Kline Cloak & Suit Co. v. Morris

240 S.W. 96, 293 Mo. 478, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 36
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 7, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 240 S.W. 96 (Kline Cloak & Suit Co. v. Morris) 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
Kline Cloak & Suit Co. v. Morris, 240 S.W. 96, 293 Mo. 478, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 36 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

*485 DAVID E. BLAIR, J.

— The action is for damages upon a building contractor’s bond. Judgment below was for plaintiff (respondent here) for the penalty of the bond and execution thereon for the damages awarded. Defendants have appealed.

We will briefly outline the issues raised by the pleadings. The petition alleges the corporate capacity of plaintiff and of defendant Southwestern Surety Insurance Company; that on April 13, 1913, plaintiff and defendant Morris entered into a contract for the construction of a certain building, and for the alteration and remodeling of another building in Kansas City, in accord *486 anee with, certain plans and specifications made by designated architects, at and for the price of $32,200, with additional compensation for extra work; that defendant Morris agreed to save and hold the plaintiff harmless of and from all loss, damages or expense, including attorneys’ fees, arising from claims of laborers or material-men in connection with the construction and alteration of said buildings, and to furnish bond for the faithful performance of said contract; that defendant Morris, as principal, and defendant Southwestern Surety Insurance Company, as surety, on April 30, 1913, executed and delivered to the plaintiff' a bond in the sum of $32,200, the condition thereof being that, if said defendant Morris should indemnify the plaintiff against any loss or damage directly arising by reason of his failure to perform said contract faithfully, said bond would be void, otherwise to remain in full force and effect; that plaintiff fully performed said contract on its part, and that defendant Morris failed to faithfully perform said contract in certain specific particulars, to-wit: he did not save plaintiff harmless from loss, damages and expense from claims of laborers and materialmen, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $8,813.34, and the additional sum of $2500 attorneys’ fees, and did not complete the work on or before August 15, 1913, as specified in said contract, and not until September 35, 1913, all to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $3,100, as provided by said contract, and failed to keep a separate account of extra labor and material as provided in said contract, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $1,000. Plaintiff prayed judgment for penalty of the bond and for execution for damages in the sum of $15,413.34 and interest.

Defendant Morris admitted the execution of the contract, and alleged an additional provision therein that he was to be paid the sum of $100 for each day said buildings were completed before August 15, 1913, and that he was to receive a profit of ten per cent on the cost of all labor and material going into the extra work; that by mistake items of $2,892 for ornamental iron and $5,270 for lumber were omitted in making up the figures- of his bid, *487 and before entering upon said work and while said defendant was still able to place the plaintiff in statu quo defendant discovered such omission and called the same to the attention of the plaintiff, and plaintiff agreed with said defendant that if he would proceed with the work under said contract plaintiff would make to defendant a reasonable allowance for the cost of installing said lumber and ornamental iron, and thereupon said defendant waived his right to rescind the contract; that thereafter said defendant proceeded with the performance of said contract and did extra work of the reasonable value of $14,020.45, as per an itemized statement attached to his answer, and that plaintiff waived the keeping- and furnishing to plaintiff of the- separate account of such extra work; that had it not been for changes in plans and specifications made by the plaintiff after the execution of the contract and delays of other contractors and the doing of the extra work, the said defendant would have completed said contract seventy-four and one-half days prior to August 15, 1913, and thereby the said defendant lost a bonus of $100 a day and sustained damages on that account in the sum of $7,450; that during the performance of said contract plaintiff and said defendant agreed that plaintiff should take over defendant’s work called for in said contract and pay all obligations incurred by defendant" Morris in the performance of said contract and would hold said defendant harmless because of loss due to the execution or performance of said contract and because of bills for labor and material contracted by said defendant, in consideration of said defendant waiving all claims which he bad against the plaintiff on account of said ornamental iron and lumber and on account of his claim for bonus and on account of his claims for extras, and that thereafter the plaintiff took over the completion of said contract, and that by reason thereof there was an accord and satisfaction of all claims made by the plaintiff as set forth in its petition.

Said defendant Morris renewed his allegations above set out in his plea of accord and satisfaction and plain *488 tiff’s refusal to select arbitrators, and because thereof prayed judgment for $29,632.45 as a counterclaim.

Defendant. Southwestern Surety Insurance Company pleaded in defense of its liability as surety the same matters alleged by defendant Morris constituting his plea of accord and satisfaction, and further pleaded that plaintiff failed to comply with the provisions of said defendant’s bond in respect to giving notice to it of the default of said defendant Morris.in not complying with the terms of his contract, and that plaintiff wholly failed to notify said surety company wherein the conditions of said contract had been breached.

Replying to the above, plaintiff set out the terms of the contract in relation to extra work and the selection of arbitrators and that the architects approved defendant Morris’s account for extra work in the sum of $11,213.40, and that defendant Morris assented to such allowance and did not ask for the selection of arbitrators until long thereafter and not until long after he had failed his counterclaim. Plaintiff further alleged that the contract provided that all questions of right of way among contractors in case of dispute should be left to the architects, and due allowance was made for the time consumed by other contractors in the performance of their work by the terms of said contract, and that no extension of time should he allowed to defendant Morris on account of the work of other contractors, unless, in the opinion of said architects, such other contractors should cause said defendant unreasonable delay. In that event, the time for completion should be'extended upon the certificate of the architects; that no such certificate of extension was issued by the architects, and if any such delay occurred, it was in accordance with the terms of the contract, and plaintiff owed defendant Morris nothing on that account.

The reply to the second amended answer of defendant Morris contained a general denial, and set up the matters alleged in its reply to the second amended answer of the defendant surety company in relation to extra work and in relation to the agreement upon the sum of $11,213.40 therefor and failure to ask for arbitrators un *489 til long thereafter.

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Bluebook (online)
240 S.W. 96, 293 Mo. 478, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kline-cloak-suit-co-v-morris-mo-1922.