Monyahan v. City of Lancaster

182 S.W. 862, 168 Ky. 677, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 610
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 24, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 182 S.W. 862 (Monyahan v. City of Lancaster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monyahan v. City of Lancaster, 182 S.W. 862, 168 Ky. 677, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 610 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

[678]*678Opinion op the Court by

Judge Carroll

— Affirming.

On October 8, 1912, the city council of Lancaster entered into a contract with, the Greer Filter Co. for the construction of a filter plant in connection with its water supply. The contract with the Greer Co. obligated it to construct a plant of one hundred thousand gallons daily capacity and place the same in operation for the sum of $2,250.00 within sixty days from the date of the contract. When the material for the construction of the plant was on the ground, the city was to pay fifty per cent, of the/ contract price and the remainder when the plant had been completed according to specifications which were a part of the contract.

After securing this .contract, the Greer Co. sublet the contract to Monyahan ‘ ‘ to build the filter and filter house for $314.00, payable when the work has been completed and accepted by the engineer. ’ ’ Afterwards the contract price was increased to $336.40.

After this contract had been entered into between the Greer Co. and Monyahan, and when the city had notice of the contract, it paid the Greer Co. $1,125.00, one-half of the contract price that it was agreed should be paid when the material was on the ground; but when the filter was completed, the city refused to accept it or to pay Monyahan any part of the price he was to be paid by the Greer Co., no part of which had been paid to him by the Greer Co'. Upon the refusal of the city to pay his claim, Monyahan filed his mechanic’s lien and later brought this suit against the Greer Co. and the city seeking to recover from the city the $336.40 which the Greer Co. had agreed to pay him.

The Greer Co. did not answer, and judgment went against it by default, but the city filed an answer denying that the filter plant had been completed according to its contract and specifications, and averred that the contract was broken in several respects, to-wit: (1) That the concrete walls used in the construction of the filter plant weré not built according to the contract and would not hold water; (2) that the walls were not reinforced with steel rods as stipulated in the contract; (3) that no baffle walls were built; (4) that the lumber used in the construction of the forms was not of that character or quality specified in the contract; (5) that the concrete was placed in the forms without being spaded away from [679]*679the sides and without the form planks being wet or oiled; (6) that the plant would not filter one hundred thousand gallons of water per day, dr more than sixty or seventy thousand gallons a day; (7) that the number of strainers called for in the contract were not furnished and that it took more than two and one-half per cent, of the water to clean the filter.

It is further set up that it had refused to accept the filter plant because it was entirely worthless for the purpose for which it was intended, and consequently it was compelled to and did erect a new filter plant in place of the one constructed under the Greer contract, and it asked that the petition of Monyahan be- dismissed.

Other pleadings were filed completing the issues, and after the case had been prepared for trial, it was heard by the lower court and a judgment entered dismissing the petition, and Monyahan appeals..

There appears to be no controversy between the Greer Co. and the city, as the Greer Co. apparently abandoned its right to collect from the city the balance of the contract price, or at least this, record does not show that it ever asserted a claim against the city for this balance. Nor is there any controversy between the Greer Co. and Monyahan, as the Greer Co. permitted a judgment against it in favor of Monyhan to go by default.

It will thus be seen that the city had paid on the contract price only. $1,125.00, and this was paid to the Greer Co. before the work was commenced and when the material for its prosecution had been put on the ground; and it now claims that it should not be required to pay any more because of the worthless condition in which the Greer Co. left the filter plant. It is further contended that as the Greer Co. has no enforceable demand against it for the remainder of the contract price, neither has the sub-contractor Monyahan, as there was a total failure of consideration. It is also said that the defective and worthless condition of the filter was due not only to the imperfect manner in which the Greer Co. did its part of the work, but also to the imperfect manner in which Monyahan did his part of it.

On the other hand, counsel for Monyahan argue that the filter plant was not useless or worthless, but, on the contrary, could by a little labor and expense have been put in such condition as to comply with the contract, but the city would not allow this to be done, although [680]*680it is admitted there were defects in its construction at the time the Greer Co. tendered it as a completed plant to the city. It is further said that no opportunity was given to the Greer Co. or Monyahan to remedy the defects as they would and could have done, and that aside from this, as the city paid to the Greer Co. $1,125.00 on the contract price after it had notice of Monyahan ;s contract and Monyahan was not responsible for the bad construction, it cannot escape liability to Monyahan for the amount of his lien claim, as it is less than the sum the city had paid to the Greer Co.

Before taking up the law of the case it is well to have a better understanding of the facts, because the conclusion reached with reference to the manner in which the contract was performed by the Greer Co. and Monya-han will have much to do with the application of the law.

On the subject as to whether the filter plant was constructed in compliance with the contract or whether it was entirely useless to the city, there is much conflict in the evidence; but we think the weight of it sustains the contention of the city that the filter plant was so wholly defective in its construction as to be totally worthless. It is shown that in the matter of forms, rods to reinforce the concrete, the construction of the concrete walls, the baffle walls, the strainers, and in other respects the contract was not complied with. But the principal defect in the filter was the fact that it would not furnish, as specified in the contract, one hundred thousand gallons of filtered water every twenty-four hours, and that it required a great deal more thán 2y2% of the amount of water filtered to clean the filter.

To get an adequate supply of filtered water was of course the principal object the city had in view in the construction of the filter plant. It estimated that one hundred thousand gallons of filtered water would be needed every twenty-four hours to supply the demand, and the weight of the evidence shows that the filter was entirely inadequate to furnish this supply.

There is evidence on behalf of Monyahan by Prof. Crooks that he made an examination and test of the capacity of the plant at the instance of the Greer Co., and that in the test, which lasted an hour and fox'ty-five minutes, the amount of water flowing into the basin was much more than would be necessary to make one hundred thousand gallons in twenty-four hours if the supply [681]*681furnished during this hour and forty-five, minutes was kept up during twenty-four hours. But we do not attach very great importance to this test.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McCrary v. Barberi
110 S.E.2d 426 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1959)
Bishop v. Moore
323 P.2d 897 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1958)
Parsons Construction Co. v. Gifford
262 N.W. 508 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1935)
McClain and Canaday v. Coleman
270 S.W. 736 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 S.W. 862, 168 Ky. 677, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monyahan-v-city-of-lancaster-kyctapp-1916.