Fine v. Hall & Co., Inc.

59 S.E.2d 161, 216 S.C. 564, 1950 S.C. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 11, 1950
Docket16338
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 59 S.E.2d 161 (Fine v. Hall & Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fine v. Hall & Co., Inc., 59 S.E.2d 161, 216 S.C. 564, 1950 S.C. LEXIS 46 (S.C. 1950).

Opinions

Baker, Chief Justice.

This is an action for $100,000.00 damages, actual and punitive, brought by the appellant against the respondent for failure and refusal of the latter to comply with the terms of an alleged contract to furnish to the appellant certain stainless steel.

The appellant desired to bid on a contract for the making of certain repairs and improvements in a federal hospital. As claimed by him, he was not familiar with the costs involved in the provision and installation of certain hospital and kitchen equipment which was involved in the job. The stain[566]*566less steel was the principal item of material required in the performance of this part of the job, and the gravamen of the complaint is that the respondent contracted “to procure” for the appellant the stainless steel required in the general contract which he would be required to execute if he became the low bidder.

The appellant is a general contractor. The respondent is a concern whose business included (it may be inferred from the testimony) the supplying of materials of the general character involved in the present action.

It is claimed by the appellant that while he was engaged in the preparation of his bid, the respondent through its agent Jones proposed to supply to (“procure for”) the appellant the stainless steel required in the performance of that part of the contract which related to the kitchen and hospital equipment. The discussions at this stage were wholly oral. As the result of these discussions, according to the appellant, the respondent agreed to give the latter a price at which the stainless steel would be supplied, and upon which price the appellant could rely in making up his bid as general contractor for the whole job. The respondent did make such a bid, naming the price of $2.85 per lineal foot for the estimated amount of stainless steel required.

Invitations for the making of bids on the whole repair job were issued in the early part of June, 1947. The time fixed for the opening of bids was June 24, 1947. The appellant’s bid was mailed to the proper authorities on June 23, 1947, and was among the bids received at the appointed time for opening bids. In making his bid the appellant used as the basis of that part of the job requiring the provision of stainless steel the respondent’s figure of $2.85 per lineal foot for the estimated amount of stainless steel required for the job, and the appellant added to this figure an aclditional sum of $4,200.00 as the cost of installation. The total cost thus arrived at by the appellant, and included in his bid for the general contract, was the sum of $6,500.00.

[567]*567The award of the general contract was made to the appellant, as the lowest bidder, on June 25, 1947. On the same date, but before the award of the contract to the appellant, the respondent’s agent Jones telephoned the appellant that he had learned that the figure of $2.85 per lineal foot for the stainless, steel, which he had given the appellant, was erroneous, and that the figure should have been $2.85 per lineal inch. This information was received by Jones by telegram, on June 25, 1947, from a supplier upon whom apparently Jones was relying to furnish the material. The telegram in question is as follows: “Hall and Co., Spartanburg, So. Car. Jones misquoted on stainless steel tops stop Approximate price for estimate only is $2.85 per inch list instead of per foot subject to discount of 40-5-10. G. E. Johnson and Associate.” The appellant, however, did not see this telegram until some time after the award of the bid to him, and had no information as to the alleged error in the figure contained in the bid other than as given in the telephone conversation above referred to.

There is no evidence of the acceptance by the appellant of the respondent’s estimate or bid, except as may be implied from the alleged reliance by the appellant upon such estimate in making his own bid as general contractor.

The appellant demanded of the respondent that it furnish the stainless steel at the figure of $2.85 per lineal foot, but this the respondent refused to do, in consequence of which the appellant was compelled to obtain the materials elsewhere. And he alleges that the cost to him of compliance with that part of the general contract which was embraced in the undertaking of the respondent, was $43,000.00. Presumably this included the cost of installation, but no attempt was made in the testimony to separate this item from the total cost stated.

The respondent demurred to the complaint, but the demurrer was overruled by the Circuit Judge. As stated in the transcript, however, this ruling is “not involved in this [568]*568appeal, except, as overruling it is assigned as an additional sustaining ground by the respondent.”

The respondent thereupon answered, admitting the employment of Jones, but alleged “that this defendant has never stocked or bought or sold stainless steel,” and denied the right of Jones to sell or contract on the respondent’s account to sell stainless steel. The answer also denied the existence of any contract or agreement between the parties, and specifically denied that there was any “written memorandum” of an agreement signed by the respondent or by anyone authorized to act for it.

At the trial of the case the respondent moved to require that the appellant elect to proceed either on the theory of an action for breach of contract or on the theory of an action for fraudulent breach.

The Circuit Judge ruled that no fraud was alleged, whereupon the appellant elected to proceed on the theory of a breach of contract. To the ruling so made by the Circuit Judge exception has been taken, but in view of our conclusion that the record does not disclose the making of a legally effective contract, this phase of the case need not be further referred to.

Thereupon the appellant moved for a voluntary non-suit. The motion was denied by the Circuit Judge. The granting or refusal of such a motion, under the circumstances of this case, is a matter within the discretion of the trial Court, and we find nothing in the record to indicate an abuse of this discretion or to warrant our further dealing with appellant’s exception relating to this subject. Cunnigham v. Independence Ins. Co., 182 S. C. 520, 189 S. E. 800.

At the close of the appellant’s case, the respondent moved for an order of nonsuit, principally upon the grounds that the appellant had failed to prove the existence of a contract between the parties; that he had proven no damages; and [569]*569that the alleged contract comes within the provision of the Statute of Frauds, and not being in writing, was not enforceable.

Other questions were raised in the course of the trial, but the disposition herein made of the issues above indicated renders a discussion of the other questions unnecessary to a proper disposition of the litigation.

The crux of the controversy between the parties, as deduced from the pleadings and the testimony, is this:

The plans and specifications upon which the appellant’s bid as general contractor was made provided for numerous articles of kitchen and hospital equipment which were to be fabricated in the main out of stainless steel. It is deducible from the testimony that the quantity of stainless steel required for this purpose could be determined from the specifications covering the kitchen and hospital equipment.

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Bluebook (online)
59 S.E.2d 161, 216 S.C. 564, 1950 S.C. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fine-v-hall-co-inc-sc-1950.