Gay-Coleman Construction Co. v. Mathis

80 S.W.2d 833, 258 Ky. 612, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 585
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 19, 1934
StatusPublished

This text of 80 S.W.2d 833 (Gay-Coleman Construction Co. v. Mathis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gay-Coleman Construction Co. v. Mathis, 80 S.W.2d 833, 258 Ky. 612, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 585 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Clay

Affirming.

H. F. Mathis brought this suit against the Gay-Coleman Construction Company, a firm composed of Buth C. Gay and C. A. Coleman, to recover on a contract for the rent of certain road machinery and the man power to operate it. The number of hours the machinery was operated was stipulated, and the only question for decision is whether the court erred in sustaining a demurrer to the answer and counterclaim as amended.

By the contract, appellee rented certain road machinery to appellants'' for the duration of ¡its contract on the Bussellville-Franldin road. In addition to other stipulations not material, the contract contains the following provisions:

“All to be in first class operating condition, f. o. b. your .storage yard eighteen miles East of Bowling Green, Kentucky and you .also agree to' furnish an operator for the scrapers and a third man for general work with the outfit. All of this for the sum of five ($5.00) dollars per hour for each hour worked. It is further agreed and understood that, the three men furnished by you with this equipment will perform the work under the direct supervision of our General Superintendent or his representative in a manner satisfactory to him or his representative and or the representatives of the State Highway Department. * * *
“You further agree to maintain this equipment in first class order and repair during the life of our contract with you and that the cost of the repairs themselves and the labor of installation shall be borne by you, and that-except for small incidental delays, we are to pay for this equipment, and the men only for the actual time they work.
“We agree on the other hand to pay you each month as the estimates are received by us from the *614 State at the rate of five ($5.00) per hour for each hour that we use this equipment and the men and we also agree to furnish all the necessary gasoline, grease and oil for the operation of this equipment but it is distinctly understood that the greasing of this machinery the getting of it ready for work each day shall be done on your time and not on ours.
“We agree that your head man of the three you agree to furnish with this equipment and our timekeeper shall check the time worked each day within twenty-four hours after the work is performed. ’ ’

We need not set forth the allegations of the original answer and counterclaim. It is sufficient to say that it asked damages for a breach of an oral warranty tlxat the machinery was capable of handling 400 or 500 yards of dirt every day, and that the men were competent to get that result, and appellants concede that they are not entitled to recover for a breach of such warranty.

The amended answer and counterclaim, after setting out the terms of the written contract, proceeds as. follows :

“Defendants further state that at the time the contract sued on was entered into the defendT ants were under contract with the State of Kentucky by and th.rou.gh the State Highway Commission of said state, to grade and surface with traffic bound macadam the Russellville-Eranklin road mentioned in the contract sued on, and that the plaintiff was one of the bidders for said contract with the State Highway Commission. That prior to the execution of the contract sued on plaintiff had frequently visited the project known as the Russellville-Franklin road, referred to in said contract, and became familiar therewith and with the nature and character of the work to be performed under the contract with the State Highway Commission, and he was awqre of all the conditions and provisions of said contract and competent to bid thereon. They state that at all the times herein and in the petition mentioned the plaintiff was an experienced highway construction contractor and familiar with the type of machinery mentioned in *615 the contract sued on and possessed with superior skill and knowledge respecting the 'Operation thereof and the nature and character of work to which the .same was adaptable, and whether the same was adptable to the work to be performed.by the defendants and for which .said machinery and men were required by the defendants to be used in the work on said project.
‘ ‘ They state that the price per hour to be paid for the machinery and men as stipulated in the contract sued on was ascertained and agreed to by the plaintiff and defendants on the basis that said machinery was and would be kept in good condition, that the men were competent and skilled men in the operation thereof, and that said machinery when properly operated and in good condition would and could handle at least four or five hundred yards of dirt per day of ten hours, and, in fact, the said machinery when in good repair and properly operated by three competent men could and should, handle four to five hundred yards of dirt per day of ten hours, and defendants informed the plaintiff of, and plaintiff! well knew, the nature and character and quantity of work to be performed by said men and machinery and the time within which said, work should be done as required by said contract between the defendants and the State Highway Department, which was the work for which said men and machinery were hired to perform, all of which was well known to plaintiff at the time of and prior to the execution of the contract sued on.
“Defendants state that the plaintiff was at the time of and prior to the execution of said contract familiar with said machinery and men, and knew the age and condition of said machinery and the skill and ability of said men, and the nature of the work to be done by said machinery under the contract, and whether said machinery was suitable and adaptable for that purpose, and whether the men were skilled and efficient in such work and whether they could properly operate said machinery and do the work required of them under said contract. They state that they, defendants, were unfamiliar with said machinery and the use thereof *616 and did not know liow to handle and operate the same, and were unacquainted with the ■ men to be furnished by plaintiff and did not know whether they could handle and operate .said machinery in a skillful and efficient manner, and they so advised plaintiff of their lack of knowledge respecting such matters, and relied upon plaintiff’s knowledge and skill respecting said machinery and the ability of the men to properly operate the same, and relying upon plaintiff’s superior knowledge and ability and his knowledge of the machinery and as to- whether' the men could operate the same • properly and efficiently the defendants entered into said contract, all of which was known to plaintiff at the time and prior to the execution of said contract, and by reason of all the foregoing the plaintiff impliedly warranted and represented that said men were competent and efficient men to operate said machinery and that said machinery when operated by them could handle' four to five hundred yards of dirt per day of eight hours, and that said machinery and men were suitable and adaptable to the work to be performed by said machinery and men.
“Defendants state that said machinery was not in first class operating condition f. o. b.

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Bluebook (online)
80 S.W.2d 833, 258 Ky. 612, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gay-coleman-construction-co-v-mathis-kyctapphigh-1934.