Howard County v. Baker

24 S.W. 200, 119 Mo. 397, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 8, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 24 S.W. 200 (Howard County v. Baker) 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
Howard County v. Baker, 24 S.W. 200, 119 Mo. 397, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 3 (Mo. 1894).

Opinion

GrANTT, P. J.

This is a suit on a bond executed by the defendant, Baker, as principal, and the other defendants, as his securities, conditioned for the performance of a contract to build a courthouse at the city of Fayette, made by him yrith the county court of Howard county.

The defendant, Baker, on the first day of July, 1887, entered into a written contract with said court to furnish the material and construct said courthouse, according to certain plans and specifications prepared by the architects, and made part of the contract, for which he was to receive the'sum of $32,942.

The only clauses in this contract, necessary to be considered in the determination of the questions of law, presented by the sureties upon said bond are, first, the one providing for changes during the progress of the work; and, second, the provision therein as to the manner of making payments to the contractor.

The contract in the second clause of the second paragraph provides that the county court, through the architects, ‘ ‘might make any .alteration desired in the specifications, and should have the right and power to make any such change or changes, and that the same should it no ivay injuriously affect or make void the contract;” but that the difference for work omitted should be deducted from the amount of the contract, by fair valuation, and for additional work required by any alteration, the amount should be agreed upon before commencing the additions, and that the agreement should state the extension of time, if any, to be granted by reason thereof.

The stipulation as to the manner of payment is as follows:

[402]*402‘ ‘Eighty-five (85) per cent, on the amoimt of the material fti/mished on the grounds, and work done on the ibuilding on the first of each and every month, as work •shall progress; and the remaining fifteen (15) per cent, to he paid when the building is fully completed and accepted.' All payments to be made on the superintendent’s estimate of material furnished and labor performed, and indorsed by the county court and certified to by the architects.”

At the time this contract was entered into, the defendant, Baker, as principal, and his codefendants, as his securities, executed the bond sued on to plaintiff, Howard county, in the penal sum of $65,884, subject to the condition, that, whereas, Samuel B> Baker had contracted with the county of Howard, in the state of Missouri, to furnish the material and construct the courthouse building, as planned, drawn and specified, for the county aforesaid, for the sum of $32,942, by contract dated July 1, 1887, if the said Baker should duly perform said contract, said obligation to be void, otherwise the same to remain in full force.

The petition sets out the bond, and the condition above recited, which stated that the contract was dated July 1, 1887; and. for breach thereof alleges, that the said Baker did not perform his said contract, but after he had partly erected the walls of the building, and performed other work thereon, he abandoned the same, and left the house unfinished and incomplete, and that the plaintiff was compelled to complete said building, and in doing so necessarily laid out and expended the sum of $11,771.73, in excess of the amount for which said Baker, by his said contract, had covenanted and agreed to erect said courthouse, and asked judgment for the penalty of the bond, and that execution issue for the damages assessed. Nothing is said in the petition about an alteration in the work, [403]*403made October 1, 1887, as to the lintels of some of the windows. No‘objection was taken before the referee, or in the trial court, as to any variance between the contract pleaded in the petition, and that shown by the evidence.

The answer of defendant, Baker, is a general denial. The other defendants, his sureties, admit the execution of the bond, deny the other allegations of the petition, and allege “that the plaintiff and Samuel B. Baker altered the terms, conditions and stipulations of the contract for the performance of which said bond was given as security, and which alterations were made without the consent of these defendants. On account of which, the defendants were, relieved of all liability on such bond, if such liability ever existed.” The replication denies this allegation.

The case was tried, by consent, by a referee, D. D. Duggins, Esq. The plaintiff upon the trial showed that Baker began work upon, the building, under his contract, in July, 1887, and continued to work thereon in the months of August, September, October, November and December in said year; that he did not work after December, 1887; and finally abandoned the same, after the foundation had been laid, and when the walls had been erected to the top of the windows in the second story; that the county, in April, 1888, took charge of the building and was compelled to complete the same, and that, in doing the work left unfinished by .Baker, and which he ought to have done under his contract, necessarily expended $9,050.97 in excess of the amount for which Baker had contracted to build said courthouse.

It was shown, upon the defendant’s part, that on October 1, 1887, the county court of. Howard county ■ and defendant Baker made a written agreement, changing from stone to railroad iron,the window lintels, upon. [404]*404•which, the “I” beams would rest, and that Baker should receive one dollar for each window lintel so changed. This agreement was in writing, and duly signed before the change was made, and was in exact accordance with the provisions of the original contract in reference to such alterations during the progress of the work.

It is shown that there was paid to the contractor, Baker, by the plaintiff, the aggregate sum of $21,363.06, which was a greater proportion of the contract price than the materials furnished and the work done by Baker were of the entire materials and work necessary to erect the building. It further appears that the payments were made upon the first of each month, and that each payment was eighty-five per cent, of the monthly estimate. These estimates were offered in evidence, and show that on the first day of each month, the superintendent made an itemized estimate of the material furnished on the grounds, and the work done on the building, which was indorsed by the county court and certified to by the architects, and filed with the county clerk, and that, thereupon, eighty-five per cent, of the amount of the materials furnished on the ground and the work done on the building, as shown by said estimate, was paid to the contractor. There was no proof offered that any payment was made in excess of the eighty-five per cent, of the estimate of the superintendent, and although each and ever one of the itemized estimates was in evidence, there was no effort made to show that any one of them was excessive or in any respect irregular or improper. There was no allegation in the pleadings of, and no attempt to show, any fraud in making the estimates. The referee found, as a fact, that the payment made each month was only eighty-five per cent, of the work done and material furnished.

The referee found and reported that the plaintiff [405]*405had sustained damages in the sum of $9,050.97, and was entitled to judgment for the penalty of the bond with an award of execution for the damages aforesaid and for costs.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W. 200, 119 Mo. 397, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-county-v-baker-mo-1894.