Pioneer Constructors v. Symes

267 P.2d 740, 77 Ariz. 107, 41 A.L.R. 2d 668, 1954 Ariz. LEXIS 181
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1954
Docket5655
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 267 P.2d 740 (Pioneer Constructors v. Symes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pioneer Constructors v. Symes, 267 P.2d 740, 77 Ariz. 107, 41 A.L.R. 2d 668, 1954 Ariz. LEXIS 181 (Ark. 1954).

Opinion

STANFORD, Justice.

Action on a promissory note by plaintiff-appellant, Pioneer Constructors, to which defendants-appellees, Symes and Cobble, counterclaimed alleging failure of consideration, overcharges, fraud, and mis *109 representation. Verdict was given for the defendants on their counterclaim for $10,000 and for plaintiff for the balance of its note remaining due and amounting to $3,000. Judgment was entered for appellee for the difference.

Defendants formed a partnership in order to build low-cost houses. Negotiations between the parties began in March, 1948. Plaintiff represented to defendants that it could build the type of houses agreed upon for less than $2,700, an amount which defendants had paid to one Bromon for the construction of a model house to use in making sales in the tract, and plaintiff’s first estimate, not including a contractor’s fee, was at $2,323 per house; subsequently plaintiff submitted a second estimate of $2,550 per house. The parties executed a written contract which reads in part:

“1. The First Party (plaintiff) will furnish all the materials and labor and construct for the Second Party (defendants), one or more houses in accordance with the attached plans and specifications, total cost of all materials and labor necessary for completion and approval not to exceed $3100.00 per unit.
“2. The Second Party will pay to ■the First Party the actual cost of said material and labor for each of said houses * * * plus the sum of Two Hundred Seventy-five * ■* * Dollars for each and every said house so constructed.
* * * * * * '
“5. It is understood and agreed 'that the Second Party will pay to the First Party all actual expenses incurred by the First Party in connection with the construction of said houses * * *.
It is further understood and agreed that the First Party will not charge the Second Party for office supplies, office labor, equipment maintenance, or depreciation, or similar items of overhead, nor will the First Party charge the Second Party any flat fee or percentage for overhead.” (Emphasis-supplied.) ■

The $3,100 maximum was placed in.the contract at the insistence of a bonding company after the contract was otherwise, executed.

Sixty-eight houses were completed in November and December, 1948; of these, sixty-six were one-bedroom houses, the remaining two containing two bedrooms.

In August, 1948, after the project was approximately four months under construction, the bonding company requested a cost breakdown on the houses; this company was interested in the total costs of the houses, including items in addition to costs plaintiff was, at that time, incurring. Defendants informed the plaintiff of this, and the plaintiff complied with a breakdown •based - on • the costs per- house. This was *110 identified and introduced in evidence. The exhibit shows that of a $3,061.58 actual total cost per house, plaintiff’s costs were only $2,734.03; this is undisputed; yet, when plaintiff completed the job, it had charged defendants with $3,064 per one-bedroom house, contractor’s fees of $275 being charged separately and not being included in this figure, the same not being in issue here. The difference between what plaintiff charged and plaintiff’s cost breakdown amounting, therefore, to $330 per house, constituting an ostensible overcharge of more than $21,000 on the sixty-six one-bedroom houses.

Before relations were terminated between the parties hereto, defendant, Symes, discovered a number of obvious overcharges on items of material purchased by plaintiff and charged to the job, which were never used. These overcharges totaled $8914 and were called to plaintiff’s attention on January 20, 1949, whereupon the plaintiff credited defendants with said amount. Subtracting the credits received from the $21,000 overcharge, this would make a difference of over $12,000 allegedly owing the defendants.

The houses constructed by the plaintiff were all one foot longer than called for by the original plans and specifications. Defendants alleged that plaintiff had proposed to defendants that it would be to their advantage to build the houses one foot longer because the number of cement blocks required then would come in even lots, that this would entail a great saving in labor costs in laying the blocks, and that such saving would more than offset the cost of the extra quantities of material required by the added foot. Defendants were inexperienced in the building business and did not know that adding one foot to each house actually resulted in an added over-all cost on the project amounting to $7,689 over and above any saving that might have been accomplished thereby, and defendants contend that this amount represents an overcharge in addition to the $12,000 mentioned in the preceding paragraph.

In addition to the above alleged overcharges, construction maintenance or depreciation charges for construction equipment mostly owned by plaintiff were made in the sum of $5,425.92.

The final transaction between the parties took place on February 28, 1949. On this date the defendants executed their promissory note to the plaintiff for $4,000 as and for the balance owing to the plaintiff for its building fees. Defendants allege that at this time they did not know of the large amount of overcharges. Defendants paid $1,000 on this note, leaving a balance of $3,000. On April 5, 1950, plaintiff sued to collect this balance and recover its attorney’s fees, defendants counterclaiming as we have heretofore stated. Judgment was entered as mentioned previously and plaintiff appeals.

The plaintiff’s first assignment of error is that the verdict and judgment are un *111 supported and not justified by the evidence and testimony in the case. Plaintiff contends, that defendants offered no evidence to show the actual cost of the project. All the defendants’ witnesses in giving their testimony accepted the unit price on materials and cost of labor actually used by plaintiff, as evidenced from plaintiff’s own statements and vouchers.

In our opinion the evidence was sufficient to support the verdict and the judgment. Plaintiff’s unit prices on materials and cost of labor were accepted and used by defendants. Plaintiff’s unit prices competently tended to show an ostensible overcharge óf $12,000. Indeed, there were other charges, such as those for equipment rental, which raise the aforementioned amount. The jury returned a verdict in favor of defendants for $10,000—an amount less than what defendants might have recovered according to plaintiff’s figures. Plaintiff cannot be heard to complain of its own figures. We cannot tell from the record exactly how the jury arrived at the $10,000 verdict, but, under the evidence presented in this case, the sum obviously can be justified. Where there are sufficient facts for the jury to consider, and where the verdict on those facts can be justified under some theory of law, we shall not disturb the judgment and verdict. Babbitt & Cowden Livestock Co. v. Hooker, 28 Ariz. 263, 236 P. 722; also, see Kinnison v. Hulett, 71 Ariz.

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Bluebook (online)
267 P.2d 740, 77 Ariz. 107, 41 A.L.R. 2d 668, 1954 Ariz. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pioneer-constructors-v-symes-ariz-1954.