Reid v. Miles Construction Corporation

307 F.2d 214
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 11, 1962
Docket16887
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 307 F.2d 214 (Reid v. Miles Construction Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reid v. Miles Construction Corporation, 307 F.2d 214 (8th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

307 F.2d 214

Gary H. REID and Trinity Universal Insurance Company, Appellants,
v.
MILES CONSTRUCTION CORPORATION and Great American Indemnity
Company of New York (Defendants) and Banco Land
Company et al. (Intervenors), Appellees.

No. 16887.

United States Court of Appeals Eighth Circuit.

Aug. 21, 1962, Rehearing Denied Sept. 11, 1962.

William Andress, Jr., Dallas, Tex., made argument for appellants and A. L. Barber, of Barber, Henry, Thurman & McCaskill, Little Rock, Ark., with him on the brief.

Edward Lester and Robert Shults, of Wright, Lindsey, Jennings, Lester & Shults, Little Rock, Ark., made argument for appellees and filed brief.

Before VOGEL and RIDGE, Circuit Judges, and DEVITT, District Judge.

DEVITT, District Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court in favor of the defendants on their counterclaim for damages resulting from the claimed breach of a construction subcontract in connection with the building of a Capehart Housing Project at the Little Rock, Arkansas, Air Force Base.

Diversity of citizenship and the requisite amount in controversy are established.

One of the appellants, Gary H. Reid, a masonry subcontractor, originally instituted a declaratory judgment action against the prime contractor, Miles Construction Corporation, one of the appellees, to determine whether Miles had breached its subcontract by underpaying a progress payment.

Subsequently, the pleadings on both sides were amended so that Reid sought recovery of damages against Miles and its surety for the claimed breach of the subcontract, and Miles and its subsidiaries sought by counterclaim to recover against Reid and his surety for damages allegedly occasioned by Reid's refusal to complete the subcontract.

The District Court entered judgment for the defendants for the amount asserted in their counterclaim, representing the cost of completion of the subcontracts, plus, in the case of Trinity Universal Insurance Company, the statutory penalty of 12% and reasonable attorneys' fees. This appeal followed.

The principal issue is one of fact-- who breached the contract, Reid or Miles? Judge Yound, the trial Judge, found that Reid did. Here is his reasoning in support of that finding and of his determination as to the extent of damages, as set out in an unreported memorandum decision:

'It is unnecessary to state in detail the dealings between these parties, or to decide many of the issues urged by the parties, for in the view of the court the determination of which party had breached its contract on September 17, 1958, the date Reid refused to further perform because of the alleged underpayment of his August 25, 1958 monthly estimate, decides this action, and this determination depends in turn upon whether Reid had been underpaid for his masonry work and brick inventory on September 17, 1958.

'The amount that Reid insists that he was underpaid on his monthly estimate of August 25, 1958 has fluctuated considerably through the various stages of this suit. On September 13, 1958 Reid protested by letter to Miles Construction Corp. that he had been underpaid $5,388.74 on this estimate, and this was the figure asserted in the original complaint, filed September 17, 1958. In an amemdment to such complaint, filed December 3, 1959, Reid stated 'On the August estimate, however, due September 10, 1959, defendant defaulted, and failed to pay plaintiff the amount of his estimate, the total payment made to plaintiff on such date being more than $7,000.00 short of the amount due and owing to him.' Reid testified at trial that Miles Construction Corp. reduced by $4,887.00 two of the three inventory estimates that he submitted, and states in his post-trial brief that 'substantially, this is the action which brought on the law suit'. However, also at trial, Reid testified that he had been underpaid by $6,002.00 over the whole contract up to September 17, but in his posttrial brief now figures the total contract underpayment at $3,779.44. This last figure, which the court will take as the amount Reid insists that he was underpaid on his subcontract, was developed as follows:

"12 units with fireplaces at $90.00 ..... $10,800.00
880 units at $75.933 ..................... 66,821.04
Total due on Construction of 892 units ... 77,621.04
Miles-Fairfax retainage (10%) ............. 2,810.00
Contract increase to cover union dues ....... 447.00
Inventory estimate--Aug. 25, 1958 ........ 13,692.15
Total due Reid as of Sept. 17, 1958 ...... 94,570.19
Total payments to Reid--Sept. 17, 1957 ... 90,799.75
                                          ----------
Shortage asserted ....................... $ 3,779.44
                                          ----------

'The court finds, however, that there was no such underpayment, either in this last claimed amount or in any greater amount. The amount due Reid under his theory of payment, using the number of housing units that the record shows to have been complete as of August 25, 1958, is as follows:

"12 units with fireplace at $900.00 (sic) .. $10,800.00
842 units at $75.933 ........................ 63,935.59
Total due on Construction of 854 units ...... 74,735.59
Miles-Fairfax retainage (9 1/2%) (Note 1) .... 2,670.00
Contract increase to cover Union
 Dues .......................................... 447.50
Contract increase to cover extra work ........... 90.84
Inventory estimate--Aug. 25, 1958 ........... 13,692.15
                                             ----------
 Sub-total ................................. $91,636.08
Less charge for roof-stain correction .......... 212.11
                                             ----------
Total due Reid as of September 17,
 1958 ...................................... $91,423.97
Total payments to Reid--Sept. 17, 1958 ...... 91,238.25
 Less 0.5% maintenance retainage ............... 140.00
                                             ----------
                       (Note 1)
                                             $91,098.25
                                             ----------
 Difference ................................ $   325.72
                                             ----------

'Note 1. The evidence indicates that Miles-Fairfax paid Reid the total retainage of $2,810.00 due under that part of his subcontract, but that Reid gave his check for $140.00 to Miles-Fairfax to cover the 0.5% maintenance escrow that was to be held for one year, so that Reid in net effect received the 9.5% retainage due for Miles-Fairfax when that section of the project was complete and accepted, as his contract provided. Although Miles-Hawthorne was complete as of September 17, 1958, the government had not, as of that date, released the contract retainage, so that Reid was not entitled to any other retainage amounts; by his amended complaint Reid abandoned his claim for Miles-Hawthorne retainage.

'Two points may be noted as to this tabulation. First, Reid claimed that he did not complete any units after August 25, 1958, so that the number of completed units as of September 17, 1958, was the number for which payment was due.

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