56 Ga. App. 729 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1937
The record in this case is voluminous aud complicated, and the various assignments of error are, at least in part, interwoven and duplicitous, and can best be elucidated and solved by a partial statement of the pleadings and the evidence. Sam Fine brought suit against East Side Lumber and Coal Company and Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland. The petition as amended alleged in' substance, that on or about September 8, 1934, the petitioner was the owner of certain described real estate in the City of College Park, with a building located thereon in which petitioner operates a retail store; that on said date defendant lumber company entered into an agreement with the City of College Park whereby West Main Street of the city would be widened, and in so doing the building of the plaintiff (as well as the buildings of others) would be set back, altered, and remodeled; that profert is made of said contract, and same will be produced at the trial; that on the same date the defendants signed an agreement in the nature of a bond, which is attached to and made a part of the petition ; that immediately after the East Side Lumber and Coal Company discontinued the work under said contract, petitioner complained to it concerning the irregular and faulty manner in which said work had been done, and on two occasions, within thirty days after said defendant discontinued the work, petitioner demanded that the faulty condition be corrected, but defendant failed and refused to remedy the same; that said faulty condition- consisted of improper flashing and improper joining of roof on the parapet wall, including the improper replacement of hood over the awning; that by reason of the improper flashing and failure to join the roof on the parapet wall, the inside of petitioner's building and his merchandise therein were subjected to the elements, and in order to correct this situation the petitioner employed Gates Brothers, general contractors, to repair said building at an expense of $151.84, as shown by an exhibit attached to the petition; that defendant never did complete the contract in accordance with the terms thereof, and the same was not completed on February 24,
The bond attached to and made a part of the petition provides, in part, that the East Side Lumber and Coal Company as principal, and the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland as surety, are bound unto the mayor and council of the City of College Park as obligee; the condition of the obligation being that “said principal has entered into a contract with said mayor and council of the City of College Park . . for the setting back, altering, and remodeling of certain buildings on West Main Street in said City of College Park, in accordance with certain drawings, specifications, and amendments thereto, referred to in said contract, and also in accordance with the provisions, terms, and conditions of said contract, which said contract is dated the 8th day of September, 1934, and is hereby referred to and made a part hereof;” that the principal would do the work according to the contract and save the obligee from all costs and charges on account of the doing of said work; and that “for a violation of said contract recovery may be had héreon either by obligee or by any property owner whose property is to be set back, altered, and remodeled under said contract.” Each defendant demurred to the petition
The plaintiff testified that he was the owner of the building; that after the defendant contractor finished working on the building it began to rain hard, and the whole roof all the way round leaked everywhere, and damaged the hats, shoes, and everything in the store; that he called the contractor but could not make him. come, but that finally the contractor told a roofer by the name of Poss to come and fix it; that “in about a week or ten days it came another rain, and it flooded me so I couldn’t keep nothing in the windows; the ceiling was coming down, the woodwork in the windows got wet, and there was 2-1/2 inches of water in the windows ;” that he again called the contractor, who this time sent three negroes to fix the roof, and they too failed to fix it; that he called again, and “Mr. Robinson [president & treasurer of the East Side Lumber and Coal Company] told me to go ahead and hire men whom I knew would fix it;” that plaintiff then hired Gates Brothers, who properly repaired the building, and plaintiff paid Gates $151.84; that he suffered damage to his store and merchandise in the summer and fall of 1935, and the first of the year in 1936; that before the time he had the roof fixed, men’s goods, ladies’ goods, and shoes would get wet in the windows, and he would
For the purposes of this decision it is unnecessary to quote from the evidence of the defendants. The jury determined the issues of fact; and the foregoing statement as to the pleadings and the evidence shows that the verdict was authorized. It also answers most of the questions raised by the assignments of error. The defendants, in their plea of the statute of limitations, alleged that the cause of action arose more than one year before the filing of the petition and therefore was barred by the statute. The contract provided that any imperfections which developed within the year should be made good by the defendant without cost to the city or the property owner; and under this clause, if the defect developed within twelve months after the defendant discontinued work on the building, the defendant was obligated to make it good. The evidence showed that the defendant was still working on the building within less than twelve months before suit was filed. Moreover, completing the work as referred to in the contract means completing the work in accordance with the terms of the contract. The petition alleges that “within thirty days after defendant discontinued said work petitioner demanded that the faulty condition be corrected-,” and “that the defendant never did complete the contract in accordance with the terms thereof, and the same was not completed on February 24, 1936,” and that “petitioner employed Gates Brothers to finish said work.” The statement as to what work Gates Brothers did, which is a part of the petition, shows that the defendant never completed the work. Moreover, the instrument signed by the defendant, stating that payment for the work did not in any sense or to any degree constitute a waiver or release of liability “under the one-year guarantee clause or otherwise,” shows that the defendant recognized its liability for any defect that developed within a year. The evidence shows that the city settled with the defendant for the work on March 5, 1935; and that during the summer and fall of 1935, and the first of 1936, the plaintiff's building was leaking, and the defendant had
The defendant assigns error on the allowance of the plaintiff’s amendment, averring that the original petition declared upon a contract between Sam Fine, the plaintiff, and the City of College Park, and the amendment declared upon a contract between the defendant and the City of College Park; and that the petition sought damages on the theory that the defendant was guilty of faulty workmanship in connection with the completion of the contract, while the amendment sought damages on the theory that the contract had never been completed. The original petition alleged "that on or about September 8, 1934, petitioner entered into an agreement with the City of College Park,” etc. By amendment the word "petitioner” was changed to "defendant.” This does not change the cause of action because the original petition, construing it as a whole, shows that the contract was between the East Side Lumber and Coal Company and the City of College Park. The bond attached to and made a part of the petition shows that the East Side Lumber and Coal Company as principal, and the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland as suretjr, guarantee the faithful performance of the contract between the East Side Lumber and Coal Company and the mayor and council of the City of College Park; and the contract is referred to and made a part of the bond. Moreover, the first paragraph and first line of the petition names the East Side Lumber and Coal Company as defendant. It is evident from the petition that it was the defendant, 'and not the petitioner, that contracted with the city to do this work; and making the correction complained of .did not change the cause of action. Nor did the allegation in the amendment that the work was incomplete change the cause of action. The statement rendered by Gates Brothers, which is a part of the original petition, shows that the defendant had not completed the work; and Gates Brothers, employed by the plaintiff at the suggestion of the de
The motion for new trial alleges that the court erred in permitting the plaintiff to testify that he was the owner of the property in question, the objection being that a deed would be the highest and best evidence. The title to this property was an incident in the litigation, and not the object of the litigation. The contract which the defendant signed, and under which the defendant did the work, named the plaintiff as owner of the property. “If in making a contract the parties agree upon or assume the existence of a particular fact as the basis of their negotiations, they are estopped to deny the fact so long as the contract stands, in the absence of fraud, accident or mistake.” 21 C. J. 1111, § 111. “If, in making a contract or in a course of dealing, the title of one party or the other to the property involved in the transaction is recognized, and the dealing proceeds- upon that basis, both parties are ordinarily estopped to deny that title or to assert anything in derogation of it.” 21 C. J. 1238, § 244. The entire
A large portion of the motion for new trial is devoted to the contention that the work was completed more than a year before the suit was filed. We have heretofore discussed this in our consideration of the plea of the statute of limitations; but, so far as it relates to the grounds of the motion for new trial, special attention is called to the following: The petition as amended avers that the work was incomplete, in that it alleges a “failure to join the roof on the parapet wall,” and that “the defendant never did complete the contract in accordance with the terms thereof, and the same was not completed on February 24, 1936,” and that petitioner, to prevent further damage, “employed Gates Brothers to finish said work.” The evidence-of C. W. Gates shows that “part of the flashing was left off” by the defendant. The evidence of the plaintiff showed that the defendant “told me to go ahead and hire men whom I knew would fix it,” which the plaintiff did in February, 1936, approximately four months before the suit was filed in June, 1936. The evidence shows that the incomplete and defective work of the defendant which the plaintiff had corrected, developed “about June, 1935,” less than a year from the time the defendant discontinued work, and that the plaintiff notified the defendant of the defects; and the contract of the defendant specifically provided that “any imperfections resulting from faulty workmanship which may develop during said period are to be made good without cost to the city or to the representative property owners and tenants.” The evidence further shows that the final payment to the defendant for the work was made on the condition and with the written agreement of the defendant that it in no sense or in any degree relieved the defendant from liability under the guarantee in the contract or otherwise. Neither the complaint in reference to the charge of the court, nor any other ground of
Judgment affirmed.