W. W. Howell, Jr., owning a lot on which he desired to have a house built for him, entered into negotiations with John Ayers, president and the only paid employee of Ayers Enterprises, Ltd., a corporation, for the construction of the house. Howell and the corporation entered into a written contract which provided that "John C. Ayers, Pres., Ayers Enterprises, Ltd., does hereby agree to provide the supervision to construct” the house on a cost-plus-15% basis. John Ayers entered upon performance of the work, hiring the subcontractors, supervising them, etc., and after substantial sums of plaintiff’s money had been expended, Howell discharged Ayers and his corporation because of faulty construction work and failure to follow the construction plans. Howell then contracted with another construction company to complete the house and to correct as many of the defects as was economically feasible, although there were many defects which were not economically feasible to correct.
Howell subsequently instituted the present action against Ayers Enterprises, Ltd., and its president and agent, John Ayers, who actually supervised the work, seeking to recover damages resulting from deviation from the plans and unskilful and *900 negligent supervision of the work. At the close of plaintiffs evidence, the trial court directed a verdict for both defendants, and plaintiff appeals. Held:
1. (a) "As a general rule, there is implied in every contract for work or services a duty to perform it skilfully, carefully, diligently, and in a workmanlike manner.” 17 AmJur2d 814, Contracts, § 371. Accord:
Doster v. Brown,
(b) The evidence here did not demand a finding that the supervision of the construction work was performed with a reasonable degree of care, skill and ability.
2. There is no merit in the contention that plaintiff took two checks from defendants in full accord and satisfaction of the entire claim. The evidence shows that defendants were drawing on plaintiffs bank account to pay subcontractors and materialmen, that more money had been drawn out than was owed, that some of the money was used to pay accounts on another house, and that the two checks given plaintiff were for these two items of overpayment. Under these circumstances a finding was not demanded that the entire claim sued upon was precluded by accord and satisfaction. See
Armour v. Ross,
3. Since no sufficient basis has been made to appear to sustain the trial court’s direction of a verdict in favor of the defendant corporation, which was a signatory to the contract, that judgment must be reversed.
4. Similarly, since the evidence is sufficient to show misfeasance and negligence on Ayers’ part in undertaking to supervise the construction work as the servant and employee of the corporation, the jury could properly have found him personally liable, it being no defense that he was acting in a representative capacity for the corporation or that the damages were occasioned by breach of duty imposed by a contract between the plaintiff and defendant Ayers’ employer.
Owens v. Nichols,
5. Appellee’s contention that appellant elected to sue on the contract and thus could not at the same time proceed for negligence in the performance of the contractual duty to build with skill and in a workmanlike manner is without merit. Code § 3-114, as amended by Ga. L. 1967, pp. 226, 247;
Cox v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
Judgment reversed.
