Lowe v. Rosenlof

364 P.2d 418, 12 Utah 2d 190, 1961 Utah LEXIS 215
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 1961
Docket9348
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 364 P.2d 418 (Lowe v. Rosenlof) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowe v. Rosenlof, 364 P.2d 418, 12 Utah 2d 190, 1961 Utah LEXIS 215 (Utah 1961).

Opinion

McDonough, justice.

Appeal by the Special Administrator of the Estate of T. O. Nelson from a judgment of the district court, the details of which we set out below. Hereinafter where plaintiff is referred to the reference is to T. O. Nelson.

On March 3,1958, the defendants as holders of the prime contract for the construe» *192 tion of a new high school building in Lehi, Utah, awarded plaintiff the subcontract for doing the concrete work on the project. Due to the plaintiff’s lack of funds, and in order to get the job under way, the defendants also cosigned with the plaintiff on a note to secure a $1,000 loan. Work commenced under the contract about the middle of March, 1958, and plaintiff continued forming and placing the concrete pursuant thereto until the evening of September 9, at which time some 73% of the concrete for the building had been poured. On the morning of September 10, the defendant Max Rosenlof “took over” the concrete work and subsequently completed it, using plaintiff’s men, tools, materials, and prefabricated forms.

The action below was brought to recover damages for an alleged breach of the written subcontract and for conversion of the plaintiff’s property. Plaintiff alleged in his complaint that the defendants had excluded him from the job without legal excuse and had converted the tools, materials and prefabricated concrete forms which he then had on the job. The defendants counterclaimed, contending that plaintiff had breached the contract by abandoning the work.

The trial court found that the plaintiff bad abandoned the work and awarded dam.ages to the defendants. The court also found that the defendants had converted 60% of the plaintiff’s prefabricated forms by using them on another job, and that the value of the converted forms was $4,000 at the time of their conversion. From a denial of plaintiff’s motions for a new trial, or to reopen for the purpose of presenting further evidence respecting the value of the converted forms, plaintiff appeals. Three grounds are claimed by the plaintiff for reversal: (1) the preponderance of the evidence does not support the finding of the court that plaintiff had abandoned the contract, but shows rather that he was forced off the job by the defendants. (2) The court erred in failing to give force and effect to the written contract between the parties. (3) The evidence was insufficient to support the court’s finding with respect to the value of the converted forms.

This court has stated on numerous occasions that findings of fact made by the trial court will not be disturbed so long as they are supported by substantial evidence. Therefore, the findings of the lower court must be affirmed unless there was no reasonable basis in the evidence on which the court could fairly and rationally have thought the requisite proof was met. 1

In support of his claim that he was “without legal excuse excluded” from the work plaintiff argues that the defendants knew of his lack of capital from the beginning, as *193 evidenced by the fact that they cosigned with him on the note to secure the $1,000 loan with which to get the job started. That notwithstanding this knowledge, the defendants failed to pay plaintiff promptly for his proportion of the estimates as they were submitted to the Alpine School District for payment. Briefly stated, it is plaintiff’s contention that he was compelled to leave the job because of the defendants’ failure to comply with their agreement to pay promptly.

Plaintiff’s contention that he was “forced off” the job is without merit. Not only was plaintiff paid in full for all estimates which he submitted prior to the time when the defendants took over the job, but by the first of August plaintiff had already been paid within a few hundred dollars of the amount to which he did not become legally entitled until the first of September. Moreover, although the written contract only imposed on the defendants the obligation to pay plaintiff once each month at the rate of $9.45 per yard for 90% of the concrete which had been poured, plaintiff was paid 100% of his estimates twice monthly at the rate of $10 per yard. In addition, defendants paid $500 on the note which they had cosigned to help the plaintiff get started.

The evidence not only fails to support plaintiff’s contention that he was forced off the job by the defendants’ failure to pay promptly, but it supports the court’s finding of abandonment as well. Plaintiff was in financial distress when he was awarded the contract in March, and this distress became more severe as the work progressed. By September 9, the last day which the plaintiff worked, he had unpaid bills for equipment rentals and materials going back to March and April. The payroll checks issued to cover the work period from August 1 to August 15 had not cleared when presented for payment, and some of the men had not been paid for work performed prior to the first of August.

That plaintiff was in such financial distress as to be no longer able to finance the work is shown by the testimony of Kelsey Chatfield, who was inspector for the archi-' tect on the project. Chatfield testified that on four or five occasions within a month to six weeks before leaving the job, plaintiff had told him that he was in such financial distress that he could no longer finance the work and that “he would have to quit.” That plaintiff abandoned the contract is also supported by the evidence relating to a telephone call from the defendant Max Rosenlof to the plaintiff. Rosenlof testified that on the evening of September 9 he placed a call to the plaintiff at his home in Bountiful. His account of what occurred is as follows:

“When I got him on the telephone I said, ‘Ted, there’s got to be something done on that job. I haven’t seen you on that job for approximately two *194 weeks. The men are running wild and getting in trouble because they have not been getting their pay checks.’ * * * I asked him about getting down on the job because the job was running wild and he said, ‘Max, you are just going to have to take the job over; I am broke; I have got a lot of people pressuring me for money and I can no longer finance the job and I am about going crazy. I am going to lose my house; I am going to lose my trucks, the forms and the equipment.’ He says, T have been home trying to sell my house so that I can get some operating capital to keep on operating with.’ ”

Although plaintiff admits that he received a call from Rosenlof, he claims that Rosen-lof merely inquired about his absence from the job and that he had advised Rosenlof that he was trying to sell his home to get capital to operate on, and that he would be back on the job within a couple of days.

We think the court was justified in accepting Rosenlof’s account of what was said. Both parties agreed that the phone call was made on the evening of September 9, and that Rosenlof took over the job on the following morning, September 10. In view of the plaintiff’s testimony that the call had ended with the understanding that he would be back on the job in a couple of days, it is significant that when plaintiff was told by his foreman that Rosenlof had taken over the job, he did not contact Rosenlof to find out what the reason was.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
364 P.2d 418, 12 Utah 2d 190, 1961 Utah LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowe-v-rosenlof-utah-1961.