Vaughan Construction Co. v. Virginian Railway Co.

103 S.E. 293, 86 W. Va. 440, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 135
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 103 S.E. 293 (Vaughan Construction Co. v. Virginian Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vaughan Construction Co. v. Virginian Railway Co., 103 S.E. 293, 86 W. Va. 440, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 135 (W. Va. 1920).

Opinion

Miller, Judge:

A writ of error by plaintiff to the judgment below, pronounced on August 30,1919, setting aside the verdict of the jury in its favor for $76,963.32, and the special findings of the jury in answen to special interrogatories submitted to' them by the court, and granting defendant a new trial.

Plaintiff, the principal contractor, sued defendant in assump-sit, on the common counts, laying its damages at $125,000:00, the several items in the bill of particulars filed aggregating with interest added $101,403.43. The first fourteen items of this account, aggregating $45,781.70, cover labor and work alleged to have been done and performed by Gist Brothers Company, subcontractors under plaintiff, in the work of double tracking and additional tracking of a portion of defendant’s railroad through Wyoming County. The remaining items of said account, pertaining to that part of the work done by plaintiff or another subcontractor, as follows: (1) Balance allowed plaintiff by defend[442]*442ant on final estimates by defendant’s chief engineer, $15,663.56; (2) Amount of so-called “Force Account”'analyzed in detail for work done by plaintiff not allotted to Gist Brothers Company, aggregating $18,906.16.

Besides the general issue pleaded defendant interposed a special plea in writing wherein it alleged that the work done and material furnished by plaintiff were done and performed under and pursuant to a contract with defendant, dated June 16, 1913, a contract in writing supplementary thereto, dated September 19, 1913, as modified by letter from defendant’s chief engineer, dated October 14, 1913, thereby shown to the court and made a part of the plea, wherein it was provided that upon the final completion and acceptance of said work the chief engineer of defendant should issue a certificate over his signature, that the whole of the work provided for in said contract had been completed and been accepted by him under the terms and conditions thereof, and that thereupon the entire balance found due plaintiff should become due and payable to it at the office of the treasurer of the defendant within twenty days after the date of such certificate; provided, that if defendant should require it before making payment of the final balance, plaintiff should execute to defendant a release under seal of all claims or demands whatsoever in any manner arising out of said contract, and’ furnish satisfactory evidence, should it be required, that all bills against it that might in any way remain as liens against defendant for the payment of which plaintiff was liable under the terms of said contract had been fully paid; and provided further, that before payment of any estimate, monthly or final, defendant’s chief engineer might require of plaintiff payment of all bills and accounts for all labor, material or supplies provided under the contract during the period covered by such estimate or at any time prior thereto, and also proper releases of all liens of labor-ers, material men, sub-contractors or others for work done or material or supplies furnished up to and including the term covered by1 such estimate, and that defendant should have the right to apply any funds of plaintiff in its hands to the payment of all such liabilities of the contractor, which should be considered and accepted as payments on said contract. And the plea [443]*443further and finally avers that upon the completion of said work defendant’s chief engineer made his final estimate and issued his certificate showing defendant still indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $15,663.56, which sum defendant was and is ready to pay over to plaintiff upon receiving the release of all claims of laborers, material men and sub-contractors as provided in said contract, as defendant and its chief engineer had required of plaintiff; but that plaintiff had utterly failed and refused to comply with these provisions of the contract; that plaintiff had sub-let a part of said contract to the firm of Gist Brothers Company, who had filed a mechanic’s lien against defendant in Wyoming County on January 14,1915, amounting to $79,959.02, which had not been released or discharged, but that on the contrary Gist Brothers Company had instituted in the circuit court of Wyoming County a suit against defendant to- enforce said lien, which suit was still pending and undetermined in said court; wherefore it was averred that under the terms and conditions of said 'contract a release of said mechanic’s lien constituted a condition precedent to any right on the part of plaintiff to maintain this action against defendant to recover the balance admitted to be due it or any other amount it might show itself entitled to receive under the terms of the contract, and that this suit ought to be quashed.

To this plea plaintiff interposed a special replication, averring that it was not altogether true, that the work done and material furnished and sued for had been done and furnished pursuant to the written contract and supplemental contracts as averred in defendant’s special plea; that in addition thereto said work had been done and material furnished pursuant to a further supplemental agreement entered into between plaintiff and defendant on the-day of September, 1913, by which, in consideration that plaintiff at great expense had shipped onto the work ample equipment etc. required to perform and complete within the time stipulated the work contemplated under the original contract, and that changes in the plans had been made by defendant after the arrival of said equipment on the ground, whereby the amount of work remaining to be done would not be sufficient to reimburse plaintiff for the cost of making such' preparation, it was. agreed between [444]*444plaintiff and defendant’s chief engineer that all the work to be done and performed east of East Elmore should be done and performed on the basis of what is described as “Force Account,” on the basis of actual cost plus ten percent, and that it was upon this supplementary agreement as well as the contracts pleaded bv defendant that said work was done and performed and labor and material furnished. And -it is further averred that the work was done and final estimates prepared and accepted by the chief engineer on ISTóvember 10, 1914, and that all bills against plaintiff other than those for which defendant was primarily liable were paid, and that there were no liens remaining against defendant or its property other than such as it was personally liable for, and that if defendant would pay and discharge its obligations no lions whatever would remain against its property by reason of the work performed under said contract; that whatever remained due the Gist Brothers Company, and for which they had filed a mechanic’s lien, was primarily the debt of defendant; that in departing from said original contracts in the classification of the work and material furnished thereunder and in making said final estimate defendant and its chief engineer had arbitrarily departed therefrom and had capriciously fixed a.n amount which did not in' any case correctly represent the amount justly due as compensation therefor; wherefore it is averred plaintiff is entitled to maintain this suit.

Upon the issues joined on these pleas the case was tried to the jury with the result already indicated. In their response to the several interrogatories submitted, covering the work of the Gist Brothers Company, as to item number one, “Clearing E. Elmore to Mullens, $933.90”; Item number two, “Grubbing E.

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Bluebook (online)
103 S.E. 293, 86 W. Va. 440, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughan-construction-co-v-virginian-railway-co-wva-1920.