Rheault v. Tennefos Construction Company

189 N.W.2d 626
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1971
DocketCiv. 8705
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 189 N.W.2d 626 (Rheault v. Tennefos Construction Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rheault v. Tennefos Construction Company, 189 N.W.2d 626 (N.D. 1971).

Opinion

STRUTZ, Chief Justice.

Tennefos Construction Company, Inc., William Collins & Sons, Inc., and Joe Mayo & Son, Inc., North Dakota corporations, the defendants herein, formed a joint venture in the summer of 1968 for the purpose of obtaining a contract with the North Dakota Highway Department for the construction of a portion of Interstate 29, the project for which they placed their bid, being designated as 1-29-2(17)76, located near Gardner, North Dakota. The joint venture was the successful bidder for this job and was awarded the contract for construction of the project.

Subsequent to securing the contract, the joint venture entered into an agreement with one Bob Alexander, doing business as Northwest Construction Company, hereinafter referred to as Alexander, for the furnishing and delivering of certain foundation fill and material required on the project for which the joint venture had been the successful bidder.

Alexander previously had had a charge account with the plaintiff, but his credit had been cut off because of his failure to *628 make payments on his account. After Alexander had made his agreement with the joint venture, he went to the plaintiff and requested that further credit be extended to him so that he could perform his agreement with the defendants. The plaintiff advised him that he would have tO' secure a written agreement from the defendants guaranteeing payment of any sales made to him on credit by the plaintiff before such further credit would be extended. Alexander thereupon requested the defendants’ joint venture to write a letter to the plaintiff so that further credit would be extended to him, thus enabling him to perform his agreement with the defendants. Pursuant to such request, the joint venture wrote the following letter to the plaintiff:

Area Code 701 (A G C) 2504 Fifth Avenue South

Telephone 235-6661 (Seal ) FARGO, NORTH DAKOTA

June 19, 1968

Dan’s Oil and Fuel

413 West Business 94

West Fargo, North Dakota 58078

RE: 1-29-2(17)76

Cass County

Gentlemen:

Mr. Bob Alexander has requested that we make our checks payable jointly to your firm, Dan’s Oil and Fuel, and to himself for all materials that he delivers to us on the above mentioned project.

At the present time we have an agreement with Mr. Alexander to do business as Northwest Construction Company of West Fargo whereby he has agreed to furnish us with approximately 5,853 C.Y. of foundation fill at a price of $2 per C.Y., which will make a total purchase from him in the amount of $11,706. Mr. Alexander has requested that we make all payments on the above mentioned purchase payable jointly to Dan’s Oil and Fuel and Northwest Construction Company for the purpose of securing credit from you to’enable him to deliver this material to us.

We hereby agree to the payments as noted above.

Yours very truly,

MAYO, COLLINS & TENNEFOS

[Signed] TODD DELMORE [Signed] A. D. BROKKE

WITNESS A. D. Brokke, Sponsor

I agree to the above stipulation.

[Signed] BOB ALEXANDER

Bob Alexander DBA [Signed] TODD DELMORE

NORTHWEST CONSTRUCTION CO. WITNESS

Alexander thereupon entered upon the performance of his agreement with the defendants. After delivering 4,009.3 cubic yards of the 5,853 cubic yards of the fill material which he had contracted to deliver to the project, he defaulted on his agreement. The defendants paid $8,018.16 for the material which actually was delivered *629 and made the payments in the following manner:

—$4,376.86 was paid by check to Alexander and to the plaintiff jointly.

—$466 was paid to Alexander and to Tennefos Construction Company, one of the joint venturers, for rental of a loader.

—$2,083.20 was paid jointly to Alexander and one Ken Michael, a private trucker who was hired by Alexander to haul for him on the contract which Alexander had with the defendants.

—$541.26 was paid jointly to Alexander and one William Geiger for royalty fees on material which Alexander purchased from Geiger for use on the defendants’ project.

—$551.28 was paid jointly to Alexander and one Arnold Levos for royalty fees on material taken from Levos’s pit and delivered to the defendants’ project.

The plaintiff had extended credit to Alexander beyond the amount of payments which he received from the defendants on Alexander’s account, and now brings this action for a claimed balance due him of $3,385.79 on Alexander’s account.

The defendants assert that their letter to the plaintiff was only an assignment, and that they agreed to pay only any amount which they should owe to Alexander ; that the contract which the defendants as joint venturers had with the State Highway Department required them to pay for all material which was used in the performance of that contract and for the rental of equipment used in connection with the project, and that the plaintiff’s claim was subject to all equities and defenses which the defendants might have against Alexander himself; that Alexander used the credit which he received from the plaintiff for doing work for other contractors on projects other than that of the defendants and that the balance now claimed by the plaintiff as due him from Alexander includes a sum in excess of $1,700 incurred on the previous account prior to the time the defendants wrote the letter requesting extension of credit to Alexander.

The trial court awarded the plaintiff the sum of $3,386.79, with interest, which was the full amount due the plaintiff from Alexander on his account. The defendants take this appeal from the judgment entered, demanding trial de novo.

The first question to be answered on this appeal is the effect of the letter of June 19, 1968, written by the joint venture to the plaintiff. Was it an assignment, as contended by the defendants, or was it an agreement to guarantee the plaintiff, if he would extend credit to Alexander, that all checks for material furnished by Alexander to the defendants would be made payable to Alexander and the plaintiff jointly? The letter relied upon by the plaintiff stated that Alexander had an agreement with the joint venture whereby he agreed to furnish approximately 5,853 cubic yards of fill at $2 per cubic yard, making a total purchase from him of $11,706; that Alexander had requested that all payments on such agreement be made jointly to him and the plaintiff “for the purpose of securing credit from you to enable him to deliver this material to us.”

An assignment is the transfer or making over to another of any property in possession or in action, or of any right therein. Black’s Law Dictionary, Fourth Edition. An assignor is the person who assigns a right which he owns, and an as-signee is the person to whom such right is assigned. Restatement, Contracts § 149(2), (3) (1932).

Here, money was due or to become due to Alexander from the defendants under the agreement which he had with them.

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189 N.W.2d 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rheault-v-tennefos-construction-company-nd-1971.