Hanick v. Marion County

278 S.W. 730, 312 Mo. 73, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 647
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 22, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 278 S.W. 730 (Hanick v. Marion County) 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
Hanick v. Marion County, 278 S.W. 730, 312 Mo. 73, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 647 (Mo. 1925).

Opinions

This is an action to recover $41,086.98, alleged to be due and unpaid on a contract for the construction of ten and one-half miles of hard-surfaced road in Marion County. From a verdict and judgment for the defendant, plaintiff appeals. On the first hearing an opinion was filed, reversing the judgment and remanding the cause for a new trial. A motion for a rehearing was sustained and the cause has been reargued.

The petition alleges that on and prior to September 7, 1920, the State Highway Commission of Missouri and the defendant contemplated the construction of certain hard-surfaced roads in Marion County as part of the state highway system, including ten and one-half miles of road running west from the city of Hannibal, as shown and described in the plans and specifications on file in the office of the State Highway Commission, and known as Project Number 62; that said State Highway Commission duly authorized Marion County to construct such hard-surfaced road, including said ten and one-half miles of road; that on September 7, 1920, the defendant, acting by and through its county court, as first party, and *Page 75 plaintiff as second party, entered into a written contract by which, in consideration of payments to be made, plaintiff agreed to do all the required work on said ten and one-half miles of road, as shown by the plans and specifications and in conformity therewith, and to complete the same within 350 days, exclusive of Sundays and holidays, unless additional time should be granted. Omitting certain details, it is provided by the contract that at the end of each month the summation of all bills paid out by the court on account of labor, repair, freight, rental, maintenance and material, shall be deducted from the engineer's estimate, if said estimate is in excess of costs paid by the court, and the difference shall be divided between the court and the contractor, forty per cent to the court and sixty per cent to the contractor; provided twenty-five per cent of the contractor's share shall be retained until the completion of the work. . . . In the event that summation of bills exceeds engineer's estimate, excess shall be assumed by the court, provided, however, contractor shall receive no compensation for time and equipment furnished in construction of the project.

That plaintiff entered upon the execution of said contract and completed the construction of said road and same was accepted by the State Highway Commission and the defendant on or about December 21, 1921; that the total amount of work done by plaintiff (here the petition sets out the items of work) and the total value thereof is $150,922.49; that defendant paid out and expended for labor, materials, etc., on said work $75,777.53; that the difference between the sums so paid out by defendant and the value of the work done by plaintiff is $75,144.96; that plaintiff is entitled to recover from defendant sixty per cent of such difference, or $45,086.98; that defendant is entitled to a credit of $4,000 paid to plaintiff by the defendant, leaving a balance due plaintiff of $41,088.98, for which he prays judgment with interest from February 20, 1922, when demand was made. *Page 76

Defendant's amended answer is a general denial, an averment that the defendant was without power or authority to execute the contract pleaded, and that plaintiff failed to construct the road in accordance with the plans and specifications. It also avers fraud and collusion between plaintiff and his brother M.J. Hanick, divisional engineer in charge of the construction of the state highway system in northeast Missouri, and the federal inspector. The reply is a general denial.

Plaintiff read in evidence a resolution adopted by the State Highway Board, reciting that the County Court of Marion County made application for State and Federal aid in the improvement of 10.26 miles of state road known as Missouri Federal Aid Project 62 (Sections A B) etc., and that all requirements for said county court to receive Federal and State aid on said project have been complied with under the law, and that the applications, plans, specifications and estimates of costs on said project have been duly approved by the Missouri state highway department and the Federal bureau of public roads, and that the state highway department advertised for proposals to construct said project and no bid or proposal had been received. Therefore, resolved, that the state highway department, by authority invested in it by Section 8b, page 656, of the Session Acts of 1919 (now Sec. 10898, R.S. 1919), does hereby instruct the State Highway Engineer to authorize the said county court to proceed to construct the said project (Sections A B) in accordance with the plans and specifications above mentioned. The resolution binds the county court to furnish all necessary items of construction at its own cost and to construct said project in accordance with said plans and specifications under the supervision of the State Highway Engineer; "that the State Highway Department agrees to pay said county court the share of the State in this work — which will be $1200 per mile for 10.5 miles, plus one-half of the cost of the project in excess of the said $1200 per mile; . . . provided the State shall not pay to the county court more *Page 77 than the sum of $67,744.57 on said project, regardless of the actual and true cost for completing the same." The resolution concludes: "Witness by our signatures the acceptance of and the agreement to the terms and conditions hereinbefore set forth." The resolution is signed by the chairman and secretary of the State Highway Board and by the judges of the County Court of Marion County, and attested by the clerk of said court and the seal thereof under date of September 7, 1920. Plaintiff also read in evidence the contract between the County Court of Marion County and O.J. Hanick, dated September 7, 1920, which is substantially as pleaded in the petition.

The evidence for the plaintiff tended to show the construction of the road according to the plans and specifications, and acceptance by the State Highway Engineer and the county court. The evidence for the defendant tended to prove that the road was not so constructed and that the alleged acceptance was collusive.

Appellant assigns errors in the admission and rejection of evidence and in the giving and refusal of instructions, but in the view we take of the case it will not be necessary to notice either of these assignments. Appellant's theory of this case is best shown by the brief and argument of his learned counsel, from which we quote:

"Marion County having initiated proceedings for the construction of ten and one-half miles of hard-surface road here involved, and known as Project No. 62, and the State Highway Board, the predecessor of the present State Highway Commission, having unsuccessfully advertised for bids, the board at the solicitation of the county entered into a contract with the county court on behalf of the county whereby the latter undertook to construct the road within the estimate of cost prepared by the State Highway Engineer. This contract obligated the State Highway Department to pay to Marion County the sum of $1,200 per mile plus one-half the cost of the project in excess of $1,200 per mile, and providing that of the estimate of cost which was then $122,889.14 *Page 78 the State should not pay to the county court more than $67,744.57.

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Bluebook (online)
278 S.W. 730, 312 Mo. 73, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanick-v-marion-county-mo-1925.