Hickory Inv. Co. v. Wright Lumber Co.

119 So. 308, 152 Miss. 825, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 264
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1928
DocketNo. 27431.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 119 So. 308 (Hickory Inv. Co. v. Wright Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hickory Inv. Co. v. Wright Lumber Co., 119 So. 308, 152 Miss. 825, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 264 (Mich. 1928).

Opinion

Anurrson, J.

Appellee filed the bill in this cause in the chancery court of Harrison count3 against appellants, the Hickory Investment Company and the Strauss Investment Company, and several other parties whose names need not be set out, because the Hickory Investment Company and the Strauss Investment Company alone prosecute this appeal. Appellee sought, b its bill, to recover of appellants the sum of six thousand eight hundred eighty-eiglit dollars and ninety-seven cents, and to foreclose a certain equitable mortgage described *830 in the bill, for the payment of said indebtedness. There was a trial on the amended bill, exhibits thereto, answers of appellants, and proof, resulting in a final decree granting the relief prayed for by the appellee, from which decree appellants prosecute this appeal.

Appellants owned certain lands in Pinehurst subdivision of the city of Biloxi, in Harrison county, upon which they desired to construct residences for sale. W. F. Robinson was a building’ contractor. On the 13th day of October, 1925, Robinson and the Strauss Investment Company entered into a written contract, providing, in substance, that Robinson would furnish ail materials and labor necessary to complete and make ready for occupancy two residences on lots 7 and 11, block 1, Pinehurst subdivision to the city of Biloxi, which lots were owned by the Strauss Investment Company; that-upon the completion of the two residences, the Strauss Investment Company was to pay Robinson for the cost of the materials and labor that went into them, and Robinson agreed to construct, out of the money so paid him, additional residences on lots in Pinehurst subdivision to be pointed out by Strauss Investment Company; that the residences should be built by Robinson, according to plans and specifications therefor prepared by himself and approved by the Strauss Investment Company, the latter to have the sole right to direct the kind of residences to be constructed; that, in the event Robinson should fail to complete the residences, or should cease to operate and carry on the construction thereof for a period of thirty days, he should forfeit to the Strauss Investment Company all improvements made on the lots; that, after the residences should be completed, the Strauss Investment Company should have the right to sell the lots and the residences thereon on time payments, and from the proceeds of such sales there should be deducted the selling cost, not to exceed ten per cent, of *831 tlie selling price, and out of tlie residue the Strauss Investment Company should be first paid the value of the lots upon ivhich the residences were located, and the balance remaining was to be divided equally between Robinson and the Strauss Investment Company. To in-sure good faith on the part of the Strauss Investment Company, it executed to Robinson a conveyance of lots 7 and 11, block 1, Pinehurst subdivision to the city of Biloxi, on which the first two residences were to be constructed, and deposited such conveyance in the People’s Bank of Biloxi, as security for the faithful performance by Strauss Investment Company of its obligations in the contract.

Appellee alleged in its bill that it had succeeded to the rights of Robinson under that contract in the following manner: That Robinson had assigned his interest in the contract to W. P. Windsor, and the latter, in turn, had assigned his interest in the contract to the appellee, and that the appellant, Hickory Investment Company, was the vendee of the Strauss Investment Company of the latter’s real estate holding’s in Pinehurst subdivision to the city of Biloxi; that Robinson had completed the first two buildings, according to said contract between himself and the Strauss Investment Company, at a cost, for labor and material, of six thousand eight hundred and eighty-eight dollars and ninety-seven cents, the amount sued for, payment of which was refused by both appellants, Hickory Investment Company and Strauss Investment Company, and that such refusal constituted a breach of the contract which entitled the appellee to sue for, and recover of them, the value of the labor and material. It was alleged that, before the filing of the bill in this case, the Strauss Investment Company had conveyed, by deed, to the Hickory Investment Companv, a large amount of real estate, including lots 7 and 11, block 1, Pinehurst subdivision to the city of Biloxi, and that, in *832 this conveyance, it was expressly stipulated that the Hickory Investment Company should assume and pay whatever indebtedness might be established against the Strauss Investment Company in favor of the contractor who had built the residences on those lots, for the cost of labor and materials that had gone into them, not to exceed the sum of seven thousand dollars.

As set out in this bill, the appellee’s position is that the Strauss Investment Company and the Hickory Investment Company, which undertook to carry out the obligations of the Strauss Company in the building contract with Robinson, breached that contract in that they refused to pay appellee, the assignee of Robinson’s interest in the contract, for the-value of labor and materials that went into the construction of the two residences. To sustain that position, appellee undertook to prove and did prove that the value of the materials and labor that went into the two residences was six thousand eight hundred eighty-eight dollars and ninety-seven cents, the amount sued for, and, further, that the residences were completed according to contract.

The contention of appellants, Hickory Investment Company and Strauss Investment Company, is that Robinson broached the building contract in that he abandoned the construction of the residences for more than thirty days without having entirely completed them.

The proof showed, as we understand the record, that the first building was entirely completed, and the second was completed, with the exception of the installation and connecting up of tlie light and heating systems therein, the cost of which the evidence showed would have been about one hundred sixty dollars.

' The appellants demurred io the amended bill, upon the ground that the Robinson building contract was not assignable without the consent of the Strauss Company. As a general rule, a building contract, which, of necessity, *833 requires the labor and attention of a number of persons, is assignable, unless it appears that the contract was made because of the knowledge, experience, or pecuniary ability of the contractor, or that, for some reason, the contractor was especially fitted to carry out the contract, or that the contract involved some feature of a personal nature or personal confidence, which was one of the inducements which led to its execution. 2 R. C. L., section 10, p. (103 et seq.; 5 C. J. 883, section 47. In the case of Janrey v. Loketz, 122 App. Div. 411, 106 N. Y. S. page 690, the court held that a contract calling for the performance of certain painting, decorating, whitewashing, and wall paper work, was assignable; that a contract to build a steam boat, to erect a synagogue, or to build a railroad, was assignable, because such contracts involved no personal, confidential relation, and no exceptional personal skill or knowledge.

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Bluebook (online)
119 So. 308, 152 Miss. 825, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickory-inv-co-v-wright-lumber-co-miss-1928.