State Ex Rel. Swalko v. Elliott
State Ex Rel. Swalko v. Elliott
Opinion of the Court
This cause is maintained under the provisions of Section 2991, Oregon Laws, requiring every contractor on public works to execute a penal bond with the additional obligation that such contractor shall promptly pay all persons supplying him with labor or material for the prosecution of the work provided for in the contract.
On February 6, 1923, the State of Oregon, through the State Highway Commission, entered into a written contract with the copartnership of Elliott, Scoggin & Paquet, hereinafter designated as the “Contractor,” for the construction of a grade on a section of The Dalles-Califomia highway in Wasco County, known as the Tygh Grade section thereof, the contractor agreeing to furnish, among other things, all material and labor to complete the work according to the plans and specifications designated in the contract. For the purpose of securing the performance of the contract and the payment for labor and ma *634 terial in the prosecution of the work, the contractor and the defendant Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company executed and delivered to the State of Oregon their bond obligatory, in writing, in the penal sum of $97,025.
While the action is prosecuted in the name of the State of Oregon, we shall designate Mike Swalko as the plaintiff herein.
There is no controversy involving the right of the laborer Swalko to maintain this action under the provisions of our Code hereinbefore alluded to. This provision (Section 2991, Or. L.), has been applied and construed by this court in a number of instances: See Portland v. New England Casualty Co., 78 Or. 195 (152 Pac. 253), and Columbia County v. Consolidated Contract Co., 83 Or. 251 (163 Pac. 438).
The complaint in this cause states seven several causes of action in favor of Mike Swalko, the plaintiff, and against the defendants. There is no controversy concerning the board and lodging of any of the persons mentioned in the complaint, nor as to the wages paid to them; and it is conceded that demand was made for the balance alleged to be due, as provided by Oregon Laws, Section 6799. The complaint alleges—and the workmen testify—that the workmen were employed by a subcontractor, one Eli Milo, one of the defendants herein, at $5 per day, and that from that wage they paid $1.20 per day for board. The defendants contend that Mike Swalko, Louis Oovich, Tony Beno, Marion Yladick, Sam Bovich, Lazo Koran and Arthur Aho were subcontractors, and not day laborers working for a daily wage, and aver that, with the exception of Arthur Aho, all of them had been fully paid before the commencement of this action. The defendants further *635 claimed that three of the above-named workmen had signed a contract as such subcontractors. In his reply the plaintiff asserted, however, that prior to the time the workmen left Portland. the written contract had been abrogated by the mutual consent of all the parties thereto, and that the above-named workmen were then employed by a subcontractor at a daily wage. Evidence was adduced at the trial in support of these averments.
The conflict concerns only these questions: Were the plaintiff and his assignors employed by Eli Milo, a subcontractor, as day laborers, or, were they, as defendants contend, working as subcontractors in the capacity of station men, and, were they fully paid prior to the institution of this action?
There is testimony in the record to the effect that these workmen left Portland and proceeded to Wasco County, where, for the period of time claimed, they were employed by a subcontractor in construction work at a wage of $5 per day, on that part of The Dalles-California highway covered by the contractor’s agreement with the State of Oregon. It is alleged, and testimony was offered and received in support of the averment, that the six workmen assigned their wage claims to Mike Swalko, the plaintiff herein. There is some competent testimony in support of every material allegation of the complaint and reply not expressly admitted by defendants. However, there is testimony upon the part of the contractor to the effect that three of the workmen had signed a written agreement, whereby they promised to perform certain construction work by removing earth and rock at a stated amount per cubic yard. There is also testimony that the contractor had paid six of the seven workmen all sums of money due them.
*636 The questions presented in this ease were for the determination of the jury; and, the jury having found in favor of the allegations of the plaintiff’s pleadings, we are bound thereby. It is well settled in this jurisdiction that upon an appeal from a judgment in an action at law the court cannot weigh the evidence.
“No fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise reexamined in any court of this state, unless the court can affirmatively say there is no evidence to support the verdict.” Or. Const., Art. VII, § 3-c.
See, also, Farrin v. State Industrial Accident Commission, 104 Or. 452 (205 Pac. 984; Derrick v. Portland Eye, Ear, Nose & Throat Hospital, 105 Or. 90 (209 Pac. 344); Reed v. National Hospital Assn., 106 Or. 471 (212 Pac. 537).
The defendants’ motion for judgment of non-suit, for the purposes of the motion, conceded the truthfulness of the testimony received into the record for plaintiff: Brown v. Sheedy, 90 Or. 74 (175 Pac. 613).
Defendants assign as error the reception into the record as evidence of Plaintiff’s Exhibit “B,” the same being the written assignments of five of the workmen. This assignment of error not having been discussed in appellants’ brief, we are authorized in assuming that it was abandoned: Nicholas v. Yamhill County, 102 Or. 615 (192 Pac. 410, 203 Pac. 593); Carty v. McMenamin, 108 Or. 489 (216 Pac. 228). However, from our examination of the record, Plaintiff’s Exhibit “B” was clearly admissible and was competent evidence.
That a lawful assignment of a claim for wages can be made in writing or verbally is a principle of law that has long been recognized in this jurisdiction: *637 Gregoire v. Rourke, 28 Or. 275, 277 (42 Pac. 996); Levins v. Stark, 57 Or. 189 (110 Pac. 980).
As a penalty for delay, the plaintiff has filed a motion for an allowance of damages in the amount of ten per cent of the judgment, based on Section 560, Oregon Laws. The motion is supported by the affidavit of one of plaintiff’s attorneys to the effect that—
“It is my belief that the appeal in this action is prosecuted without probable cause, and solely to hinder and delay.”
The affidavit charges that—
“The transcript of the testimony * * discloses that every question involved * * was solely a question of fact for the jury to determine.”
Further, that—
“No material exceptions were taken by appellant in the trial in the lower court.”
He further states that appellants have abandoned their assignments of error.
The language of Section 560 of bur Code is plain, and the writer concedes that the motion to assess damages is not entirely without merit. But. this court has held that although an appeal may fail, yet, if prosecuted in good faith, the appellant is not liable in damages. A mistake in judgment is not conclusive evidence of bad faith: Nelson v. Oregon Ry. & Navigation Co., 13 Or. 141 (9 Pac. 321); Manary v. Runyon, 43 Or. 495 (73 Pac. 1028).
As was stated in a Per Curiam opinion in the case of Morrison v. Hall, 55 Or. 243, 244 (104 Pac. 963):
“As to the assessment of damages because of an appeal alleged to have been taken in bad faith, the *638 case made is not of that clear and convincing character as would authorize the infliction of the statutory penalty.”
See, also, the opinion of this court by Mr. Justice Thayer in Nelson v. Oregon Ry. & Navigation Co., supra, and the recent case of Martin v. Glenbrook Farms Corporation, 110 Or. 87 (222 Pac. 1102).
An abandonment of an assignment of error is not an abandonment of an appeal.
The judgment in the instant case bears the legal rate of interest and will afford the plaintiff some compensation for delay, but damages will not be allowed.
The judgment appealed from. is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Reference
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- STATE Ex Rel. SWALKO v. W. C. ELLIOTT Et Al.
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