State Highway Commission v. Edward E. Morgan Co.
State Highway Commission v. Edward E. Morgan Co.
Opinion of the Court
On May 24, 1946, the appellee, Edward E. Morgan Company, Inc., was awarded a contract by the appellant,
The appellee contractor brought this suit in the circuit court for the said sum of $12,335.08, alleged that the contract was in due course duly discharged and performed in strict accordance with the terms and provisions thereof, so as to entitle it to all of its benefits and the compensation as agreed upon therefor. A skeleton of the contract, disclosing its general terms and duly signed by the parties on the date aforesaid, was filed as an exhibit to the declaration, and reference was made therein to the proposal, plans and specifications, and to the details of the work to be done, as being made a part of the contract by specific reference thereto, and with like effect as if each and all of said instruments had been set out fully therein in words and figures.
The defendant, State Highway Commission, filed its answer to the declaration, admitting the execution of the contract as shown by the exhibit to the declaration and the proposal, plans and specifications, and the details of the work to be done, as referred to in said exhibit. The defendant also admitted that the contractor had earned
In answer to the allegation of the declaration to the effect that the contract had been in due course duly discharged and performed in strict accord with the terms and provisions thereof so as to entitle the contractor to all of its benefits and the compensation as agreed upon therefor, the defendant alleged “that the plaintiff failed to perform the contract within the number of working days or time agreed therefor in his contract.” It appears from the contract that the same was to be performed within 200 working days, and the proof discloses, without any substantial conflict therein, that 289 working days were consumed in the performance of the contract. It was contracted and agreed under Section 8.07 of the contract, captioned “Failure to Complete the Work on Time”, that if the contractor fails to complete the work in the time as stipulated in the contract “a deduction of an amount equal to the actual cost incurred by the Department will be made for each- and every day that such contract remains incompleted after the time above designated for the completion. This actual cost is hereby agreed upon as liquidated damages for the loss to the Department on account of the necessary expense of maintaining Engineers, Inspectors, and other employees on the work after the expiration of the number of working days as stipulated in the contract. The actual cost of additional engineering expenses will be deducted from any money due the contractor under the contract . . .. ”
The difference between the amount tendered to the plaintiff before the suit was filed in, the sum of $10,030.60,
Estimate No. 12 was for $9,828, and the check tendered to the contractor in connection with said estimate was for $9,356.04, and to the check for the latter amount there was attached a statement showing the estimate to be $9,828 "Less Deductions, Engineering Expense S/A” in the sum of $471.96, leaving the balance of $9,356.04 as the "net amount due”, and the contractor cashed this check;
Estimate No 13 was for $15,152.40, "Less Deductions, Engineering Expense S/A” in the sum of $619.40, leaving a balance of $14,533, for which a check was delivered to and cashed by the contractor and to which was attached the statement showing what the deductions were made for and the amount thereof;
Estimate No. 14 was for $18,339.30, "Less Deductions, Engineering Expense S/A” in the sum of $779.06, leaving a balance of $17,560.24, for which a check was delivered to and cashed by the contractor, to which check there was attached a statement showing- what the deductions were made for, and the amount thereof;
Estimate No. 15 was for $2,425.85 "Less Deductions, Engineering Expense S/A” in the sum of $217.77, leaving a net amount due of $2,208.09, for which a check was delivered to and cashed by the contractor, and to which check there was attached a statement showing what the deductions were made for, and the amount thereof;
Estimate No. 16 was for the sum of $1,609.42, and from which no deductions were made in the check for such expense.
These deductions aggregate the sum of $2,304.48 and represent the difference between the amount which defendant tendered before the suit and again in its answer, $10,030.60, and the $12,335.08 sued for. These checks and estimates were introduced by agreement as exhibits to the testimony of the plaintiff but subject to objection by the plaintiff as to their relevancy, competency, and materiality under the state of pleadings. But the plaintiff did not on the trial offer any proof to show that he did not consume 289 working’ days in the performance of the contract, or contend that the deductions were not in the proper amounts if he had consumed 89 working days in excess of the 200 working days of contract time, but merely contended as a matter of mathematics that the project engineer when showing in the estimates the number of working days consumed, in addition to the contract time, showed only 268% days. However, this was fully explained by the witness, Smallwood, on behalf of the defendant, in that the other 20% days were accounted for in the fact that from November 11, 1947 to March 10, 1948, wherein not more than $500 was earned per month, no estimate was required to be rendered and that the 20% days of engineering costs, etc., were due to have been deducted from Estimate No. 7. In other words, it was shown without any substantial conflict in the evidence, that the defendant, State Highway Commission, had paid to the contractor $196,901.60 in the manner aforesaid prior to the 17th and final estimate, and owed to the contractor a balance of only $10,246.89 “Less Deductions, Engineering Expense S/A” of $216.29, leaving a balance of $10,030.60 for which the check was tendered and refused prior to the filing of the suit, and which tender has been kept good.
But the appellee contends in his brief that the appellant “interposed no defense to the suit either by pleadings or its evidence and the trial court gave a peremptory instruction to the jury to find for the appellee . . . for the sum of $12,335.08, with 6% interest thereon from and after March 19, 1949, until paid.” However, the check for the entire balance due in the sum of $10,030.60 was tendered to the plaintiff within three days after the same became due.
The appellee takes the position that the directed verdict in favor of the plaintiff was justified, and that the evidence as to the deduction for engineering costs, and the proof showing that the plaintiff had accepted the checks which had attached thereto the statement show
Section 1505, Code 1942, provides: “In pleading the performance of conditions precedent, the plaintiff or defendant may aver generally that he duly performed all the conditions on his part; and the opposite party shall not deny such averment generally, but shall specify in his pleading the condition precedent the performance of which.he intends to contest.”
The plaintiff alleged by a general averment that the contract had been in due course duly discharged and performed in strict accordance with the terms and provisions thereof, and contends that the defendant denied such fact by a general averment.
It is true that the defendant in its answer stated that it “denies that the plaintiff did in due course duly discharge and perform said contract in strict accordance with the terms and provisions thereof”, and it is true that this constitutes a general averment. However, the averment did not stop there. It proceeded to state “and defendant would show, if and when it becomes material hereto, that the plaintiff failed to perform the contract within the number of working days or time agreed therefor in said contract. ” We are of the opinion that this was a specification of the condition precedent, the performance of which he intended to contest. It is also true that Section 2 of Chapter 230, Laws of 1948, provides that the defendant shall answer fully all of the allegations of the declaration, and that all matters of fact therein not denied by the answer otherwise than by the general traverse may be taken at the hearing as admitted. However, we think that this averment in the answer was more than a general traverse. It pointed out the particular wherein the plaintiff, had not fully performed the contract. But Section 3 of this Act provides that “If an answer be deemed insufficient in law a plaintiff may, at such time as the court may allow, test the legal sufficiency of the same, or of any part thereof, by
The answer further states that “in accordance with the terms and conditions of said contract this delay in the performance of said contract on the part of plaintiff has been adjusted to the satisfaction of the defendant under the express terms and conditions of said contract, and the amount of $207,148.49 is the compensation to which the plaintiff is entitled for performance of the contract under the terms and conditions thereof.” While more apt language may have been chosen by the defendant to more fully state its position, it is clear that the answer meant that the delay in performance had been adjusted by the deductions from the estimates, as shown by statement attached to each estimate, and which estimates and statements were mailed to the plaintiff along with the checks for the net amount due him on such estimates, respectively, after deducting the engineering expense on account of the delay in the performance; that the answer did not mean that the plaintiff was still entitled to $207,148.49, since it was elsewhere alleged in the answer- that the defendant had paid the sum of $196,901.60 of the said amount and owed a balance of only $10,030.60 — the amount of the check which was tendered to the plaintiff before the suit was filed and which is now on file with the clerk of the circuit court from which the appeal was taken.
There is no question of set-off or recoupment here involved. The contract which the plaintiff made an exhibit to his declaration expressly provided for the deductions made by the defendant for engineering expense
We are of the opinion that since the record fully discloses indisputably from the testimony of Mr. Morgan, president of the plaintiff corporation, and the witness Smallwood for the defendant that the Highway Commission does not owe the contractor any sum whatsoever except the amount of the tender, we would not be justified in affirming the directed verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $12,335.08 merely on the technical ground that the defendant’s answer should have, in addition to raising the specific defense, gone more in detail by giving the number of working days consumed above the contract period. The defendant, instead of the plaintiff, was in our opinion clearly entitled to a directed verdict in its favor.
The cause will therefore be reversed and judgment rendered here for the appellant, State Highway Commission, but without prejudice to the right of the appellee to receive and cash the check of $10,030.60' now on file
Reversed and judgment here for the appellant.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State Highway Commission v. Edward E. Morgan Co., Inc.
- Status
- Published