Staton Springs Park Company v. Keesee

289 S.W. 292, 217 Ky. 329, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 83
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 17, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 289 S.W. 292 (Staton Springs Park Company v. Keesee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Staton Springs Park Company v. Keesee, 289 S.W. 292, 217 Ky. 329, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 83 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

*330 Opinion op the Court by

Commissioner Sandidge—

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

Appellant, Staton Springs Park Company, is a Kentncky corporation with its chief office and place of business in Pikeville, Kentucky. In the spring of 1924 it held a lease on a certain tract of land situated on1 Road fork of Pond creek in Pike county, Kentucky, on which there were several sulphur springs. The corporation was organized and the lease on the land was taken in the belief that the property could be improved and profitably operated as. a summer resort. Appellant corporation entered into a contract with appellee, L. L. Keesee, and J. M. Stanley, by which the latter were to construct for it on the property in question a swimming pool, certain bath houses and lockers, a dance pavilion, a dining hall, a kitchen and certain other buildings; and were to construct concrete walls around the springs and wooden structures over them; and were to beautify the grounds by removing the underbrush, constructing certain roadways and paths leading to the various springs. Proceeding under the contract appellees constructed the swimming pool and the various buildings contemplated and did the other work required. They took necessary steps seasonably to assert mechanics’ and material men’s liens under the provisions of section 2463, Kentucky Statutes, and the sections immediately following. Not having been paid for the work they did they instituted this action to recover $4,712.06, the alleged balance due, and to subject the tract of land to its payment under their lien. The contract between the parties was not reduced to writing, and by the answer filed by appellant corporation the terms of the contract with reference to the character and dimensions of the swimming pool and the various buildings which appellees agreed to construct for them were put in issue, and it was denied that any of them had been constructed of the size and according to the specifications of the contract. The answer further pleaded that a great many things whi ch appellees agreed to do were not done at all, and that the structures it had built were so poorly built and of such inferior material that all of them were worthless. By way of counterclaim it sought to recover $2,350.00 from appellees as damages for their breach of the contract. Issue was joined by reply, proof was taken, and, upon the' trial below, the chancellor adjudged that if appellees had performed the contract and had con *331 structed the various buildings and structures .according to the plans aiid specifications agreed upon they -would have been entitled to recover $7,663.71; that $2,921.05 had been paid to them during the progress of the work; that for their failure to perform the contract and construct the buildings and other structures according to specifications $1,312.65 should be deducted, leaving a balance of $3,400.00 due for material furnished and labor performed, and entered judgment for that sum in their favor against appellant corporation. It was further adjudged that they have a lien on the tract of land which was described in the judgment and that it be sold in satisfaction of the same. The counterclaim of appellant corporation was dismissed except to the extent indicated, and the lien adjudged to appellees was adjudged to be superior to that of the other defendants, who are appellants here, who had filed answers asserting their superior claims against the land in question. The appeal is prosecuted from that judgment.

For appellant corporation it is insisted that the judgment is erroneous and that the petition should have been dismissed, and that a judgment in its favor for the. full amount sought by it on its counterclaim should have been entered herein. A case in which greater conflict between the pleadings and evidence for the parties would be difficult to' imagine. They do not agree in any particular as to the terms of the contract with reference to the size or dimensions, material or workmanship which it contemplated for any of the buildings or structures. Appellees, the contractors, by their evidence supported their version of the contract as they pleaded it in their petition, and according to their testimony the various structures and buildings which they agreed to erect for appellant corporation were constructed exactly in accordance with the contract as to their dimensions, material and workmanship, except that in certain particulars some of the buildings and structures, at the instance and with the agreement of appellant corporation, were changed after the contract was made. The evidence for appellant corporation tends to establish an altogether different contract from that claimed by appellees as to the dimensions of the various structures, and that none of them were built of the material specified, and that as constructed all of them are practically worthless. It appears, however, that throughout the time appellees were engaged in the work which they undertook under the contract appel *332 lant corporation had a representative in the person of its president on the ground for the purpose of seeing that the contract was. complied with, and it seems improbable that if ''appellees were proceeding with the work wholly, at variance with the terms of the contract as to the size and dimensions of the various buildings being constructed and the material and workmanship being used that some complaint or question would not have- been made at the time. A great deal of the evidence for appellant corporation was devoted to the particulars in which the swimming pool constructed failed to comply with the contract and specifications therefor. From the evidence it seems reasonable to attribute most of the defects in the concrete work on the swimming pool to the poor quality of the sand and'gravel used in making it, which came from a nearby creek and which, according to the evidence, the-parties agreed shouid.be used. The corporation received the buildings .and structures erected by appellees and put them to tire use contemplated. We have carefully read and considered the evidence herein for the contending parties and are not prepared to say that the chancellor erred in concluding that $1,312.65 is sufficient to cover the.difference in value of the buildings and structures as constructed and as contracted.for,’that ordinarily being the criterion of' damages. See Young v. Cumberland County Educational Society, 183 Ky. 626; Hartford Mill Company v. Hartford Tobacco Warehouse Company, 121 S. W. 447; Culbertson v. Ashland Cement Company, 144 Ky. 614, 139 S. W. 792; Panke v. Fischer, 48 S. W. 993; Short v. Moore, 43 S. W. 211. That sum would seem to be ample to remedy all the defects properly attributable to appellees’ failure to comply with the contract. The rule is that if upon the whole case the mind be left in such doubt that it can not be said with reasonable certainty that the chancellor has erred his judgment will be affirmed. This case upon the question under consideration seems clearly to fall within that rule, and the judgment in favor of appellees .against appellant corporation for $3,400.00 will not be disturbed.

It appears that appellant corporation owns no interest in the tract of land described in the petition and judgment herein other than that which it acquired under a lease filed in evidence herein. On the 5th day of September, 1922, appellant, Willard Staton, executed and delivered to Willis Staton a title bond for the land de *333

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Totten v. Stewart
286 S.W.2d 539 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1955)
German v. Frey Planing Mill Co.
77 S.W.2d 414 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1934)
Weir v. Jarecki Manufacturing Co.
72 S.W.2d 450 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1933)
Cincinnati Stucco Co. v. North Kentucky Fair, Inc.
291 S.W. 715 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
289 S.W. 292, 217 Ky. 329, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staton-springs-park-company-v-keesee-kyctapphigh-1926.