenner, which as to the precise sum was less than the amount claimed by Fenner, cannot be severed from the condition to which it was attached that he was willing to pay it provided it was accepted in full settlement. Duff v. Vogt, 89 Pa. Superior Ct. 412.
We think, therefore, the court was right in holding that these .conversations to which the attorneys testified were not sufficient to carry the case to the jury. Plaintiff’s whole ease was founded upon the alleged acknowledgment of indebtedness by the defendant, Basford, but the proof failing as to this, his ease fell with it.
The judgment is affirmed.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
92 Pa. Super. 567, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fenner-v-murray-pasuperct-1927.