Doyle Vacuum Cleaner Co. v. F. J. Siller & Co.

223 N.W.2d 86, 55 Mich. App. 601, 1974 Mich. App. LEXIS 859
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 25, 1974
DocketDocket 17075
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 223 N.W.2d 86 (Doyle Vacuum Cleaner Co. v. F. J. Siller & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doyle Vacuum Cleaner Co. v. F. J. Siller & Co., 223 N.W.2d 86, 55 Mich. App. 601, 1974 Mich. App. LEXIS 859 (Mich. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Holbrook, P. J.

Plaintiff, Doyle Vacuum Cleaner Company, brought an action against defendants herein claiming that they were responsible for damage to plaintiff’s building. In December 1972 a ten-day jury trial was had. The jury returned a verdict of no cause of action in favor of defendants. Thereafter, plaintiff moved for a new trial claiming errors had occurred in the instructions, the disallowance of certain rebuttal testimony, and by comments of the trial court which were prejudicial to plaintiff, and that the verdict was contrary to the great weight of the evidence. By written opinion, the trial court denied plaintiff’s motion.

In late 1967 or early 1968, defendant City of Grand Rapids determined a need for a sanitary relief sewer to run in Stevens Street from Ionia Avenue to the west. Plans for such sewer were prepared by the city and, pursuant to requirements of the Grand Rapids City Charter and City Code, the bid was let to the lowest (and only) bidder. In April 1968 a contract was made between defendant city and defendant F. J. Siller to construct the sewer line.

The route of the sewer line was along the north side of Stevens Street, within a few feet of the south wall of plaintiff’s building. Plaintiff is in the business of manufacturing commercial and industrial vacuum cleaners. Its factory building is approximately 262 feet in length and occupies a substantial^ portion of the block along Stevens Street between Wallen Avenue and Phillips Avenue. The building is one structure; however, it is *604 made of separate structures built at different times.

In the original plans, it was designated by the city that the contractor should use the "tight sheeting” method in supporting walls of the trench to be dug. The sewer pipe itself was some 36 inches in width. In order to lay that pipe, the contractor dug trenches approximately 5 feet in width and 14 feet in depth. For various reasons, the method of digging a trench was temporarily abandoned in favor of a tunneling method. The tunneling method proved inadequate and the sewer line was finished by use of the trench and tight sheeting method.

It appears that as the construction of the sewer line approached the southwestern portion of the Doyle building, Mr. Dewey I. Doyle, Sr., chief executive of the corporation, became concerned as to whether the construction would cause damage to the building and contacted a Grand Rapids engineering firm for advice. Prior to the time that the trench passed adjacent to plaintiff’s building and during that time, elevations were taken by the engineering firm. The firm advised the use of steel sheeting rather than wooden planks in support of the walls of the trench. In the alternative, they proposed the use of the soil stabilization method, which is the injection of certain chemicals into the soil which cause soil particles to bind together.

By complaint, filed January 27, 1971, plaintiff alleged that defendant had been negligent in the construction of the sewer line and that as a result thereof plaintiff’s building had subsided, cracked, settled, and sustained permanent structural damage. Damages claimed in the complaint were for repair and rebuilding of a wall, the loss of employee efficiency, cost of time of executive manage *605 ment and supervisory personnel, loss in value of plaintiffs building, and curtailment of manufacturing operations. By amended complaint, filed in May 1972, plaintiff asserted that it was a third-party beneficiary under the contract entered into between the defendant city and the defendant Siller. This was based upon provisions in the contract that the contractor should: safely guard adjacent property from damage; replace or make good any damage, loss or injury; take precaution against injuries to persons or damaged property; and restore, at its own expense, any public or private property damaged or injured as a result of any act or omission on its part, its employees or agents. Plaintiff alleged breach of these provisions.

Plaintiff has appealed and set out a number of issues, which we consider in the following sequence.

I

Plaintiff asserts that the trial court committed reversible error by excluding certain evidence which plaintiff sought to introduce in rebuttal.

Mr. Rupert McGinn was an assistant city engineer involved with the construction which led to this law suit. Plaintiff has asserted that during the two-and-a-half-week trial, Mr. McGinn was with counsel for the city and was acting in an advisory capacity and that, as a function thereof, plaintiffs counsel assumed that he was to testify during the city’s case in chief. When he did not, plaintiff called Mr. McGinn as a rebuttal witness. The court, over strenuous objection of both defendants, allowed this, but limited the rebuttal to testimony which tended to contradict evidence already introduced by the defense, rather than testimony which would merely confirm or corroborate evidence of *606 fered by plaintiff in its case in chief. Plaintiff asserts that reversible error was committed when plaintiff was prohibited from introducing evidence which it says would have tended to contradict evidence of the defendants. Plaintiff says that certain testimony of Mr. McGinn would have contradicted testimony by Mr. F. J. Siller as to the length of tunneling. Apparently dissatisfied with the elicited testimony of Mr. McGinn, plaintiff attempted to introduce a city record which included information as to time consumed in the project and total figures of the footage which had been completed. Plaintiff asserted that this record would have shown the length of pipe that had been tunneled and contradict the testimony of Mr. Siller. The court excluded this record as being improper rebuttal.

Plaintiff had originally introduced evidence of the tunneling operation in its case in chief. Certainly, plaintiff had the opportunity to submit the business record at that time. Thus, it is readily apparent that the attempted admission of this record in rebuttal was improper in that it tended to substantiate plaintiff’s case. See McCormick, Evidence (2d ed), § 4, p 6.

The second ruling of which plaintiff complains is the disallowance of certain testimony of Mr. Mc-Ginn as to a conversation had with members of the Doyle family. Presumably, the probity of this conversation would have related to knowledge by defendant city of its duty towards plaintiff and as a preliminary fact in the proof of negligence. Plaintiff says the testimony would have contradicted the city’s testimony that the plans were adequate. The following colloquy occurred:

”Q. [Mr. Skilton, plaintiffs attorney]: In fact, didn’t *607 you tell the Doyles you were going to find a construction method that would be safe for the building?

”A. [Mr. McGinn]: The method that we were using was a suitable method to protect the building, right from the beginning as it was stipulated in the contract.

"Q. Did you tell the Doyles that you were concerned with preventing damage to the building?

"A. Again, we wanted to make sure that no damage was done to public or private property.

"Q. Did you tell the Doyles that?

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Bluebook (online)
223 N.W.2d 86, 55 Mich. App. 601, 1974 Mich. App. LEXIS 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doyle-vacuum-cleaner-co-v-f-j-siller-co-michctapp-1974.