Lasar Manufacturing Co. v. Pelligreen Construction & Investment Co.

162 S.W. 691, 179 Mo. App. 447, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 267
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 162 S.W. 691 (Lasar Manufacturing Co. v. Pelligreen Construction & Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lasar Manufacturing Co. v. Pelligreen Construction & Investment Co., 162 S.W. 691, 179 Mo. App. 447, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 267 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

ALLEN, J.

This is an action to recover a balance claimed to be due plaintiff from defendant for the [450]*450reasonable value of certain work performed and materials furnished, after the allowance of a credit of $2000 paid thereon. The suit was instituted against defendant and the latter’s surety upon a certain bond given, but the cause proceeded to judgment below against the defendant only, and is appealed here by it.

It appears that the defendant was the general contractor for the erection of the Sumner High School building in the city of St. Louis, under certain plans and specifications furnished by the architect of the school board of said city. On November 16,1908, plaintiff made the following proposition to defendant :

“Pelligreen Construction Company, City. G-entlemen: We propose to furnish and erect the following work for the Sumner High School, as per plans and specifications, W. B. Ittner, architect, and according to revised plans for the two gymnasiums on third floor. Purring for plaster ceilings, metal plaster partitions and metal lathing, for the sum of thirty-seven hundred and twenty dollars ($3720).”

On May 21, 1909, defendant replied to the above proposition, accepting the same, as follows:

“Your proposition for furnishing and erecting work at the Sumner High School as per your letter of November 16th, is hereby accepted by this firm for the sum of $3720.
“We would be pleased to have you prepare to get tin's work out for us at your earliest convenience.”

The evidence discloses that plaintiff duly entered upon the performance of that part of the work thus contracted to be done by it, and completed the same, to the defendant’s satisfaction, with the exception of certain work to be done in the auditorium of said building,- that with respect to the latter, a controversy arose between plaintiff and defendant as to whether certain iron framework to be attached to certain beams or trusses in this auditorium.was “structural iron,” [451]*451or whether it was “furring” within the contemplation of the contract.

It appears that there were four large beams or trasses in the auditorium, extending entirely across the room, which were each intended to be surrounded by a steel framework, and the whole enclosed by plastering. It seems that this steel framework was to consist of strips or bars of steel three inches in width by three-eighths of an inch in thickness and weighing approximately three pounds to the foot, and was to be attached to the beams or trusses by rivets; the holes in the large beams for thus riveting the same having been bored at the shop where such beams were made. It appears that to the steel bars, constituting the framework above mentioned, were to be attached strips of light “channel” or “angle” iron, the same to be tied on with copper wire of a certain size, and that to this, in turn, metal laths were to be tied with like wire to receive the plastering or finish.

The steel framework, to be immediately fastened by rivets to the large beams or trusses, is also referred to in the evidence as a series'of brackets that were bent to form a “cornice” which was to extend around the beams. And these “brackets” are also referred to as “hangers.”

The plaintiff declined to furnish and install these steel bars forming this framework, which was to be attached immediately to the large beams or trusses, upon the ground that the same was not within the contemplation of its contract; but offered to complete the remainder of its work in the auditorium as soon as the defendant should erect this framework in dispute. The defendant, on the other hand, claimed that the disputed work came within the terms of plaintiff’s contract, refused to install it, and later sublet to-another contractor the work unfinished by plaintiff in the auditorium.

[452]*452The plaintiff alleged that the reasonable value of the work performed by it was $3320', gave credit for $2000 paid thereon, and prayed judgment for $1320.

Defendant denied owing plaintiff anything in the premises; and interposed a counterclaim, praying judgment thereon in the sum of $230 for damages alleged to have accrued to it by reason of delay caused by plaintiff’s alleged failure to carry out the terms of its contract.

The cause was tried before the court without a jury, a jury having been waived, and resulted in a judgment for plaintiff on its cause of action in the sum of $1182.14, and for plaintiff on defendant’s counterclaim.

At the request of appellant, the learned trial judge made a special finding of facts, stating separately his conclusions of law; and therein quite clearly stated the pertinent facts and the conclusions which he reached.

The point in controversy pertains to the use of the word “furring” in the contract. It appears that the specifications referred to in plaintiff’s proposal above set out, and which were thereby called into the contract for appropriate use in construing the same, contained the following clause: “Building terms used shall have the meaning respectively set down to them in the revised city building ordinances and the Dictionary of Architecture and Building, by Bussell Sturgis. ’ ’

It was not made to appear that the 1‘ revised city building ordinances” throw any light upon the meaning to be given to the word “furring,” but it was shown that the word is defined in Russell Sturgis’s Dictionary of Architecture and Building as follows:

“Furring. — A light framework or simple strips; generally of wood, but sometimes of metal; applied to walls, beams or similar surfaces to support sheathing, plaster or other form of finish. Its purpose is either to give a more even structure for application of such [453]*453finish, or to form an air space behind snch finish, or to give a semblance of constructive form, as the imitation of a vault, by means of some plastic material carried on a frame of the necessary shape. By extension in recent times hollow brick or tile used for such purpose.”

Appellant’s counsel contended below that this dictionary definition was conclusive as to the construction to be placed upon the term in question as employed in the contact, and that it was error for the court to admit, as it did, expert testimony for the purpose of arriving at the meaning to be ascribed to this important word in the contract. And this is the chief point urged upon us for a reversal of the judgment.

There can be no doubt, and it is conceded, that in interpreting the contract with respect to the meaning to be given to the word “furring” employed therein, the definition of such term as found in the dictionary to which the specifications refer is to control; provided such definition is unambiguous and clear, so that by applying the same the matter is altogether free from doubt. The lower court’s ruling, however, proceeded upon the ground that such definition was in fact ambiguous and indefinite to the extent that it did not solve the question presented.

Learned counsel for appellant contend that there is no ambiguity in the definition, and say, in effect, that anything is to be regarded as “furring,” within the meaning of the contract, which can in any manner be said to be comprehended within said dictionary definition thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W. 691, 179 Mo. App. 447, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lasar-manufacturing-co-v-pelligreen-construction-investment-co-moctapp-1913.