Grady v. Felker

186 N.W.2d 509, 85 S.D. 477, 1971 S.D. LEXIS 93
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1971
DocketFile 10768
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 186 N.W.2d 509 (Grady v. Felker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grady v. Felker, 186 N.W.2d 509, 85 S.D. 477, 1971 S.D. LEXIS 93 (S.D. 1971).

Opinion

GRIEVES, Circuit Judge.

In this action plaintiff seeks to recover $642.45, plus interest, for alleged goods, wares and merchandise furnished *478 and services rendered to the defendant at his request in connection with the repair of a building owned by defendant.

The answer of the defendant was a general denial and a counterclaim which stated:

“That during the month of May, 1965, or thereabouts, the plaintiff undertook excavation operations on the lot adjoining the cafe owned by the defendant and that during the course of such excavation and as a result thereof, the wall of the building owned by the defendant collapsed; that the plaintiff was careless and negligent in his excavating operations and did not take the necessary steps and precaution to protect the wall of the cafe building owned by the defendant and that by reason of such carelessness and negligence the said wall collapsed and that the defendant suffered damage by reason of the careless and negligent acts of the plaintiff.
“That as the direct result of the facts herein-before alleged and the carelessness and negligence of the plaintiff, the defendant suffered damages consisting chiefly of materials, labor and other incidentals of the sum of Eight Hundred Twenty-Three and 3/100 Dollars ($823.03)”.

The prayer for relief asks for judgment against the plaintiff for the alleged damages of $823.03 plus interest. There is no dispute as to the amount of either account. The reply of the plaintiff amounts to a general denial of the counterclaim. The action was tried to the court without a jury and the court rendered judgment against the defendant in the sum of $642.50 plus interest of $159.82 or a total of $802.32, from which judgment the defendant appealed.

The trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law and therein found that in October, 1964 the defendant owned the Howard Cafe building located in the middle of the block on the east side of Main Street in Howard, South Dakota. This building was constructed of brick and concrete and was at least 50 years old. It was located immediately south of a building used as a pool hall. The south wall of *479 the pool hall building was approximately two feet to the north of the north wall of the Howard Cafe building and immediately north of the pool hall there was located a building used as a drug store. On October 27, 1964 a fire completely razed the drug store and pool hall buildings and as a result of the fire and the water used to extinguish it, the north wall and roof of the Howard Cafe building were extensively damaged. After the fire the defendant employed Yirgil Kroger to repair the damage done to the cafe building. Mr. Kroger repaired the roof and the “parapet” along the top side of the north wall. He completed the repair work approximately three months after the fire. The plaintiff was the sole owner and operator of the Grady Construction Company and was hired by the owner of the two lots immediately north of the Howard Cafe on which had been located the pool hall and drug store buildings, to construct a new drug store building to be known as the Rafferty-Robbins building. About four months before plaintiff commenced work on the new RaffertyRobbins building there was a deep crack in the north wall of the Howard Cafe building. This crack began at the base of the building just a few feet from the rear or east end thereof and extended in a semi-circular arch upward to a height of 15 to 16 feet and then down again in about the middle of the wall to the base of the building about 25.feet from the point of beginning. The crack was approximately 1/8 inch thick when first observed and increased to a thickness of 3/4 inch prior to the collapse of the wall. In the vicinity of the crack there was a prominent outward bulge in the wall and the crack showed continual signs of shifting for a period of about four months prior to the actual collapse of the wall. The plaintiff commenced construction of the Rafferty-Robbins building during the latter part of April or the first part of May, 1965 by cleaning out the debris in the existing basements of the two lots and by increasing the depth of the existing basements by about one foot by the use of a “D-4 Caterpillar”. No excavation was done to enlarge the basement areas other than the one foot increase in depth. The excavation was at least two feet from the cafe wall. After the completion of the excavation, the plaintiff commenced to have the footings of the adjoining Rafferty-Robbins Drug Store building poured. At *480 least two days after the completion of the excavation work, when the footings were nearly poured, the east or back portion of the north wall of the Howard Cafe building, in the general vicinity of the “cracked area’’, collapsed and the wall and the dirt immediately below the wall all seemed to collapse at about the same time. The wall fell more or less directly downward.

Either on the day the wall collapsed, or the following day, the plaintiff and defendant had a conversation in which the defendant requested the plaintiff to assist in the repair of the wall and at that time a contract was entered into between said parties for the repair of the wall by the plaintiff. The plaintiff repaired the wall and furnished certain materials and labor to the defendant which had a reasonable value of $642.50. In addition to the materials and labor furnished by the plaintiff to the defendant for the repair of the wall, the defendant also hired and received other materials and labor which was used for the repair of the wall at the same time, which had a reasonable value of $823.03. The plaintiff never had been the owner of the real property on which the Rafferty-Robbins Drug Store was built. No notice of the proposed excavation on the Rafferty-Robbins property, either verbal or in writing, was ever given to the defendant.

We have carefully considered the evidence and are of the opinion that it amply supports the facts as found by the trial court.

Upon the foregoing findings of fact the trial court concluded in part that the plaintiff had proven by a preponderance of the evidence that an oral contract was entered into between the plaintiff and defendant whereby the plaintiff was hired by the defendant to repair in part the north wall of the Howard Cafe building after its collapse in early May, 1965; that the reasonable value of the materials and labor furnished by plaintiff to the defendant in repairing said wall was the sum of $642.50 and that plaintiff was entitled to judgment against the defendant for said amount plus 6% interest from June 1, 1965. The trial court also concluded that the defendant had failed to prove his counterclaim by a pre *481 ponderance of the evidence and thus denied recovery to the defendant on his counterclaim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 N.W.2d 509, 85 S.D. 477, 1971 S.D. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grady-v-felker-sd-1971.