EFFIE JONES BICKEL and COMMERCE TRUST COMPANY, a Corporation, Executors Under the Will of A. BICKEL, Appellants, v. ARGYLE INVESTMENT COMPANY, a Corporation, E. SHUKERT, and COMMERCE TRUST COMPANY, a Corporation
Division One
November 19, 1938
121 S. W. (2d) 803
Furthermore, “the mere fact that allegations of new facts essential to constitute a cause of action, and necessitating new and additional evidеnce to support same, are introduced in the petition by an amendment does not brand the amendment as introducing or substituting a new cause of action.” [Hudson v. Railroad, 173 Mo. App. 611, l. c. 633, 159 S. W. 9.]
The third amended petition is not departure from the original petition, and the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded. It is so ordered. All concur.
Watson, Ess, Groner, Barnett & Whittaker for appellants.
The cause was referred, and the referee found for defendants. Plaintiffs filed exceptions to the report of the referee. These were overruled, the report confirmed, and final judgment entered in favor of defendants. After the usual steps, plaintiffs apрealed.
A. Bickel, deceased, filed this cause August 19, 1926. Bickel died April 29, 1930, and the cause was revived December 11, 1930, in the name of the executors under his will. The cause is based on a written contract executed December 8, 1924, between Bickel, operating under the name of The Bickel Contracting Company as first party and defendants, Argyle Investment Company and Shukert, as the second party.
Defendants, Argyle Investment Company and Shukert, contemplated adding six storiеs to the then four story Argyle building at Twelfth and McGee streets, in Kansas City, Missouri, and the contract concerned the addition of the six stories. The contract recited that defendants, Argyle Investment Company and Shukert, proposed to construct the six stories “in accordance with preliminary plans and sketch elevation, both of which are herewith submitted and approved, and specifications covering details which are hereto attached,”
The contract provided, among other things, that Bickel was to furnish architectural service and certain stenographic service, and was to receive $30,000 “as a fee” for the services performed by him. The contract recites that Bickel estimated that the cost of the improvement would be $285,000 and that he guaranteed that “the cost will not exceed that sum,” and agreed thаt if the cost exceeded that sum, he would pay on such excess a sum not to exceed $15,000. The contract also provided that if the cost was less than $285,000, then Bickel was to have, in addition to the $30,000 fee, “one-half of such saving.”
April 15, 1925, the parties entered into what was termed an “addenda to contract for loft building.” The addenda concerned “the construction of tenant partitions which are not included in loft building estimate or fee.” Compensation for looking after the construction of the tenant partitions was to be “cost plus ten per cent.”
The cause is based on the contention that the construction of the six stories, called the loft building, exclusive of the work called for in the addenda, was $30,450.54 less than $285,000, and that, under the contract, Bickel was entitled to recover a judgment for $15,225.27, one-half of the alleged saving, and was entitled to have the judgment declared a mechanic‘s lien on the described premisеs, and superior to the lien of the deed of trust mentioned.
As stated, the cause was filed August 19, 1926. At the September Term, 1926, defendant, Commerce Trust Company, as trustee in the deed of trust, filed answer, alleging that the deed of trust given by the Argyle Investment Company to it as trustee, on December 1, 1924, was to secure a bond issue of $600,000; that the indebtedness secured by the deed of trust was unpaid; and that the lien of the deed of trust was superior to any claim by Bickel. The answer denied generally othеr allegations of the petition. Defendants, Argyle Investment Company and Shukert, filed general denials at the September Term, 1926. Nothing further appears to have been done until October 16, 1928, when Hon. John D. Wendorff, a member of the Kansas City Bar, was appointed referee by agreement. As stated, Bickel died April 29, 1930, and the cause was revived in the name of his executors, December 11, 1930, and on April 3, 1931, the referee
The amended answer alleged that Bickel was negligent in the discharge of his duties, and that as a result defendants, Argyle Investment Company and Shukert, sustained and sufferеd damages far in excess of the amount claimed by Bickel. The items of alleged damage are set out at length in the amended answer, and total $43,004.20. Also the amended answer alleged that Bickel was not entitled to the $30,000 fee paid to him. An accounting was asked; also a judgment over was asked against the executors as such “for the amount found to be due on account of such damages, credits, and over payments.” The claim for judgment over was abandoned, and the alleged damages were invoked only to defeat Bickel‘s claim for the $15,225.27 and interest.
For reply (filed June 2, 1931) to the amended answer plaintiffs filed general denial, and then alleged that defendants were served with process August 19, 1926, and that at the September Term, 1926, each of the defendants filed general denials for answers, and alleged further, among other things, that defendants, Argyle Investment Company and Shukert, were barred by the one-year Statute (
The referee filed his report May 26, 1934, and plaintiffs filed exceptions on May 29, 1934. It appears that the chief items of alleged damage claimed by defendants, Argyle Investment Company and Shukert, were based on alleged defective plumbing and on an inadequate heating system installed under the supervision of Bickel, in the Argyle building. These were installed by McKinley Plumbing & Heating Company. August 15, 1927, the McKinley cоmpany filed suit against defendant, Shukert, to recover $6693.52, a balance claimed on plumbing and heating work at the Shukert building, Twenty-sixth Street and Grand Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri. February 25, 1928, the McKinley company filed suit against defendants, Argyle Investment Company and Shukert, to recover $7429.17, a balance claimed on plumbing and heating work at the Argyle building. The McKinley company was adjudged a bankrupt before either of these cases was tried, and afterwards both suits were settled by payment of $4500 tо the trustee of the bankrupt estate of the McKinley company. December 29, 1934, and after the referee had filed his report, and after exceptions thereto were filed, and after the cause was
It is conceded, in effect, that plaintiffs are entitled to recover if defendants, Argyle Investment Company and Shukert cannot defeat the Bickel claim on the defense set up in the amended answer.
These questions are presented: (1) Was Bickel respоnsible, under his contract and the evidence, for any damages that defendants, Argyle Investment Company and Shukert, may have sustained by reason of defective work or material connected with the plumbing and heating installation by the McKinley company? (2) Are defendants, Argyle Investment Company and Shukert, barred by laches from relying upon the defense alleged in the amended answer? and (3) Did the trial court abuse its discretion in refusing to reopen the case to permit the intrоduction of evidence relative to the two McKinley company suits?
Hereinafter, when we use the term defendants, we have reference to defendants, Argyle Investment Company and Shukert.
Was Bickel responsible, under his contract, for any damages that defendants may have sustained by reason of defective work or material connected with the plumbing and heating installation by the McKinley company? It appears from the evidence of Hal C. Brent, defеndants’ witness, son-in-law of Shukert and secretary-treasurer of defendant, Argyle Investment Company, that the McKinley company, since about 1903, had “taken care of, done all of Mr. Shukert‘s plumbing and steam heating work,” and that defendants desired that this company do such work in the proposed addition to the Argyle building; that defendants “made it very plain” to Bickel that the McKinley company was “to have this work on this building, on the Argyle building.” Also, it appears from the evidence of Brent that hе called to Bickel‘s attention that the McKinley company was not installing a sufficient heating system, and that Bickel told him to see Mr. McKinley; that he saw McKinley, and that McKinley said that “we will put in a larger—we will put in a whole unit;” and that he (Brent) told McKinley “that will not do.”
The referee found that “before the plumbing and heating contractor (McKinley) started to work, he informed Benjamin Natkin, a practicing engineer for heating plants in Kansas City, of the plan for heating the six additional stories, and was advised by Natkin that same was impractical and would not work; . . . that
In the referee‘s report it is stated that Bickel claimed that “the troubles (as to plumbing and heating) did not exist, but that they were defendants’ own fault due to failure to operate properly.” The referee found that such claim was unfounded. After reviewing the evidence, the referee on the question of Bickel‘s liability, closed the subject as follows:
“The inquiry now becomes pertinent, as to whether Bickel is chargeable with any default in the performance of his agreed services, in connection with McKinley‘s failure to properly install the heating and plumbing systems—for Bickel was not to install them himself. He was only to arrange for same and to perform the necessary service in the execution of what he had arranged, just as a general contractor would. I find the facts to be as follows: The record convicts Bickel of the grossest neglect of an inattention (attention) to his duties. So far as this record shows, though defendants’ agent, he discovered none of the defects complained of, but shut his eyes to all of same.
We find nothing in the contract, or in the evidence to support the contention that Bickel was not liable for the defective work done by the McKinley company. The referee and the trial court so found, and we agree.
Are defendants barred by laches? As appears above this cause was filed August 19, 1926, and that at the September Term (1926) of the court, defendants answered by a general denial; and that amended answer setting up the defense of defective plumbing and heating was not filed until May 20, 1931, a year and twenty-one days after Bickel‘s death (April 29, 1930). Plaintiffs say in their brief that at the time this cause wаs filed defendants were in possession of all the facts (and they were), and that had they not delayed nearly five years, and until after Bickel‘s death to bring forward their defense, Bickel “could have assembled the evidence to defeat those claims;” that “the conduct of defendants in delaying the assertion of the affirmative matter contained in their amended answer nearly five years and until after Bickel‘s death, had the effect of depriving Bickel and these appellants of assembling the evidence with which to defeat those claims, and to permit those claims to be asserted, affirmatively for the first time after Bickel‘s death and nearly
It appears that during the taking of evidence before the referee, Bickel (then represented by counsel other than here) regarded the cause as оne at law, while defendants, the referee and the trial court, regarded the cause as one in equity. Regardless of Bickel‘s contention, during the trial, that the cause was at law, his theory was not adopted, and he had to proceed as though in an equity forum, and we so proceed (without deciding) as though the cause is on the equity side of the court. Defendants make the point that laches was not pleaded, and, therefore, not in the case. The time thаt elapsed from the filing of the petition until the filing of the amended answer is shown by the pleadings and the record proper. No objection, on the ground that laches was not pleaded, was made to the evidence showing delay. In the situation we think the question of laches should be considered. [Ilgenfritz v. Mo. Power & Light Co., 340 Mo. 648, 101 S. W. (2d) 723, l. c. 726, and cases there cited.]
Laches “cannot be invoked to defeat justice, and it will be applied only where the enforcement of the right asserted would work injustice.” [21 C. J., sec. 212, p. 214.] “The defensе that a claim is stale is purely an equitable one, and unless there is some natural justice back of it a court of equity will not entertain it.” [Bucher v. Hohl et al., 199 Mo. 320, l. c. 330, 97 S. W. 922.] Before laches can be invoked, “the delay must have been such as practically to preclude the court from arriving at a safe conclusion as to the truth of the matters in controversy, and thus make the doing of equity either doubtful or impossible.” [21 C. J., sec. 219, p. 223.] Mere lapse of time is not sufficient to support laches. [Lindell Real Estate Co. v. Lindell et al., 142 Mo. 61, 43 S. W. 368.]
Plaintiffs say that they were at a disadvantage because of Bickel‘s death. The record shows that McKinley, as a witness for plaintiffs, testified at length. McKinley‘s evidence covers about 225 pages of a 1130 page record. He vigorously maintained that there was nothing wrong with the plumbing and the heating. Likely no one was more familiar with the work the McKinley company did than McKinley himself. We are quite clear that plaintiffs had no just ground to complain on laches, and that defendants’ defense was not barred by laches.
Did the court abuse its discretion in refusing to reopen the case to permit the introduction of evidence relative to the two McKinley company suits and their settlement? The record shows that plaintiffs knew about the McKinley Company suits at least two years before the motion to reopen was filed. However, present counsel for plaintiffs did not come into the case until July, 1934, and it аppears that present counsel for plaintiffs, after coming into the case, had
Counsel for defendants resisted reopening the case, claiming that the showing as to the two McKinley company suits did not justify reopening. It appears that if the case had been reopened it would have been necessary, according to defendants’ counsel, to refer it back to the referee, and that the additional evidence would have been rather extensive.
During the hearing on the motion to reopen the court said: “I am making a statement of the status of the case since it reached me on this hearing on the referee‘s report. There seemed to be no disрosition at all on the part of either attorney at the time it came before me to introduce further testimony. They had a voluminous record and they both thought the matter was concluded, except upon the question of confirming the report or not. Now I feel disinclined to reopen this case. It is practically reopening it extensively.”
“The reopening of a case after both sides have closed to permit the introduction of other testimony is a matter largely within the discretion of the trial court, and unless it appears that such discretion has been abused in that injury has resulted therefrom to the party complaining it will not be interfered with.” [Buck v. St. Louis Union Trust Co. et al., 267 Mo. 644, 185 S. W. 208, l. c. 213, and cases there cited.]
The offerings made by plaintiffs on the motion to reopen do not disclose that, in settling the McKinley company suits, defendants settled for the matters and things set up in the amended answer. It appears that both suits were settled by paying $4500. The McKinley suit against Shukert to recover $6693.52, concededly did not concern the Argyle building, and there is no showing what part of the $4500, if any, was considered as applying in the suit concerning plumbing and heating work in the Argyle building. There was no counterclaim filed in either of these cases. The answer in each was a general denial. In a deposition of Shukert, taken in the $6693.52 suit against Shukert only, it appears that Shukert contemplated filing a counterclaim, but such was not filed. However, this suit, as stated, did not
The trustee of the bankrupt estate of the McKinley company executed a release as to the two McKinley company suits on payment of the $4500. This receipt is to the effect that the two suits and “all other controversies” so far as the trustee was concerned, were settled.
On the hearing of the motion to reopen, the court remarked upon the length of time this cause had been pending (from August 19, 1926, to December 29, 1934). We do not think that the trial court abused its discretion in overruling the motion to reopen.
In the reply to the amended answer plaintiffs, as appears, supra, pleaded that the defenses set up in the amended answer were barred under
The judgment should be affirmed and it is so ordered. Ferguson and Hyde, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by BRADLEY, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
JOHN H. STOLLHANS v. THE CITY OF ST. LOUIS, a Municipal Corporation, Appellant.
121 S. W. (2d) 808.
Division One
November 19, 1938.
