Feaster v. Richland Cotton Mills

28 S.E. 301, 51 S.C. 143, 1897 S.C. LEXIS 64
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 22, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 S.E. 301 (Feaster v. Richland Cotton Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feaster v. Richland Cotton Mills, 28 S.E. 301, 51 S.C. 143, 1897 S.C. LEXIS 64 (S.C. 1897).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

The plaintiff, by his complaint, containing three causes of action, sought to recover $1,618.40 from the defendant. The issues under the pleadings and proofs were submitted to a jury, whose verdict was for $790, in favor of the plaintiff.

After judgment was entered thereon, the defendant appealed therefrom on three grounds, to wit: 1. Because his Honor erred, it is respectfully submitted, in not permitting defendant to introduce testimony to show what it cost defendant to complete the Feaster contract after Feaster was dismissed. 2. Because he further erred in refusing to charge, as requested by defendant, “That if the jury believe the work called for from plaintiff was not done in a true [145]*145and workmanlike manner, that the defendant then had the right to terminate the contract.” 3. Because his Honor further failed to charge, as requested by defendant, “That if the plaintiff was improperly discharged, the value of the work done at a reasonable price would be all that he could claim from the defendant.”

1 We will dispose of those exceptions in their inverse order. The third exception cannot be sustained, for the Circuit Judge, in his charge in relation thereto, said: “I do not charge you in those words,” meaning the words of the request; “I prefer the law quoted in another case, and give this as the law: ‘The measure of damages in a case of this sort — it secures to the injured party as a compensation only such advantages as the parties must be deemed to have had in their minds in making the agreement, and excludes all contingent and uncertain profits, everything that may not reasonably be supposed to have been within the contemplation of the contracting parties, and would not naturally follow the breach. The party who has been wrongfully deprived of the gains and profits of an executory contract, may recover as an equivalent, and by way of damages, the difference between the contract price, the amount which he would have earned and been entitled to recover on performance, and the amount which it would have cost him to perform the contract.’ ” It is very evident, when we regard the language of the Circuit Judge in this part of his charge, that he has correctly set forth the proposition of law in answer to the request of plaintiff. Indeed, the request to charge, itself, failed to express exactly what was in the mind of appellant’s counsel, as the correct law, for we cannot for a moment imagine that appellant would contend, that if John G. Feaster was improperly discharged by the Richland Cotton Mills, thus preventing him from completing his contract with such mill, the value of the work, done at a reasonable price, would be all he could claim of the plaintiff, thus leaving it in doubt with the jury whether the appellant referred to the work which had [146]*146already been performed by such Feaster before bis discharge, as “the work done,” or whether such appellant referred to the work to be done to complete the contract, as “the work done.” The Circuit Judge preferred to treat the request in the last light, and hence it was necessary that he should use his own language to explain the law in this particular. This exception is overruled.

2 As to the second exception. We find, on examination of the “Case,” the Circirit Judge did not say in his charge thereon that it was not good law, but merely that he preferred to say to the jury that if the plaintiff failed in the discharge of the duty he had voluntarily assumed when he signed the contract (and this contract was in evidence), that then the defendant could rightfully have discharged such contractor (Feaster). It may be that the Circuit Judge saw that while in this contract the words, that the work should be done by Feaster “in a true and workmanlike manner,” did occur, he also saw that such “a true and workmanlike manner” was conjoined with the words “according to the general scope and design of the plans and specifications for said plant now in the office of W. B. Smith Wha-ley & Co.,” &c., and hence he preferred to make his charge a little more general than the words of the request were. The whole includes its parts, and as the duty of Feaster to do his work in a true and workmanlike manner was a part of Feaster’s duty under said contract, it was fully covered by the charge of the Judge as made. We must, therefore, overrule this exception.

3 Lastly, we will consider the first exception, which, in our judgment, presents' a nice and difficult question, and we may remark that it has called forth some considerable effort on our part to reach a conclusion. In order that it may be understood, we will reproduce some of the facts of the case. John G. Feaster was a contractor, and as such, in the month of February, 1895, entered into a written contract with the Richland Cotton Mills to do the woodwork on the buildings for said mill, with certain ex[147]*147ceptions, for the price of $3,000. He commenced work in March, 1895, and on the 22d June, 1895, he was discharged by the Richland Cotton Mills, and thus prevented from completing his contract. He had finished a goodly part of his work, and had received $1,560 in part compensation. After Feaster’s discharge, the defendant mill secured a force of carpenters and completed the work before the 10th day of September, 1895. On that day, 10th September, 1895, this action -was commenced. Mr. Feaster contended that he was wrongfully discharged; while the Richland Cotton Mills, on the other hand, contended that he was rightfully discharged. These issues were before the jury. Both sides contended that a different rule of law would apply in the event the jury found that Feaster was rightfully discharged from that applicable in the event the jury found that Feas-ter was wrongfully discharged. Of course, all testimony relevant to these issues should go to the jury. The defendant contended that it had the right to show what the reasonable cost of completing the buildings was by testimony showing what it had actually cost the defendant to complete all this work. This is part of the colloquy on this subject: “Mr. Shand: I know of no better test of what it would reasonably cost to complete a work than what it reasonably did cost to complete it, by the use of reasonable means and proper hands, &c. Mr. Thomas: We object as to the number of hands that were employed. We think the question is, what it reasonably would have cost to complete the work. The Court: What would it reasonably cost to have completed the contract? I will allow the witness to testify to that. Not what he paid, but what it would reasonably have cost to complete the contract that both parties entered into.” The Court ruled out the testimony of defendant’s witness, W. B. Smith Whaley, when he offered to testify as to the amount paid out to complete the job, as well as the number of hands employed for that purpose, &c. And also the testimony of defendant’s witness, J. S. Moore, Fsq., who, as treasurer, had made all the [148]*148payments for the completion of the work. It may as well be stated at this point that we entirely agree with the Circuit Judge that when a contractor, after a partial compliance with his contract, is wrongfully discharged by the owner of the property, and a partial payment had been made of the compensation under the contract, that the measure of such contractor’s recovery is the whole price of the contract, less what he has received thereof, and álso less the cost of completing the work.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 S.E. 301, 51 S.C. 143, 1897 S.C. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feaster-v-richland-cotton-mills-sc-1897.