111 Ga. 518 | Ga. | 1900
Lead Opinion
The Hunnicutt & Bellingrath Company instituted an action against Van Hoose and Pearce, in which they alleged that the defendants owned certain land in the city of Gainesville, and that in the spring of 1896 such owners entered into a contract with G. W. Foote, who was a contractor, to erect on said land a large building to be known as an auditorium, and agreed with Foote to pay him the sum of $14,200 for said building complete. It is further alleged that such - contract was in two parts; that is, that when certain portions of the work were done the owners were to pay Foote ten thousand dollars, and if the remainder was completed, the remaining sum of $4,200 was to be paid. The petitioner further alleged that it did certain work on and furnished certain material for the building, under a contract with Foote, to wit, that it furnished all the galvanized iron, tin, slate work, and sky-light for the building; for which Foote agreed to pay it $1,148, -which was a fair market price for the sanie; that $400 of said sum has been paid, leaving an indebtedness of $748 to the petitioner for said work and material. It is further alleged, that
To this petition the defendants filed a general demurrer, which on the hearing was sustained, and the petition dismissed; To this ruling the plaintiff excepted.
Section 3643 of the Civil Code, which is but a reaffirmation of the common law, declares that a contract may be either entire or severable; that, if it is entire, the whole contract stands or falls together; if it be severable, the failure of a distinct part does not void the remainder; and that the character of the contract is to be determined by the intention of the parties. Referring to the contract now under consideration, we find that it was the purpose and intention of the parties, as expressed by its terms, that an entire and completed building, to be known as an auditorium, should be constructed, in a certain way and of specified materials, by a given day, and delivered to the owners; that this contract, included all the work necessary for its
But it is contended, inasmuch as the building was in fact completed, that under a fair construction of the statute, notwithstanding the contractor abandoned the work, the owners, ■must be held liable for labor and material to the extent of twenty-five per cent, of the amount originally agreed to be paid. We do not think so. Necessarily, to a certain extent at least, the contract for the erection of the house must be considered in fixing the rights, respectively, of the owners and the materialmen. When the statute provided that the owner should be liable to the extent of twenty-five per cent, of the contract price to materialmen and laborers, it necessarily meant that he was liable when the contractor had performed the work which he agreed to do; for, otherwise, the statute would become an instrument of oppression and a means of working gross injustice. The words are, that he shall retain twenty-five per cent, of the contract price, and it meant that he should retain it from the contractor — that is, that he should not pay him over the full contract price — when? Necessarily, when the work had been finished and the contract had been
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. Prior to the repeal of sections 2802 and 2803 of the Civil Code, one who gave out a contract for the construction of a building, and who failed to retain twenty-five per cent, of the contract price thereof until the contractor should submit to him an affidavit that all debts incurred for material in the construction of the building had been paid, or that the persons to whom the debts for material were owed had consented to the payment of such per cent., was liable to the extent of twenty-five per cent, of the contract price to a material-man for material furnished to the contractor in constructing the building, although the contract contained a stipulation to the effect that when the building should have progressed to a certain stage toward completion the owner might suspend further work thereon, and, should he elect so to do, then a stated sum should be the compensation of the contractor for the work done and material furnished up to that time, and notwithstanding the fact that when the work of construction had reached the stage mentioned the contractor abandoned it without the consent of the owner.-