Webb v. Cobb

288 S.W. 897, 172 Ark. 255, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 29, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 897 (Webb v. Cobb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webb v. Cobb, 288 S.W. 897, 172 Ark. 255, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 66 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

Smiti-i, J.

Appellant was the general contractor for the construction of a four-story steel and brick building and an additional story on an old building for the Woodmen of Union, a negro fraternal organization in the city of Hot Springs. Appellant and appellee entered into the following written agreement:

“Hot Spring National Park, Ark., “April 29, 1924.
“I, J. C. Cobb and Company, do hereby agree to build complete all brick work, terra cotta, and tile for the outside walls of the proposed W. O, U. bank and office building and the fourth story of the present building, corner Gulpha and Malvern Streets, city, in keeping with the plans and specifications furnished by W. T. Bailey, architect, for the sum of $8,250, to be paid as follows:
“For the first story $1,000; during and completing the second story $1,500; during and completing the third story $1,700. And for the completion of the fourth floor and parapet walls complete, $4,000. All of which is to be done in a workmanlike manner and subject to the usual conditions.
“John L. Webb, Principal.
“J. C. Cobb, Contractor.”

After the execution of this contract, appellee commenced work, but, after a few weeks, discovered, according to his contention, that the spacing and openings in the steel work were irregular and not uniform, and that the uprights were out of plumb, and the brick and terra cotta would not fit and fill the openings without extra chipping, cutting and reshaping, and changing the levels of many of the horizontal pieces of steel. When this condition was discovered, according to appellee’s contention, it was seen that it was impracticable and impossible to follow the plans and specifications in building the walls with the materials furnished by appellant, and it was therefore agreed to abandon the written contract, and a new oral contract was made. This oral contract provided that appellee should furnish the labor for building' the outside walls, without plans or specifications but under the directions of a superintendent employed and furnished by appellant, for the same price stipulated in the written contract, towit, $8,250, and appellant was to pay an additional charge for chipping, cutting and finishing the brick and terra cotta to fit the openings or spaces in the structural frame steel work of said building, and for all extra brick work done in and about the building.

Appellant’s contention is that the steel framework and the terra cotta blocks were properly constructed, and that all trouble encountered by appellee was dire to his own fault in improperly building his brick and terra cotta walls so that they were not plumb and in disregarding the terra cotta plans and the numbers on the terra cotta blocks which were intended to show where each of the blocks was to be placed in the structure, and that the written contract was not changed. Appellant also contends that appellee did no extra work except the construction of a smokestack at an agreed price of $900. Appellant alleged in his answer that appellee had abandoned the work without cause after having been paid more than he had earned under the contract, and appellant was required to employ another contractor to complete the job, thereby increasing the cost of the work to a sum largely in excess of the contract price, and a judgment for this excess was prayed in a cross-complaint filed by appellant.

The cause was submitted to the jury under instructions covering the two theories of the case, and there was a verdict and judgment for appellee in the sum of $2,500, from which is this appeal. Appellant has abandoned the allegations of his cross-complaint.

The steel framework of the new building and the concrete foundations for this work were in place when appellee began operations.

Appellee testified that the steel was out of plumb, and gave as his reason for saying it was not plumb' that his brick ran into the steel flanges at the second story, and at every other story. He testified that his brickwork was plumb, and, if the steel had been plumb, he would not have run 'into it with his brickwork, but he admitted that he never dropped a plumb line to get his starting point. He also testified that he properly placed the terra cotta blocks, and they did not fit. A number of witnesses corroborated appellee in these statements.

The testimony on appellant’s behalf is in conflict with this testimony, but the verdict of the jury is decisive of the conflicts in the testimony as to the cause of the trouble.

When appellee was called as a witness in his own behalf, he offered in evidence the written contract set out above, and objection was made to its introduction unless and until' the plans and specifications there referred to were also'introduced in evidence. Appellant, while denying that there was a second or oral contract, insists that, if there were, it was.still necessary to introduce the plans and specifications to determine what work done by appellee was called for in the contract; in other words, it could not be definitely known what part of the work was extra without knowing what work was contemplated in the plans and specifications with refer.ence to which the written contract was made. By numerous objections to testimony and the instructions which were given, and by exceptions to the refusal to give other instructions, appellant preserved this point throughout the trial.

Appellee insists that he is not suing on the written contract, but on a subsequent oral contract; and he also insists that the testimony shows the work which the plans and specifications required him to do, and also the extra work called for by the plans.

Appellee makes two answers to appellant’s insistence that appellee should have offered in evidence the plans and specifications. The first is, as stated, that the suit was not based thereon, and the second is that the testimony does not show that appellee was in possession of a copy of the plans and specifications, but does show that appellant was in the possession of the original of the plans and specifications and might have introduced them, and we are unable to say that the testimony does not support appellee in both these contentions.

We think the court was correct in holding that appellee’s right to recover was not dependent on the written contract, for, according to- his contention, it had been superseded by a subsequent oral contract, and he had the right therefore to sue upon the oral contact.

One of the principal items for extra work involved in this appeal is for the construction of the pilasters. Appellee admits that the pilasters were shown on the original plans, but, when the plans were submitted to him, appellant stated that he did not want the pilasters, and for appellee to take no account of them in making his hid, yet, according to appellee, appellant changed his mind as the work progressed, and decided that he did want the pilasters, and directed appellee to build them, but this direction was not given until after the abrogation of the written contract. Appellant objected to this testimony, and insists that it is a contradiction of the written agreement by oral testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 897, 172 Ark. 255, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-cobb-ark-1926.