85 Kan. 760 | Kan. | 1911
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff sued to recover for extra work and material performed and furnished in the construction of a school building. The contract price was $11,600. He alleged that the contract was to erect a building according to certain plans and specifications; that the plans required and provided that the basement be made three feet below the grade line; that the defendant by its district board verbally ordered and requested that the basement be made four feet and four inches below the grade line, which was one foot and four inches deeper than the plans and specifications provided for; that the amount of the original contract and changes, alterations and extra work and material had been paid for except the work and material necessary to make this change in the depth of the basement. The answer denied the indebtedness and sought to recover for certain material sold to plaintiff. Upon the trial the plaintiff offered in evidence a plan or blue print, the witness stating: “This is the plans they gave me in the construction of the building out there.” Upon which the abstract shows that “plaintiff offers blue print in evidence (plans). Defendant objects to the introduction, no proper foundation having been laid.” The witness then stated that this plan was signed by the secretary of the school board and was one of the plans under which he worked in the construction of the building and one of the plans given him to bid on. He again offered the blue print in evidence, to which defendant .objected as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, no proper foundation having been laid. The objection was overruled. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence a demurrer thereto was overruled and the defendant elected to stand upon the demurrer,
The defendant’s contention is that as the petition alleged that the basement was made deeper than required by the plans and specifications, it was indispensable to produce such plans and specifications before it would be possible to show that the work sued for was extra, and that the blue print was only one -portion of the plans and was no part of the specifications, and therefore was by itself incompetent. After its introduction the witness testified that for the foundation the excavation made in the basement was one foot and four inches deeper than called for by the blue print. It is difficult to tell what was actually offered in evidence, whether one of a duplicate set of plans or simply a blue print taken from a number. Neither does it- appear whether the specifications had reference to the depth of the basement or whether this was indicated alone by the blue print in question. On these matters the record does not enlighten us. From the description given by the witness it would seem that the paper offered indicated by itself the depth of the basement, so that it was unnecessary to introduce plans and specifications for other parts of the building which would have no direct reference to the basement walls. But even if these should have been put in evidence, if consisting of different papers it would be as competent to introduce one at .a time as all together, and if separate the offer of one could hardly be denied for the reason that all the others were not offered along with it. Doubtless the defendant might have compelled the production of the entire plans and specifications, but that fact would not render the blue print in question incompetent, irrelevant or immaterial, or without propér foundation. If the contract was to be performed according to the
When the plaintiff’s evidence was closed the trial court held that he had made out a case and therefore overruled the defendant’s demurrer. So far as the evidence already discussed is concerned, there was no error in overruling the demurrer. It is insisted, however, that aside from this the testimony failed to show any binding obligation upon the district to pay for extra work, for the reason that no contract with the board in session was made. This is true, and the question remains whether under the facts shown the district is bound by ratification and estoppel. It appears from the evidence that one or two ■ member's of the board directed the extra work to be done, that some member, or members of the board were upon the grounds practically every day watching or overseeing the progress of the work, and that the completed building, including the extra work sued for, was accepted and had been used as a school building for a year or more.. It was also admitted that the building was turned over by the contractor to the school board and by it used for school purposes ever since. Numerous authorities are cited in support of the proposition that a binding contract with the officers of a school board district can be made only when they are in session. Notwithstanding this rule, a district may be required to pay the value of material received by it when it has knowingly permitted it to be furnished and has received and used the same and enjoyed its benefits, and this was the attitude of the defendant appearing from the evidence. (Sullivan v. School District, 39 Kan. 347, 18 Pac. 287; School District v. Sullivan, 48 Kan. 624, 29 Pac. 1141; Furniture Co. v. School District, 50 Kan. 727, 32 Pac. 368; Mound City v. Snoddy, 53 Kan. 126, 35 Pac. 1112.)
The evidence being sufficient to warrant a verdict for the plaintiff the demurrer thereto was properly
Under the circumstances suggested upon argument and shown by the record we do not deem it necessary to discuss the argument of the demurrer in the court below or the failure to argue the same.
Finding no material error the judgment is affirmed.