N. C. Clayton & Co. v. Galveston County

50 S.W. 737, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 591, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 220
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 23, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 50 S.W. 737 (N. C. Clayton & Co. v. Galveston County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
N. C. Clayton & Co. v. Galveston County, 50 S.W. 737, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 591, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 220 (Tex. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

*592 GARRETT, Chief Justice.

This action was brought by ET. J. Clayton & Co. against the county oí Galveston to recover commissions for plans and specifications for a courthouse furnished to the county at the request of the Commissioners Court, and for damages on account of an alleged breach of contract for .the supervision by plaintiffs as architects of the construction of a courthouse in accordance with such plans and specifications. The county answered, admitting the adoption of the plans and specifications, but denied liability on account of material alterations therein made by the plaintiffs, without the knowledge of the Commissioners Court, between the time of the submission of the plans and specifications and their adoption. Plaintiffs demurred to the answer, that it presented no defense because it did not show that the action of the Commissioners Court adopting the plans and specifications was the result of any fraud, concealment, or misrepresentation on the part of plaintiffs. The demurrer was overruled, and the case was tried by jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant.

Plaintiffs are architects, and on Hay 24, 1897, in response to an advertisement ordered by the Commissioners Court of Galveston County, submitted to the court, in competition with other architects, plans and specifications for the construction of a courthouse for said county, not to exceed the cost of $175,000. The architects competing were required to guarantee that the cost of the building would not exceed the sum mentioned, and to secure such guaranty the competitor whose plans and specifications were adopted was required to enter into a bond with sureties in the sum of $25,000. In compliance with such requirement, plaintiffs presented to the court in connection with their plans and specifications the following guaranty: “We guarantee that said courthouse can be constructed in accordance with the plans and specifications submitted by us for a sum not exceeding $175,000, exclusive of our commissions, and we stand ready to furnish you with a bond in the sum of $25,000, with good and sufficient sureties, to that effect.”

All of the architects presenting plans and specifications were permitted to address the court in behalf of their respective plans from Hay 24th to Hay 26th, and the court selected the plans and specifications of three of the architects, including plaintiffs’, and referred them to a committee composed of two of the members of the court and two-other persons, with instructions to examine them and ascertain and report back to the court whether they were so complete that a contractor could bid on them. This committee reported to the court on Hay 27, recommending two of the 'plans, those of plaintiffs and those of Sanguinet & Hesser; whereupon the court, by its order made and entered on that day adopted and accepted the plans and specifications of the plaintiffs, conditioned upon their execution of the bond to secure their guaranty as to the cost of the building. The bond was executed and approved by the county judge.

The specifications accompanying plaintiffs’ plans called for different kinds of material for the same portions of the work, some of the material costing less than other material provided for the same work. During *593 their examination of the plans and specifications referred to them, the committee conferred with the architects about them; and after the committee had settled upon their report and adjourned, Barnes, one- of the commissioners, requested the plaintiffs to have their specifications call for only one class of material for the several parts of the work, and Babbitt, one of the plaintiffs, prepared and put with the specifications, but not attached thereto, a paper signed by him for his firm, dated May 27, 1897, and addressed to the Commissioners Court, as follows: "Our proposition of May 24, 1897, is based upon the followingThen follows eleven paragraphs in writing, ten of which designate one particular kind of material for the several parts of the work; the eleventh excludes the cost of the sidewalk provided for in the specifications from the entire cost of construction. This paper was referred to in the trial of the case as the "rider.” Babbitt also made pencil memoranda upon the margin of the specifications corresponding with the changes contained in the rider. The marginal notes were made after the specifications had been examined by the committee. The rider was rolled up in the plans and was taken into the courtroom, but was not mentioned in the report of the committee, and was never presented to the court nor called to its attention, and the order accepting plaintiff’s plans and specifications was made without any knowledge on the part of any member of the court, except Barnes, of the rider or of what it contained, or of the marginal notes on the specifications. The alterations made in the specifications by the rider material!}1- and greatly reduced the cost of the construction of the building by the specification of cheaper material for the work. On May 29th the plans were opened and the rider discovered. The county judge called a meeting of the Commissioners Court and the plaintiffs’ plans and specifications were referred back to the committee for examination and report of any changes. The. committee reported on June 1st that the pencil notes on the margin of and the interlineations in the specifications had been added since the committee first examined the same, and that the rider then attached to the specifications was not attached thereto when before examined by the committee. A committee of experts was then appointed by the court to ascertain the difference in the cost of the construction of the courthouse by the original specifications and the cost as changed by the rider. This committee reported in detail showing an aggregate reduction in the cost of construction by the rider of over $60,-000. This report was laid before the court on June 1st, and the plaintiffs were present and Clayton explained that it was not intended to exclude the cost of the sidewalk from the cost of construction. After consideration of the matter, it was ordered by the-court that the plans and specifications of ÍT. J. Clayton & Co. be rejected. The plans and specifications of Bangui net & Messer were then adopted by the court, and the courthouse is now being constructed under a contract in accordance therewith. If their plans had been finally adopted the plaintiffs would have been entitled to a commission of 3£ per cent of the contract price for the erection *594 of the building and a further commission of 1-|- per cent for superintending the construction thereof.

The purpose of the Commissioners Court was to build a courthouse for Galveston County to cost about $175,000, exclusive of the commissions of the architect for the plans and specifications of the building and the supervision of the construction thereof, and not to exceed that sum. In order to keep the cost of the building within the architect’s estimates, all architects submitting plans were required to guaranty that the building could be constructed within the estimate, and to execute a bond to the county judge with sureties to that effect. Plaintiffs and other architects submitted plans and specifications for a building to cost about $175,000, and which they represented could be built for that sum.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 S.W. 737, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 591, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/n-c-clayton-co-v-galveston-county-texapp-1899.