ANDRIOLA v. MILLIGAN
Citation | 191 P.2d 716,52 N.M. 65 |
Decision Date | 25 March 1948 |
Docket Number | No. 5059,5059 |
Parties | ANDRIOLA v. MILLIGAN. |
Court | Supreme Court of New Mexico |
Rueckhaus & Watkins and Stanley W. P. Miller, all of Albuquerque, for appellant.
M. Ralph Brown, of Albuquerque, for appellee.
The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for the breach of an agreement to dig a water well. The trial was to the court without a jury and resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $3,825.00.From the judgment entered for this sum, defendant appeals.
We shall refer to the parties as they were designated below; the plaintiff, John Andriola, being the appellee here, and the defendant, Allen H. Milligan, being the appellant.
The parties entered into the following written agreement:
W. A. Rockwell, under the supervision of the defendant, Allen H. Milligan, commenced work on the project in March, 1947. There seems to have been no serious trouble in running the casing until a depth of 583 feet was reached, when it hung. To this depth five inch casing was used. Drilling continued below the casing for 100 feet where some water was found. Then without anchoring or securing the string of casing in any way, the driller struck the casing with such force that it dropped to the bottom of the hole. As a result of such drop the casing was telescoped and crimped in a 'V' shape. The defendant then inserted four inch casing in an effort to drill deeper, but many difficulties were experienced which prevented finishing the well. The work continued under the supervision of Milligan until some time in September, 1947, when the job was abandoned. In the Fall of 1947, one Van R. Turner, an experienced well driller, was employed by the plaintiff to dig a new well, approximately 225 feet from the abandoned one. Water was encountered at a depth of 678 feet with a continuous flow at the rate of from six to seven gallons per minute. The cost to plaintiff for this new project was $3,825.00.
Under point one, he argues that there is no competent evidence in the record to support the court's findings of fact. The findingswhich the defendant complains of now are Nos. 5 and 6, and are as follows:
There is a conflict in the evidence as to whether the proper methods were used by the defendant in drilling the well and in setting the casing. The trial court accepted the evidence of the plaintiff's witnesses upon these questions and as it is substantial the findings will not be set aside or disturbed by this court. The defendant not only failed to complete the well to a lower depth than 683 feet, but he left crumbled and telescoped casing in the hole, in such a manner as to prevent the plaintiff from drilling to a lower depth, or at all, for the purpose of developing water. Regardless of any question of negligence, defendant's inability to complete the well to a depth of 700 feet, or until sufficient water was encountered prior to reaching that depth, was due to his own operations and not to any fault of plaintiff. Where a person is employed in work of skill, the employer buys both his labor and his judgment; he ought not to undertake the work if he...
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