Wiebener v. Peoples

1914 OK 397, 142 P. 1036, 44 Okla. 32, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 633
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 25, 1914
Docket3116
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 1914 OK 397 (Wiebener v. Peoples) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiebener v. Peoples, 1914 OK 397, 142 P. 1036, 44 Okla. 32, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 633 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

THACKER, C.

Plaintiffs in error will be designated as “defendants” and defendant in. error as “plaintiff,” in accord with their respective titles in the trial court.

*34 Plaintiff, as contractor and builder, sues defendants, as owners of the property, for $869.80, with interest, thereon at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from January 13, 1910, until paid, as a balance owing for the construction of a business building at Alva, Okla., under a written contract which required defendants to pay therefor $8,917.00 plus proper charges for “extras,” which plaintiff alleges amounted to $162.80. The contract specified July 1, 1909, as the time when a certain portion and September 1, 1909, as the time when the remainder of the building should be completed, subject to allowance for delay caused by the “act, neglect or any default of the owner,” and required payment to the plaintiff of “$1,000.00 when the second floor joists are in place, and $1,000.00 when the building is ready for the finished roof, $2,-000.00 when plastering is done, and $1,000.00 when the first floor business room is ready to move into,” and final payment “within 30 days after this contract is fulfilled, or the work is finished as hereinbefore provided.” The plans and specifications, which are separately signed by both parties, were made by the plaintiff and are referred to in the other portion of the contract, and are clearly a part of the same.

All material was to be furnished. and all work to be done by the plaintiff under the supervision and to the satisfaction of defendants according to this contract, except that it provides for metal ceiling, specified portions of hardware, and a granite column to be furnished by owners, and further: “Excavations and foundations complete to joist line; will be completed to joist line by owners.” Defendants, by answer, in effect admit the contract as above stated, but deny plaintiff’s alleged performance and claim $1,543.00 as damages caused by omissions, deviations, and defects in plaintiff’s work of construction and by plaintiff’s failure to complete the building within the time specified in the contract. Plaintiff replied by a general denial of allegations inconsistent with his petition.

The evidence for plaintiff tended to show his substantial and good-faith performance of his aforesaid contract and that he *35 is entitled to charge $154.05 for “extras’’ under the contract, subject to the deductions hereinafter stated.

The evidence for defendants tended to show omission, deviations, and defects in construction which, if properly chargeable to the plaintiff, would entitle them to recoup in damages • to the amount of $161 on account of 23 vents omitted from upper rooms, also $147 on account of omitted railing and basement steps, also showing that the portion of the building which the contract recites should have been first completed was not completed until October 25, 1909, the same being of the rental value of $75 per month, and that the remaining portion of the building was not completed until November 1, 1909, the. same being of the rental value of $125 per month.

The evidence .tended to show several delays chargeable to “the act, neglect or default of the owners.”; and, although it seems doubtful if the whole delay is properly imputable to the defendants (the owners), it is possible that the state of the evidence would have warranted the court in submitting (as was done) this entire question to the jury even if time had been of the essence of the contract.

The only seriously controverted questions seem to be: (1) As to whether plaintiff should have furnished and put in the said steps and furnished and placed the said railing; (2) as to whether the building was completed within a reasonable time after allowing for such delay as is chargeable to defendants; and (3) as to whether defendants waived their right to insist on any or all of the 23 vents required by the contract — plaintiff testified they were all waived, but defendants testified that they only waived the vents upon condition of strict compliance by plaintiff with all the other requirements of the contract.

It does not appear, even from their own testimony, that defendants, who are named in the contract as owners and permissible supervisors and directors of- the work of construction, made any serious, if any, complaint as to the'manner in which the work *36 .of construction was done during its progress or until after the building was finally left to them by plaintiff as complete and after they had commenced to use the same, or until December 20, 1909, when defendants made the last payment they have made to plaintiff, unless in respect to the said railing, which they have supplied at a cost of $125, and their evidence seems uncertain as to when they made complaint as to this, especially as to the railing. They did complain in respect to a vent, which the contract apparently did not require, in a lower story toilet, and at a cost of $8 made the same to their liking.

It appears that the jury may have allowed defendants $22.51 on account of this claim of damages in the way of rentals for delay, as their verdict was apparently for that amount less than the $954.06 which plaintiff would otherwise have been entitled to recover as principal and interest to date of verdict; and the $161 for omitted vents should have been allowed or disallowed in whole, according as the jury may have found defendants did not or did waive their rights to them, while the item of $125 for the iron railing involved no controverted question of fact and was a question of law upon the contract and the undisputed facts.

The court gave the jury written instructions to which there were no exceptions which are presented for our consideration, except that it is here objected that the court should not have instructed the jury in effect: (1) That the contract in this respect was ambiguous and so as to permit it to determine from all the evidence whether said iron railing connected with the basement of the building and on the outside of the.building, valued at $125, and said two certain stairways leading from such basement, valued at $22, all of which were omitted by plaintiff and supplied by defendants, were within the terms of the aforesaid contract between the parties; (2) that only good faith and substantial performance was required of plaintiff under said contract, and so as to permit plaintiff to recover the contract price, less the difference between the value of these omitted or faultily constructed parts if they had been constructed as required by the- contract and their value *37

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Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 397, 142 P. 1036, 44 Okla. 32, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiebener-v-peoples-okla-1914.