John King Co. v. L. & N. R. R.

114 S.W. 308, 131 Ky. 46, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 18, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 114 S.W. 308 (John King Co. v. L. & N. R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John King Co. v. L. & N. R. R., 114 S.W. 308, 131 Ky. 46, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 108 (Ky. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Chiep Justice O’Rear

Reversing.

Appellee advertised for bids for excavating and grading grounds at Corbin, Ky., necessary to enlarge its yards and for the accommodation of its machine shops at that point. The surface of the country was uneven, so that a hill some 10 or 12 feet high had to be cut down for a considerable width, and the dirt and material taken from the excavation used in making a fill at an adjacent point, where the land was lower than the track level. To enable bidders to know what the character of the formation to be excavated was, as well, perhaps, as to learn for itself that fact, appellee caused two test pits to be sunk in the hill — one near the north end and the other near the south end of the area to be cut through. These test pits were about 10 or 12 feet deep — as deep as the proposed excavation was to be — and from four to six feet in diameter. Appellants were invited to submit bids to do the work.' They were contractors who engaged in doing that class of work. A member of the firm and his clerk went upon the ground at the invitation of appellee’s engineer in charge of the work, and inspect[50]*50ed it as carefully as the conditions would admit of without sinking further test pits, or boring through the surface at other points, so as to develop the nature of the underlying earth material. So far as the surface and the appearance of the surroundings indicated, appellants contend there was nothing to suggest either to appellee’s engineers or to appellants that the body of the material to be excavated was different from what was disclosed by the test pits sunk by appellee. These pits showed only soil, clay, and loose sandstone and shale, according to appellant’s testimony, all of which could have been readily taken out by the use of steam shovels. They did not indicate there was a stratum of solid rock beneath the surface of the hill elevation, and above the level of the proposed track site. The rock did not show as an outcropping. Upon this appearance appellants submitted a bid to do the work for 24 cents a cubic yard. This bid was accepted, and a contract in writing entered into. After working on the job a few weeks appellants came upon a stratum of solid sandstone rock extending practically throughout the area to be excavated, and from its bottom to within 14 iches or three or four feet (varying in places) of the top'. The whole excavation represented some 66,574 cubic yards, while the ledge of sandstone rock constituted, it is claimed, 32,287 cubic yards. When appellants came upon the ledge of rock, they quit work, and appealed to appellee’s engineer for relief. They represented to him that they had not contemplated such a situation and were unable at the contract price to complete the work, that before they could do so it. would bankrupt them, and that they would abandon it unless some other arrangement could be made. There had been some delay in beginning the work, and it. [51]*51looked as if it would not in any event be completed within the contract period. Appellee’s engineer insisted that his superiors were pressing for the completion of the work, that the delay was embarrassing them in their business, and he was quite insistent that it be pushed to completion with the utmost expedition. Appellants claim that thereupon it was agreed in parol between them and the engineer in charge that their contract should be modified, and that it was then modified, by changing the compensation for excavating and removing the sandstone rock stratum from 24 cents a cubic yard to a reasonable price, to be subsequently agreed upon. "Whereupon appellants resumed' and completed the work. The written contract provided for monthly estimates of work done under it, and for monthly payments of 90 per cent, of such estimates until the work was completed, when the whole of the balance was to be paid. Monthly estimates of the work done were made each month, based, as to price, upon the written contract, and payments were made accordingly. About a year after the work was finished appellants brought this suit to recover a reasonable compensation for the work of excavating the rock; it being alleged that 75 cents a cubic yard! was a reasonable price for that work. Credit was admitted for the payments made, and the earth and loose substances contained in the excavated plot were charged for at the contract price of 24 cents a cubic yard.

When the pleadings reached the stage that profert of the written contract was made, the circuit court sustained a general demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition alleging a modification or change of the written agreement by the subsequent parol agreement. Thereupon the plaintiffs amended their petition to conform, [52]*52it is stated, to the opinion of the circuit judge, in which it was alleged that the written contract was abandoned and abrogated by the parties, and a parol agreement entered into under which the work was done. An issue was made as to the parol contract’s having been entered into, as well as to abrogation of the written contract. Issue was also joined as to the reasonableness of the charge of 75 cents a cubic yard for removing the rock. The court then, of its own motion and over the objection of the plaintiffs, transferred the cause to equity, at the same time directing an issue out of chancery to be submitted to a jury as to whether the written contract had been rescinded by the parties, and a parol contract entered into in lieu of it, and, if it should be found that there had been such, change, then as to the value of the work done under the alleged parol agreement in removing the rock. The evidence was heard, and under instructions of the court, which propounded to the jury the two questions above outlined, the jury found a verdict that the written contract had not been abrogated. They did not return an answer to the second query propounded^ and. it was unnecessary that they should do so, if the first was properly submitted' and answered.

It is argued here, for appellee, that the evidence shows that the written contract was the only one made between these parties. But we do not feel that we have a right to say so. Besides, other questions of practice arise in the case, which affect the substantial rights of the plaintiffs, the decision of which w7e find to be our sole duty upon this record. This action was begun properly as an action at law, to recover upon express assumpsit for labor done and performed for the defendant at its special instance. Before the issue [53]*53was joined it had developed that originally the parties had1 agreed in writing concerning the work; but it was alleged, and disputed by the other side, that the parties had subsequently agreed to a modification of the contract in so far as it touched the price to be paid for a o certain part of the work. This did not .change the fo',""~ of action. It was still an action at law. Later, under stress of the interlocutory rulings of the trial judge, appellants again changed their claim, making it finally that a written contract covering the same subject-matters had been abrogated, and the parties had by parol agreement substituted an entirely independent contract for doing the work. Still the question was one triable at law exclusively. There was not a claim, nor does there appear ground for one, that the accounts were so complicated or difficult or that for other reason the matter was cognizable in equity. We think the court erred to appellants’ prejudice in transferring the case to the equity docket. O’Connor v. Henderson Bridge Co., 95 Ky. 633, 16 Ky. L. R. 244, 27 S. W. 251, 983; Creager v. Walker, 7 Bush, 1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 S.W. 308, 131 Ky. 46, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-king-co-v-l-n-r-r-kyctapp-1908.