Texas Bldg. Co. v. Collins

187 S.W. 404, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 735
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 15, 1916
DocketNo. 8353.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 187 S.W. 404 (Texas Bldg. Co. v. Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Bldg. Co. v. Collins, 187 S.W. 404, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 735 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

In September, 1912, the Quanah, Acme & Pacific Railway Company, a corporation, duly organized under the laws of the state of Texas, contracted with the Southwestern Construction Company, another corporation duly organized under the laws of the state of Texas, to do all the work and furnish all of the material necessary to the construction of the roadbed and to lay the track for a line of railway from Padu-cah, in Cottle county, Tex., to a. point in Motley county, Tex., a distance of approximately 40 miles. The construction company in turn sublet the contract to the Texas Building Company, another corporation, and the latter company in turn contracted with various firms and individuals to do all the grading, clearing, grubbing, excavating, and embankment work on specified miles of the contemplated road, and some of these firms and individuals later in turn sublet portions of the work that they had contracted to do. The contracts referred to in a general sense may be said to be interdependent, and for the gradation work payment was provided in a fixed sum per square foot for grubbing and clearing, and a fixed sum per cubic yard for *405 the moving of dirt and rock. It appears that the work was completed in October, 1913, and that soon thereafter one W. B. Drake instituted a suit against the Texas Building Company to recover an amount alleged to be due him for services or material furnished in the construction of the road, and garnished the construction company, alleging that there was reason to believe that the construction company had funds of the building company in its possession. At a later period, it appears that J. E. Collins and several others, who had performed labor hereinafter to be more particularly mentioned, instituted suit against the Texas Building Company to recover sums alleged to be due them. These several suits, upon motion duly made, were consolidated, and the railway company and the Southwestern Construction Company answered that there was a balance due from the railway company to the construction company, under the contract between them hereinbefore referred to, of $27,-480.48, which had been retained under the terms of the contract, and this sum the railway company and the construction company, by their answers, tendered into court. These companies also set up that there were numerous other specified parties who had claims against the Texas Building Company; and it was prayed that they might be required to intervene and set up their rights to the fund in question. Numerous parties thereafter did intervene and set up claims, as will hereinafter more particularly appear. The garnishment suit of W. B. Drake against the Texas Building Company was later dismissed on the ground of the notorious insolvency of the building company. So that, in the final form of the litigation, this contest is one between the Quanah, Acme & Pacific Railway Company and the Southwestern Construction Company on the one side, and J. E. Collins and numerous others on the other side. As against the railway company and the construction company, Collins and other laborers and materialmen, asserting claims, substantially alleged that a greater sum than $27,480.48 as tendered was due from the railway company to the construction company, under the terms of the contract between them. The several claimants, however, as among themselves set up priorities of right to the fund referred to and of lien upon the railroad as alleged.

The trial was before the court without a jury, and the court’s conclusions of fact and law' are before us. The court found and adjudged that the total amount of the funds remaining in the hands of the railway and construction companies due under the contracts was $32,185.98, which the judgment of the court required these corporations to deposit in the registry of the court. The' claimants were divided into classes A, B, C, and D. In class A were some 13 claimants, in whose favor the court found sums severally aggregating $28,538; three of the claimants were included within class B, the total of class B’s claims amounting to $2,553.45; there were some five of class O’s creditors, whose claims aggregated $3,310.30. The court found and adjudged that the creditors in class A were entitled to recover of the railway and construction companies their several claims and to a first lien upon the railway, after which the creditors in class B were entitled to a like judgment with foreclosure of lien for their several claims, and that, after the satisfaction and payment of the claims in classes A and B, then what fund remained should be ratably paid to the creditors specified in class C. No lien was found in favor of the creditors in classes O and D. It was adjudged that the creditors in class D take nothing, and, as they are not represented on this appeal, it will be unnecessary to further notice the claims of this class.

The railway and construction companies have prosecuted an appeal from the judgment against them, and one of the creditors in class O has likewise appealed from the court’s judgment, complaining of the adjustment of the priorities.

The record before us is very voluminous, and the numerous briefs and conflicting claims of the parties have rendered the case one somewhat difficult of disposition. It seems manifest that we cannot within reasonable limits state or discuss at length all of the details of the case. We think we can but briefly, though perhaps irregularly, dispose of such of the questions presented as we deem material to our final disposition, and, so proceeding, we will first attempt to dispose of the appeal of the railway and construction companies.

[1] Appellants, the railway and construction companies,, insist that the court erred in rendering judgment against them in excess of the sum of $27,480.48, for the reason, as alleged, that none of the interpleaded parties deny the correctness of the sum so tendered, and for the further reason that there is evidence that the sum so tendered was the correct amount. In the interest of brevity, we will not undertake to set out the pleadings of the several interveners relating to the subject; but such pleadings have been examined and we find that several of them allege that “they are without sufficient information to enable them to affirm or deny the allegations of the first paragraph (the paragraph of the answers setting forth the amount due under the railway contracts as claimed by appellants), except that they are informed, and so charge, that the said construction company was at the time complained of, and is now, indebted to the building company in the sum stated, or a greater sum than stated.” Another allegation of the intervening creditors is to the effect that in computing the amount due from the construction company to the Texas Building Company, the former *406 charged certain amounts “for rent or lease of construction material or construction equipments, and other such items which the construction company was not entitled to charge against the building company, and which, if deducted, would make the construction company owe the building company a greater sum than $27,480.48.” Yet another answer of an appellee alleges that “it has not sufficient knowledge to enable it to form a belief as to the amount owing by the construction company on the building company’s contract, and demands strict proof as to all of said facts.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 S.W. 404, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-bldg-co-v-collins-texapp-1916.