97 Mo. 561 | Mo. | 1888
The plaintiffs were the contractors with the exposition association for furnishing the brick and doing the brick-work upon the exposition building in St. Louis, and for which they were to receive the sum of $112,797. The contract contemplates changes during the progress of the work, and it is provided that additions to, or deductions from the work, as shown by the plans and specifications, shall be made according to the following rates : (1) Strictly hard and red brick laid in pure cement mortar, $13.50 per thousand; (2) same laid in fresh lime mortar tempered with cement, $12.30 per thousand; (3) stock brick, $40.00 per thousand; and (4) selected red brick-work for facing, $25.00 per thousand. This is a suit for the contract price, and for extra work, and for the enforcement of. a mechanic’s lien, the balance claimed to be due being $16,410.76.
1. The court, on the motion of the defendants and against the objection of the plaintiffs sent the case to a referee for trial, and of this ruling the plaintiffs complain. The account attached to the petition contains over ninety items. The first is the contract price, and the other items are for additional work for which the contract fixed the price, and there are other items for extra work. The answer, in its general scope, denies that the work done and materials furnished were of the kind and quality specified in the contract, and it then sets up and claims various credits because of deductions, and for changes made in the quality of the brick used from that specified in the contract. It denies that there is anything due plaintiffs, and there is filed with it a statement of the account between the plaintiffs and
The statute provides that the court may, upon motion of either party, or of its own motion, direct a reference “where the trial of an issue of fact shall require the examination of a long account on either side,” etc. Cases are cited which show that actions sounding in tort are not embraced in this and like statutes, though it may become necessary to consider many items of damage ; for it is considered that such items of damage do not constitute an account as the term is used in the statute. But those cases are without application here. An account is a detailed statement of the mutual demands in . the nature of a debt and credit between parties, arising out of contract or some fiduciary relation. Bouv. Law Die. The demands in this case grew out of contract, and there can be no doubt but the account is a long one within the meaning of the statute. It can make no differance that many of the prices are fixed by the same contract. Aside from the work specified in the original contract, the demands for extra work arose from time to time, when the plaintiffs were requested to, and did do such work, and the right to have credits arose when the defendant directed the omissions. The petition could not be well framed save by setting out all of these items; and on its face, the correctness of the items being disputed by the answer, it shows a proper case for reference. It is obvious that this case could not be tried except by stating a long account, and the statute was designed to facilitate the trial of just such issues.
3. The referee made these deductions' from the contract price:
“ Difference on 67,531 brick on exterior, corridor walls above roofs changed from selected red face brick to straight hard brick at $12.70..................$857 64
*569 “Difference on 42,105 brick on exterior music hall walls above roofs changed from selected red face brick to straight hard brick at $12.50.................$534 73 ”
The question is whether these walls are exterior walls within the meaning of the contract. The building is a large structure, and Music Hall is located in the center surrounded by brick walls which extend to and support the roof, which is independent of the roof over other portions of the building. There are two other inner walls, one on each side of Music Hall, each twenty feet from the walls of Music Hall, and two hundred feet in length, which extend to the top of the building, and the roof of the exposition departments rests on these walls and the outer walls of the entire building. These inner walls form corridors about twenty feet wide and two hundred feet long in the first and second stories, but the roof over the corridors is twenty to thirty feet below the roof of the other portions of the building; thus leaving open spaces, or areas, or as one witness says, they are just like a box with the cover off. The controversy is over that portion of these two interior* walls above the corridor roof.
The specifications provide: “All exterior walls (except stock brick walls hereinafter specified) will be faced with selected dark red brick,” etc. Again : “The inner walls east and west of Music Hall, forming corridors, will start on top of footings in basement, and to top of main floor will be twenty-two inches thick ; and from there to roof to be eight inches thick.” Some of the witnesses say they are exterior walls, because they are exposed to the weather. Other experienced architects deem them inner walls, and the evidence of one of them is clearly to the effect that they must be regarded as inner walls unless otherwise specifically designated. The notion th^t they are exterior walls because exposed to the weather is a narrow and technical method of arriving at the true meaning of the specifications. We
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to the trial court to enter up a judgment for the plaintiffs, including therein the two items before mentioned.