Zindorf v. Roe

255 P. 107, 143 Wash. 266, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 617
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1927
DocketNo. 20220. Department Two.
StatusPublished

This text of 255 P. 107 (Zindorf v. Roe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zindorf v. Roe, 255 P. 107, 143 Wash. 266, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 617 (Wash. 1927).

Opinion

Parker, J.

The plaintiff, Zindorf, commenced this action in the superior court for Snohomish county seeking foreclosure of his claim of lien against land of the defendant Boe in that county, notice of which claim was duly filed in the office of the county auditor. Zindorf’s claim is for diking repair and construction work performed with his steam shovel ditcher upon Boe’s land. The amount originally claimed in Zindorf’s notice of lien was $2,765, and the original prayer for recovery in this action was also in that amount. Boe cross-complained, seeking damages in the amount of $1,000 against Zindorf upon the ground that the work per *267 formed by Zindorf was worthless and also that it was performed in snch manner as to damage his land in that amount. The whole controversy being treated as of equitable cognizance, the trial proceeded upon the merits before the court sitting without a jury and resulted. in findings and decree of foreclosure awarding to Zindorf recovery in the sum of $424.50, and attorney’s fees and costs, and denial to Boe of any recovery upon his claim for damages. From this disposition of the case in the superior court, Boe has appealed to this court.

In January, 1923, Zindorf as contractor and Boe as owner entered into a contract by which Zindorf was to do diking repair and construction work upon Boe’s land. The only provisions of the contract which seem necessary to be here noticed are the following:

“(1) That the said contractor will, with his said ditcher, excavate along the south and east sides of said dike as directed by the owner, a certain ditch approximately nine feet wide and three feet deep and will place the dirt from such ditch upon and over the present dike as directed by the owner while the work progresses.
“ (2) The contractor in doing said work will furnish his said machine and appliances and the services of sufficient help to operate the shovel and the donkey engine, including dragging and lifting lines for the skids and will also furnish his own fuel.
(3) The owner will set stakes for margins of ditch and dead men for pulling lines of ditcher and will furnish sufficient help to place skids for ditcher as rapidly as needed. . . .
(4) The work herein provided for shall begin at the end of the dike near the northeast corner of the owner’s said land and continue to the southwest corner thereof. . . .
“(8) For the said work, the owner shall pay and the contractor shall receive, the sum of thirty cents per cubic yard for all dirt moved. . . .
*268 “(10) . . . The amount of dirt to be moved under this agreement shall average at least one cubic yard per lineal foot exclusive of the portion of new dike to be constructed as hereinbefore provided.”

Zindorf proceeded with the work soon thereafter and completed, according to contract, as he claims, 1415 lineal feet of the work, this being approximately one-third of the lineal feet of the work he was to do under the contract. Zindorf claims that he then ceased work because of Roe’s failure to furnish any further help to aid in placing skids for the ditcher to move over as it progressed in doing the work, as provided in paragraph 3 of the contract.above quoted; that such needed help called for the labor of men in removing the skids from the rear and placing them in the front of the ditcher as it advanced in the course of the work, other than the power necessary for such removal which was supplied by the engine and a cable; that the help so agreed to be furnished by Roe was in the attaching of the cable to the skids in the rear, the detaching of the cable therefrom when moved to- the front, and digging for the placing, and the proper placing, of them in front; that Roe from the beginning failed to furnish sufficient help for this purpose, and finally refused to further furnish any help therefor just before the abandoning of the work by Zindorf. Roe claims that he furnished all the help required of him by paragraph 3 of the contract; that Zindorf abandoned the work, not because of any fault on his (Roe’s) failure to furnish such help, but because of his (Zindorf’s) own election and own'fault; and that the work, so far as it progressed, was so defectively done that the land was damaged rather than benefited, to the extent of $1,000. The trial court found, in effect, in favor of Zindorf and against Roe on all of these contentions; finding that Zindorf *269 had'completed 1415 lineal feet of the work according to the contract; that in doing so he removed that many yards of dirt; that he ceased work, not because of his, but because of Roe’s, fault in his failure to furnish the necessary help as agreed in paragraph 3 of the contract ; that Roe, and not Zindorf, breached the contract; and that Zindorf is entitled to be awarded for the removal of 1415 yards of dirt at the rate of thirty cents per yard, in all $424.50.

The principal contention in behalf of Roe is that the evidence does not warrant this result. To here review the voluminous evidence would be, as we think, wholly unprofitable, there being nothing but questions of fact involved in this contention. The controversy was strenuously waged upon both sides. The evidence is voluminous and much in conflict. We deem it sufficient to say that our review of the evidence, as abstracted by counsel for Roe, convinces us that we would not be warranted in disturbing the disposition of the-cause made by the decree of the trial court; that is,.we are unable to see that the evidence preponderates against that conclusion.

Some further contentions are made in support of claims of error in rulings of the trial court in the introduction and rejection of evidence, and in the denial of Roe’s motion for a new trial upon the ground of newly discovered evidence. We have examined each of these claims of error and think they are not of .sufficient merit, as presented, to warrant discussion here. We conclude that none of these rulings calls for reversal of the decree.

Contention is made in behalf of Roe that, in any event, Zindorf should not be awarded foreclosure recovery because of the excessive amount claimed in his filed notice of lien. Had Zindorf-’s counsel insisted *270 to the end of the trial on his right of foreclosure fof^the full amount claimed in his filed notice of lien, there might be some fair ground for arguing that the claim made in the lien notice and the seeking of foreclosure for the full amount thereof would evidence such bad faith on the part of Zindorf as to warrant the court in denying him foreclosure of his lien.

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Bluebook (online)
255 P. 107, 143 Wash. 266, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zindorf-v-roe-wash-1927.