Lewelling & Price-Williams v. St. Francis County Road Improvement District No. 1

250 S.W. 1, 158 Ark. 91, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 407
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 2, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 250 S.W. 1 (Lewelling & Price-Williams v. St. Francis County Road Improvement District No. 1) 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
Lewelling & Price-Williams v. St. Francis County Road Improvement District No. 1, 250 S.W. 1, 158 Ark. 91, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 407 (Ark. 1923).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

Appellee is a road .improvement district in St. Francis County, created by a special statute enacted by the General Assembly at the session of 1917 (act No. 157) for the purpose of improving certain public roads in that county, the road running east and west between Wheatley, on the western boundary of the county, and Madison, on the St. Francis Biver, and between Colt, in the northern part of the county, and Bon Air, near the southern boundary, a total mileage of 45.08. The roads were, according to the plans adopted, to be graded and surfaced with gravel, and new bridges and culverts to be constructed, some to be of wood and others of concrete. An engineer was employed to prepare plans and specifications and to superintend the work, and a contract for the construction of the improvement was let to appellants, Lewelling & Price-Williams, a copartnership, with whom became associated another copartnership, Reinman & Wolfort. During the progress of the work Reinman & Wolfort sold out to Lewelling & Price-Williams.

In accordance with the requirements of the bid and contract, the contractors gave a performance bond in the sum of $137,119, with the Aetna Casualty & Surety Company as surety.

Before the completion of the work the contractors quit work, claiming that the district had broken the contract by failing to pay past-due claims for work, estimated and unestimated, and they instituted this action in the chancery court of St. Francis County against the district to have an accounting of the amount due and to recover earned compensation for performance of work under the contract, and for damages on account of the alleged breach of the contract. The suit was brought by Lewelling & Price-Williams, the other parties, Rein-man & Wolfort, having, as before stated, retired from the association.

The district filed an answer and cross-complaint, denying that it committed the first breach of the contract or that it was indebted to the contractors in any sum, and, after joining Reinman & Wolfort and the Aetna Casualty & 'Surety Company as defendants in-the cross-complaint, it alleged that the contractors broke the contract and abandoned performance of the work, and that the district was thereby compelled to finish the work at an increased cost over the contract price, and recovery was prayed in the sum of $137,119 from the contractors and the surety on the bond.

On the final hearing of the cause the court dismissed the complaint of the contractors for want of equity, and rendered a decree in favor of the district on its cross-complaint in the sum of $37,202.60 against the contractors and the surety on the bond, all of whom have appealed, and tlie district has cross-appealed, claiming that it was entitled to a decree for the recovery of a larger sum than that awarded by the chancery court.

The chancellor made a finding that the contractors broke the contract by quitting work without justification, and, after finding the amount of the increased cost o£ completing the construction of the improvement, charged the same against the contractors- and credited the amount found to be due for earned compensation and for rental of equipment owned by the contractors and used by the district in completing the work, leaving a balance found to be due to tlie district by the contractors in the sum above mentioned. The court also rendered a decree in favor of the surety over against the contractors.

The witnesses in the case are numerous, and their testimony is quite extensive, the record in the ease being very voluminous. It will therefore be impracticable to state the case in lengthy detail, and only a brief outline will be given, so that tlie disputed facts may be fully understood.

The contract for the construction of the work was awarded on November 15, 1917, and the written contract between the parties was executed on November 24, 1917. The contract is in customary form, and refers to the plans and specifications' and contains the usual requirements about giving a surety bond for the performance of the contract. Peterson & Marshall, a firm of engineers, were designated as the engineers of the district in charge of the work, and there were the usual provisions with reference to monthly estimates as the work progressed, and payment of the estimates, ¡after retaining ten per centum until final settlement, the usual reference to the work being done under the supervision of the engineers, and that the engineers should be the arbiters of all disputes.

The work was done, for a time, under the supervision of Mr. Marshall, who retired from the firm and accepted employment elsewhere, and another resident engineer was put in charge of the work.

The contractors began work a short time after the execution of the. contract and continued the work until there was a complete abandonment in April, 1919.' Controversies arose from time to time between the contractors and the district concerning the interpretation of certain clauses of the contract and as to certain items of compensation claimed by the contractors and disputed by the district. At times the progress of the work was very slow, and the district claims that the contractors broke the contract by failing to prosecute the work with diligence.

During the summer of 1918 a controversy arose between the parties as to the payment for overhaul on gravel used in surfacing. The gravel was to be obtained from three different places in St. Francis County, being designated as Crow Creek, which is a gravel bed near the public road between Forrest City and Madison, and what are known as the Crisp and Blaylock pits, gravel beds situated near the public highway between Forrest City and Colt. The contractors were to be paid what is termed overhaul charges for gravel used in surfacing, and there was a specification that there should be what is termed a free haul of one mile, an allowance being made for the haul beyond that limit. Large quantities of the gravel were shipped by rail from pits to railroad sidings and thence hauled by truck to the points of distribution, and the controversy arose as to whether or not the overhaul charges should be allowed from the sidings where the cars were unloaded or from the pits, after deducting the one mile free-hanl. The controversy over this point raged for several months, and, after reaching an acute stage, the engineer of the State Highway Department was called in, and it was finally settled by a new written contract on this subject, specifying that, where it became necessary to ship the gravel by rail, the district should pay the loading and freight charges, and that the hauling charges allowed to the contractor should be from the sidings to the points of distribution, after deducting the one mile free haul. It was further agreed, in consideration of the compromise of the disputed question, that the contractors should pay the sum of $15,000 on the aggregate freight charges for loading and hauling the gravel from the pits to the sidings where the cars were unloaded. This disputed feature of the contract was thus eliminated from the controversy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 S.W. 1, 158 Ark. 91, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewelling-price-williams-v-st-francis-county-road-improvement-district-ark-1923.