McEvoy v. Willard E. Harn Co.

98 A. 522, 129 Md. 93, 1916 Md. LEXIS 133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 98 A. 522 (McEvoy v. Willard E. Harn Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McEvoy v. Willard E. Harn Co., 98 A. 522, 129 Md. 93, 1916 Md. LEXIS 133 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the 9th of February, 1914, the appellant entered into a contract with the appellee, a body corporate, for the erection and construction of a brick dwelling on Wendover road and Greenway, Guilford, in Baltimore City, according to certain plans and specifications prepared by Mr. Thomas B. Owings, architect, and made a part of the contract.

The contract is set out in the record and is the approved form of contract known as “the Uniform Building Contract,” and was filed by the plaintiff with the declaration in the case.

By the terms of the contract the appellee was to provide all the materials and perform all the work for the erection and completion of the building at and for the sum of $24,-020.00.

Subsequent to the execution of the contract certain extra work amounting to the sum of $6,789.34 is alleged to have been performed by the contractor at the request of the owner *97 and by direction of the architect, in addition to the contract price, and the items of this extra work are shown on an annexed itemized statement filed with the declaration and set out in the record now before us.

It is admitted that the defendant has paid the plaintiff the sum of $18,000 under the contract and this stun has been duly credited to him, but a balance of $12,599.84, that is, the sum of $6,020.00 upon the contract price and the sum of $6,579.84 for extra work, is claimed to be due the contractor, and it is this balance that is the cause of action of Ihe suit and is the subject matter of this controversy.

The suit is in assumpsit and the declaration contains six common counts and the seventh a special count on the building contract.

The ease was tried in the Baltimore City Court and from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $10,-615.22 the defendant has appealed.

During the trial twenty-four exceptions wore taken by the defendant, one' to the ruling of the Court upon the prayers and the others to rulings on evidence.

'Ihe issues in the ease it will be seen relate and have to do as stated by the appellant in his brief with the charges for extra work and alleged defects, omissions and substitutions in the construction of the building.

The first contention of the appellant is that the refusal of the plaintiff to a submission to arbitration is a bar to his right to recover in this case.

This defense was presented by a motion on the 8th of October, 1915, on the part of the defendant at the trial for leave to file a third ploa specially setting up the defense and it was also raised by the defendant’s fifth prayer at the conclusion of the testimony. The motion was overruled and the. ease proceeded to trial under the general issue pleas.

Assuming without deciding that the claim of the plaintiff to recover for alterations and extras were matters to be referred to a board of arbitrators, for decision under Articles TFT and XII of the contract, in ease of disagreements he- *98 tween the owner and contractor we think the right to arbitrate was clearly waived by the defendant and this right ■could not be re-asserted and relied upon as a defense under the facts and circumstances pf the case.

The suit it. will be seen was brought on the 9th of January, 1915, and The general issue pleas under an affidavit of defense were filed on the 23rd of January, 1915. The defendant moved into the house in the early part of October, 1914, and received from the architect a certificate of approval of the payment of $4,000, being the payment due upon acceptance of the house, and on November 16th, 1914, gave his check to the plaintiff for this amount.

On the 6th of January, 1915, the architect issued his final, certificate of payment as follows:

“James MeEvoy, Esq.,

“Eidelity Building.

“Dear Sir:

“The final statement of the cost of your house at Guilford has been submitted to me by Willard E. Harn and Company, and I have approved it. Willard E. Harn and Company are therefore entitled to the final payment on the house, amounting to $12,599.84.

“Very truly yours,

“(Signed) Thomas Bond Owings.”

The' question of arbitration does not appear to have been suggested until September 20th, 1915, over a year after the house was to have been completed and nearly a year after the defendant occupied the house. The suit was instituted on the 8th of January, 1915, and the plea was not sought to be interposed until October 8th, 1915, long after the general issue pleas had been filed and over eight months after the suit was brought.

Besides this Mr. Owings, the architect, testified, that when the witness wrote to Mr. MeEvoy on October’ 21st, 1914, stating that “Ham’s account was $29,213, included in that sum was the contract price of $24,020, and that Ham’s extras ns shown by his account at that time amounted to $5,193; *99 that Mr. McEvoy did not then or at any subsequent time complain to him about those extras; that between October 21st, 1914, and January 6th, 1915, the witness spoke to Mr. McEvoy probably five or six times and that no complaint was made by Mr.' McEvoy concerning these charges for extras upon those occasions.

The witness Vm. E. Harn testified that the cheek for $4,000 was not paid by the bank, although presented two or three times for payment and that a joint note of defendant and wife was accepted, payable on the 3rd of January, 1915, in place of the check; that this note was not paid; it was protested and he took it up and instituted suit on it on J anuary 9, 1915; that was on Saturday; I saw him last, prior to that day on Wednesday when I asked him about, the entire indebtedness, but not specially about tbat note; he said he was making arrangements for a loan and would pay me on Saturday; that he was making an arrangement with the, Eutaw Savings Bank; that was on the Wednesday prior to the 9th of January, which would make it Wednesday, the 6th of January, 1915; there was no objection made to me at any time about the character of the work; the only thing that occurred on that Wednesday was that Mr. McEvoy made the statement that it ran into more than he thought it did and he was not prepared to meet it just- then, and no objection was, made to the amount of this bill to me at that time; he requested me to meet, him at the Eutaw Savings Bank on Saturday morning, hut I did not do so because ho did not come; I was there and Mr. George Bullen, Mr. Hayden and Mr. Evans were there, Mr. Hayden,being the president of the bank and Mr. Evans; an officer of the bank; we waited until about 11 o’clock until we found he was not coming. Mr. Hayden or Mr. Evans, I don’t know which, said it was useless to wait any longer, so we left; I tried to see Mr. McEvoy later that day; I called at his office, but he was not in; I only made one attempt to see him that day.

Mr. Randolph Barton, Jr., the attorney for the Eutaw Savings Bank, who was negotiating a loan of $20,000.00 for *100 the appellant, testified that Mr. McEvoy consented on the 7th of January, 1915, that Mess.

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Bluebook (online)
98 A. 522, 129 Md. 93, 1916 Md. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcevoy-v-willard-e-harn-co-md-1916.