Stubblefield v. Montgomery Ward & Co.

98 P.2d 14, 96 P.2d 774, 163 Or. 432, 125 A.L.R. 1240, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 50
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 98 P.2d 14 (Stubblefield v. Montgomery Ward & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stubblefield v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 98 P.2d 14, 96 P.2d 774, 163 Or. 432, 125 A.L.R. 1240, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 50 (Or. 1940).

Opinions

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the defendants, W. M. Mitchell and Montgomery Ward & Company, a corporation, from a judgment of the circuit court in the sum' of $1,942.60, based upon the verdict of a jury. The respondents, who were the plaintiffs, are husband and wife. Their cause of action was predicated upon charges that the defendants, after having contracted by written agreement to do some plumbing work for the plaintiffs, breached their contract through unwarranted delay and unskillful workmanship. The verdict and judgment are thus constituted:

Damages incurred through injury to plaintiffs’ building ..................................................$ 300.00

Damages as the reasonable rental value of the building during delay...................................... 3,000.00

$3,300.00

Value of the material and labor furnished by the defendants.................................................. 1,357.40

Amount of the verdict and judgment................$1,942.60

The appellants (defendants) present no contentions concerning the item of $300 damages to the building. They do not, however, admit that they damaged the *435 building. The plaintiffs admit that they paid nothing to the defendants for their work, and material. We are, therefore, concerned only with the damages allowed as the reasonable rental value of the building during the delay. Concerning it the defendants present the following assignments of error: The court erred (1) in employing rental value, and not interest upon invested capital, as the measure of damages to compensate for the period of delay; (2) in receiving opinion testimony concerning the rental value of the structure as the latter would have been- if completed (at the time the defendants committed their alleged breech the building was only partially built and has not been completed since); (3) in not withdrawing from the jury’s consideration the rental value testimony just mentioned; and (4) in receiving as evidence a letter of complaint from the plaintiffs to the defendants following the state plumbing inspector’s rejection of the work which the defendants had done.

In the Blue mountains, at an elevation of 4,200 feet, is a place named Lehman Springs owned by the plaintiffs. It is about fifty miles south of Pendleton and about forty miles west and slightly south of La Grande. The waters of the springs, according to one of the witnesses, possess curative properties, and in the timbered areas surrounding the springs are deer and elk. These facts make the place an attractive resort. In 1925 when the plaintiffs purchased this property it was improved with a 24-room hotel, which the plaintiff Fancho Stubblefield described thus: “It was a part old log hotel and a part annex built on to it out of rough boards.” There were no plumbing fixtures of any kind in its rooms. Two years later the building was destroyed by fire.

*436 In 1933 the plaintiffs started construction of a new hotel which was to consist of 24 guest rooms, lobby, kitchen, barroom, storeroom, and four servant rooms. The plans provided that the main structure should be 40 by 70 feet in dimension. In addition to its two principal floors there were to be a basement and a third partially finished floor in the attic. -Forming a part of the building there was to be a kitchen annex 24 by 28 feet in size with the aforementioned servant rooms overhead.

The construction of the hotel made very slow progress, due to the lack of funds. As stated above, construction was begun in 1933. By the latter part of 1937 the exterior of the building had been constructed and the roof had been shingled. However, at that time construction of the front porch had not been completed and some' of the scaffolding was still in place. Very little progress had been made with the interior. The rough or sub-floor had been laid and the electric wires had been strung, but the framework for the bathrooms had not been set.

In the latter part of 1937 the plaintiffs became interested in that part of the installation of the plumbing known as the “roughing in”; that is, the installation of the various vent, water and waste pipes which serve the plumbing fixtures later to be placed. The plaintiffs desired that each guest room should have a bathroom containing a bathtub, toilet and washbowl. Their inquiries disclosed that the cost of material and labor for the roughing in would approximate $1,000. It seems that at that time the property was encumbered with a laborer’s or materialman’s lien. This circumstance afforded the basis for obtaining the funds with which to pay for the plumbing. One of the plaintiffs’ *437 witnesses testified: “Well, the plumbing was to be paid for out of funds that were at first in the hands of Judge Maloney of Portland, that was left over from the payment of bills and a prior lien upon the hotel. The loan, as I recall it, was $7,000, and these bills and the prior lien amounted to something like $5,500, leaving $1,500 on hand.” In this manner $1,500 was rendered available to take care of the cost of installing the plumbing.

Defendant Mitchell was at that time a licensed plumber following his trade in Pendleton. The defendant Montgomery Ward & Company operated a store in that city and sold, among other items, plumbing supplies and fixtures. The manager of its Pendleton store was Stanley Day. January 5, 1938, the parties to this action signed the contract with which we are now concerned. It bound the defendants to supply the necessary materials and labor for the aforementioned roughing-in work. It provided that the work should be done “in a good, careful and skillful manner # * * jn accordance with the laws of the State of Oregon and the rules and regulations pertaining to this character of work.” It bound the plaintiffs to pay $773 for the materials and $165 for the labor.

The contract mentioned no time limit for either the beginning or the completion of the work. The parties seem agreed that a reasonable time was the time limitation. Mr. Stubblefield swore that before he signed the contract he several times told both Day and Mitchell that their work would have to be done in the winter months so that he could complete the rest of the construction in the same season and have the building ready for occupancy in the spring of 1938. He also swore that before the contract was signed he told them *438 that he had not only secured the money with which to pay for the plumbing, but had also (a) contracted for the lumber necessary to complete the work after the plumbers had finished the roughing in; (b) contracted for the labor required to complete the interior; and (c) secured a promise of a loan from one A. H. McIntyre of sufficient money to enable him to defray all remaining expenses incidental to the completion of the building as a hotel. Both Day and Mitchell deny that this information had been given to them.

The plaintiffs did not intend to plaster the interior walls, but to sheet them with knotty pine lumber. Mr. Stubblefield and two individuals named Wickstrom and Womack, who operated a small sawmill, signed a contract December 11, 1937, in which Stubblefield promised to purchase, and Wickstrom and Womack promised to sell to him, 350,000 feet of lumber in the spring of 1938.

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Stubblefield v. Montgomery Ward & Co.
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Bluebook (online)
98 P.2d 14, 96 P.2d 774, 163 Or. 432, 125 A.L.R. 1240, 1940 Ore. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stubblefield-v-montgomery-ward-co-or-1940.