LEVY, J.
(after stating the facts as above).
By its second assignment of error the appellant surety company makes the contention that judgment should have been entered in its favor because it was discharged through the failure of the owner of the house and the contractor to perform the contract according to the agreement therein which provided that the owner was to pay the contractor for the work “the sum of $3,300 as follows: Each week during the life of this contract and progress of work estimate shall be made of actual labor done and material furnished, and owner shall pay 85 per cent, of same upon said estimate in lawful money U. S. A.; remainder of contract retained by owner shall be paid in lawful money of the U. S. A. within five days after work is completed.” The contract contained the agreement mentioned. The evidence admittedly shows that the contractor abandoned the contract after commencing the work, At the time the contractor abandoned the contract, the building was about two-thirds finished, having the walls and partitions up, the floors to the second story in, and the roof on. At the time of the abandonment of the contract the appellee had paid over to the contractor the total sum of $2,52S; the same having been paid only as the work progressed each week and only for labor done and material furnished for the building. As to whether there was’compliance with or failure of performance of the particular terms of contract complained of rests in the evidence given by appellee and Mitchell. Appellee testified that “It was agreed between Welsh and me that for the purpose of making estimates of the work, and so far as making payments was concerned, Mr. Mitchell would look after that, as superintendent to that extent. * * * I think it was $2,528 that I paid to Welsh, leaving only a balance of $772 to complete the building. * * * I did not have him to furnish me along, while he was erecting the building, with the bills for the different materials which he had purchased; I knew about practically most of the bills, but I did not take any copies of any bills. When I paid him I reserved nothing with which to pay these bills. I would not pay him just whenever.he would call on me for money. As the work progressed every week Mitchell paid him the amounts. I put the money to his credit as trustee to make payments. * * * Every week he advised me of the amounts he was paying; he knew how many men they had on the job and could tell how many days’ work they had put in. It was a matter of very easy calculation, what the labor amounted to, and in that way the estimates were made. * * * I did not pay up the labor in full. The purpose and intention was to keep back within the provisions of the contract all the time. I presume that the laborers were paid in full each week up to the last week, when they were not; but the material was not paid up in full; the material was never paid up in full. Each week I took an approximate éstimate of everything as it went along. The superintendent would know as what his judgment was as to whether or not the proper estimates were made on the work as it progressed. * * * As to what estimates Mr. Mitchell made of the work, and whether he paid 85 per cent, of the labor and material, or whether he paid all the labor off each week, I know that after the matter was wound up (that is, when Welsh quit) there was $668.30 of labor and material that went into the building that had not been paid for by me or Welsh; and that is more than 15 per cent., which the contract says I shall keep back.”
W. B. Mitchell testified as follows: “Mr. Warren asked me to look over the building and to make estimates on it and to see if anything went wrong. I am familiar with the provisions of the contract relative to making payments of 85 per cent, of labor done and material furnished. In making the estimates I estimated and paid, according to my best judgment, within the 85 per cent., and I tried to hold it to less than that. The payments were made according to my estimates from time to time. When the foreman presented his bills and pay rolls I would look over his list, and I demanded the time book; and by that means, and with my
The following eases seem to be authority for the proposition that the surety of the contractor would be released if advances were made by the owner to the contractor in excess of contract provisions: Ryan v. Morton, 65 Tex. 258; McKnight v. Mfg. Co., 155 S. W. 977. And we for the moment assume the correctness of the decisions mentioned. The difficulty here, though, is to hold that the evidence so conclusively establishes, as assumed by the assignment, that there was such a breach of the terms of contract mentioned on the part of the owner of the house and the contractor as to require the court to say, as a matter of law, that there was a breach in respect to the points above mentioned. The judgment of the trial court involves the finding of fact against the contention made by appellant, and we would not be authorized to disturb such finding if there is evidence to warrant such finding. It is plain to be seen, we think, from the language of the provision in question, that it was not the agreement of the owner and the contractor that payments by the owner to the contractor should be in proportion only as the work bore to the completed building, nor that the owner should pay only a certain per cent, of the contract price as the building progressed. The payments were to be, as expressly provided, 85 per cent, of each weekly “estimate” made actual labor done and material furnished.” That the payments were made weekly during the progress of the work, and only for actual labor done and material furnished, seems not to be a disputed point in the evidence. Hence the fact appearing that the building was only two-thirds completed at the time of the abandonment, in connection with the fact that $2,528 was paid of the $3,300 contract price, would not in this record be sufficient to show accelerated payments in violation of the contract. And the assignment must rest for merit entirely upon the further contention that the evidence shows that the owner in the payments made exceeded 85 per cent, of “said estimate.” It would be difficult to say that the evidence did not authorize the finding by the trial court, as involved in the judgment, that an “estimate,” within the meaning of the contract, was made by the parties, and that advances were made by the owner’s agent on such estimate as a whole. While it does appear that the labor was paid in full at the end of each week, it does not appear conclusively, taking the evidence as a whole, that the estimate of the cost of the material for the building was fully paid up and in excess of 85 per cent, of the whole estimate. The language of the provision does not require that 15 per cent, each of the amount of the labor done and the amount of material furnished shall be reserved by the owner, it is of sufficient compliance that there be not payment in excess of 85 per cent of the whole estimate made up of both labor done and material furnished. And especially was the finding warranted that at the time of the abandonment of the contract the payments were not in excess of the amount to be paid under the contract if force and weight be given, as the court was authorized to do, to the fact that $668.30 worth of material was not paid by the owner. This item of material aggregating $668.30 that went into the building, when added to the $2,528 paid by the owner, would go to show that $3,196.30 in labor done and material furnished went into the building, and that the owner had not paid on the whole estimate a sum in excess of 85 per cent. It is shown that this $668.30 was in the estimated sum on which Mitchell figured 85 per cent. As we cannot say, as a matter of law,.that the evidence shows a breach of the agreement, the assignment must be overruled.
By the third and fourth assignments of error grouped the contention is made that it was error to allow appellee a recovery for the especial amount of expenditures for labor and material shown in the evidence to have been necessarily incurred in overhauling and rebuilding certain work of the contrac
By the fifth assignment the contention is made that appellee was not entitled to-recover as a part of his damages the amount, paid the architect for services in supervising the overhauling of the work done by the contractor on the ground that appellee was estopped from making such claim by reason of having paid out the advances required by the contract without inspection of the work done either by himself, the architect, or the superintendent. It is believed there is no estoppel by negligence or carelessness, as a matter of law, in the case, as ruled in the preceding assignments, and this assignment should be overruled. The contract expressly provides that the advances required to be-made by the owner each week shall not be-deemed an acceptance or waiver of any defective work by the contractor, and the contract does not require that the owner shall inspect the quality and character of the work or that the architect or superintendent shall do so before the owner shall make the 85-per cent, advance. And it is not claimed that appellee himself, or the architect or Mitchell for appellee, ever as a fact accepted the work done by the contractor, either in whole- or in part. So the evidence would seem to-support the finding by the court, as involved-, in his judgment, that the owner was not guilty of negligence on which to predicate estoppel, and we would be bound by this finding, since the assignment does not ehallengethe finding of fact.
By the sixth assignment appellant contends, that there was error in not allowing it credit for the sum of $772 balance due on the contract price of the building. It appears that the 85 per cent, advances paid to the contractor amounted to $2,528, leaving $772 as a balance of the $3,800 contract price. The itemized account of the damages sued on and' proven was $4,411.47. The $772 was credited.
The judgment is affirmed.