Rivercliff Co. v. Linebarger

264 S.W.2d 842, 223 Ark. 105, 1954 Ark. LEXIS 620
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 8, 1954
Docket5-149
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 264 S.W.2d 842 (Rivercliff Co. v. Linebarger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rivercliff Co. v. Linebarger, 264 S.W.2d 842, 223 Ark. 105, 1954 Ark. LEXIS 620 (Ark. 1954).

Opinion

Ward, J.

This appeal involves the final settlement between the Linebarger Construction Company which constructed Rivercliff Apartments in the City of Little Rock for appellant, or more specifically it involves the alleged errors in the report of' the special Master who made certain findings of fact and conclusions of law. All construction was to be performed according to the terms of a detailed contract and plans, and under the direction of an architect. For convenience the appellant, the Rivercliff Company, Inc., which is the owner of the apartments, will be referred to as “Rivercliff,” and W. E. Linebarger and R. W. Linebarger, d.b.a. as Linebarger Construction Co., one of the appellees, will be referred to as “Contractor.” The United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company is one of the appellees but makes no separate contentions in this action.

The specific points presented for our consideration come to us in the manner presently set out.

On September 11, 1950, the Contractor filed suit in Circuit Court against Rivercliff to recover the sum of $15,000 alleged to be due under an arbitration award made by the parties pursuant to an earlier attempt to settle their differences. Rivercliff answered that the arbitration award was void, filed a cross-complaint against the Contractor, and moved to transfer to equity. The cause was transferred, where the arbitration award was set aside, and now passes out of the case.

After numerous pleadings and amendments to the pleadings were filed the Chancery Court appointed Rodney Parham as special Master to hear testimony on the conflicting claims and to make and report findings of fact and conclusions of law for the court’s guidance and consideration.

During a period of two years and three months the Master took testimony which, together with numerous exhibits introduced, constitutes a voluminous record, and then submitted his detailed report, awarding to River-cliff the sum of $29,696. The Master’s report was approved in all respects by the court with the exception that the court found a mathematical error in the report and increased the amount due Rivercliff to $31,397, and rendered a decree for that amount.

Rivercliff has appealed from the decree of the court on two issues only, contending that “the Master [and the court] erred in his conclusions of the law applicable to the uncontested or undisputed facts.” Specifically, Rivercliff has appealed on only two issues, both of which will hereafter he separately discussed. The Contractor has cross-appealed, alleging “but one issue” for affirmative relief. As these three issues are discussed below in the order mentioned the testimony [much of which is not disputed] will be referred to in each instance as it is deemed necessary.

1. Expansion Joints. The Master allowed River-cliff the sum of $1,612.80 as compensation for the Contractor’s failure to comply with the contract plans and specifications which called for “expansion” joints, one-half inch in width, between the brick walls and the concrete pillars at the corners of each of the four buildings —the space to be filled with oakum which is a pliable substance. It is not disputed that hard mortar was used instead of oakum, and appellant contends this caused serious cracking of the brick, resulting in damage to the extent of approximately $75,000. It is not disputed by the Contractor that the brick has cracked or that the walls are now in poor condition, nor is the amount necessary for a complete repair job seriously denied. The Contractor’s defense is that the extensive damage is not the result of failing to use oakum in the joints.

The Master found that it would cost $73,565 to completely correct the condition that now exists, hut he also found that the existing condition of the walls was not the result of the failure of the Contractor to comply with the contract specifications.

After a careful review of the testimony and an examination of the plans and drawings, we reach the same conclusion the Master did as to the cause of the damage. We cannot put our reasons for this conclusion in better words than those used by the Master:

“The plans and specifications show, and an inspection by the Master, at the request of the parties, confirms that the interior or tile pumice block wall and the face brick outer wall are bonded together at the point of the expansion joint by solid brick masonry set in an especially hard mortar. The evidence discloses beyond contradiction that the expansion coefficient of the inner block wall is greater than that of the outer brick wall and I am of the opinion, based on the testimony of the experts and the physical examination, that all or the major part of the rupture of the brick would have occurred irrespective of the omission of the expansion joint or the creation of the rigid joint by the mortar between the brick and the concrete column, and that the defendant, Rivercliff Company, has not met the burden of proof of this issue, but that it is entitled to recover the cost of the installation of the joint in the amount of $1,612.80 under its contract with the plaintiff. ’ ’

Appellant presented a number of experts in the architectural and constructural field of engineering to show that no rupture in the walls would have occurred if the joints had been built as they were designed, but a like number and caliber of experts testified for appellees that the rupture would have occurred even though the joints had been constructed according to specifications. The burden was on appellant to sustain its contention, and we cannot say the Master’s finding that it has not done so was against the weight of the evidence. The testimony produced on the point considered was conflicting and we recognize that the Master was in a better position than we are to properly evaluate it and correlate it with the plans and designs because he made a personal inspection of the walls of the buildings.

In this connection appellant seeks to sustain its contention on another ground. It is pointed out that when the Contractor’s attention was called to the fact that the joints had not been properly caulked and that the walls were in bad condition, the Contractor, in consideration of being paid a balance of $112,713.50 claimed due under the contract, agreed by correspondence to make all necessary repairs, and that it would enter into a contract with a reliable Waterproofing Company to do the job on a guarantee basis. The record supports this contention to some degree and it further shows that it would have cost the amount fixed by the Master to correct all the defects, but the record further shows, we think, that appellee’s agreement was to correct the caulking of the joints and not to repair all damage to the brick walls. One of the letters relied on to support the alleged agreement was to the Contractor, dated December 6, 1948, in which the correction work was referred to in this way:

“ ‘2. Caulk and waterproof expansion joints between the outside brick masonry and monolithic concrete corners. This expansion joint was filled with brick mortar which is to be removed and the joints caulked with oakum and mastic compound as per plans and specifications.’ ”

Another letter to appellee, dated January 18, 1949, demanded that all cracked and broken bricks be removed and replaced by new brick.

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.W.2d 842, 223 Ark. 105, 1954 Ark. LEXIS 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rivercliff-co-v-linebarger-ark-1954.