W. W. Brown Construction Co. v. MacArthur Bros.

139 S.W. 104, 236 Mo. 41, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 197
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 1, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 139 S.W. 104 (W. W. Brown Construction Co. v. MacArthur Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. W. Brown Construction Co. v. MacArthur Bros., 139 S.W. 104, 236 Mo. 41, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 197 (Mo. 1911).

Opinion

BOND, C.

The plaintiff and defendant are each corporations engaged in construction work. The defendant had a contract with the Illinois Central Railroad to do a certain construction work in Kentucky. It thereafter entered into a sub-contract with the plaintiff corporation, employing it to do a portion of the work, described in the contract, for the prices therein named: to-wit, ‘ ‘ earth excavating, 19y2 cents per cubic yard; clearing, $25 per acre; grubbing, $8 per station.” This contract between the parties to this suit was in the form of a letter addressed by plaintiff to defendant upon May 30, 1902, and an acceptance endorsed thereon by defendant. It contained a provision, to-wit, “All in accordance with the specifications [46]*46and to the satisfaction of the chief engineer of construction of the Illinois Central Railroad Company.” After some delay in obtaining “access and right .of way” to and over the grounds where the work was to be done, plaintiff engaged in the performance of the work. During the progress of the work of excavating, the plaintiff reached a substance termed ‘ cemented gravel,” more difficult and expensive in excavation than earth. Plaintiff called defendant’s attention to the quality of this substance, and proposed to stop work until an agreement was reached as to payment for excavating the same.

The evidence tends to show that there was an agreement reached, that plaintiff should go forward with the work and should be allowed the reasonable value of excavating the “cemented gravel.” With this .understanding the work was performed, and plaintiff received payment therefor according to the terms of the contract between the parties, except as to the work done of excavating the ‘ ‘ cemented gravel, ’ ’ which was paid for at the price of excavating earth. Plaintiff demanded in addition a further sum equal to the reasonable value of performing that work. Plaintiff further demanded that it should be allowed the cost and expense of “assembling teams and wagons” for the doing of the work in question and being compelled to hold them in readiness during the delay occasioned by the defendant’s failure to procure for. plaintiff “access and right of way” to the property within a reasonable time after defendant had required plaintiff to be ready with “men and teams” and other appliances for doing the work.

Upon the failure of the defendant to comply with these demands, the present suit was brought in a petition containing five counts. Three of the counts were dismissed or nonsuits taken therein on the trial. Copy of the petition and summons was personally served upon the defendant to the April term, 1904, of [47]*47the circuit court of the city of St. Louis. The defendant made default, and judgment was rendered accordingly on the first and third counts of the petition. The first count of the petition alleged, in substance, that defendant on or about the 30th of May, 1902, employed plaintiff to do the excavating in and about Capp’s Cut, on the Illinois Railroad; that plaintiff, excavated 9166 cubic yards of a material known as “cemented gravel,” the reasonable value of which was seventy-five cents per cubic yard, and prayed judgment accordingly. The third count alleged cause of action against defendant for failure to procure the right of way and access to the grounds on which said work was to be done at the time indicated by defendant, whereby plaintiff was put to the cost and expense of $2261. The items, dates and particulars of all of which were incorporated in said third count, as follows:

“June, 1902.
Twenty-five teams ... .10 $ 4.00 per day each... .$1000.00
Supt................10 3.50 ................ 35.00
Timekeeper .........10 2.00 ................ 20.00
1 Traction engine ......15 10.00 ................ 150.00
1 Grader .............15 5.00 ...'....... ..... 75.00
12 Wagons ............15 .25 per day each.... 45.00
12 Wagons ............15 .25 per day each.... 45.00
July, 1902.
1 Traction engine ......26 $10.00 ................$ 260.00
1 Grader .............26 5.00 ................ 130.00
12 Wagons ............26 .25 ................ 78.00
Aug., 1902.
1 Traction engine ......26 $10.00 ................$ 260.00
1 Grader .............26 5.00 ................ 130.00
12 Wagons ............26 .25 ................ 78.00
Total ............. .......................$2261.00
“Wherefore plaintiff prays judgment for said sum of $2261 and interest thereon.”

The court appointed a referee “to examine into and assess the damages in this case.” After taking proof, the referee reported, recommending judgment [48]*48in favor of plaintiff on the first count for $5087.13, and on the third count for $1156 — total $6243.13 with interest from March 19, 1904. In reaching his conclusions on the second count, the referee excluded from view the cost and expense “for delaying the graders and traction engine, amounting to the sum of $1005,” hut allowed all the remaining items of the account set forth in the third count of plaintiff’s petition.

On hearing of the evidence before the referee, it was not shown that any copy of the specifications of the contract between defendant and the railroad was exhibited to plaintiff at the time of the contract made between plaintiff and defendant, or at any othér time “before plaintiff encountered the ‘cemented gravel’ and refused to do further work unless it was to be paid therefor.” There was evidence tending to show the defendant agreed to pay plaintiff a reasonable value for doing the work of excavating the “cemented gravel.”

Exceptions to the referee’s report were filed by both parties and overruled. Motions for new trial filed by both parties were also overruled, and both perfected their appeals to this court — the plaintiff from so much of the finding of the referee as excluded any allowance for the delay of the graders and traction engine; and the defendant from the judgment against it on the first count.

I. The two appeals taken in this case present for review the question of the correctness of the affirmance of the referee’s report on the first and third counts of plaintiff’s petition.

Taking these in order. The default made by the defendant, after personal service, in this action was an admission on its part ©f every traversable allegation contained in the first count of plaintiff’s petition, and precluded the defendant from controverting thereafter any sufficiently stated cause of action contained [49]*49in said connt. [Barclay v. Picker, 38 Mo. 143; Lombard v. Clark, 33 Mo. l. c. 309; Price v. Page, 24 Mo. l. c. 67.]

In considering this count of the petition, the referee should have confined the testimony of the defaulting defendant to evidence tending only to mitigate or diminish the damages, and should have excluded all testimony or evidence tending in any manner to controvert the cause of action stated in this count of the petition, for that was admitted and confessed by the default of the defendant.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dugan v. Trout
271 S.W.2d 593 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1954)
Phelps v. Fenix
134 S.W.2d 84 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1939)
Fawkes v. National Refining Co.
108 S.W.2d 7 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1937)
Electrolytic Chlorine Co. v. Wallace & Tiernan Co.
41 S.W.2d 1049 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1931)
McClure v. National Bank of Commerce
172 S.W. 336 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1914)
Grooms v. Morrison
155 S.W. 430 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 S.W. 104, 236 Mo. 41, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-w-brown-construction-co-v-macarthur-bros-mo-1911.