Louis Lyster General Contractor, Inc. v. City of Las Vegas

489 P.2d 646, 83 N.M. 138
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1971
Docket9204
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 489 P.2d 646 (Louis Lyster General Contractor, Inc. v. City of Las Vegas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louis Lyster General Contractor, Inc. v. City of Las Vegas, 489 P.2d 646, 83 N.M. 138 (N.M. 1971).

Opinion

OPINION

STEPHENSON, Justice.

Louis Lyster General Contractor, Inc. (“Lyster”) and T. E. Scanlon and Associates, sometimes called Scanlon-Erwin & Associates, both names referring to the same entity and hereafter collectively called “Scanlon,” have appealed from á money judgment entered against them in favor of the Town of Las Vegas on account of a structural failure in a sewage treatment facility in this case of many stercoraceous facets. The City of Las Vegas (“the City”); has since been substituted for the Town! of Las Vegas as a party. .,-¡-

This is the second appeal in this case. See Louis Lyster Gen. Con., Inc. v. Town of Las Vegas, 75 N.M. 427, 405 P.2d 665 (1965) (the “first appeal”). The-opinion, which reversed and remanded for a new trial, accorded the parties the' right “jtkj amend their pleadings to simplify -the satire and to eliminate the present errors aijid .po^j fusion as to issues, parties, and the typei of relief sought.” This has proven ¿''vain hope. ' •.''■ii.'í 'nil.'

Scanlon asserts that he was noj a at the time of the second trial. This tósué • , , , , , . ) ' '0Cp p."'.-- iO-l is to be resolved by the law relating t,0 pleading. The pleadings here'ape ^complex: We will first deal with Lyster’s, appeal and will defer an exposition of the pleadings, except as they relate to Lyster, until we reach Scanlon’s' appeal.

Following the first appeal, Lyster filed an amended complaint against the City only, Scanlon being omitted as a defendant, seeking recovery of the unpaid. balance on a construction contract. The complaint as amended alleged the structural failure in question to have resulted from an inadequate and improper design by Scanlon as the agent of the City. The City by its answer denied the agency and alleged that the failure was in part caused by Lyster’s improper workmanship and -failure to fob low the plans and ’specifications."'

Lyster, from a time antedating the first trial and the first amended complaint, while Mr. Lyster individually was plaintiff,'-v^as a defendant in a third-party complaint filed against it hy the City seeking a money judgment, asserting that it had failed to complete a tray as specified in the contract documents and that it was negligent in the construction of the tray slab, which resulted in its collapse. Lyster does not assert that it was not properly defending this claim of the City.

The issues embodied in all of the pleadings were tried to the court without objection by anyone other than Scanlon. Following trial, findings were requested by Lyster and United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company (U. S. F. & G.), Lyster’s surety. The court in its decision found various items of negligence on the part of both Scanlon and Lyster, and that such acts or omissions equally contributed to the structural failure. Judgment was entered against Lyster and Scanlon for various items of damages, including liquidated damages. No judgment was entered against U. S. F. & G. The means of its escape do not appear.

The evidence showed that the contract called for a circular structure forty feet in diameter and thirty feet high of reinforced concrete. Eight feet from the top there was a tray with a four-foot opening in the center. The portion of the structure from the tray upward comprised the upper chamber. A revolving arm driven by an electric motor was designed to revolve slowly over the surface of the tray. In operation, waste material was supposed to enter the structure, find its way onto the tray and then pass through the opening into the lower chamber. The revolving arm was designed to keep the solids broken up and move them slowly to the center.

There was a structural failure of the tray during the time the plant was being tested, as evidenced by a crack around the tray where it joined the outer walls and a dropping of the tray from a point at the end of the structural steel supports which extended seven feet inward from the outer walls. The tray hit the revolving arm, jamming and binding it and the machinery which moved it, rendering the structure inoperative.

Lyster, in its first four points, attacks certain findings of fact made by the trial court and also, in some instances its failure to adopt findings requested by Lyster. We are bound to view the evidence, together with all favorable inferences reasonably deducible therefrom, in the light most favorable to support the findings. All evidence unfavorable to the findings must be disregarded and no unfavorable inferences will be drawn. Oberman v. Oberman, 82 N.M. 472, 483 P.2d 1312 (1971). We have examined those portions of the record cited by the parties in support of their respective positions.

Lyster’s Point One is:

“THE COURT ERRED IN REFUSING TO FIND THAT SCANLON’S CONTRACT WITH THE TOWN REQUIRED SCANLON TO PROVIDE A RESIDENT SUPERVISOR FOR THE PROJECT.”

This point is abstract and without relevance. Since no causal relationship between the want of a resident inspector and the failure of the structure is suggested, the court’s action related merely to evidentiary matters, and the error, if any, was harmless.

Lyster’s Point Two is:

“THE COURT ERRED IN ITS FINDING OF FACT NO. IS, TO-WIT, ‘SAID CLARIFIER-DIGESTER WAS EQUIPPED WITH AN ALARM SIGNAL WHICH WAS SET TO GO OFF AT ANY TIME EXCESSIVE FRICTION DEVELOPED BETWEEN THE DORR-OLIVER MECHANISM AND THE STRUCTURE, THUS PROVIDING AN OPPORTUNITY TO STOP OPERATION OF THE UNIT FOR INSPECTION AND REMEDIAL ACTION.’ ”

And its Point Four is:

“THE COURT ERRED IN MAKING ITS FINDING OF FACT NO. 20, TO-WIT: ‘THAT AFTER COMPLETING THE CONSTRUCTION OF SAID CLARIFIER-DIGESTER, LOUIS LYSTER, GENERAL CONTRACTOR, INC., NEGLIGENTLY AND IN VIOLATION OF HIS CONTRACT, ATTEMPTED TO SEED THE SAME WITH RAW SEWAGE AND SLUDGE DURING COLD, INCLEMENT AND FREEZING WEATHER, THEREBY RENDERING IT IMPOSSIBLE FOR THE SEEPING AREA WHICH PERMITTED MATERIAL ON THE UPPER PORTION OF THE UNIT TO SEEP DOWN INTO THE LOWER PORTION OF THE UNIT TO BECOME CLOGGED, FROZEN AND STOPPED; AND THAT SAID CONTRACTOR NEGLIGENTLY FAILED TO CHECK OR DETERMINE WHETHER OR NOT SAID SEEDING MATERIAL WAS IN FACT FLOWING INTO THE LOWER CHAMBER OF SAID UNIT, AND WHETHER OR NOT SAID LOWER CHAMBER HAD BECOME FILLED BEFORE ALLOWING THE UPPER CHAMBER TO FILL UP.’ ”

We agree with Lyster as to both Points Two and Four. However, since our decision as to them is neither dispositive of the appeal nor significant in the result we reach, it does not seem worthwhile to discuss them further.

Lyster’s Point Three is:

“THE COURT ERRED IN MAKING ITS FINDING OF FACT NO. 16, TO-WIT, ‘THAT, AS DESIGNED BY T. E. SCANLON, SAID TRAY SLAB WAS TO BE CONSTRUCTED WITH CONCRETE WITH REINFORCING STEEL BARS WHICH WERE TO BE PLACED, SET AND TIED-IN IN A PRECISE AND SPECIFIC MANNER.’ AND ERRED FURTHER IN MAKING ITS FINDING OF FACT NO.

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Bluebook (online)
489 P.2d 646, 83 N.M. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louis-lyster-general-contractor-inc-v-city-of-las-vegas-nm-1971.