Barnes v. Beck

83 N.W.2d 228, 348 Mich. 286, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 422
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 1957
DocketDocket 35, Calendar 47,078
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 83 N.W.2d 228 (Barnes v. Beck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. Beck, 83 N.W.2d 228, 348 Mich. 286, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 422 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

Black, J.

This case is an instance of what is getting to be chronic litigation between home owner and contractor. The one invariably claims that the contractor agreed to build a house on his lot for so much money, whereas the other usually insists that the agreed arrangement was that of “cost plus” construction. The parties in cases of such nature rarely reduce their commitments to writing. When they do, apparently inevitable controversies respecting extras and subsequent modifications — occasioned by claimed oral agreement from time to time as work progresses — make up a congeries of trouble for our trial courts.

In the case before us there was no written agreement. The decisive questions before the trial court were (a) whether the original agreement was that *288 of a fixed price or otherwise and (b) whether the original agreement, whatever its determined nature, was agreeably modified so as to provide plaintiff with a right of recovery as claimed by him.

Plaintiff Barnes is a building contractor whose principal business is carried on in Antrim county. He operates a lumber yard at Eastport. Originally, and with satisfaction all around, he built a summer cottage for defendants Beck on Torch lake. After the cottage was finished, and after the Becks had started to use it, Mrs. Beck produced a set of plans, known in the record as the “Better Homes & Gardens Five-Star plan,” and opened negotiations toward construction by plaintiff of a permanent home for defendants on their building lot in Birmingham. According to plaintiff, the agreement finally reached between the parties was that he would furnish materials (at wholesale cost) and labor for construction of the house according to such plans and that the defendants would pay him for his “out-of-pocket expense for these materials and labor in addition to an hourly wage to be paid plaintiff for his own work on the job.”

Plaintiff says that the total cost of such labor and materials, so furnished by him, was $17,450.86; that defendants have paid him $11,000 only, and that he is entitled to recover from defendants a computed balance of $6,450.86. Defendants insist that plaintiff agreed to build the home according to-such plans for a total sum of $17,000 “exclusive of painting and decorating,” and that they have paid plaintiff considerably more than what they claim was the agreed contract price.

Construction was duly commenced. The usual disagreements began to appear as estimates and costs parted company according to dismaying postwar building-trade developments. When the job' was near completion, financing of a substantial part *289 of the cost of construction was accomplished through a mortgage loan made by the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States. To complete the loan, it was necessary that a release and certificate of payment form be signed by the general contractor. Plaintiff executed such a release and certificate but claims that it was conditionally delivered by express agreement of the parties, without prejudice to his present claim. To the contrary, defendants insist that its recitals were correct in fact and that there was no conditional or special agreement with respect thereto.

The trial judge found (the case having been tried to the court) that the original agreement between the parties was that of construction of the home for an agreed price of $17,000, exclusive of painting and decorating; that the defendants had paid plaintiff a total of $11,100; that defendants had paid $5,107.-99 for building materials plaintiff obligated himself to provide as a part of the agreed job; that they had paid various subcontractors of plaintiff a total of $5,661.17, and that they had accordingly paid plaintiff, for the job so undertaken, a total of $21,869.16. On such finding — recorded later in opinion denying new trial * — the trial judge entered judgment of no cause. Plaintiff reviews in pursuance of Court Buie No 64 (1945) and presents the usual question on review of law cases tried without a jury, vis., “That the judgment is against the preponderance of the evidence.”

First: The tendency in recent years toward waiver of trial by jury, worthy though it may be in the name of prompt submission and determination of a law case, points up an apparently continued misconception of our function when nonjury cases arrive for *290 appraisal under Court Rule No 64. The drumfire of jury arguments * delivered here, orally and in brief on review of such cases, suggests that we are not getting through to counsel with previous declarations that we do not hear and consider Rule No 64 cases de novo (Jones v. Eastern Michigan Motorbuses, 287 Mich 619; Schneider v. Pomerville, 348 Mich 49) and that the trier of facts is in better position than we are to judge the right and wrong of human memory and the “demeanor-clues” witnesses personally exhibit on the witness stand.

Modern science extends an apt illustration. The televised delivery lends a great deal more to the accuracy of belief or disbelief than does the invisible yet audible radio speech of the same personality. The latter in turn is relevantly more aidful than the comparably tabescent printed record of utterance. We noted, in In re Calhoun Estate, 346 Mich 227, 232, 233, that the best and most accurate record of oral testimony “is like a dehydrated peach; it has *291 neither the substance nor the flavor of the peach before it was dried,” and in Hayes Construction Company v. Silverthorn, 343 Mich 421, 428, 429, that:

“The trier of the facts in such a matter has an inestimable advantage over the appellate tribunal. The hesitant word and the averted glance stand on a parity, on the printed page before us, with the positive assertion and the forthright expression. * Not so in the mind and conscience of the nisi prius judge. He makes his appraisal of truth or falsity upon an evaluation of all the elements visible and audible, and while cases may occur in which his disregard for the clear preponderance is manifest even in these chambers, this case is not one of them.”

We write here, not alone for this case of Barnes but for the increasing numbers of cases brought to us under said Rule No 64. The place for powered emphasis on what each party claims should be the facts is in our trial courts. When the facts are found there and review of the judgment takes place, we consider alleged errors of law only and do not, as has been urged (see In re Hoffman’s Estate, 183 Mich 67, and discussion of the 1938 committee report of American Bar Association, pp 639, 640, of report of Jones v. Eastern Michigan Motorbuses, supra), proceed as in equity cases.

Second: Turning now to the case before us:

We have previously noted the general findings of the trial judge.

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.W.2d 228, 348 Mich. 286, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-beck-mich-1957.