Hansen v. Kaperonis

55 N.W.2d 284, 243 Iowa 1257, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 444
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 14, 1952
Docket48123
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 55 N.W.2d 284 (Hansen v. Kaperonis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hansen v. Kaperonis, 55 N.W.2d 284, 243 Iowa 1257, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 444 (iowa 1952).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

Plaintiff, a general contractor and builder in *1259 Sioux City, Iowa, remodeled a bouse for defendant during the fall of 1947. He brings this suit asking foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien for an alleged balance due him therefor. He alleges a cost plus contract whereas defendant claims there was an agreed fixed price.

I. Were the decision to turn on that issue alone we would have no difficulty in upholding the decision'of the trial court in plaintiff’s favor.

The conceded- absence of definite plans and specifications; the practically uncontradicted testimony that the original intention contemplated a job to take “a week at the most” and that due to frequent changes by defendant as to its. scope it lasted several months; the fact that the original building permit was originally for only a $500 job; the fact that defendant only pleads plaintiff “estimated” the cost at “approximately” the amount which he now claims was an agreed price; and finally the fact that defendant has overpaid by $300 or $400 the amount he claims was an agreed price and makes no claim for a refund, all preponderantly support plaintiff’s pleading and téstimony that there was a cost plus and not a fixed price agreement,

II. But a more difficult problem faces us when we come to defendant’s objections to the nineteen exhibits by which alone plaintiff attempts to prove the cost and the delivery of materials and labor upon which his own claimed compensation was computed.

There is shown us in the record only Exhibit 1 with a general signed stipulation that:

“All of the exhibits consist of statements of accounts or invoices showing'-various items-of lumber, hardware,- or -other building materials, on regular statement forms bearing the heading ‘Chris Hansen, Contractor and Builder’; and each such statement- * * * also bears the written designation ‘to Pete Kaperonis, 1917 Grandview.’ Attached to each of these state.-ments * * * are the delivery slips from lumber companies or other building material suppliers. These statements or invoices contain numbers for each item shown by and corresponding with the number on each delivery slip. Some of the exhibits have timecards for labor attached; some * * * are statements *1260 * * * showing merchandise supplied out of the Chris Hansen warehouse; and some * * * show insurance and cost plus percentage for which appellee makes claim. None of the exhibits is a ledger sheet or book account or a copy thereof. None * * * contains any signature but the (delivery slips attached thereto do in most instances bear an identifying initial or signature.

“Since all of the exhibits are in the same form, and particular reference, by way of illustration of procedure, has been made * * * to * * * Exhibit 1 and attachments thereto, that exhibit and said attachments are reproduced as a part of this record.”

The nineteen exhibits were (without objection) offered en masse and objected to “as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, no proper foundation laid, and based entirely on hearsay testimony, or in part on hearsay testimony, so that the court couldn’t reasonably separate the part which is hearsay from the part which is not. The objection goes to the competency of the testimony and the competency of the exhibits.”

The first item on Exhibit 1 is $2.50 for “building permit”, copy of which is attached. The second item simply says “Carlson-Dahlin Co. $20.54” and there is attached a statement “Chris Hansen Job Cost Account, Kaperonis in account with Carlson-Dahlin Co.” for that amount.

Each of the succeeding twelve items merely recites “Spald-ing-Avery Lbr. Co.” with an invoice number and amount, and there are attached Spalding-Avery Lumber Company “invoices” (referred to in testimony as “delivery slips or tickets”) corresponding in number and amount with the several items of the statement. These slips describe the material for which charge is made. The last item of the statement is “Warehouse Stock-$1.66.”

There is no showing in the record as to what part of the total charge on the nineteen exhibits is for material and what part is for labor, nor does it show what amount of material came out of plaintiff’s warehouse and how much was furnished by other suppliers.

Plaintiff testifies: “We take delivery slips which are turned in by the men on the job which [who] are in charge and as we *1261 get our invoices from the dealers they are compared and personally cheeked by myself in conjunction with the bookkeeper.”

Plaintiff further says: “The bookkeeping is done under my personal supervision. I personally check the accounts and purchases against the delivery slips and that is the way I handled this particular project. Some materials I have in my own warehouse * * *. When materials are taken from our warehouse an invoice is made directly from the warehouse. We have no method of checking that except making out an invoice when we load out a said amount of material on the job and check to the job.”

When asked if he personally checked items from the warehouse he replied: “It is very true, especially in a lot of cases, especially any small amount, naturally if I don’t happen to be there somebody else will do it.” He does not say what, if any, items he checked here. “Somebody else” never testified nor did plaintiff attempt to verify the items involved in this claim.

When it comes to proof of actual delivery of material to, and performance of labor on, the job, plaintiff’s whole testimony rests on a presumption that his- system was followed and that “the invoices, Exhibits 1 to 19, inclusive, would not have been issued if they had not tallied or dovetailed with the delivery slips.” No one testifies the slips did tally with the material actually delivered or that the labor shown on the attached time-cards was actually performed on the job. The unverified delivery slips and timecards are no proof in themselves as to the fact that the material and labor they describe was in fact delivered to and used on the job.

Plaintiff’s foreman on the job, Sterling, testifies as to the system or custom under which they operated, but there is no testimony by him or anyone that when any of the material shown by these exhibits was delivered he checked it with the delivery slip and found it correct.

Some (but not all) of the delivery slips attached to Exhibit 1 have a blank place “Received the above material --.” About half of these are signed with illegible, unidentified initials, one each is signed by Mr. Sterling, Neis Pierson, and “- Stevens.” The rest are unsigned. These signers (except Sterling) were not produced and no one explains the undecipherable *1262 initials or identifies tbe persons whose signatures they are supposed to represent.

Mr. Sterling, the only employee called, does testify that “upon the basis” of his examination of the exhibits “the labor shown” on them was performed on the project. His testimony was objected to as “conclusion” and “hearsay” and we are of the opinion the objection was good.

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.W.2d 284, 243 Iowa 1257, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansen-v-kaperonis-iowa-1952.