George M. Morris Construction Co. v. Four Seasons Motor Inn, Inc.

567 P.2d 965, 90 N.M. 654
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 11, 1977
Docket11136
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 567 P.2d 965 (George M. Morris Construction Co. v. Four Seasons Motor Inn, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George M. Morris Construction Co. v. Four Seasons Motor Inn, Inc., 567 P.2d 965, 90 N.M. 654 (N.M. 1977).

Opinion

OPINION

SOSA, Justice.

Plaintiff-appellee George M. Morris Construction Company [hereinafter Morris] sued Four Seasons Motor Inn, Inc. and Dale J. Bellamah Corporation [hereinafter Bellamah], defendants-appellants and third-party plaintiffs, for arrearages under a construction contract and also filed liens against its real property. Bellamah denied those amounts, counterclaimed for slander of title, and counterclaimed for failure to disburse $18,709.32 to thirty-four laborers. Those same laborers sued Bellamah for failure to pay $15,182.23 in fringe benefits and filed liens against its property. Mesa Concrete, Springer Corporation, and Burke Concrete sued Morris and Bellamah and filed liens for arrearages. All suits were consolidated. Bellamah in turn brought a third-party complaint against American Bonding Company [hereinafter ABC], its surety, on a performance bond and a labor-material bond. ABC cross-claimed against Morris on an indemnity agreement.

The factual circumstances from which the suits arose are the following: On November 1, 1972, Bellamah and Double R, Inc. entered into a written contract for adding one hundred units to the Four seasons Motor Inn for a price of $247,046. ABC issued performance and material-labor bonds in the amount of $247,046. Double R was unable to complete the contract, so on February 16, 1973, Bellamah and Morris, who was general foreman for Double R, entered into a written contract to complete the unfinished work for $175,896.75. ABC issued a rider to the bonds, substituting Morris as principal in place of Double R.

After several months Morris determined he would be unable to complete the contract at that price. Bellamah then orally agreed to modify the contract to put payment on a cost plus basis. Whereupon Morris completed the construction of the additions for an additional $85,367.44 over the $175,-896.75 price. The additional cost included the cost of two written agreements to provide and install doors ($12,347.59) and bathroom vanities ($8,500).

After considering all claims and evidence the trial court ordered Bellamah to pay Morris $2,892.74, the unpaid portion of certain invoices; ordered Morris and Bellamah personally to pay the laborers $15,182.23 and granted the laborers a lien against the property in that amount; ordered Bellamah to pay Mesa Concrete, Springer Corporation, and Burke Concrete $4,822.30, $5,324.10, and $744.02 respectively (stipulated to by Bellamah); ordered Bellamah to pay the stipulated $331.28 to Morris for the laborers’ fringe benefit fund; awarded Morris and the intervenors attorney fees; awarded Bellamah $10,914.60 on the performance bond against ABC; and awarded ABC $10,914.60 plus attorney fees against Morris.

On appeal all aspects of the trial court’s judgment, except the stipulated amounts, are challenged by Bellamah and the other parties.

A.Morris v. Bellamah

Morris sued Bellamah for $27,425 allegedly owed, the debts consisting of amounts due on the concrete contract ($24,878), the door contract ($325), and the vanity contract ($2,200). On the stand Morris admitted that this claim actually included the $6,459.09 he owed to his subcontractors Mesa Concrete, Springer Corporation, and Burke Concrete; the $14,850 he had already been paid once by Bellamah and which he still owed to the laborers’ fringe benefit fund; the $331.28 he still owed the fringe benefit fund (this amount he had never received from Bellamah).

The trial court awarded Morris $9,683.11, computed as follows: (1) $6,459.09, the amount due Burke, Mesa, and Springer; (2) $331.28, the amount due the laborers’ fringe benefit fund but never received from Bellamah; (3) $2,892.74, the amount Bellamah refused to pay on the concrete contract (and perhaps the door and vanity contracts) starting about August, 1973. There is substantial evidence to uphold these awards. Bellamah argues that there should be a $109.20 set-off for the amount it paid Morris for the Mesa Concrete bill. There is substantial evidence supporting the claim for this set-off and the trial court should have allowed it against Morris.

As a set-off against the $2,892.74 owed only to Morris, Bellamah argues that Morris received from Bellamah $14,850.95 for the laborers’ fringe benefit fund, which Morris never transferred to that fund but kept for himself. Morris himself testified to that effect. This set-off should have been granted by the trial court. 1

B. Bellamah v. Morris Counterclaim

The only additional matter raised in the counterclaim was the slander of title claim for $25,500. The trial court rejected this claim by not making a finding thereon. No evidence was introduced at trial. There was substantial evidence to support the negative finding of the trial court.

C. Intervenors (thirty-four laborers) v. Bellamah

The trial court awarded intervenors both a personal judgment against Bellamah and liens against its real estate. Bellamah argues that both judgments were improper.

First, the laws of New Mexico do not give a subcontractor a personal cause of action against owners, only a lien against the land or structure. Section 61-2-2, N.M. S.A.1953 (2d Repl.Vol. 9, 1974). Most jurisdictions have rejected such quasi-contractual claims against owners, although two states have allowed such actions in narrow circumstances. For a general discussion of those cases and their legal theories, see Annot., 62 A.L.R.3d 288 (1975). We do not approve of such a personal judgment in this factual situation, and it should not have arisen here, thus we reverse the trial court. See Allison v. Schuler, 38 N.M. 506, 36 P.2d 519 (1934).

Second, the trial court granted intervenors a lien against the property. Bellamah argues that the thirty-four intervenors signed waivers of lien 2 and thus the trial court should have denied the liens. Intervenors counter that Bellamah failed to plead waiver as an affirmative defense, thus Bellamah was barred from asserting it during trial. Bellamah argues that intervenors broached the issue when they asked Bellamah’s witness, Mr. McGregor, during cross-examination about the existence, identification, and usage of the lien waivers. Counsel to Bellamah on redirect pursued the subject further and sought to introduce Exhibit J, a copy of one of the waivers of lien. Only at that point did counsel for intervenors object on the grounds that there was no foundation, no authentication, and general inadmissibility. The trial court overruled the objection and received Exhibit J into evidence.

After a short recess, counsel for Bellamah sought to introduce Exhibit K, consisting of other lien waivers, into evidence. Counsel for intervenors again raised the same objections but added a new one: it was a new affirmative defense not raised in the pleadings. The trial court then ruled it would receive Exhibits J and K into evidence against all parties except intervenors. The trial court agreed to amend the pleadings to conform to the evidence, but it continued to hold that Bellamah had waived its affirmative defense of waiver of lien.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
567 P.2d 965, 90 N.M. 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-m-morris-construction-co-v-four-seasons-motor-inn-inc-nm-1977.