Seitz v. Meriwether

176 S.W. 160, 119 Ark. 271, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 368
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 26, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 176 S.W. 160 (Seitz v. Meriwether) 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
Seitz v. Meriwether, 176 S.W. 160, 119 Ark. 271, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 368 (Ark. 1915).

Opinions

Hast, J.

By special Act No. 172, passed by the General Assembly of 1905, a levee and drainage district to be 'composed of certain designated territory in Clay and Greene Counties, was established. See Acts of 1905, page 429.

The directors were appointed .and the district was duly established in accordance with the terms of the act. The directors then proceeded with the construction of the improvement.

In June, 1912, two of the directors of the district and certain taxpayers within the district instituted a suit in chancery court (against the remaining directors and against A. V. Wills & Son, with whom a contract had been made for the construction of the improvement, ¡and J. D. Mitchell, who had been elected engineer for the district.

In the complaint it was .alleged that the contractors were maMng overcharges and were being paid in excess of the' contract price. It was also alleged that the contractors and the engineer had been guilty of fraud in certain respects. The court ordered a reference to a special master of the accounts between the district .and the contractors, and of the accounts between the district and the engineer. The special master was instructed to report in accordance with directions 'given him. An appeal was tafeen to this court and an opinion was handed down on all matters pertaining to the decree which we held to be final .and appealable. The court, however, held that the decree against 'the contractors and the engineer for an accounting was not final and could not be reviewed by us because the report of the master had not then come in and the finding of the chancery (Court was not for any definite amount against the 'contractors ¡and the engineer. Therefore, the appeal of the engineer .and of the contractors as to the state of .accounts between them respectively .and the board of directors was dismissed as being premature. See Seitz v. Meriwether, 114 Ark. 289, 169 S. W. 1175.

Upon a remand of tlie case and the coining in of the report of the special master, the chancellor found that the contractors, A. Y. Wills & Son, were indebted to the district in the sum of $4,634.32; and that J. D. Mitchell, the engineer, was indebted to the district in the sum of $1,435.13. A decree was entered accordingly, and to reverse that decree, the contractors and the engineer have prosecuted this appeal.

It is first insisted by counsel for the defendants that the court had no jurisdiction to adjust the accounts between the district and the contractors ¡and the engineer. This question was decided adversely to their contention on the former appeal, which is the law of the case. Moreover, we are of the opinion that our decision on the appeal in this respect was correct. It appears from the record that the board of directors elected J. D. Mitchell as engineer for the district and made a contract with A. Y. Wills & Son for the construction of the improvement provided for in the statute. The contractors proceeded with the construction work and had been so engaged for several years before the suit against them was instituted. Thus it will be seen that the accounts ran over a period of several years. They consisted of numerous items. Mistakes are alleged in the accounts on both sides. Many of the vouchers for the payment of the contractors have been lost. A great many of the monthly estimates prepared by the engineer were also lost. All these matters are to be considered in the adjustment of the accounts.

(1) In such cases the chancellor has power to appoint a master trained in the work to examine the accounts, to take testimony in reference thereto', and to direct him to report his finding tO' the court. The chancellor then has (authority to consider and modify the report of the master after exceptions thereto have been made. All these are cogent reasons why the accounts could be better settled by the machinery of a court of equity than by a jury. The jurisdiction of a court of chancery to settle 'and adjust long and complicated accounts such as appear from the record in this case is well established by former decisions of this court. Trapnall v. Hill, 31 Ark. 345; Smith v. Stack, 89 Ark. 143; Bagnell Tie & Timber Co. v. Goodrich, 82 Ark. 547; Goodrum v. Merchants & Planters Bank, 102 Ark. 326.

It is insisted by counsel for the contractors that the court erred in not allowing them payment for the refilling of the muck ditch. The muck ditch was an excavation “not to exceed in depth eighteen inches and in width three feet, ’’tobe dug as designated by the engineer. The contract contemplated that it should be dug along the center line of the base of the levee .and provided that “a muck ditch not to exceed in depth eighteen inches and to exceed in width three feet shall be dug as designated by the engineer; such muck ditch shall be filled with earth free from perishable materials as may be taken with a dredge boat dipper. ¡Stump holes and others that may be necessary in preparation work shall be filled and compacted as prescribed for muck ditch.”

The contract ¡also provides that “The contractor agrees to accept the following prices as full compensation for the completion of the work specified or implied in this contract, namely, the ¡sum of $3.50 per rod for muck ditch.”

In preparation for the construction work the contractors first cleared the right-of-way by cutting down the trees on it. They used dynamite in blowing out the stumps ¡and for a part of the way the blowing out of the stumps formed a ditch along the right-of-way,-although the ditch was not constructed in a straight line a® contemplated in the ¡contract. Where the stumps were not close enough together to form a continuous ditch the earth between the ¡stumps was blown out in order to form a ditch.

The contractors testified that it would have been cheaper for them to have dug out the stumps but that they blew them out with dynamite in order that they might clear the right-of-way of obstructions and ¡construct the muck ditch at the same time.

(2) The chancellor found that in doing this they practically constructed the mncik ditch along the whole line of the levee and that their work in this respect was a substantial compliance with the contract. Mnch testimony was taken on both sides, and after a careful consideration of it we do not deem it necessary to set out the testimony in detail, but think it sufficient to say that the finding of the 'chancellor to the effect that the contractors constructed a muck ditch in substantial compliance with the terms of the contract should be upheld.

(3) It is contended by counsel for .the defendants that the contractors are entitled to payment for refilling the muck ditch, and this is the principal item of contention between the contractors and the board of directors of the levee district. We do not agree with counsel in this contention. We have set forth above the terms of the contract on this question. After setting forth the dimensions of the ditch, the contract provides that it shall be filled with earth free from perishable material; and another clause provides that the 'contractor is to receive $3.50 per rod for the muck ditch. Thus it will be seen that the contract itself provides that the muck ditch shall be dug and refilled for the sum of $3.50 per rod, and this was all that the contractors were entitled to receive for that work.

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193 S.W. 531 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
176 S.W. 160, 119 Ark. 271, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seitz-v-meriwether-ark-1915.