Burrell Engineering & Cоnstruction Company brought suit against the Empire Mills Company to recover a balance of $882.45, on a contract for the erection of a concrete elevator, and the further sum of $150 for furnishing and installing a certain tank, the total amount claimed aggregating $1,032.45, principal. The defendant filed a plea alleging a breach of the contract on the part of the plaintiff, in that the plaintiff had failed to comply with a certain stipulation in the “brief of specifications” attached to and made a part of the contract, the stipulation rеferred to being as follows: “All gravel for concrete purposes shall be reasonably free from loam and vegetable matter. All gravel for foundation may be screened through а 2 in. ring. All gravel for bin walls, cupola walls, floors, roofs, columns shall be screened through a 1 1/4 ring.” The defendant alleged that the plaintiff had failed to screen the gravel used in the concrete foundation, and thereby had injured and damaged the said foundation in the sum of $1,000, as more particularly set forth in the plea.' The defendant claimed damages also in the sum of $2,500, because the plaintiff had, by improper construction of the said elevator, injured and damaged a brick building, near which the elevator was erected, as set forth in the plea.
The question is definitely settled in Harrison v. Kiser, 79 Ga. 588 (8), 595 (
