George W. Katterjohn & Son v. Board of Education

261 S.W. 257, 202 Ky. 690, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 363
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 22, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 261 S.W. 257 (George W. Katterjohn & Son v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George W. Katterjohn & Son v. Board of Education, 261 S.W. 257, 202 Ky. 690, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 363 (Ky. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Turner, Commissioner

Affirming on the original and reversing on the cross appeal.

In 1919 the voters of Padueah at an election held for that purpose authorized the issuing’ of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars in bonds for the construction and improvement of certain school buildings in that city.

Under the proposition as submitted one hundred and fifty thousand dollars of the bond issue was specifically set apart for the erection of the Augusta Tilghman High School building. The bonds were sold and this amount was so set apart.

The board of education had plans and specifications prepared for this building by architects, and bids were received for construction of the same under the terms thereof. There were also certain alternate propositions provided for in the plans and specifications and submitted to the bidders, and among them was one for the erection of a gymnasium in connection with the Tilghman High School building.

When the bids were submitted it,was ascertained that appellants were the lowest bidders, but that the one hundred and fifty thousand dollar fund so set apart for that building would be insufficient to cover the cost of the erection of both the máin building and the gymnasium attached thereto.

Accordingly, in the contract thereafter entered into the board of education accepted appellant’s bid for the main building and it was provided that the bid for the construction of the gymnasium

‘‘Shall be held in abeyance and left open by said contractor, and his bid for the construction of said gymnasium for said amount may be accepted by said board at any time between this date and April 1st, 1921, and in the event said board does decide to con[692]*692struct said gymnasium the said contractor agrees to build same as per alternate number 11, and according to the plans and specifications.”

The original contract was dated December 30, 1920, and it was contemplated by the board that between that date and the 1st of April, 1921, a popular subscription would be taken up among the citizens of sufficient amount to authorize an acceptance of appellants’ alternate bid for the erection of the gymnasium; and such subscription having been made, on the 31st of March, 1921, the board did accept appellants’ bid for the erection of the gymnasium under the terms and specifications of their bid therefor.

This is an equitable action by the contractors against the board of education wherein it seeks a judgment against the board of $33,744.63, with interest from the 4th day of August, 1921, and that it be adjudged a lien upon the funds in the hands of the board specifically set apart for the payment of such construction. The amount so claimed is the aggregate of several different amounts claimed by the contractors growing out of different features of the work and different provisions of the contract, and of the plans and specifications.

The issues were made up in great detail about the various subdivisions of the work, and the pleadings are so voluminous it will be sufficient to say they presented all the issues.

After the taking of evidence and the filing of a great many exhibits, including the detailed plans and specifications under which the contract was made, the contract itself, and a supplemental contract entered into with reference to part of the brickwork, the cause was submitted and the court adjudged to the plaintiffs on account of the main building a balance of $26,753.97 with interest, and the sum of $6,419.79 with interest as the balance upon the contract price for the construction of the gymnasium.

In reaching this result it allowed the plaintiffs .$4,100.00 for the completion of the main building forty-one days before the 15th of September, 1921, according to a provision of the contract, which item is vigorously contested by appellees; but it denied the claim of plaintiffs to an allowance of twenty-nine hundred dollars for twenty-nine days’ delay alleged to have been caused by [693]*693the negligence of defendants and its employes, and denied a claim of plaintiffs for five hundred and ninety-seven dollars because of the falling of a basement wall alleged to have fallen because plaintiffs were required by the agent of appellees to improperly construct same in the first place. The court also disallowed a claim of the defendants of sixty-two hundred dollars as a penalty under the provisions of the contract for the plaintiffs’ alleged failure to complete the building for sixty-two days after the fifteenth day of September, 1921, but on its claim of twenty-five hundred dollars for damages for defects there was allowed to the defendant one thousand dollars, and the balance disallowed. The court also in its judgment allowed defendants a credit for seventy-one hundred and sixty dollars for face brick purchased by it under the terms of a supplemental contract to be hereafter considered, and of that action appellants complain. The contractors are prosecuting this appeal, and the board of education is prosecuting a cross-appeal.

The only items seriously contested by appellants on this appeal are:

(a) The court’s refusal to allow them $597.00, the cost of the reconstruction of the fallen wall which they claim fell because appellees”’ agent required them to construct it in a faulty and improper manner in the first place;

(b) Because of the court’s refusal to allow them twenty-nine hundred dollars which they claim they would have earned under the terms of the contract by completing the building twenty-nine days earlier except for the failure of appellees ’ agents to furnish them in time certain detailed drawings about the stone work; and

(c) Because the court allowed appellees a credit for seventy-one hundred and sixty dollars on account of the face brick under the terms of a supplemental contract.

The items contested by appellees are:

(a) Allowance to the appellants of forty-one hundred dollars as a bonus for completing the main building forty-one days before the 15th of September, 1921;

(b) Because of the court’s refusal to allow appellees a credit for sixty-two hundred dollars because of the alleged failure of appellants to complete the buildings for sixty-two days after the 15th of September, 1921.

[694]*694There are several small items oil each side referred to by counsel in their briefs, but not insisted upon. The whole controversy revolves around the consideration of the above five items.

The court adjudged that the main building Was completed on the 4th of August, 1921, but it seems to be conceded that the gymnasium was not completed until some time after the 15th of September, 1921. The appellees earnestly urge that there was in fact only one contract for the erection of both, and that as the gymnasium, which was a part of and connected with the main building, was not completed until sixty-two days after the 15th of September, 1921, they are entitled to have it adjudged that the plaintiffs thereby forfeited the sixty-two hundred dollars contracted for-by them. But we are not inclined to give this harsh interpretation under the facts. While technically it was only one contract, the fact is that appellants only undertook to build the gymnasium according to the plans and specifications, three months or more after they had entered into the contract to build the main building.

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261 S.W. 257, 202 Ky. 690, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-w-katterjohn-son-v-board-of-education-kyctapp-1923.