W. D. Miller Construction Co. v. Donald M. Drake Co.

351 P.2d 41, 221 Or. 249, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 446
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 351 P.2d 41 (W. D. Miller Construction Co. v. Donald M. Drake 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
W. D. Miller Construction Co. v. Donald M. Drake Co., 351 P.2d 41, 221 Or. 249, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 446 (Or. 1960).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant, Donald M. Drake Company, a corporation, from a judgment in the sum of $13,638.92 which the circuit court entered in favor of the plaintiff, W. D. Miller Construction Co., also a corporation. The case was tried without a jury and the judgment is based upon findings of fact and conclusions of law. The plaintiff maintains a plant in Klamath Falls from which it furnishes transit-mixed concrete to contractors. The defendant, on June 22, 1955, entered into two contracts with the United States Navy whereby it bound itself to build several buildings at the Klamath Falls air base. Construction of the floors, foundations and other parts of the buildings required the use of transit-mixed concrete. July 12,1955, the plaintiff and the defendant entered into a contract whereby the plaintiff agreed to deliver to the defendant transit-mixed concrete of the quality specified in the contract between the defendant and the Navy for the work just mentioned. According to the plaintiff, it supplied to the defendant in the period of July 15, 1955, to November 19, 1956, transit-mixed concrete of the required kind and of the value of $66,170.20. It alleged that of that sum $13,638.92 remained unpaid when this action was filed. The defendant not only denied that it was indebted to the plaintiff, but submitted a counterclaim in the sum of $35,515.46 which was based upon averments that the concrete which the plaintiff delivered to the defendant did not meet the terms of the agreement between plaintiff and defendant. The counterclaim also alleged:

“By reason of plaintiff’s said breach of its sub *252 contract, the performance of said prime contracts by defendant was stopped by order of the United States Navy from September 3, 1955 until October 11, 1955, and defendant sustained damages from said delay and from additional costs and expenses incurred by reason of the said breach and resulting contract changes in a total amount of $35,515.46.”

The circuit court denied the defendant’s prayer for judgment upon its counterclaim and, as we have said, awarded the plaintiff judgment in the sum of $13,638.92.

The contract between the plaintiff and the defendant bound the former to deliver to the defendant transit-mixed concrete which would meet the demands of a specification written by the United States Navy known as Bureau of Yards and Docks Specification No. 13 Yd and of another known as Federal Specification SS-A-281.

In appealing, the defendant submits eight assignments of error. We will now consider them.

The first assignment of error reads as follows:

“The court erred in denying Appellant’s motion for dismissal.”

The motion for dismissal, as expressed by the defendant’s counsel in the trial court, gave as its basis the following reason:

“* * * Plaintiff has introduced in evidence, as a part of it’s case, the purchase orders which are involved here which require Plaintiff to supply concrete meeting the contract and the specifications; that there is no proof, no evidence offered by Plaintiff to show that any of the concrete which it supplied met the specifications. Hence, Plaintiff is not entitled to recover.' There is a failure of proof, and its complaint should be dismissed.”

The second assignment of error asserts that the circuit court erred when it overruled the defendant’s *253 objections to some questions which plaintiff’s counsel propounded to Mr. W. D. Miller, the president of the plaintiff corporation. The objections urged that the questions called for expert opinion evidence and that Mr. Miller had not qualified as an expert.

Since the second assignment of error challenges the admissibility of evidence which the circuit court took into account when it denied the defendant’s motion for a dismissal, we will resolve the second assignment of error before giving attention to the first.

One of the questions which was propounded to Mr. Miller and to which the defendant objected reads as follows:

“Mr. Miller, to the best of your knowledge did any of the concrete delivered by your Company to the Drake Company, other than the amounts delivered in this 3-day period, fail to test satisfactorily?”

After the objection had been overruled the witness answered:

“A. No, the rest of the concrete, there was no question about it.”

Having given that answer Miller was asked:

“On the basis of that, Mr. Miller, will you tell us whether the concrete delivered to the Drake Company under these purchase orders were mixed in accordance with the Specifications 13 YD, and in accordance with the designs set up by representatives of the Navy with representatives of the Miller Construction Company?”

Defendant objected to the question:

“* * * for the reason and upon the ground that it is a matter of testing, a matter of expert testimony, and the conclusion of this witness—this witness is not qualified to be able to answer.”

*254 The objection was overruled and Miller answered:

“Yes, the concrete was mixed in accordance with those designs.”

Those are the questions, answers and rulings which are the subject matter of the second assignment of error.

It will be noticed from the first of the two questions that the plaintiff conceded that it delivered to the defendant during a three-day period concrete which did not meet the specifications. According to the plaintiff, .the three-day period was July 27, 28 and 29,1955. The plaintiff claims that all of its other deliveries complied faithfully with the contract and the specifications. It allowed the defendant a credit of $417.56 on account of the substandard concrete which it delivered July 27, 28 and 29. The defendant passed on the credit to the Navy and the latter accepted it. The evidence indicates that the Navy in due time accepted the buildings and, in maldng payment to the defendant, deducted from the contract sum the credit of $417.56 which we just mentioned.

We will now determine whether error was committed when the defendant’s objections to the two challenged questions were ovérruled.

The plaintiff states that Mr. Miller was not offered as an expert witness and that the questions propounded to him called for nothing except the results of the observations which he made while overseeing the performance of the contract. The plaintiff claims that expert knowledge was not needed to enable Miller to answer the questions.

Occasionally samples of the concrete which the plaintiff delivered to the defendant were submitted to Northwest Testing Laboratories in Portland, and after that concern had subjected them, to tests the Navy and *255 the defendant were given the results. At times the plaintiff was acquainted with the results. The latter were accepted without cavil by all three and were deemed authoritative.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
351 P.2d 41, 221 Or. 249, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-d-miller-construction-co-v-donald-m-drake-co-or-1960.