Giudicy v. Giudicy Marble, Terrazzo & Tile Co.

329 S.W.2d 664, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 696
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 9, 1959
DocketNo. 46606
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 329 S.W.2d 664 (Giudicy v. Giudicy Marble, Terrazzo & Tile Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Giudicy v. Giudicy Marble, Terrazzo & Tile Co., 329 S.W.2d 664, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 696 (Mo. 1959).

Opinion

BOHLING, Commissioner.

Paul M. Giudicy and Melva M. Giudicy, husband and wife, sued the Giudicy Marble, Tcrrazzo & Tile Company, a corporation, in three counts. We designate the parties as in the trial court. Plaintiffs, in Count I, sought a recovery for a balance allegedly due under a lease on premises owned by them for royalties based upon the tonnage of rock removed by defendant in operating a quarry from March 3, 1941, and prior to October 1, 1956. They claimed damages against defendant for trespassing upon and removing stone from their land beyond said leased premises in Count II and prayed for the forfeiture of the lease in Count III. A jury returned a verdict for $16,000 on Count I and for $2,000 on Count II, and judgment was entered in accordance with the verdict. The court refused to decree forfeiture and plaintiffs did not appeal from the judgment for defendant on Count III. Defendant has appealed from the judgment entered on Counts I and II, and contends plaintiffs failed to prove their alleged damages under Counts I and II with “reasonable certainty”; that plaintiffs’ instruction No. I submitted an erroneous measure of damages for plaintiffs’ recovery under Count II and that the verdicts on both counts were excessive.

The evidence and the reasonable inferences most favorable to the verdict are for consideration and defendant’s evidence is disregarded unless it aids plaintiffs’ case. Capra v. Phillips Inv. Co., Mo., 302 S.W.2d 924[1] ; York v. Daniels, 241 Mo.App. 809, 259 S.W.2d 109[1]. Such evidence supports the following statement:'

The Giudicy Marble, Terrazzo & Tile Company, defendant, was incorporated in 1924. Henry Giudicy and plaintiff Paul Giudicy, his son, owned and operated defendant company until 1942.

Plaintiffs owned three adjoining tracts of land; to-wit: a 68-acre tract, 52 acres of which were under the lease here involved to defendant; a 40-acre tract on which plaintiffs had a quarry; and a 15-acre tract.

Ellis Bage formerly owned the land. He quarried 8,000 or 9,000 tons of rock for a road on the 40-acre tract in 1924. He leased his land to defendant in 1933 or 1934, authorizing defendant to quarry the entire area. There was no quarrying on the 68-acre tract between 1924 and his lease to defendant. The “Giudicys,” defendant, quarried in a “sketchy” way, a little here and there, for four or five years. The lease [666]*666between Bage and defendant ended in 1938, and about that time in 1938 plaintiffs purchased the 68-acre tract from Bage. Plaintiffs permitted defendant to operate its quarry without a written lease until March 4, 1941, when the lease here involved was executed. Plaintiff Paul had the responsibility of keeping defendant’s records. His wife assisted him. The father wanted the duplicates of the records and told them “to keep all records down here with us.”

Ray Giudicy was a marble cutter by trade and engaged in the terrazzo and marble business. He and Paul Giudicy are brothers. Ray purchased defendant company, became its president and took over its operation in 1942. Paul continued working for defendant until April, 1943.

The lease of March 3, 1941, between plaintiffs, as lessors, and defendant, as lessee, granted defendant the right to quarry and remove rock from a specifically described 52.38 acres of plaintiffs’ 68-acre tract of land for a period commencing March 1, 1941, and ending March 1, 1985. Defendant agreed to pay, as rental therefor, $10 per year, payable on March 1st, in advance, “together with royalties of five (5) cents per ton for each ton of rock removed from said premises, said royalties to be paid quarterly, on or before the 15th day of January, April, July and October of each year,” with a minimum guaranteed calendar year royalty of $100, payable January 15 of each year.

Defendant entered into possession and has continuously operated under said lease since March 1, 1941. The lease contained no provision for the lessors to check the amount of rock defendant removed from the premises. Defendant mailed to plaintiffs quarterly statements purporting to show the totals in pounds and tons of the rock removed, together with royalty payments based upon said quarterly statements. All but a few of said statements were introduced in evidence by plaintiffs and the contents of the missing ones were testified to by them.

According to plaintiffs’ evidence, not disputed, defendant removed 11,796.55 tons of rock between 1933 and the end of the first quarter of 1941. Plaintiffs’ evidence, based on statements of tonnage and remittances received from defendant, also established that an additional 64,940.90 tons of rock were removed under the lease here involved by defendant prior to October 1, 1956. This makes a total of 76,737.45 tons.

Defendant quarried rock for terrazzo chips, small pieces of limestone of different colors. The dirt and overburden on top of the stone to be quarried is first removed and left on the premises. The stone to be quarried is then blasted loose, hauled to the-crusher, processed and sacked in 100-pound, bags for sale as terrazzo chips. The residue-is either sold or stock-piled for sale as agricultural lime. About one-third of the-crushed stone is agricultural lime.

Robert Volz, a registered engineer and' surveyor of the State of Missouri, was. plaintiffs’ principal witness on the amount of rock removed from plaintiffs’ premises-by defendant. No point is made in defendant’s brief respecting his or witness Johannes’ (hereinafter mentioned) qualifications.

Volz was at defendant’s quarry two weeks-in October, 1956, to make his calculations. He surveyed and made a plat of said quarry to determine the portion that extended onto-plaintiffs’ land not described in the lease- and to calculate the volume of stone removed. He testified that he used the only prescribed engineering method known for determining the tonnage that had been removed. To obtain the shape of the top of the surface he considered the slope of the ground above and below the quarry, his-visual inspection of tree stumps and other points, and a United States Geodetic Survey quadrant made before his survey was-talcen and having contours on it. He surveyed the perimeter of defendant’s quarry.. He took cross-section measurements at each, distinct change in the shape of the quarry-“Then we took the mean distance through [667]*667the cross-section and the average area of two cross-sections, took two cross-sections at each end of a distance and the mean, and multiply that together and you will come out with the volume. We added all these volumes together. I think there were about fifty of them all told. That is the way I obtained the cubic feet.” He calculated the volume of the fill and overburden left on the premises by the same method. He used 165 pounds per cubic foot as the weight of rock for his calculations, which his and •other testimony established as the weight usually used by engineers for limestone.

Volz calculated that 5,411,100 gross cubic feet, or 447,000 tons of rock had been quarried on the leased premises, and subtracting 36,400 tons of fill and overburden, showed 410,600 tons of rock removed from the leased premises. Subtracting also the 76,737.45 tons of rock removed prior to March 1, 1941 gives 333,862.55 tons of rock removed from the leased premises during the term of the lease up to October 1, 1956, and unpaid for.

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Bluebook (online)
329 S.W.2d 664, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giudicy-v-giudicy-marble-terrazzo-tile-co-mo-1959.