Oberbeck v. Mayer

59 Mo. App. 289, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 439
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 7, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 59 Mo. App. 289 (Oberbeck v. Mayer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oberbeck v. Mayer, 59 Mo. App. 289, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 439 (Mo. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Rombauer, P. J.

This is an action upon a builder’s bond against the contractor and his sureties. The breaches complained of are that the contractor failed to pay for the material and labor which entered into the construction of the building; that, in consequence thereof, liens were filed against it in excess of the penalty of the bond, and that these liens had been discharged by the plaintiff owners, obligees in the bond. The trial of the cause before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plantiff for the full amount of the bond. From this judgment one of the sureties alone appeals.

Numerous defenses were interposed by the answer of the contesting surety. The substantial defenses made at the trial and urged on this appeal are: First. That the bond does not sufficiently identify the contract, and there is a fatal variance between the contract [291]*291and the 'bond. Second. That the bond was executed after part performance of the contract, and is not supported by any independent, consideration so as to Bind the surety. Third. That several of the lien accounts were unenforcible as liens, and hence could not be taken into account in measuring the plaintiff’s ■damages. Fourth. The contractor was prevented by the violence of one of the plaintiffs from completing his contract. Error is assigned that the court ruled «erroneously on these propositions, and further complaint is made that the court, upon the examination of the jurors on voir dire, made a remark which was in the nature of an oral instruction.

The conditions of the bond sued upon bind the obligors to keep the- obligees harmless and indemnified from and against all and every claim, demand, judgment, liens, mechanics’ liens, costs and fees of every description incurred in suits or otherwise, against the building erected under said contract, and to repay to tht obligees all sums of money which they may pay to other persons on account of work and labor done or materials furnished on or for said building. ■ The italics , are our own.

Upon the trial the plaintiffs gave in evidence the amounts which they paid for material and labor which entered into the construction of the building, and for which the contractor was bound to pay, and had failed to pay. They followed up this evidence by showing that liens were filed by the claimants on account of such labor and material, and that the plaintiff failed to pay such-liens, including costs, to the amount of over $1,600. The payments made to the contractor, and upon his order, had exhausted the entire contract price. All of these liens, with two exceptions, had ripened into judgments against the property, and, as far as the judgments were concerned, the [292]*292sureties were concluded as to the validity of these claims. McFall v. Dempsey, 43 Mo. App. 369.

An argument, however, is advanced in regard to the two lien claims which had not ripened into judgment, that they were defective as lien claims. While there was some conflict of evidence on that subject, and the surety would be precluded by the finding of the jury on that question in any event, the validity of the claims as lien claims does not determine the surety's liability. In that respect the case was tried on a theory more favorable to the surety' than he had a right to demand. Assuming that the bond referred to the contract, all that the plaintiffs vere bound to show under the condition of the bond italicized above, was that they paid for labor and material for which the contractor was bound to pay, and had failed to pay, and that they did so to prevent the filing of any liens against their property. Krey v. Hussman, 21 Mo. App. 343; Casey v. Gunn, 29 Mo. App. 14, 24. As the plaintiffs made proof of this fact in every instance, it was in effect immaterial whether any of the claims had ever ripened into judgment against the property or not, or could have constituted valid liens against-the property or not, if properly defended against. The plaintiffs in their proof went further than they were required to do. Of this, however, the appellant can not complain.

Touching the appellant's fourth complaint, there was evidence offered tending to substantiate it on the part of the defendants. The plaintiffs offered evidence tending to show that the- work was completed by the subcontractors under the contractor’s direction, and that the contractor had no cause for abandoning the work, and in fact never did abandon it. All this evidence was submitted to the jury under an instruction given at the instance of the appellant, and, as the [293]*293evidence was conflicting, the appellant’s assignment of error on that score is not tenable.

Upon the examination of one of the jurors voir dire, it appeared that he was a brother lodge member of one of the plaintiffs. He was thereupon asked by defendant’s counsel whether this fact would not lead him to decide in plaintiff’s favor, if each side produced the same amount of evidence; to which he replied in the affirmative. The juror was then challenged for cause.’ The court then addressed the juror, stating that the attorney’s question was somewhat misleading, and added: “Under the law, before the plaintiff would be entitled to recover anything, the jury would have to be satisfied, by a preponderance of evidence in favor of the plaintiff, that the claim was a just claim. Now, the question is whether you could hear the evidence in this case and fairly consider both sides, and reach a fair and impai'tial verdict without leaning' •in favor of one side or the other.” These observations of the court are challenged as prejudicial to the defendants’ case, and as being in effect an oral instruction. The remark of the court, that the question was misleading, was not a reflection on the integrity of counsel in any sense. What is meant by the same amount of evidence is certainly not very clear to a layman, and often not even to a lawyer, nor can the court be restrained by a prohibition against verbal instructions from explaining to the jury on voir dire what fact will or will not work their disqualification. The supreme court has decided, in Hudson v. Railroad, 53 Mo. 537, and Keegan v. Kavanaugh, 62 Mo. 232, that questions put to a juror what his decision would be in a hypothetical state of the evidence are inadmissible as-foundations of a challenge for cause; and, as this juror was subsequently excused by the defendant, and did [294]*294not sit upon the panel, the occurrence furnishes no just ground of complaint.

This brings us to the two close propositions which arise in the case, namely, was there any substantial evidence in the case that the bond was supported by a sufficient consideration, and was there substantial proof that the bond had reference to the contract under which the' house was erected. The appellant claims that both these propositions must be answered in the negative.

The contract was signed by the contractor on. March 31, 1891, and was subsequently modified in writing on May 8, 1891. The contractor went to work shortly after the modification, and had constructed part of the building when he gave the bond on June 1, 1891. The bond is dated June 1, 1891, and refers to a contract of even date herewith and hereto annexed, but there was no evidence that the contract was annexed to the bond when the sureties signed the latter; in fact, it is conceded that the bond was not thus annexed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Mo. App. 289, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oberbeck-v-mayer-moctapp-1894.