Neyman v. Pincus

267 P. 805, 82 Mont. 467, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 95
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1928
DocketNos. 6,266, 6,267.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 267 P. 805 (Neyman v. Pincus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neyman v. Pincus, 267 P. 805, 82 Mont. 467, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 95 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*475 MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought action originally against the Northwestern Realty Company, a corporation, as owner of certain lots on which an excavation was made for building purposes, and Jesse Huddleston and Sam Cook, as the contractors who made *476 the excavation, for damages resulting when a building, standing on an adjoining lot and in which plaintiffs were conducting a mercantile business, fell by reason of the removal of the lateral and subjacent support from the lot.

It is not necessary to set out the allegations of the pleadings at length. The action is primarily against the realty company and is based upon the theory that it owed to plaintiffs a duty, as occupants of the building, to so conduct its excavating operations as not to disturb the lot on which the building stood and a violation of that duty. The contractors were joined as the agents or servants of the realty company. The complaint alleges that the nature of the subsoil of the lots in question is such that the wall of the excavation made therein would not stand without artificial support and that the care, skill and caution required in making such an excavation dictated that the south wall of the excavation be made in sections and the new foundation erected in each section before further support was removed from the adjoining lot, which method defendants negligently failed to adopt.

The realty company and the contractors interposed separate answers; the realty company denied liability generally; the contractors denied liability and alleged that the work next to the building in question was done under an independent contract and that the work done under the realty company contract did not result in the damage alleged by the plaintiffs.

Issue was joined by reply to each of the answers interposed. Thereafter the term of the realty company, as a corporation, expired and the directors thereof Adolph Pincus, Andrew J. Davis, and Andrew J. Davis, Jr., were substituted as defendants, as trustees for the creditors and stockholders of the corporation.

A trial was had to the court with a jury. At the close of the plaintiffs’ case the trustees and the contractors separately moved for judgment of nonsuit, which motions were denied, and defendants thereupon introduced testimony. At the close of all of the evidence the trustees and the contractors separately *477 moved for a directed verdict, which motions were overruled. The trial resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiffs and against all defendants jointly, and judgment was duly entered thereon. The trustees and the contractors have each appealed from this judgment, but the two appeals are presented on identical records, and have been submitted jointly, and, for the purposes of this opinion, will be considered as one.

The trustees have made forty-nine assignments of error, certain of which are duplicated by the contractors. New of these assignments are necessary to a determination of these appeals and those will sufficiently appear from our discussion of the questions considered. The record is voluminous, the evidence alone consisting of approximately 500 pages of printed matter, but the following brief summary will disclose the facts on which the verdict and judgment are based:

In June, 1922, the Northwestern Realty Company, owner of lots 10 and 11 in block 41 of the original town site of Butte, secured plans and specifications from Herman Kemna, a competent architect, for the erection thereon of a substantial building. These lots are in the west half of the block facing on Main Street. Lot 10 corners on Main and Galena Streets; lot 11 lies to the south, and so on down the block. The map and plat of the town site shows the lots in this half block not to be equal in width; lot 10 being 20 feet wide, lot 11, 38 feet wide, and lot 12, lying to the south of 11, being 36 feet wide, the six lots facing on Main Street, having a total front footage of 210 feet. However, actual survey and measurement shows that the total width of the block is 210 feet and 7% inches, the overplus being unaccounted for.

One Hum Yow is the owner of lot 12' and, at the time the realty company arranged for the erection of the building, there stood on lot 12 an ancient one-story building of brick and frame construction, occupied by the plaintiffs as a store, and containing a large assortment of goods. The north wall of this building was irregular in line and of poor construction, founded upon “rubble rock” thrown into a shallow trench *478 which had not been dug to firm ground. It was built directly over two old vaults for toilets and a cellar had been excavated with an almost perpendicular wall extended from the northwest end of the wall of the building east for from 35 to 40 feet. While there is no direct testimony to that effect, the inference is clear that this cellar “wall” was but the natural composition of the ground. This irregular wall of the building was at all points north of the common line between lots 11 and 12, varying from 5% to 13 inches.

The architect’s plans for the preliminary excavation give the width thereof as 58 feet, or the width of lots 10 and 11 on the original map and plat of the town site. On June 15 the realty company let a contract to Huddleston and Cook, expert excavators, for the excavation to be made in accordance with the plans prepared by the architect and attached thereto a copy of those plans. This contract required the contractors to furnish all necessary tools, labor, etc., and to deliver to the contractee a completed excavation by July 14. It left the method of excavating entirely to the contractors’ judgment and provided for the payment of a lump sum therefor, but further provided for payment of seventy-five per cent of the value of the work done each week on Saturday of that week.

The realty company employed E. J. Strasburger, a competent engineer, to survey its lots and mark the lines of the excavation on the ground. In doing so, Strasburger, discovering the excess of 7y<¿ inches in the block, allotted to these lots an additional inch and marked the width of the excavation as 58 feet and 1 inch.

The contractors commenced work on June 23, and the architect, representing the realty company, visited the ground at least once a day while work was in progress, but only for the purpose of observation in order to estimate the amount to be paid each week and to determine whether the work was progressing with sufficient' expedition to insure its completion within the time mentioned in the contract.

*479 On the day the work was commenced, the realty company served upon Hum Yow, by delivery to his wife in his absence from the city, the following written notice:

“Butte, Mont., June 23, 1922.
“Mr. Hum Yow, Butte, Mont.
“Dear Sir: This is to notify you, the owner of lot 12, block 41, original town site of Butte, Mont., that the Northwestern Realty Company is excavating for a basement on the property adjoining your above-named lot on the north. This excavation will go below the bottom of the north wall of your building.

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Bluebook (online)
267 P. 805, 82 Mont. 467, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neyman-v-pincus-mont-1928.