O'Shea v. North American Hotel Co.

191 N.W. 321, 109 Neb. 317, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 67
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1922
DocketNo. 22144
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 191 N.W. 321 (O'Shea v. North American Hotel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Shea v. North American Hotel Co., 191 N.W. 321, 109 Neb. 317, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 67 (Neb. 1922).

Opinion

Letton, J.

This action was brought against the North American Hotel Company to recover damages for the breach of a contract to construct a hotel at Scottsbluff, and against the American Surety Company upon a bond executed by that company in favor of the plaintiff to secure the faithful performance of the contract. These parties will be hereinafter designated “the Hotel Company” and “the Surety Company.”

Plaintiff O’Shea, J. C. McNish, and H. H. Ostenberg were the owners of a number of lots and tracts of land in and about the city of Scottsbluff, among them three lots upon the corner of Main street, two or three blocks north of the then business center of the city. They believed that the erection of a hotel on these three lots would greatly enhance the value of their adjacent real estate, and, on the 21st of March, 1917, plaintiff, on behalf of himself and his associates named, entered into a written contract whereby in consideration of the conveyance to the Hotel Company of the three lots, and the payment of $5,000 in cash, the Hotel Company agreed to erect thereon a modern fireproof hotel consisting of 80 rooms, and to complete the same within 15 months after the delivery of the deed and payment of the $5,000. The contract contained the provision that, if the erection of another hotel was started in the city by. other parties before the Hotel Company began the erection of the hotel provided for, the contract should be null and void, and the Hotel Company should reconvey the lots and repay the $5,000. The Hotel Company failed to fully complete the erection of the hotel building within the time limited. Plaintiff alleges that, by reason of such failure, he and his associates were damaged by the loss of the increased value of the remaining lots to the amount of $60,000.

[321]*321It is alleged that plaintiff notified the Surety Company on July 7, 1919, of the default in the construction of the hotel-; that no objection was made by. it on account of his failing to-give notice earlier; and that it denied all liability on the bond and thus waived any defense by reason of failure to give notice;

The Hotel Company pleads fraud on the part of O’Shea by reason of a representation in a letter that no other hotel was being erected in Scottsbluff, an estoppel based-on the fraud, and a general denial.

The Surety Company defends upon the ground that, after the bond was executed, the plaintiff and the Hotel Company, without its knowledge, made a material alteration in the contract whereby the Surety Company was discharged. It also alleges failure to give notice within ten days, as required by the terms of the bond, and that the bond was given for the benefit only of the plaintiff O’Shea. The reply alleges that the letter was intended by the plaintiff and understood by the Hotel Company merely to be a waiver of the right of plaintiff to declare the contract null and void in the event a third party should start to erect another hotel in Scottsbluff before the Hotel Company should begin to erect the hotel contemplated in the contract, and further alleges that the letter was written without consideration and at the special instance and request of the Hotel Company.

The original contract contains the following provisionsJ “It is further agreed that if there shall be erected or started to erect another hotel in Scottsbluff, Nebraska, by any other party than the party of the first part, before the party of the first part shall start the erection of said hotel, then this contract is to be null and void, and the party of the first part is to deed back to the party of the second part the said lots so donated and to return the $5,000 in cash as hereinbefore recited, and the party of the second part is to surrender and cancel said bond furnished to him by the party of the first part.”

Before the contract was executed, another concern, the [322]*322Nebraska Hotel Company of Lincoln, had entered into negotiations with the chamber of commerce of Scottsbluff for the erection of a hotel. Before April 16, 1917, a site had been acquired, and it had begun the erection of a hotel building. This was within the knowledge of O’Shea, and, under date of April 16, O’Shea signed the following letter to the Hotel Company:

“Gentlemen: I have investigated the possibility of any other party erecting a hotel at Scottsbluff, and have satisfied myself that there is no possibility that any move will be made to construct a hotel here. You are, therefore, authorized and instructed by me to proceed with the erection of the hotel building as provided for in our contract under date of March 21, 1917.
“It is expressly understood and agreed that any right to cancelation of said contract and the return of the donations therein specified are hereby waived by the undersigned, and that no demand by reason of any other hotel proposition will be made on you for cancelation of said contract. Yours very truly, Peter-O’Shea.”

The evidence establishes that this letter was prepared at the office of the Hotel Company in Omaha at the instance of Peter Elvad, who was in active charge of the negotiations of the company; that one Henzie, an agent of the Hotel Company, had been in Scottsbluff about three weeks before the letter was prepared, and had then ascertained that the Nebraska Hotel Company was. about to erect a hotel there. When he returned he reported this fact to Elvad. Henzie, under Elvad’s directions, then returned to Scottsbluff with the letter. He presented the same to O’Shea, saying that the company wanted him to sign it as a waiver “so that he could not back out in case the other hotel was built.” It was then signed by O’Shea and returned to Elvad. It is also shown that the original contract was negotiated directly with Elvad by Ostenberg, McNish and O’Shea, and that Elvad was then informed that the Nebraska Hotel Company was negotiating with the Scottsbluff chamber of [323]*323commerce with respect to building a hotel in Scottsbluff. In the negotiations preceding its execution, Elvad stated that the Nebraska Hotel Company could not build the hotel on account of its financial situation.

If any other party started to erect another hotel in Scottsbluff before the defendant Hotel Company, the contract was to be null and void, the real estate was.-to be reconveyed, the $5,000 repaid, and the bond surrendered. These provisions were for the benefit of both parties to the contract. Under the evidence it is clear, that both of the parties understood this letter to be a change .and modification of the contract, and a waiver of the right of O’Shea to rescind by reason of the erection, or the beginning of the erection, of another hotel at Scottsbluff, and that there was no fraud or deceit as between O’Shea and the Hotel Company. The original contract in all other terms and conditions was left unaffected by these waivers. Considering both the direct and circumstantial evidence, we are convinced that the Hotel Company has not sustained .the defense of estoppel based upon the letter. '

The Hotel Company also defends upon the ground that O’Shea is not the real party in interest except as to his own one-third interest in the real estate, and .assigns as error the ruling of the court allowing him full recovery. Before the contract was executed the Hotel Company was in possession of full knowledge as to the relations between McNish, Ostenberg, and O’Shea, and knew that the contract was being executed in the name of O’Shea for the benefit of himself and his two associates. It is said that though under section 8528, Comp. St.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 N.W. 321, 109 Neb. 317, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oshea-v-north-american-hotel-co-neb-1922.