McRainey v. Langston

110 So. 536, 92 Fla. 903
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 18, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 110 So. 536 (McRainey v. Langston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McRainey v. Langston, 110 So. 536, 92 Fla. 903 (Fla. 1926).

Opinions

This case is before us on writ of error from a judgment rendered for the plaintiff in the court below, in a suit wherein E. C. Langston was plaintiff and W. H. Rainey and J. N. Bradshaw were defendants.

The suit was brought to recover a balance which the plaintiff alleged was due him from the defendants for the construction of certain roads through a sub-division in Orange County, Florida, more particularly described in the pleadings.

The declaration sets forth the cause of action in five counts, the first four being the common counts, and the *Page 905 fifth count declaring upon an alleged contract between the plaintiff and the defendants for the construction of the roads. It is alleged in this fifth count that the defendants, being the owners of the property described, "engaged the plaintiff to construct roads in and through said lands according to the plans of the defendants therefor, and agreed to pay the plaintiff the sum of eighty-five cents (85c) per square yard for the roads so constructed in and through said lands by him, and plaintiffs, in accordance with the terms of his said employment, constructed 17,053 square yards of roads in and through said lands, and the defendants became indebted to the plaintiff therefor in the sum of $14,495.05, and paid the plaintiff upon said indebtedness the sum of $11,400; that said work of constructing said roads was completed on to-wit, the 11th day of February, 1922, and defendants were indebted to plaintiff on said 11th day of February, 1922, in the sum of $3095.05 for the balance due for said work and still are indebted to plaintiff in said sum, which they have refused and still do refuse to pay. Wherefore, plaintiff brings this suit and claims said sum of $3095.05, with interest thereon at the legal rate from February 11th, 1922, until paid."

The defendants filed three pleas to the declaration, the first two being pleas of the general issue. The third plea undertakes to set forth the contract entered into with the plaintiff, and the failure of the plaintiff to construct the roads in compliance with the contract, in the following language:

"And for a third plea to each count except 6th these defendants say that they entered into certain contractional agreements with the plaintiff to construct certain hard-surfaced roads through the property described in the fifth count of said second amended declaration, said plaintiff *Page 906 furnishing all the materials and labor for same and to do the work in a good, first-class, workmanlike manner, and to use first-class materials, constructing the base 6 inches in thickness and that same was to be levelled, rolled and packed and dressed off to a smooth surface for which these defendants agree to pay said plaintiff the sum of eighty-five cents per square yard for said work and materials; but these defendants aver that said plaintiff did not construct said roads in a good workmanlike manner, or furnish first-class materials, nor rolled and packed said roads and scarifield same and levelled same to a smooth surface, but avers the truth to be that the said plaintiff used an inferior grade of materials and left the roads in such uneven and loose condition and performed said agreement in such unworkmanlike manner that these defendants were required to expend and pay out an additional sum of more $5000.00 to place said roads in the condition that plaintiff under his agreement should have placed them."

Issue was joined on these pleas, and a trial of the issue resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $2748.54, with interest.

The plaintiffs in error have filed several assignments of error. The first three purported assignments of error cannot be considered as such; they fail to set forth any ruling of the court objected to, and are merely recitals of grounds set forth in the motion for new trial. In fact, the questions intended to be raised by these three assignments may properly be considered under the fourth assignment of error. The eighth assignment has been abandoned by the plaintiffs in error.

We shall proceed to examine the remaining assignments of error in the same order in which counsel for plaintiffs in error has considered them in his brief. Therefore, we will consider at this time the fifth assignment of error, *Page 907 which is as follows: "The Court erred in permitting the witness Louie Protham to answer the following question: 'Louie, was there any question raised during the performance of this work as to the failure to perform and to do the work according to agreement?' "

An examination of the bill of exceptions incorporated in the transcript of record discloses that the defendants failed to except to the ruling of the court below in permitting the witness to answer this question. This court has on numerous occasions held that error cannot be predicated upon matter which does not appear in the bill of exceptions to have been excepted to. Daley v. State, 67 Fla. 1, 64 South. Rep. 358; Tampa Electric Co. v. Charles, 69 Fla. 27, 67 South. Rep. 572; Gadsden v. State, 77 Fla. 627, 82 South. Rep. 50. The fifth assignment of error having, then, no basis in proper exceptions, must fall. Foster v. Sunday, 65 Fla. 329,61 South. Rep. 625.

We find that the sixth assignment of error fails for the same reason as the fifth, there being no exception taken by defendants in the court below to the ruling sought to be reviewed by said assignment of error.

The seventh assignment of error is as follows: "The court erred in refusing to permit James H. Hirsch to testify as to the amount of money expended by McRainey and Bradshaw on the work by the Finley Method people, in answer to the following question, after witness had testified that he had ascertained the amount from the records. "What it is?"

There was no error in this ruling. The record shows that, according to the contention of plaintiff, after the roads had been constructed and he had granted the defendants a sixty or ninety days' extension of time for the payment of the balance due, the defendants claimed that the roads had not been built according to the contract, *Page 908 and upon failure of the parties to agree on an amount that would make the roads complete, or repair the same, defendants procured the services of Finley Method Company to put the roads in shape, as they contend.

It appears from the pleadings and the testimony that the plaintiff was to put on six inches of loose rock and water bind it, roll it to four inches, and shape it up to a smooth surface. It further appears that the testimony in this case, including that of the witness Hirsch, had shown that holes or dust pockets had been found in the roads, and that in many places the rock had been washed away. There was no evidence that plaintiff's contract or agreement with defendants called for any kind of surfacing for the roads, except to water bind the loose rock, and scarify it, and roll it to a smooth surface.

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Bluebook (online)
110 So. 536, 92 Fla. 903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcrainey-v-langston-fla-1926.