Rua v. Bowyer Smokeless Coal Co.

99 S.E. 213, 84 W. Va. 47, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 6
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 99 S.E. 213 (Rua v. Bowyer Smokeless Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rua v. Bowyer Smokeless Coal Co., 99 S.E. 213, 84 W. Va. 47, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 6 (W. Va. 1919).

Opinion

Miller, President:

Plaintiff sued for damages for alleged breaches by defendant of a contract, alleged to have been entered into between the parties in January 1918, whereby in consideration of the plaintiff’s promise that he would furnish the labor, tools, explosives, means and appliances and drive four rock headings in a certain coal mine of the defendant, six feet in height and twelve feet in width and to the depth limited by the coal holdings of defendant, approximately four thousand feet, the defendant undertook and promised on its part to [49]*49pay plaintiff therefor át tbe rate of fourteen dollars per lineal yard for each and every yard so driven by Mm, tbe payments to be made on tbe regular semi-monthly pay days] for tbe work accomplished by him pursuant to tbe contract] prior thereto.

And it is further averred that plaintiff, then a resident of Virginia, upon making said contract and relying thereon, immediately proceeded with his preparations to perform the contract on his part, and to that end secured the necessary tools, supplies, equipment and appliances, and employed laborers and workmen necessary to carry out the provisions of the contract on his part, and completed said arrangements, and was thereupon ready, able and willing to proceed with the work, and to complete the contract in the manner and upon the terms and to the end provided and stipulated, and if he had been permitted to proceed with the performance of his contract, he could and would have driven under and pursuant thereto at least four thousand lineal yards of the rock heading, at a cost to him of nine dollars per yard.

And by way of assigning'a breach of the contract, it is ' further averred that defendant wholly disregarded the proms* ises and undertakings on its part, and artfully contriving and intending to wrong, injure, oppress and defraud plaintiff in that behalf, did wrongfully, without justification or-lawful excuse, and without fault on plaintiff’s part, renounce- and repudiate the same, and to further wrong, injure andi oppress him, and to deprive him of the benefits of his contract, would not permit plaintiff to enter upon and continue-the performance of the contract on his part, but on the contrary orderefl Mm to stop any further proceedings and not to present himself at the mine, and without Ms knowledge or consent let said contract to another person, to his damage $20,000.00and not regarding its said promises and undertakings had not paid plaintiff the sum or sums of money due him, although often -requested etc., wherefore Ms suit.

The defense was non-assumpsit and the statute of frauds. On the trial before the jury, on the issue joined on the plea of non-assumpsit, after plaintiff had introduced all Ms evidence and rested, defendant moved the court to strike out [50]*50all of plaintiffs evidence relative to any contract between him and it which had not been performed within one year, and pending said motion to strike out, plaintiff, on his motion and over objection by defendant, was permitted to amend his declaration by adding the common counts in as-sumpsit with bill of particulars attached. Thereupon defendant moved the court to strike out all of plaintiff’s evidence and direct a verdict in its favor, which motion, over plaintiff’s objection, was sustained, and a verdict in accordance therewith was returned by the jury; whereupon, after plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was overruled, the judgment of nil capiat complained of was pronounced.

The bill of particulars filed with the amended declaration laid a claim against defendant for three days time lost in visiting defendant’s mine, at $20.00 per day, $60.00; for twelve days time lost in looking up and employing men at .■$20.00 per day, $240.00; for wages paid Angelo Toledo and Dan Cannans, twelve days each, at six dollars per day, $144.00; for board of fourteen men and two women, three ■days, at $1.00 per day, $48.00; for removing furniture to station and returning same to miner’s home, $12.00; for ■getting tools out of mine and time of laborers for the work, $15.00; for expenses of self to Bowyer, $16.60; for three days loss of time, $72.00; making a total of $607.60.

We think it is apparent, indeed it is conceded, that the rulings of the circuit court in striking out plaintiff’s evidence ¡and directing a verdict were predicated on the theory that ithe contract alleged and sought to be proved was not to be ¡performed within one year and was not evidenced by a writing signed by defendant or its authorized agent, and was void under the statute of frauds, chapter 98 of the Code, and wholly without binding obligation upon the defendant.

The evidence shows that the contract was invited by a letter written on one of the letter heads of the defendant «company, dated at Bowyer, September 26, 1917, addressed 'to Mr. Frank Rhu, Kimball, W. Va., and signed Bowyer ■Smokeless Coal Co., F. L. Heinze, Supt., as follows: “We 'have some slate to be shot here in our mines and will have through the life of the place. Mr. Hopkins, who was mine ■foreman at Rolfe has recommended you as a good slate man. [51]*51Would be pleased to have you come over to look at tbe work and bid on same.’' To a letter of inquiry addressed to defendant by plaintiff on December 5, 1917, Heinze, Superintendent, replied on December 11, 1917: “Dear Sir:-Your favor of tbe 5th. Have two main entries where slate must be shot, also two rock headings. Will be pleased to have you come and bid on this work.” On January 13, 1918, in response to these letters of invitation, plaintiff in company with one Cannans, whom he took along to assist him in judging the character and value of the work, met Heinze, Superintendent, and after being shown the four headings by Hopkins, to whom Heinze had referred in his letter of September 26th, and as directed by Heinze, the three men returned to the superintendent’s house at Bowyer, where plaintiff says, •after a preliminary colloquium, he proposed to Heinze to do the work of driving these four entries, six feet in height, twelve feet in width, and about a thousand yards each through the mine, at the price of fourteen dollars per lineal yard, which proposition was then and there accepted by Heinze on behalf of defendant. He also says Heinze thought there would be work for. three or four years, right straight through. He further swears that the agreement was that he was to begin January 21, 1918, and that he was to do double shift work, that is, work night and day with two shifts of men, and was to prosecute the work as rapidly as possible. Plain-' tiff, in his statement of this contract, is fully corroborated by the evidence of Hopkins, mine foreman of defendant, detailed by Heinze, Superintendent, to take him to the mines •and show him the property and the work on which he was requested by Heinze to make a bid.

This and other evidence in the record, in our opinion, ■clearly constitutes an oral agreement between Heinze, Superintendent, professing to act for and on behalf of the defendant company, and the plaintiff Rua, substantially as alleged in the declaration. If anything was left uncertain in the contract, it was the time the contract was to run. It seems to have been in the mind of Heinze at the time of the making of the agreement that there would be work for Rua during the life of the mine, and it seems to have been his Opinion that [52]*52it would take from three to four years to do all the work. Otherwise the time during which the contract was to continue was not mentioned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 S.E. 213, 84 W. Va. 47, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rua-v-bowyer-smokeless-coal-co-wva-1919.