Haynes, Spencer & Co. v. Second Baptist Church

12 Mo. App. 536, 1882 Mo. App. LEXIS 80
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 14, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 12 Mo. App. 536 (Haynes, Spencer & Co. v. Second Baptist Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haynes, Spencer & Co. v. Second Baptist Church, 12 Mo. App. 536, 1882 Mo. App. LEXIS 80 (Mo. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action by an incorporated company, to recover of defendant, which is a corporation, the value of certain pews and other wood-work of a church edifice, and labor and materials furnished by plaintiff to defendant. The cause was tried by the court, a jury being waived, and the finding and judgment were for the defendant.

There are record admissions and testimony tending to show the following state of facts : Defendant was erecting a house of worship in St. Louis. It let out the work to different contractors, having separate contracts with the mason, carpenter, and other mechanics. The general direction of the work was under the control of an architect and superintendent employed by defendant. Defendant kept the building insured, increasing the insurance from time to time as the building progressed, insuring far enough ahead to cover any work after it was done. On January 2, 1879, the building caught fire from some unexplained accident. The answer alleges that this was without the fault or negligence of defendant, and the reply denies this, though it admits that the fire was accidental. The fire destroyed the church and everything in it.

The written contract between plaintiff and defendant provides that plaintiff, shall make, finish, and put up complete, furnishing all labor and materials, the pews in the audience-room and in the gallery, the pulpit, and the screen over the pulpit and baptistry, and the organ front: the work to be of a described character and quality, and subject to the approval of the architect of defendant; for the sum of $4,800, to be paid on the completion and acceptance of the work. The work is to be put up complete, on or before [539]*539December, 1, 1873, under a forfeit of $10 a day for every day’s delay beyond that time.

At the time of the fire, defendant was engaged in putting up the pews. The gallery pews were partly up ; none of the pews in the audience-room were up, but they were scattered about oil the floor ; two pieces of the organ loft were in the building, but not put up. The baptistry-screen was partly up, and all of it was in the building. It would have taken five men about two weeks to set in order in the church what remained of plaintiff’s contract. While the pews were being put up, some slight change from the contract was made in the construction of some pews, at the suggestion of the building committee of defendant; this change was nearly completed when the fire broke out. The work and materials furnished, were of the character and quality required by the contract, and reasonably worth the amounts charged in the bill of particulars filed with the petition. Some payments had been made, and the balance claimed remains unpaid.

If money is to be paid when the work is done, non-performance of the work is a good defence ; and where there has been a partial performance only, and not a performance of what is substantial in the contract, as a general rule, plaintiff cannot recover. The rule always applies where the non-performance is voluntary on the plaintiff’s part. But where the non-performance is caused by the defendant, or by the act of God, the rule is not always applied, and in this country (Cutter v. Pavell, 6 Term Rep. 320), has not been followed, but, in contracts for service, sickness and death have been held to excuse the non-performance of an entire contract.

If a workman undertakes to build a house, to be paid when the house is done, he cannot demand payment until he has complied with his contract; and if the house is destroyed by inevitable accident, it will be the loss of the contractor. And so we held in Richardson v. Shaw (1 Mo. App. 234), that,.where the contract-price of the building is [540]*540to be paid in instalments, on the completion of certain specified portions of the work, though if the house be destroyed by accident, the employer would be bound to pay the instalments then due, yet he would not be responsible for the intermediate work and materials.

The case before us is not, however, an undertaking to build a house, but a contract to do certain wood-work in an erection under the control of defendant and not under the control of plaintiff. There is a difference. In the first case, the defendant makes no agreement as to the existence of the building; in the last case, the work contracted for cannot be done unless the building exists while it is being done and until it is completed, and it may be said that there is an implied agreement that the building shall be in existence as a condition precedent to doing the work upon it. It happens that contracts on their face appear to be obligatory on one party only, when it was manifestly the intention of the parties, and a part of the consideration, that there should be a corelative obligation on the other party. And “ if the act to be done by the party binding himself can only be done upon a corresponding act being done or allowed by the other party, an obligation by the latter to do or allow to be done the act or thing necessary for the completion of the contract, will be necessarily implied.” Per Hough, J., in Lewis v. Insurance Co., 61 Mo. 538.

It is a maxim that res perit domino suo; and the rule of the common law is the civil-law rule, that if one is employed in making up the materials or adding his labor to the property of the employer, the risk is with the owner of the thing with which the labor is incorporated. And upon grounds applicable to the general contract of hire, in the absence of any special agreement or general usage, if the thing for which materials were furnished is destroyed before the work is done, the employer must pay for the work and materials, though they are lost to him. Mene~ [541]*541tone v. Athawes, 3 Burr. 1592. But Story lays down the doctrine that where there is a contract to do work on a thing by the job, and the thing accidentally perishes, the workman would not be entitled to compensation pro tanto up to the time of the destruction, because the job must be treated as an entirety and be completed before the compensation under the agreement would be due. And Appleby v. Myers and Brumby v. Smith, which will be considered afterwards, are referred to in the notes to the later editions. Story on Bail. (9th ed.), sect. 426 os, et seq. He admits, however, that Pothier holds a different opinion, and thinks that, even then, the workman should recover pro tanto. But the observations of Story go only to some of the general principles applicable to the present case, and he does not consider the case in which the res is in the custody and control of the owner, and in which the contract implies that it shall remain in existence to receive the work.

Brumby v. Smith (3 Ala. 123) was decided in 1841, and is directly in point for respondent. A workman agreed to complete the carpenter-work on a house, and to receive a certain sum on the completion of the work, his employer furnishing the materials. The house and materials were destroyed by fire, without the fault of the workman, the house being in the possession of the employer. It is held that the workman could not recover a pro rata compensation. The case is put solely upon the ground that, by the express terms of the contract, the labor was not to be paid for until the work was completed, and that, whenever this is rendered impossible without the act of the employer, there can be no recovery.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Mo. App. 536, 1882 Mo. App. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haynes-spencer-co-v-second-baptist-church-moctapp-1882.