Hope v. Rebel Motel, Inc.

292 S.W.2d 477, 40 Tenn. App. 666, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 116
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 22, 1955
StatusPublished

This text of 292 S.W.2d 477 (Hope v. Rebel Motel, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hope v. Rebel Motel, Inc., 292 S.W.2d 477, 40 Tenn. App. 666, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 116 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

AVERY, J.

This cause comes from the Chancery Court of Shelby County, Charles W. Hope, dba Hope Electric Company, Appellant and original Complainant, and cross-defendant v. The Rebel Motel, Incorporated, S. D. O’Dell and his wife, Mamie M. O’Dell, Thomas M. Hobbs, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and Carl A. Sanford, Appellees and original Defendants, the Motel, O’Dells and Sanford, also being cross-complainants.

The parties will be referred to hereinafter in accord with their respective original designation in the lower court.

The suit was'originally brought by complainant to recover the unpaid balance due for electrical work done by complainant in and on the property referred to as Rebel Motel, Inc.; for the declaration of a lien on said property; appointment of receiver; for attachment of alleged lien properties, and for judgments against defendants, Carl A. Sanford, S. D. O’Dell and his wife, Mamie M. O’Dell, and The Rebel Motel, Inc., but complainant dismissed the suit against Thomas M. Hobbs, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and Carl A. Sanford. The complainant waived his right to a lien for the work done and materials furnished, and the attachment was dismissed.

In view of the fact that the lien was waived, the attachment dismissed, and the bill dismissed as to all parties except defendants, The Rebel Motel, Inc., S. D. O’Dell and his wife, Mamie M. O’Dell, against which defendants the complainant seeks to recover judgment, it is unnecessary to minutely state the contents of the original bill and answers, only referring to that part of it necessary to the determination of the particular matter pending in this Court.

[668]*668The bill alleged that defendants were indebted'to complainant for the electric work and materials furnished and installed in the Motel building; that the work done and materials furnished on the first section of the Motel, consisting of about 13 units, was by an ora], agreement between the parties for which the complainant was to have reasonable compensation; that the general work done on the remaining 29 units was in a written contract, with the exception of certain extras, and after the bill was property amended,, complainant, sought to collect $1,056.47 alleged balance due.

Answers were property filed by all the parties, and defendants The Rebel Motel, Inc., S. D. O’Dell and wife, Mamie M. 0 ’Dell, alleged that all the electrical work done by the complainant on The Rebel Motel, Inc., was included in a written contract which provided for a consideration of $1,760, .and that the total contract price had been paid. They alleged that the work done by complainant-was carelessly and improperly, done; that the installations .were not property made and that as a result of the inferior work done by complainant, it was made necessary for them to expend considerable sums, which are set out in the answers, and they filed á cross-bill against complainant by which they sought to recover the total amount they were required to expend on account of such defective workmanship. '

The suit realty, resolved itself into an accounting be-, tween .the parties by which it was to be determined what, part of the material and labor furnished and done by complainant was covered .by the. written. contract and what part, if any, was extra or not included in the written contract, and also the amount expended by defendants [669]*669in correcting the careless, negligent and inferior work done by complainant.

The Chancellor referred the issues to the Master, his Order in that regard being:

‘ ‘ Ordered, adjudged and decreed that 'the cause be and the same is hereby referred to the Clerk- and Master to hear proof and to report to the Court the work originally contracted to be done by the com-, plainant, Charles W. Hope, and the defendants, Rebel Motel, Inc., S. D. O’Dell and wife, Mamie W. O’Dell, the contract price thereof, what amount, if any, has been paid, what extra work, if any, was contracted to be done, the amount, if any due therefor, and the amounts, if any, due to Rebel Motel Incorporated, S. D. O ’Dell and Mamie M. 0 ’Dell, or either of them, by the complainant-, Charles W. Hope, for materials, or labor furnished by them or by reason of defective workmanship or materials, and, lastly, to state - the final account as between the complainant, Charles W. Hope, and Rebel Motel, Incorporated.” .(R. .43.)

; Twelve witnesses testified orally before the Clerk and Master, in accord with the agreement that the case would be tried on oral testimony. Many exhibits were introduced, including two copies of the written contract, Invoice No. 247, Invoice No. 442 shown in the Master’s Report as No. 640, Invoice No. 507, Invoice No. 512, Invoice No. 513, Invoice No. 514, and the ledger sheet, in behalf of complinant, all of which were taken into consideration by the Clerk and Master. Other exhibits were introduced in behalf of the complainant, showing certain work done [670]*670by complainant on other structures belonging to the defendants.

Many exhibits were introduced in behalf of defendants, consisting of invoices which he claimed to have rendered to him and which were paid by him, in order to correct the faulty work done in the installations by complainant. Nine of the items shown by these exhibits were allowed by the Master. (R. 303.) Without setting out each item included in the Master’s Report and Finding, it is only necessary to say that the Master found that complainant and defendants had executed a contract calling for payment of $1,760, all of which has been paid. He found that extra work outside of that called for in the contract had been done by complainant, as shown by seven invoices totaling $2,242.72. He found that the defendants were entitled to credits thereon of four items totaling $1,186.25, making a balance due by defendants to complainant of $1,056.47. (R. 302-303.) He further found that defendants were entitled to recover under their cross-bill, which he designated as “the amount due Rebel Mot. Inc., by reason of defective workmanship or matei’ials ”, nine items paid by defendants, three of which were to the A. C. Electric Company and six of them were to Normal Electric Company, totalling the amount of $849.04. The Master then reported that the item of $1,056.47 due complainants by defendants should be credited with the total cost of correcting this inferior work of $849.04, as a set-off, leaving a balance due complainant of $207.43 (R. 303.)

This Report was filed on the 18th day of March, 1954. On April 2, 1954, exceptions were filed by defendants to the Report of the Master. These exceptions covered a great deal of the Report of the Master, particularly the [671]*671invoices allowed by the Master for extra work and to Invoices No. 247, No. 507, and No. 512, totalling more than $1,500. It was insisted that these items were covered by the written contract. Exceptions were made to Invoice No. 640, the contention being that it was for work not authorized by defendants. This item was only for $63.39. Exceptions were made to Invoice No. 513 in the amount of $571.61. As to this item the contention is that it should be $392. Exceptions were made to Invoice No. 514, the contention being that this was an unauthorized item, and amounted to $102.82. Exceptions were also taken to the finding of the Master in connection with items of labor and material furnished by defendants and which should have been credited against the amount allowed complainant. No definite amount is set out in this exception.

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W.2d 477, 40 Tenn. App. 666, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hope-v-rebel-motel-inc-tennctapp-1955.