Dempsey v. Schawacker

140 Mo. 680 | Mo. | 1897

Lead Opinion

Macfarlane, J.

This is an action on a quantum meruit for work done and materials furnished in the construction by plaintiffs for defendant, of a livery stable in the city of St. Louis, and for a mechanics’ lien on the property for $2,748.12, the balance claimed to be due.

Defendant pleaded a special contract under which plaintiff undertook to furnish the material and construct the building in question for the sum of $8,369, and charges an abandonment of the work without cause before completion, and asked judgment for $3,267 as damages for breach of the contract. He also sets up a counterclaim for $3,267, the amount he charges he was *684required to pay above the contract price, to complete the building. He also pleads the payment of a number of mechanics’ liens held by subcontractors and material men against plaintiffs as contractors, and the property of defendant.

Plaintiff by reply denies the voluntary abandonment of the contract, but charges that they y^ere unable to perform it on account of the continued interference by defendant with the work and their employees, and on account of the failure and refusal of defendant to pay stipulated sums as they became due.

The case was sent to a referee who took the evidence and reported to the court his conclusions of law and fact.. After carefully considering each controverted item in the accounts of the parties and passing upon them separately, the referee made the following summary of his conclusions:

RECAPITULATION.
Finding for plaintiff's work covered by contract.. *... $9,285 80
For extra work. 468 97
Total.$9,754 77
FINDINGS FOR DEFENDANTS.
Amount paid plaintiffs or their orders during progress of work.$ 5,722 19
Amount paid subcontractors’ judgments. 3,462 77
Amount paid to finish work. 1,986 41
Attorney’s fee. 300 00
Total.$11,471 37
‘‘Inasmuch, however, as I have found that plaintiffs were not justified in abandoning the work, they can not recover beyond the contract price, which is $8,369.”

By allowing them the contract price, plus extras, and charging them with payments made to them, to satisfy the subcontractors’ judgments, and what it cost *685to finish the building, and attorney’s fees in McLaughlin ease, the true state of the account is arrived at as follows:

FINAL FINDINGS FOR PLAINTIFFS.
Dor work done under contract price.. $8,369 00
Dor extra work... 468 97
Total.$8,837 97
FINDINGS FOR DEFENDANTS.
Paid to plaintiff’s order.$ 5,722 19
Subcontractors’ judgments . 3,462 77
To finish building.,. 1,986 41
Attorney’s fee. 800 00
Total.$11,471 37
Add interest on judgments as found, ante. 1,008 84
Total. $12,480 21
Excess allowed defondant. 3,642 34
“I accordingly recommend that judgment be entered in favor of defendant for the sum of three thousand, six hundred and forty-two dollars and thirty-four cents ($3,642.34), with interest from November 20, 1893, at six (6) per cent and costs.”

Exceptions to the report, covering nearly every special finding of the referee, and controverting the conclusions reached, were filed by plaintiffs. These were considered by the court and overruled, the report was thereupon approved and judgment rendered in accordance therewith. Plaintiffs appeal.-

I; Plaintiffs make serious complaint to the finding of the referee that they were not justified in abandoning the work from any interference, or other act or omission on the part of the defendant, yet they do not claim that the finding in that particular was not supported by substantial evidence. A large part of the brief of counsel is devoted to a consideration of questions of fact.

*686The report of the referee shows a very fair and thorough consideration of the case made, and all his conclusions of fact are well sustained by the evidence. The report, and the findings of fact clearly stated therein, were reviewed by the circuit court upon the most explicit exceptions thereto made by plaintiffs, and the report was approved and confirmed.

The conclusions of a referee on questions of fact in law cases, and the confirmation thereof by the circuit court, stand in the nature of special findings, and if supported by substantial evidence will not be reviewed on appeal. Frans v. Dictrick, 49 Mo. 95; Berthold v. O’Hara, 121 Mo. 88.

It is true the referee considered, separately, each act of alleged interference with the work on the part of defendant, and found it insufficient to authorize an abandonment, but did not expressly sum up their united effect, that is, whether all taken together were .sufficient, yet we must assume, from the general conclusion that “plaintiffs were not justified in abandoning the work/’ that the entire evidence was considered.

II. The referee finds that certain changes in the order of the work and in the specifications were insisted upon and required by defendant but that plaintiffs, at the time, made no objection to the changes and did not quit work on account of them. Plaintiff insists that evidence of a waiver was not admissible under the pleadings.

The question under the pleading is whether plaintiff had good cause to abandon the work. The ground for the abandonment is stated in the reply of plaintiff, which is the last pleading required or allowed by the code. Defendant is therefore entitled to introduce any competent evidence in rebuttal of that offered in support of the reply. We think it was competent, therefore, for defendant to prove that plaintiff consented, at *687'the time, to the interferences complained of as grounds for quitting the work.

But the referee expressly finds that plaintiff abandoned the work for the reason that defendant refused to make payments for certain amounts claimed at the time to be due. We must take this finding of fact as conclusive upon us.

III. The contract provides for the payment of installments as the work progressed. The first and second, consisting of $2,800, were paid as they respectively became due. The third installment of $2,500 was overpaid by $422.14. The fourth installment was for $1,000, deducting from which the over-payment of the third left $577.86 due. This balance defendant refused to pay. The last installment of $2,069 is made payable under the contract on the. completion of the work.

Plaintiffs gave a bond for the faithful performance of the contract and for the payment of all mechanics’ liens.

In respect of the payment of the contract price, there was an express provision that the wages of laborers, and the claims of those furnishing materials should be satisfied “so that they should have no lien upon said building and works, arid in case the said parties of' the second part shall fail to pay and satisfy all and every claim and demand against said building as aforesaid, the said party of the first part, if he deems proper so to do, may retain from the moneys due and coming to said parties of the second part, enough to pay and satisfy such claims and demands, it being, however, understood that nothing herein contained shall in any way be construed as impairing the right of the said party of the first part to hold the said parties of the second part or securities liable on their obligatory bond for any breach of the condition of the same.”

On refusal of defendant to pay the balance on the *688fourth installment, and for that reason, plaintiffs abandoned the work.

The referee found that at the time this installment ■became due there were outstanding lienable claims exceeding in amount the entire balance that would be due on the completion of the building under the contract, and that defendant was justified in refusing, further payments until these demands had been paid. Plaintiffs on the other hand insist that the bond was intended to protect and indemnify defendant against these claims and the right to withhold payments applies only to the final installment.

The referee declared the law to be that defendant had the power under the contract to withhold the fourth and also the final payment from plaintiffs, and to apply it as far as it would go to the payment of the lienable claims against his building, and that this constituted no breach of contract on his part, and that plaintiffs’ abandonment of the work because of this was not justifiable.

We entirely agree with the referee in his construction of the contract. It very clearly appears from the contract that the right to withhold payments in the circumstances mentioned was intended as a provision, in addition to the bond, for the protéction of defendant, and laborers and material men.

IV. The referee, in making up the accounts between the parties, gave defendant credit for the payment of a number of mechanics’ lien judgments against plaintiffs, as contractors, and against the property of defendant, without further proof of the correctness of the account adjudicated than the judgments themselves afforded.

In this we think the referee was right. In mechanics’ lien cases a judgment of a subcontractor, laborers or material men, against the contractor, who has been *689duly served with process, is conclusive upon the contractor in an action by the owner against him to recover the amount of .such judgment which the former, as such owner, has been compelled to pay in order to protect his property. In such case the identical question of liability is litigated, the contractor being a party to the suit, has a right to control the proceedings, and is liable over to the owner who may be required to pay the judgment. R. S. 1889, sec. 6725; Strong v. Ins. Co., 62 Mo. 299; State ex rel. v. Branch, 134 Mo. 592; 36 S. W. Rep. 226; City of St. Joseph v. Railroad, 116 Mo. 643.

Y. The referee allowed defendant the sum of $300, the amount of fees paid to attorneys for defending a suit of McLaughlin, a subcontractor, against plaintiffs, as contractors, and defendant as owner of the property.

Plaintiffs made no defense to this suit and defendant employed and paid counsel and made defense. The case was decided in favor of McLaughlin by the circuit court, and defendant appealed to the court of appeals where the judgment was affirmed.

We think defendant had the right to defend the action, plaintiff failing to do so, and to recover reasonable counsel fees necessarily paid.

While the suit was against the defendant, as well as the plaintiffs, it was the duty of the latter to defend it at their own expense. When they neglected this duty and defendant, for the protection of his own property, was compelled to make the defense, the expense should be borne by plaintiffs, whose default caused the litigation. Attorney’s fees are a necessary part of the expense. Sec. 6725; State ex rel v. Tittmann, 134 Mo. 162; 35 S. W. Rep. 579, and authorities cited.

YI. No evidence was offered by either side as to the reasonableness of the attorney’s fee paid. The *690only evidence before the court was the record of the proceedings in the case. From this alone the referee found the charge reasonable..

It is now insisted by plaintiffs that there was no evidence to sustain the charge.

The record of the proceedings in the case was evidence of the services rendered; indeed, it was the best evidence of that fact. The referee was himself a practicing attorney and member of the bar of the St. Louis Circuit Court. As a practicing lawyer in the courts in which the proceedings were conducted he had knowledge of the value of the services rendered and had the right to apply his knowledge to the facts proved. The evidence was sufficient to sustain the finding.

VII. Counsel complain that the referee and court committed error in failing to allow plaintiffs interest on their demand from the commencement of the suit. The amount of plaintiffs’ demand was found to be $8,837.97. Defendant paid prior to the commencement of the suit:

To plaintiffs’ order.'.$5,722 19
To finish building. 1,986 41
Attorney’s tees. 300 00
$8,008 60
This leaves an unpaid balance of.$ 829 37

This amount it is true was overpaid by the amount of the judgment satisfied by defendant, but the application was not made until the referee filed his report and until then the judgments bear interest. So far as these demands off-set each other interest should be allowed on both or neither. A party is entitled to interest on an account from demand, if one is made, otherwise from the service of process, or in the absence of proof of date of service, from the commencement of *691the suit. Plaintiffs are entitled to an allowance of in-* terest on $828.78 from September 17, 1887, the date of commencing the suit, at sis per cent.

A careful examination of the record and briefs of counsel discloses no other error.

The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with direction to enter judgment on the report of the referee with interest thereon to date, less the allowance of interest to plaintiffs as above indicated.

All the judges of this division concur, except Robinson, J., who is absent.





Rehearing

ON REHEARING.

Defendants ask leave to remit the interest on the sum of $829.37 from the commencement of the suit, September 17, 1887, to the date of the circuit court judgment April 25, 1894, and that the judgment for the correct amount be affirmed. On consideration we are of the opinion that such a course may better protect and preserve the rights of the parties and a remittitur will therefore be allowed, as the amount is a mere matter of calculation. And defendants now entering a remittitur for the amount of such interest, to wit, the sum of $328.52, which deducted from the amount of the judgment as rendered, to.wit, $3,733.39, leaves the correct amount of the judgment at $3,404.87, as of April 25, 1894, and for that sum the judgment is affirmed, respondent to pay the cost of the appeal, including cost of printing abstract.

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