Lasich v. Wimpenney

278 P.2d 807, 73 Wyo. 345, 1955 Wyo. LEXIS 3
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1955
Docket2634 and 2638
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 278 P.2d 807 (Lasich v. Wimpenney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lasich v. Wimpenney, 278 P.2d 807, 73 Wyo. 345, 1955 Wyo. LEXIS 3 (Wyo. 1955).

Opinion

*351 OPINION

Riner, Chief Justice

CASE NO. 2634

The plaintiff and appellant, George Lasich, is hereinafter usually designated “appellant” or by his surname, Lasich. The respondent, Clarence Wimpenney, will also be usually referred to herein as aligned in this court or by his surname, Wimpenney.

Lasich as principal contractor undertook to erect a dwelling house on a certain lot in Riverton, Wyoming. This lot was owned by Wimpenney, and the dwelling house aforesaid was built by Lasich for the owner. It developed that Lasich was not so situated financially as to enable him to construct this building in accord with a certain written contract which the parties executed after a number of conferences about the matter. This contract thus signed by Lasich and Wimpenney was couched in this language:

“BUILDING CONTRACT
“THIS AGREEMENT made and entered into this first day of August, 1951, by and between C. Wim-penney, hereinafter referred to as the owner, and George Lasich, hereinafter referred to as the contractor, both of Riverton, Wyoming.
“WITNESSETH:
“FOR AN (sic) IN CONSIDERATION HEREINAFTER STATED TO BE PAID BY THE OWNER, *352 the .contractor hereby covenants and agrees to and with the owner to construct a dwelling house upon Lot 7 in Block 24 of Ashgrove Addition to the Town of Riverton, Fremont County, Wyoming, in accordance with the following terms and conditions:
“1. PLANS AND SPECIFICATIONS. Said building will be of frame construction and in accordance with the plans and specifications heretofore agreed upon and approved by the parties.
“2. MATERIALS AND LABOR. All materials and labor necessary to construct said building will be furnished by the contractor, and said materials will be of good quality, as specified, and all work and labor will be performed in a good and workmanlike manner to the reasonable satisfaction of the owner.
“3. TIME. Construction will start immediately after the execution of these presents and will continue without interruption or delay to completion. The contractor will keep an adequate number of workmen employed on the building at all times to insure its completion by December 1, 1951. The contractor, however, will not be liable for work stopages (sic) occasioned by labor or material shortages which he is unable to avoid with the exercise of reasonable diligence. If, however the contractor does not complete the building, under the terms above stated, by December 1, 1951, a penalty of twenty five dollars per day may be assessed by the owner, for each day after December 1, 1951, until the building is fully completed and this penalty of twenty five dollars per day may be deducted by the owner from the final payment, as provided below in this contract.
“4. LIEN CLEARANCE. Upon completion of said building the contractor will furnish satisfactory evidence that all materials and labor have been paid in full before final payment under this contract shall be due.
“CHANGES. The owner shall have the privilege of making minor changes in the construction plans and the contract price shall be adjusted accordingly but no changes so made shall increase the contract price unless the amount thereof is mutally (sic) agreed upon *353 in advance and evidenced by written menorandums (sic) signed by the parties.
“In consideration of the foregoing the owner covenants and agrees to and with the contractor to pay him for the construction of said building the sum of twenty seven thousand, nine hundred seventy eight dollars ($27,978.00) which shall be due and payable as follows :
“a. Seven thousand Dollars ($7,000.00) of the contract price shall be due and payable to the contractor when the concrete work for the foundation and basement is completed and the forms removed.
“b. An additional Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00) shall be due and payable when the outside walls are up and the roof is completed.
“c. An additional Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00) shall be due and payable when the plastering is completed.
“d. The balance of the contract price, less the amount of Five Hundred Dollars ($500.00) shall be due and payable when the house is completed.
“e. The amount of Five Hundred Dollars ($500.00) mentioned above in item (d.) is withheld as a guarantee that the materials and wormanship (sic) on this contract will be satisfactory and for the protection of the owner in case any defects that may show up or develope (sic) within three months after the completion of this contract, which the contractor agrees to correct, at his expense.
“f. The withheld amount of Five Hundred Dollars ($500.00) becomes due and payable three months after the completion of this contract, under the terms stipulated in item “e”.
“The owner shall have the privilege of paying, as part of the contract price, all material bills as they accrue in order to obtain any discounts available, and the amounts so paid, plus the amount of such discounts, shall be credited on that portion of the contract price next accruing, as provided for in the preceding paragraph. This provision particularly pertains to lumber *354 and all materials purchased from the Riverton Lumber Company, on which a 5% discount is to be allowed and on the M. J. Gilpatric (sic) Construction Company’s contract on which a discount of 5% is to be allowed and on the heating unit on which a 10% discount is to be allowed, if paid for at the end of each calendar month.
“The contractor is to have the building fully insured as the construction of same proceeds.
“Any and all materials left over from the construction of the house are to be returned to the seller of same for the credit of C. Wimpenney, owner.
“Included in this contract are the following items:
All cabinets — Book cases — Kitchen table
Flower beds in and out of house, Mail, Milk and paper recepticals (sic)
Fence — Cement curb on alley side so as to avoid hand triming (sic)
Cement slab for incinerator — Side Walk to alley — Clothes line
Sod removal to fill in where tree stumps were.
Lawn to be graded all ready for seeding.
Copper to be used for all plumbing.
Copper for all .screening.
“ALLOWANCES FROM ORIGINAL CONTRACT PRICE
“For garage not being sealed as originally planned will be 1114.24

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Bluebook (online)
278 P.2d 807, 73 Wyo. 345, 1955 Wyo. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lasich-v-wimpenney-wyo-1955.