Lakeside Bridge & Steel Co. v. Duvall

19 S.W.2d 1107, 179 Ark. 963, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 201
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 1, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 19 S.W.2d 1107 (Lakeside Bridge & Steel Co. v. Duvall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lakeside Bridge & Steel Co. v. Duvall, 19 S.W.2d 1107, 179 Ark. 963, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 201 (Ark. 1929).

Opinion

Butler, J.

The appellant, Lakeside Bridge & Steel Company, was engaged in constructing a nine-mile section of Highway No. 105 north from Atkins, and this suit was brought against it by the appellee, Duvall, for damages for alleged breach of contract, and a verdict was rendered in his favor for the sum of $500. The evidence was to the effect that he had made an oral contract with one B-ay Hundley, who he alleged to be plaintiff’s superintendent, by which he was given the contract to haul sand, rock, cement, and other materials to be used in the construction of the road from Atkins to station No. 512, a distance of about nine miles, and also was given the contract to haul the feed for the teams of the appellant company and the oil to be used in the company’s operations on that road; that the price he was to be paid for hauling the materials was to be ten cents per hundredweight from Atkins to a place called Gumlog, located about station No. 22'2, and was to receive for the material hauled beyond that and across Isabelle Creek to and including station No. 512 the price of fifteen cents per hundredweight; and he sublet the contract for hauling the material to Gumlog from Atkins to W. S. Liles and Tom Johnson. These parties were to haul from Atkins to station No. 126, at three cents per hundredweight and from station No. 126 to station No. 222, or south of Gumlog from Atkins, at five cents per hundredweight, giving appellee a profit of seven cents per hundredweight on the nearer haul and five cents per hundredweight on that from station No.. 126 to station No. 222.

The testimony was that the contract was made first by Liles, and that Hundley, who was in'charge of the construction work, informed him that Liles had declined to carry out the contract, and offered it to appellee. There was some discussion as to the price to be paid for the hauling, hut Hundley, after a consultation with Mr. Kelly, the general foreman of the work, agreed upon the prices above stated — that is, ten cents per hundredweight from Atkins out to Isabelle Creek and fifteen cents per hundredweight north of Isabelle Creek. There was no written contract entered into. Appellee proceeded with his own teams to haul north from Isabelle Creek, and completed the hauling of material, and was paid for same, hut, at about the time his subcontractors began to haul, the appellant company put its own teams and trucks on the shorter hauls, and refused to permit the appellee’s subcontractors to do the work. According to the evidence for the appellee, all of the material was to be delivered by the appellant company at Atkins, and appellee was to haul it from Atkins to the end of the road.

The court, in submitting the case to the jury, made the following declaration of law in instruction No. 2:

“The court tells you that as a matter of law Hund-ley, under the testimony in this case, was not authorized to malee the character of contract that the plaintiff contends he did make with him, but that plaintiff contends that, even if Hundley did not have that authority, the bridge company knew that Hundley had made a contract giving him the exclusive privilege and right to do all of this hauling. And the court tells you that is the principal question for you to decide in this case. If the bridge company knew that Hundley, as their foreman, had — •although he didn’t have authority — if they knew that he had made that contract and they went on and performed parts of the contract under it, after they had knowledge that such a contract was made, the court tells you that they would be bound by the contract if they knew that Hundley had made it and went ahead and recognized the existence of the contract.”

The 'appellant contends that there was no proof to support the allegations in the complaint relative to the items $217.30 for hauling feed and $120 for hauling oil, and on two items for hauling gravel used in bridges, $287.27 and $166.35. We think that the appellant’s contention in these particulars is correct, and that there was no substantial testimony as to amount of feed or oil used in the work or the amount of additional gravel used in bridges. As to the feed, the most that is shown by the testimony is that there were about nine sacks a day used in feeding the teams, but there was no evidence as to how long the teams were used and fed on the work nor any testimony to warrant the jury in arriving at the amount of the oil used or additional gravel, and it is evident that these items were not considered by the jury, because its verdict was for much less than the damage claimed, and less than what it might have found as damages for loss of profit on the gravel and sand hauled.

It is next contended that there is no evidence sufficient to establish with any reasonable degree of oertainity the amount of sand, gravel and cement used on the road from Atkins to station No. 222 at or about G-umlog, because appellee did not know how much rock, sand, or other material he had hauled — that he didn’t keep any account of it. However, there is no contradiction as to his having hauled all of the material north of Isabelle Creek to station No. 512, the end of the road, or that he was.paid for it.

Watkins Hall, connected with the State Highway Department, testified in the case, and made an estimate of the quantities of material used on the highway running north from Atkins, known as No. 105, and attached to his testimony an exhibit showing the quantities of sand, gravel and cement used in the construction of the road, and also showed the amount of these materials that were used from Atkins to station No. 222, the total aggregate weight being 3,369,900 pounds, and it was this material that was to ¡be hauled for the appellee by Liles and Johnson, to whom he had sublet his contract for that part of the haul. The testimony of Hall is nowhere contradicted, and it is evident from his testimony that he Lad first-hand knowledge regarding the matters about which he testified. So, if the appellee did have a contract with the appellant, he would be entitled to his profit on the haul from Atkins to station No. 222. According to his statement, his profit would have been three cents per hundredweight from Atkins to station No. 126 and five cents per hundredweight from station No. 126 to station No. 222, but there is no testimony that we have been able to discover that would indicate just what proportion of material was hauled at a profit of three cents and how much was hauled at a profit of five cents per hundredweight to the appellee. The only way by which these amounts could be ascertained would be upon the assumption that the same proportionate amount of material was used between each station, but this assumption has no evidence to support it, and there is no warrant for the inference that the road was of the same width at every station or that the same amount of material was used. But, as appellee would have been entitled to as much as three cents per hundredweight profit for the whole amount used, if he is entitled to recover at all, the jury would have been warranted in figuring his profit on that basis, which would be in excess of its verdict.

The most serious question, however, which presents itself for our consideration is whether Hundley and Kelly, or either of them, were clothed with apparent authority to make the contract, and, if they were not, did the appellant company ratify the contract? In considering this question it is proper to take into consideration all of the ’circumstances surrounding the transaction.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W.2d 1107, 179 Ark. 963, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakeside-bridge-steel-co-v-duvall-ark-1929.