Weil v. B. E. Buffaloe & Co.

65 S.W.2d 704, 251 Ky. 673, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 923
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 23, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 65 S.W.2d 704 (Weil v. B. E. Buffaloe & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weil v. B. E. Buffaloe & Co., 65 S.W.2d 704, 251 Ky. 673, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 923 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

A voluminous record is presented containing the consolidation of a number of suits, intervening petitions, and cross-petitions. Some of the parties are here as appellants and, of course, others as appellees. Some -occupying those stations are cross-appellants and crossappellees; the whole creating difficulty of designation other than by their names.

The case arises from the erection of the Irvin Cobb *675 Hotel at Paducah. Adolph Weil, the then owner, has conveyed an undivided interest to Henry Weil, who is also a party to the appeal. The general contractor was B. E. Buffaloe & Co., a corporation. Other contracts were madp directly by the owner for certain portions of the work, and numerous subcontracts were entered into with Buffaloe & Co. The case was elaborately prepared and submitted to the master- commissioner. His report reflects great care and unusually clear and logical conclusions. The case was briefed before him, and he made a number of personal inspections of the buildings. Exceptions to his report were argued before the judge, who overruled them except in two particulars, which offset one another. We ha've gone into the evidence, and, where it does not clearly appear that the findings of fact are correct, there is raised only a doubt, and that doubt has been resolved in favor of supporting the findings of the trial court. That is the usual rule, but in this case, where there has been such an exceptionally complete hearing below, there is all the more reason for applying the rule.

It is submitted by Weil that a demurrer to the answer and cross-petition of Buffaloe & Co. should have been sustained because the contract filed as an exhibit contradicted the allegations, in that the pleading showed that the petitioner had not complied with the terms of the contract nor brought itself within certain conditions precedent to recover under it. He further claims that the material breach of the contract there disclosed had excused further performance on his part, as it was an indivisible one. The claimed deficiency in the petition is in its essence that the contract provided the contractor should pay for all material and labor and save the owner harmless on that account; and also that, before final payment should be made or any right of action should accrue against the owner, the contractor should furnish satisfactory evidence that the work was free of claims and liens. It was also argued that before final payment there must have been a final approval of the work by the architect and a certificate to that effect furnished the owner. These things, it is said, are conditions precedent to recovery, and it was not alleged that they had been performed. The contract provided for the payment of 90 per cent, of the work and material as the job progressed. The plead *676 ing alleged that all the work had been done and the structure completed and turned over to the owner for occupancy; that the extra work in the sum of $17,043.72 had been performed. It set up a justification for not getting the architect’s approval, and alleged that the contractor had paid all claims and demands ratably, and was unable to complete their payment because of a lack of funds, but that it would satisfy them contemporaneously with the payment to it by the owner of what was owing under the contract, and that the owner would be furnished with the receipt in full and discharged from all liability when that was done. It appears that some of the claims were paid directly by the owner, and a willingness was expressed by the contractor for the owner to satisfy and pay the rest of them out of the balance owing to the general contractor.

The consideration to be given the pleading must be under the rule that substantial performance' of a building contract will support a recovery of the entire contract price, where it was undertaken to be performed in good faith; damages for incompleteness or defects being allowed and deducted. Cassinelli v. Stacy, 238 Ky. 827, 38 S. W. (2d) 980. Another rule to be borne in mind is that, where a party is prepared to clear an incumbrance out of the purchase price coincidentally with the closing of the transaction, so that the other party would acquire a clear title, no complaint will be entertained that the incumbrance was not removed earlier. Cook v. Johnson, 241 Ky. 452, 44 S. W. (2d) 547. We may pass the question of sufficiency, of the pleading in the light of those doctrines and the application of the rule that a pleading will be regarded as good after judgment if it contains allegations from which every fact necessary to maintain the action or establish a defense may be fairly inferred; that is, the curing of the defect by judgment. Rogers v. Felton, 98 Ky. 148, 32 S. W. 405, 17 Ky Law Rep. 724; Chesapeake & O. Ry. Co. v. Williams, 156 Ky. 114, 160 S. W. 769, 49 L. R. A. (N. S.) 347.

Counsel for Buffaloe & Co. point out what they regard as an error of $1,000 in the judgment due to miscalculation or a clerical misprision. It is agreed that the original contract price with Buffaloe & Co. was $360,688, and that there had been paid on this $331,648, leaving a balance of $29,020. In the original judgment *677 this sum was used as the basis for adding allowances to the contractor for extras, damages, etc., amounting to $8,267.64, as listed. This would make $37,287.64. But the judgment erroneously recited it to be $37,508.42. In a modified or corrected judgment, the balance due on the original contract is erroneously stated to be $30,-020. Here the item of allowance for gutters and elevator locks is correctly shown to be $555.50, whereas the original judgment erroneously showed these items to be $1,555.50. There is also here added $220.78 as an allowance for extra pipe trenches. As thus corrected, ■the total is $37,508.42, which was the sum awarded in the original judgment. The error in the items of gutters, etc., is apparent from the record, and it is clear that the items of $220.78 was erroneously omitted from the first judgment. It seems also apparent that, in using $30,020 in the last judgment instead of $29,020, a clerical error was made and that the correct sum to be adjudged against Weil is $36,508.42, consisting of the balance of $29,020 and extras of $7,488.42 detailed in the modified judgment. There was no change made in the judgment which allowed a total of $6,431.30 in favor of Weil on account of damages claimed against the contractor. This is a net award of $30,077.12 instead of $31,077.12 against Weil. The recprd manifests this .as a clerical misprision, which may be corrected by motion (section 517 et seq., Civil Code of Practice) and does not require a reversal of the judgment. However, the judgments in favor of the subcontractors and material-men against Buffaloe & Co., secured by different liens and assignments, are to be credited when satisfied by Weil. That is the order of court and, while Weil is not specifically directed to pay them, the authority is sufficiently implied.

The building was turned over to the owner on April 29, 1929, with a written agreement that, although it had not been fully completed, the building would be finished according to the terms of the contract. On May 1st a long list of claimed defects and unfinished parts of the building was furnished the contractor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 S.W.2d 704, 251 Ky. 673, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weil-v-b-e-buffaloe-co-kyctapphigh-1933.