Truckee Lodge v. Wood

14 Nev. 293
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1879
DocketNo. 883
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 14 Nev. 293 (Truckee Lodge v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Truckee Lodge v. Wood, 14 Nev. 293 (Neb. 1879).

Opinions

By the Court,

LEONARD, J.:

This is an action for damages for alleged breaches of contract. Respondents, Wood & Richards, were contractors and builders. They entered into a written contract to build for appellant an Odd FelloAvs’ Hall and building in Reno, and to secure a faithful performance of the same, executed and delivered to appellant an undertaking in the penal sum [299]*299of ten thousand dollars. Wood and Richards were principals and the other respondents sureties. In its complaint appellant alleges failure to perform according to the contract, plan and specifications, and demands judgment therefor in the sum of five thousand two hundred and thirty-four dollars and twenty-one cents. The principals and sureties answered separately. . They deny all alleged' breaches of the contract on the part of Wood & Richards, and aver full performance thereof. Wood & Richards allege that there is a balance of two thousand four hundred and nine dollars and eighteen cents due upon the original contract, and the further sum of four thousand seven hundred and forty-four dollars for extra labor performed and materials furnished at the request of appellant, for which sums they demand judgment. The sureties allege that there is due Wood & Richards, upon the original contract and for extra work and materials, the sum of six thousand two hundred and ninety-four dollars. Other parts of the pleadings will be referred to as we proceed in the examination of questions presented for consideration. At the trial, respondents, Wood & Richards, obtained judgment against appellant for one thousand and ten dollars and thirty cents, and the sureties were released. This appeal is from an order overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial, and from the judgment. Objections have been made to the transcript, all but one of which could be waived, and that has been removed by amendment. Counsel for Wood & Richards argued the case upon its merits without intimating that there were any faults in the transcript, and not until months thereafter were any objections made thereto. We shall consider the case upon its merits, believing the objections now made have been waived.

I. The contract above referred to provides that the appellant shall not in any manner be answerable or accountable for any of the materials or other things used or employed in finishing said building. In its complaint appellant alleges, “ That in partial performance of the said contract, the said Benjamin Wood and E. S. Richards incurred indebtedness to sundry persons for work and labor performed [300]*300and materials furnished, to be used, and wbicb were used, iu constructing said building, in the sum of four thousand seven hundred and ninety-three dollars and thirteen cents gold coin of the United States, which said indebtedness became, and is, a lien against plaintiff’s said building and premises, and for the payment of which plaintiff and its said building and premises are liable, wherefore plaintiff has been greatly injured and damaged in the sum of four thousand seven hundred and ninety-three dollars and thirteen cents, etc.” To maintain its claim for damage on account of the liens mentioned, appellant offered to prove, by the records of the county recorder of Washoe county, that Wood & Richards had incurred said indebtedness to the persons named in said records; that the materials and labor therein mentioned had been furnished at the request of said contractors and used in and about the construction of said building, and that the contractors had failed and refused to pay the same or any part thereof; that the same were their valid and subsisting liens upon the building in question; that plain tiff was liable to pay the same, and that suits had been commenced to foreclose them. Counsel for respondents objected to such proof, for various reasons stated, aud it was rejected.

In rebuttal, appellant offered to prove the same facts for the purpose of defeating the claim of Wood and Richards for extra work, etc., upon the building. This proof was also excluded by the court, and its action in excluding the offered proof to support appellant’s claim for damages on account of said liens; also, to defeat recovery by Wood and Richards upon the counter claims set up by them in their answer, is assigned as error.

It is first claimed by counsel for appellant, that the proof offered should have been admitted for the purpose of showing damage resulting frqm a breach of the contract, and that the amount of the liens is the measure of such damage. If it be conceded that the contractors broke their contract by permitting liens to be filed, etc., still the admitted, fact remains, that there was no offer to prove that appellant had paid any sum for their satisfaction, or had otherwise been [301]*301damaged, by reason of their existence. Such being the case, appellant was entitled to recover, at the most, nominal damages only, on account of the breach complained of.

Had actual damages been allowed against defendants on account of the liens, the contractors might have been compelled to pay twice for the same thing. The lien-holders might have dismissed their foreclosure suits and brought an action against the contractors. A judgment for damages in this case, in favor of appellant for the full amount of the liens, would not bar such an action. The lienholders are not parties, and would not have been bound by any judgment in this case. Hence, as before stated, had appellant recovered actual damages on account of the liens, the lien-holders might thereafter have dismissed their foreclosure suits, waived their liens, brought actions against the contractors, and recovered judgment to the extent of the amount due, regardless of the fact that theretofore judgment in this case had been rendered against them for the same claims. (Prescott v. Trueman, 4 Mass. 627; Wyman v. Ballard, 12 Id. 305; Tufts v. Adams, 8 Pick. 547; Harlow v. Thomas, 15 Id. 68; Sedgwick on Dam. 44, et seq.) And if, technically, appellant should have been permitted to prove the existence of the liens for the purpose of showiug nominal damage, that error is not ground for a new trial, in eases where, under statutes like ours, such damages do not entitle the plaintiff to recover costs. (Jennings v. Loring, 5 Ind. 250; Sedgwick on Dam. 54.)

The refusal of the court to permit appellant, in rebuttal, to introduce proof of the existence of the liens, and that suits were then pending to foreclose the same, was error. Section 10 of the lien law (Stat. 1875, page 123) is as follows : ‘ ‘ The contractor shall be entitled to recover upon a lien filed by him, only such amount as may be due to him according to the terms of his contract, after deducting all claims of other parties, for work done and material furnished as aforesaid; and in all cases where a lien shall be filed under this chapter, for work done or materials furnished to any contractor, he shall defend any action brought thereupon at his own expense; and during the pendency of such [302]

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14 Nev. 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/truckee-lodge-v-wood-nev-1879.