51 Neb. 740 | Neb. | 1897
During the year 1891 the plaintiff in error, the school district of Beatrice, entered into a contract with one W. G. Smith to erect for it two schoolhouses, the amount to be paid therefor, as expressed in the contract, being the sum of $14,605. ' W. 0. Smith, at or about the same time, entered in a contract with the defendant in error by which the party last mentioned agreed to do all grading and excavating, also all stone and brick work necessary to be done in or about the erection of the two schoolhouses, and was to receive therefor the sum of $8,200. At sometime during the progress of the work by the parties on the schoolhouses, W. G. Smith abandoned the contract and absconded, and the completion of the work
During the progress of the work under the contract there had been labor performed and material furnished by defendant in error as subcontractor, on which estimates had been made by the architect and delivered to the main contractor, aggregating an amount of which the fifteen per cent retained by the school district was in total $817.50. This last mentioned amount was one of the items of the defendant in error’s claim of which he sought a recovery in this action. One question to be settled is, c.ould he assert and maintain this portion of his demand? It cannot be said that he was entitled thereto because of any contract with the district, for he had none with it. His contract was with Smith, the original contractor. By the terms of the contracts defendant in error was to receive payment for his services and materials from the contractor, and the contractor was to be paid by the school district. That a party contracts with one to perform labor and the one employs another to do the work does not authorize the latter after
It is also argued that the rule “Where a party makes a promise to another for the benefit of á third person, such third person may avail himself of the promise and bring an action thereon, although the consideration did not move direct to him,” is applicable and may be invoked by the defendant in error as against the school district. There were no portions or elements of the contract between Smith, the original contractor, and the district which can by any allowable process of construction be said to contain any promise by the district, made for the benefit of the subcontractor, on which he would be entitled to institute a suit against the district; hence the doctrine to which reference has been made is of no force here.
The agreement of the district with the original contractor to the extent it provided for the retention of the fifteen per cent of the amounts of estimates had several purposes, to insure the district against the claims of laborers and material men, that they should be paid by the contractor, also to enforce the completion of the buildings according to contract, all prior to the payment of the fifteen per cent retained. With the due course of fulfillment of either purpose, the defendant in error could not interfere in a direct suit at law, instituted by him against the school district. After the contractor abandoned this contract and departed this, so far as the record discloses, for another and unknown clime, his bondsmen
“We, the bondsmen of W. C. Smith for the erection of the two schoolhouses in Beatrice, now under course of construction, hereby authorize and instruct T. P. Thomas, who has the excavation, stone and brick work from said Smith on said buildings, to go ahead with his part of said contract; and in consideration that said Thomas goes ahead and carries out his contract with said Smith, we agree to carry out the contract of said Smith with said Thomas, and as fast as the estimates are made upon the work of said Thomas, we authorize and order the school board of the city of Beatrice to pay the money on such estimates directly to said Thomas.
“Dated October 30, 1891.”
On the instrument, over the signatures of all but one of the members of the school board, appeared the following: “We hereby accept the above order, but by doing so we do not in any manner release the bondsmen of said Smith, nor relieve them or him from liability on his contract or on his said bond.” It is urged that this conferred the right on the subcontractor to collect the fifteen per cent, which had been retained by the school district, of the estimates made and paid in part as provided in the contract during the time the original contractor remained in charge. This, we think, is not tenable. The instrument, which we have just quoted, clearly refers to future and not past transactions, and could by no fair or even strained construction of its terms be given a meaning by which it could be said to be a direction or authorization by the bondsmen to pay the fifteen per cent due, or to become so on any of the past transactions to the subcontractor, and an agreement by the district so to do.
With regard to the other questions raised and argued
Some labor was performed and material furnished by defendant in error after the bondsmen quit the work and the school district took charge of it. One of the questions presented is with reference to this part of the account and its payment, whether only eighty-five per cent or all of it It is clear from the evidence bearing on this point that the whole of the account was paid.
It was also of the litigated quesions whether the extra labor and material performed and furnished by defendant in error were included in estimates made during the progress of the work, and payments therefor made under and conformably to the terms of the contract or were not so included and the whole sum due therefor remained unpaid to be recovered in this suit. The evidence in the record before us, whatever the fact may have been, establishes that extras, both labor and material, were included in the estimates made and for which there were settlements as the buildings progressed. There were methods of calculation within the evidence by which the jury could reach approximately the verdict rendered, each of which must have included the allowance to defendant ant in error of the $817.50, the fifteen per cent retained of the aggregate of estimates made, part paid to the original
The verdict was for $1,596.82, which, we must conclude, was $1,021.97 in excess of the proper amount. The defendant in error may file a remittitur within forty days of the last mentioned sum, $1,021.97, as of the date of the verdict, October 17, 1893. If he does so, the judgment, as thus modified, is affirmed. If he does not comply with the above stated condition the judgment stands reversed and the cause remanded.
Judgment accordingly.