Watson v. De Witt County

46 S.W. 1061, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 150, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 203
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 2, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 46 S.W. 1061 (Watson v. De Witt County) 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
Watson v. De Witt County, 46 S.W. 1061, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 150, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 203 (Tex. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Justice.

De Witt County brought this suit in the District Court of that county against A. 0. Watson as principal, and D. M. O’Connor and J. P. Schneider as sureties, upon the bond of Watson given to secure the performance by Watson of a contract entered into between him and the county of De Witt for the erection of a courthouse for said county. The plaintiff alleged that Watson breached the contract *152 by the abandonment thereof, leaving the building unfinished, so that the county was obliged to take possession and" complete the same. The damages were laid at the reasonable cost of completion of the building in accordance with the contract over and above the contract price, including attorneys’ fees and the fees of an architect, and in addition thereto stipulated damages for delay beyond the time fixed for the completion of the building were sought to be recovered in accordance with a provision therefor contained in the contract. Defendants filed certain special exceptions to the petition, which were all overruled except one addressed to the claim for attorneys’ fees, and one to the recovery of stipulated damages for delay after the county took charge of the building, which were both sustained by the court. The remaining exceptions were addressed mainly to the invalidity of the contract by reason of the alleged failure of the Commissioners Court to comply with the law in the creation of the debt for the erection of the house. This defense was set up also at length in a special answer. Defendants also specially denied that the said Watson had ever abandoned the contract, and pleaded in bar of the right of the county to treat the contract as abandoned and to take charge of and complete the building. It was also pleaded that the contract for the completion of the building was invalid because the debt therefor was created without at the same time making provision for the payment thereof.

A trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff.

The facts developed at the trial, so far as material to the questions presented on this appeal, were as follows:

1. On May 15, 1894, at a regular term thereof, the Commissioners Court of De Witt County, all the members being present, and the county then being without one, decided to build a courthouse, not to exceed the cost of $70,000, and for that purpose made an order directing the issuance of seventy bonds of the county for $1000 each to bear date at the date of issue. A proper tax was levied by the order to meet the principal and interest of the bonds, and no excess of indebtedness over the authority of the county to incur was created by their issuance. On the same day the court directed that plans for a courthouse not to exceed the cost of $70,000, with accompanying bids for the building thereof, would be received up to June 11, 1894, and ordered the publication of a notice to contractors to the same effect in three certain daily newspapers published in this State. Under the mode of competition adopted each contractor was required to submit bids in accordance with plans furnished by himself.

2. The defendant Watson, who was an architect by profession, and not a contractor, on June 11, 1894, submitted to the Commissioners Court his plans for a courthouse and a bid for the construction thereof in accordance with the plans and specifications. His expressed purpose was to build the house by a subcontract. The court was then in special session considering the several plans and bids submitted to them until June 16th, *153 when the contract for the erection of the courthouse, according to the plans and specifications filed with his bid, was awarded to Watson, conditioned upon his presentation of a bond in the sum of $50,000, payable to the county judge of De Witt County. The court then adjourned, as shown by the minutes, until “Monday, June 18, 1894, at 9 o’clock a. m., as a board of equalization.”

On June 22, 1894, the court, then being in session and a full board being present, entered into a written contract with the defendant Watson to build the courthouse. It was signed by Watson, styled as party of the first part, and the county of De Witt acting by the members of the Commissioners Court as party of the second part, subject to the presentation of the bond within twenty days to be approved by the court. At a called session of the court held July 7, 1894, a full board being present, the defendant Watson presented to the court his bond as required by the court at a previous session, and the same was approved by the court and the contract was finally affirmed and concluded, all of which was embraced in an order of the court then entered upon the minutes thereof.

3. The contract entered into between Watson and the county bound Watson, “his heirs, executors, and assigns,” for the consideration named therein by June 22, 1895, to “well and sufficiently erect, build, finish, and complete, and deliver for use in a true and thoroughly workmanlike manner to said party of the second part, a courthouse building on the courthouse square, in the city of Cuero, De Witt County, according and agreeable to the plans, drawings, and specifications for the same prepared by A. 0. Watson, architect, of Austin, Texas, copies of which are on file in the county clerk’s office and are hereby made a part of this contract.” * * * “Said courthouse building to be built in strict accordance with plans and specifications, and under direction and personal supervision of the county judge and the Commissioners Court of DeWitt County, or a superintendent to be designated by said party of the second part. If the latter, he is to be paid by the party of the second part, and the party of the first part will, at his own proper cost and expense, find and provide such good, proper, sufficient material and labor of all kinds whatsoever as shall be proper and sufficient for building and finishing said courthouse building.”

In full payment for the erection and completion of said courthouse building the county agreed to deliver to the said Watson, his heirs, executors, and his administrators or assigns, seventy courthouse bonds of the denomination of $1000 each, to run and bear interest as set out in the contract, to be issued and delivered as the work progressed, as follows: (1) Twenty bonds when the foundation of the building was completed ready for placing the first floor beams; (2) twenty bonds when the first story was finished and ready for the placing of the second floor beams; (3) twenty bonds when the third story wall was completed and ready for the placing of the ceiling beams; and (4) ten bonds, the balance in full of the contract, upon the acceptance of the building by the county.

It was further agreed that for each day after the time specified for the *154 completion of the building that it should remain unfinished, Watson should pay the county $5 as liquidated damages, provided that there should be deducted from such time all delays caused by weather, etc., of which notice should be given by the contractor. It was also agreed that time should be deducted for delay in delivering the bonds of the county as stipulated, but that such delay should not be cause for stopping work.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W. 1061, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 150, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-de-witt-county-texapp-1898.