Hutchison Lumber Co. v. Lewis

1923 OK 203, 214 P. 721, 89 Okla. 145, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1025
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 10, 1923
Docket10720
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1923 OK 203 (Hutchison Lumber Co. v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutchison Lumber Co. v. Lewis, 1923 OK 203, 214 P. 721, 89 Okla. 145, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1025 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

KENNAMER, J.

This action was instituted May 28, 1917, in the district court of Tulsa county by the Hutchison Lumber Company, plaintiff, against W. L. Garner and S. R. Lewis, defendants, to recover $2,445.80, with interest at six per eent., from W. L. Garner and for the foreclosure of ma-terialman’s lien against certain lots located in the city of Tulsa, owned by the defendant 8. R. Lewis.

The plaintiff’s petition alleged that the p'aintiff had furnished to W. L. Garner, in pursuance of ,an oral contract and at the request of Garner, lumber and building material to the total amount of $4,490.70, on which amount $2,044.90 had been paid, leaving a balance of $2,445.80. That the plaintiff, within 60 days after the last material was furnished, on the 18th day of April, 1917, filed a verified statement showing the amount due plaintiff from Garner for said lumber and building material with the clerk of the district court of Tulsa county and served notice upon the defendant S. R. Lewis of the filing of said statement.

The defendant S. R. Lewis, on April 20, 1918, filed an amended answer and cross-petition in which he denied every allegation in the petition of the plaintiff not specifically admitted. He admitted that he was the owner of the real estate described in the plaintiff’s petition, but denied that the plaintiff furnished any lumber or material at the instance and request of the defendant W. L. Garner. He alleged that the building material for the improvements made upon the lots described in the petition was furnished to him by the plaintiff under a contract with him and denied owing the plaintiff any sum for the materials furnished.

Defendant Lewis attached a copy of the contract, which was in writing, to his answer and cross-petition and alleged that he *146 entered into the contract with the Hutch-ison Lumber Company through E. S. Hutch-ison, who was president and manager of said company, but at the time the contract was executed E. S. Hutchison requested that W. L. Garner be permitted to sign the contract instead of the Hutchison Lumber Company, giving as his reason that the Hutchison Lumber Company being engaged in the retail sale of lumber and building materials, he (Hutchison) did not want the lumber company to appear as having entered into a contract as contractor for the construction of the houses which the defendant Lewis was contracting to have constructed.

The cross-petition of the defendant Lewis alleged that the total contract price, according to the terms of the written contract, was $10,567,' for the construction of eight houses, and that he had paid to the plaintiff $378.55 in excess of the contract price; the failure of the plaintiff to complete the houses in accordance with the terms of the written contract, and for damages against the plaintiff for $2,958.53.

The plaintiff filed a reply to the answer and cross-petition of the defendant Lewis, denying all the allegations of said answer and cross-petition, admitting that the contract attached to the pleading of the defendant Lewis was a correct copy of the contract entered into between W. L. Garner and S. R. Lewis, but specifically denying that W. L. Garner was the agent of the plaintiff in any matters connected with said contract. The reply was verified by the president of the company.

Defendant Garner filed an answer and cross-petition against S. R. Lewis, but this pleading is immaterial, as the defendant Garner has not appealed from the judgment rendered. The answer of the defendant Garner, to the petition of the plaintiff consisted of a general denial.

The cause was tried to a jury in November, 1918, and certain controverted issues of fact as made by the pleadings were submitted to the jury by special interrogatories.

The first interrogatory submitted to the jury the issue whether the contract entered into for the construction of the houses was in fact the contract of the Hutchison Lumber Company. The jury answered this interrogatory in the affirmative and found that the contract was in fact the contract of the Hutchison Lumber Company.

The second interrogatory required the jury to find the date on which the last lumber was furnished by the Hutchison Lumber Company to W. L. Garner, which date the jury found to be February 17, 1917.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the Hutchison Lumber Company against W. L. Garner for the sum of $1; a verdict in favor of S. R. Lewis on the eláim alleged to be due W. L. Garner from Lewis; and a verdict in favor of S. R. Lewis against the Hutchison Lumber Company upon his claim for damages against said company in the amount of $1.

The Hutchison Lumber Company, on November IS, 1918, filed written objections to the special interrogatories and verdicts of the jury, which iwere by the court overruled and exceptions allowed. The plaintiff then filed motion for new trial, which was by the court overruled and exceptions allowed, and judgment was entered in accordance with the verdict of the jury. The plaintiff prosecutes this appeal to reverse the judgment of the trial court.

The plaintiff has assigned numerous assignments of error for reversal of the judgment of the trial court. The first error presented by counsel for the plaintiff is that the trial court erred in refusing to sustain the motion of the plaintiff to set aside the verdicts of the jury and declare a mistrial. It is contended that the, first interrogatory was too indefinite to pass upon. With this contention we cannot agree. The interrogatory complained of reads:

' “Do you find from the evidence that so far as the counterclaim of S. R. Lewis against Hutchison Lumber Company, find the same to be the contract of the Hutch-ison Lumber Company? Answer yes or no.”

This interrogatory, considered in connection with the general instructions of the court, was sufficient to have the jury determine from the evidence whether the Hutch-ison Lumber Company in fact was a party to the contract. An examination of the record of the evidence shows that E. S. Hutchison, president and manager of the Hutchison Lumber Company and acting for the company, had submitted an estimate of the cost of materials and labor necessary for the construction of the eight houses, which the defendant Lewis desired to build, to the defendant Lewis, and had agreed with the defendant Lewis that the company was willing to undertake to furnish the materials and labor for the construction of the houses for the consideration of $10,567. and that Lewis had agreed to accept the proposition of the lumber company for the construction of said houses. That after the contract was reduced to writing. Garner signed the contract instead of the lumber *147 company for the reason Mr. Hutchison did not want the name of the lumber company to appear in the contract, hut that Garner signed the contract as the representative of the lumber company.

It is true that the plaintiff contends that Garner was substituted for the lumber company in the contract in consideration of Mr. Hutchison personally, under a written guaranty guaranteeing the performance of the contract on the part of Garner, but the issue made by the pleadings was whether it was intended by the parties that Garner in executing the contract was only acting as the agent of the Hutchison Lumber Company.

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 203, 214 P. 721, 89 Okla. 145, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchison-lumber-co-v-lewis-okla-1923.