Snyder v. Tulsa Engineering and Construction Co.

1957 OK 114, 312 P.2d 488, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 450
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 14, 1957
DocketNo. 37196
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1957 OK 114 (Snyder v. Tulsa Engineering and Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snyder v. Tulsa Engineering and Construction Co., 1957 OK 114, 312 P.2d 488, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 450 (Okla. 1957).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This appeal involves an action instituted by defendant in error, as plaintiff, to recover from the plaintiffs in error, as defendants, the principal sum.of $5,600 allegedly due it for certain work and labor referred to as “earth work” performed by plaintiff in the construction of an open-air, or outdoor, movie theater, known as the “Bellaire Drive-In Theater” on West 51st Street in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and to foreclose its claimed mechanic’s lien therefor. The parties will hereinafter be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

There is no question but that plaintiff performed so-called “earth work” in preparing the present site of the drivc-in theater, hereinafter referred to merely as the “Bellaire”, for use as such a theater.

For some time previously the defendant, L. E. Snyder, had been president of a corporation known as “Modernaire Theaters” which owned and operated two other drive-in theaters in Tulsa, referred to as the “Apache” and the “Modernaire.” On two previous occasions plaintiff had done bits of earth work to accomplish repairs and/or enlargements of those theaters.

In January, 1953, after Snyder had decided to lease the tract on West 51st Street for the site of the new drive-in theater here involved, he contacted Messrs. E. V. James and J. G. Michaelson, officers and directors of the plaintiff corporation, and indicated he wanted said company to do the earth work therefor. Later, when he obtained, in the name of himself and his wife, the defendant Marjorie J. Snyder, a lease on the proposed site of the Bellaire, and, after conversations between him and one or both of the above-named officers of the plaintiff corporation, including an initial one in which the latter were apprised of the location of said site, and another subsequent one held in Snyder’s home one Sunday morning, in which he asked for an estimate on at least a portion of the work, a figure was quoted Snyder over the telephone, and, at his instance, the preliminary grading and dirt moving on the tract was commenced. After starting the second phase of the work, viz., the building of the ramps for automobiles to park on, so their occupants could see the movies projected on the large open-air screen, as distinguished from the preliminary earth [490]*490work' referred to as “general”, or “preliminary”, grading work, it was discovered that if the ramp work was completed the way it had been commenced, the occupants of parked autos on ramps toward the rear of the theater could not see all of the movie screen over the tops of autos on ramps closer to the screen, or screen tower; and the rainfall and other surface water would not properly drain off the theater site from between the various ramps. Also it was discovered that additional “road oil” and crushed rock would have to be spread •on the ground to keep cars from becoming .stuck.in mud at certain places on the site. Discovery of’ these defects entailed additional work.

At some time before the work was commenced, or .completed, Mr. Snyder organized the defendant corporation, “Family Theaters, Inc.”, of which a Mrs. Eloise Stéger became president and he became an officer and stockholder. Thereafter, in April, 1953, Snyder and his wife assigned their lease on the Bellaire site to said corporation. By June, 1953, when plaintiff had performed all of its earth work on this site,.’except some “rolling” to be done the last day, it had received a total of $2956.00, paid to it in three installments, by three separate checks issued on various dates by Family Theaters, Inc. A few days later Mr. James appeared at the Apache Theater office used by Mr. Snyder and Mrs. Steger with “work sheets”, representing that a total sum of $5,948, in addition to the above-mentioned sum, was due plaintiff for work it had performed at the Bellaire. When Snyder protested it, James reduced the total of this bill by $348, and subsequently plaintiff mailed Snyder a bill, or ■“invoice”, dated June 29, 1953, representing the balance due it, as $5,600.

After several efforts to collect this sum, ■plaintiff instituted the present action, praying, in the first cause of action of its second amended petition, for recovery of judgment iii the sum of $5,600 against both .Snyder and his wife, and Family Theaters, ¡Inc., as defendants. In its second alleged ■ cause of action, plaintiff asked foreclosure of its claimed mechanic’s lien on the theater property in the same amount. Plaintiff’s alleged right to recovery of the money judgment was based on two theories: (1) That during the above-mentioned conversations which preceded the construction of the theaters, Snyder had specifically agreed to pay for plaintiff’s work at certain rates; and, (2) That the transaction which allegedly occurred at the theater office, after the work was completed, when Mr. James reduced the amount of the bill from $5,948 to $5,600, constituted an “account stated”, by reason of which the defendants were also liable.

In her separate answer to the above-mentioned pleading, Mrs. Snyder disclaimed any interest in the theater leasehold and the subject of the action, and, by cross petition, asked that she be granted judgment against plaintiff in the reasonable sum of $750 as a fee for the attorneys she had employed to represent her in the action. In their separate answers, Mr. Snyder and the other defendant, Family Theaters, Inc., coupled general denials with certain admissions and additional allegations. They both admitted, among other things, that Snyder had entered into an oral contract with plaintiff to do the earth work necessary in the construction of the Bellaire, but they alleged, in substance, that said work was to include both the building and “compacting” of the ramps, as well as the preliminary grading, all for the total sum of $2,956, which had already been paid plaintiff; and they denied that they, or either of them, then owed plaintiff any sum whatsoever. The defendant Snyder specifically denied (as alleged by plaintiff) that he had ever agreed to an account stated of $5,600, or any other amount, and disclaimed any direct interest in the leasehold estate, against which plaintiffs’ claimed lien was sought to be foreclosed; and alleged that his actions in the matter of the construction of the theaters were all in the capacity of a representative of Family Theaters, Inc., which fact was fully known and understood by plaintiff. Both Snyder and the Family Theaters, Inc., alleged that, by the terms [491]*491of the oral contract with plaintiff all of the latter’s work was to be completed not later than May IS, 1953; and, in an amended cross petition, the theaters corporation alleged that said work was done in an un-workmanlike manner and so tardily and ineptly that it suffered certain damages total-ling $10,026.79, for which it asked judgment, together with $750 in attorney’s fees, over against the plaintiff.

At the trial, plaintiff, in attempting to refute the above-mentioned defense position that the $2,956 paid it had been the agreed price for all of this work and to establish that said sum was the agreed consideration for only the preliminary, or general, grading of the theater’s site, was al-owed, over the objection of defense counsel, to introduce in evidence an unsigned “letter” dated March 16, 1953, addressed to Snyder by plaintiff, but admittedly never mailed to, nor received by, him, in which the $2,956 was quoted as the price for “Grading the site as per stakes” only, and mentioning a rate of $10 per hour for “Building ramps with Motor grader”, and further stating: “Other grading outside staked area Machine time at hourly rates.”

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1957 OK 114, 312 P.2d 488, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-tulsa-engineering-and-construction-co-okla-1957.