Welsh v. Warren

159 S.W. 106, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1361
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 29, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 159 S.W. 106 (Welsh v. Warren) 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
Welsh v. Warren, 159 S.W. 106, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1361 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinions

By its second assignment of error the appellant surety company makes the contention that judgment should have been entered in its favor because it was discharged through the failure of the owner of the house and the contractor to perform the contract according to the agreement therein which provided that the owner was to pay the contractor for the work "the sum of $3,300 as follows: Each week during the life of this contract and progress of work estimate shall be made of actual labor done and material furnished, and owner shall pay 85 per cent of same upon said estimate in lawful money U.S. A.; remainder of contract retained by owner shall be paid in lawful money of the U.S. A. within five days after work is completed." The contract contained the agreement mentioned. The evidence admittedly shows that the contractor abandoned the contract after commencing the work, At the time the contractor abandoned the contract, the building was about two-thirds finished, having the walls and partitions up, the floors to the second story in, and the roof on. At the time of the abandonment of the contract the appellee had paid over to the contractor the total sum of $2,528; the same having been paid only as the work progressed each week and only for labor done and material furnished for the building. As to whether there was compliance with or failure of performance of the particular terms of contract complained of rests in the evidence given by appellee and Mitchell. Appellee testified that "It was agreed between Welsh and me that for the purpose of making estimates of the work, and so far as making payments was concerned, Mr. Mitchell would look after that, as superintendent to that extent. * * * I think it was $2,528 that I paid to Welsh, leaving only a balance of $772 to complete the building. * * * I did not have him to furnish me along, while he was erecting the building, with the bills for the different materials which he had purchased; I knew about practically most of the bills, but I did not take any copies of any bills. When I paid him I reserved nothing with which to pay these bills. I would not pay him just whenever he would call on me for money. As the work progressed every week Mitchell paid him the amounts. I put the money to his credit as trustee to make payments. * * * Every week he advised me of the amounts he was paying; he knew how many men they had on the job and could tell how many days' work they had put in. It was a matter of very easy calculation, what the labor amounted to, and in that way the estimates were made. * * * I did not pay up the labor in full. The purpose and intention was to keep back within the provisions of the contract all the time. I presume that the laborers were paid in full each week up to the last week, when they were not; but the material was not paid up in full; the material was never paid up in full. Each week I took an approximate estimate of everything as it went along. The superintendent would know as what his judgment was as to whether or not the proper estimates were made on the work as it progressed. * * * As to what estimates Mr. Mitchell made of the work, and whether he paid 85 per cent. of the labor and material, or whether he paid all the labor off each week, I know that after the matter was wound up (that is, when Welsh quit) there was $668.30 of labor and material that went into the building that had not been paid for by me or Welsh; and that is more than 15 per cent, which the contract says I shall keep back."

W. B. Mitchell testified as follows: "Mr. Warren asked me to look over the building and to make estimates on it and to see if anything went wrong. I am familiar with the provisions of the contract relative to making payments of 85 per cent. of labor done and material furnished. In making the estimates I estimated and paid, according to my best judgment, within the 85 per cent, and I tried to hold it to less than that. The payments were made according to my estimates from time to time. When the foreman presented his bills and pay rolls I would look over his list, and I demanded the time book; and by that means, and with my *Page 109 knowledge of the men he had on the job, passing there every day, I would arrive at the correctness of the matter. I did not keep the bills and pay rolls, but I took a receipt for the checks I gave him showing whether for labor or material." He further testified: "I would pay the men up entirely every Saturday night. In some cases I did not pay them up entirely, and in some cases I did not hold back anything. I kept the labor pretty well paid up as I went along. I paid off for part of the material that he furnished. For instance, a bill for material was furnished; I would not deduct 15 per cent. of it, but would pay it all, whatever it was. I paid their bills for freight in full. I did not deduct anything out of the bills, but would just pay their bills. * * * I paid the money directly to Mr. Cuberly, gave him a check, and he paid the bills himself. Whenever he presented a bill, for instance, he claimed he had a bill for sand or something of that sort to be paid, I made an estimate and considered whether or not he had enough to cover that within the 85 per cent.; and if he did, on my estimate, I paid it. I did the same way with reference to labor, pay rolls, making my estimates on labor done and material furnished as a whole." He further testified that he knew Welsh was getting hardware, cement, and the materials in the aggregate of $668.30, and that in making his estimates he figured these as part of the material on the ground, but no bills for said items were ever presented or paid, and according to his estimates payments were less than 85 per cent. It was shown that there was $668.30 worth of material furnished in the building at the time above the $2,528 paid the contractor and not paid for by the owner or the contractor.

The following cases seem to be authority for the proposition that the surety of the contractor would be released if advances were made by the owner to the contractor in excess of contract provisions: Ryan v. Morton,65 Tex. 258; McKnight v. Mfg. Co., 155 S.W. 977. And we for the moment assume the correctness of the decisions mentioned. The difficulty here, though, is to hold that the evidence so conclusively establishes, as assumed by the assignment, that there was such a breach of the terms of contract mentioned on the part of the owner of the house and the contractor as to require the court to say, as a matter of law, that there was a breach in respect to the points above mentioned. The judgment of the trial court involves the finding of fact against the contention made by appellant, and we would not be authorized to disturb such finding if there is evidence to warrant such finding. It is plain to be seen, we think, from the language of the provision in question, that it was not the agreement of the owner and the contractor that payments by the owner to the contractor should be in proportion only as the work bore to the completed building, nor that the owner should pay only a certain per cent. of the contract price as the building progressed. The payments were to be, as expressly provided, 85 per cent. of each weekly "estimate" made "of actual labor done and material furnished." That the payments were made weekly during the progress of the work, and only for actual labor done and material furnished, seems not to be a disputed point in the evidence. Hence the fact appearing that the building was only two-thirds completed at the time of the abandonment, in connection with the fact that $2,528 was paid of the $3,300 contract price, would not in this record be sufficient to show accelerated payments in violation of the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.W. 106, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welsh-v-warren-texapp-1913.