Fitzgerald v. Hayward

50 Mo. 516
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 50 Mo. 516 (Fitzgerald v. Hayward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitzgerald v. Hayward, 50 Mo. 516 (Mo. 1872).

Opinion

Adams, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was founded on a special contract entered into between the plaintiff and one Smith, with the defendants, by the terms of which the plaintiff and Smith undertook to do grading on section 22 and the grading and masonry on section 23 of the Hannibal & Central Missouri Railroad, to be commenced immediately (November 10,1869) and prosecuted with sufficient force to insure completion by the first day of June, 1870; the work to be done in such manner as should be directed by the engineer in charge of the work, or other agent of the defendants ; to be prosecuted to completion with such speed as should be required by the defendants; the work to be of first class of its kind, to be done to the satisfaction of the engineer. The work, as it progressed, -was to be paid for monthly according to certain rates specified in the contract. The payments were to be made on estimates to be made monthly by the engineer, and ten per cent, of the same was to be reserved as security for the completion of the contract; and in case of failure to complete the contract, this reservation to remain as liquidated damages in the hands of the defendants for such non-fulfillment. In making payments, the defendants reserved the right to pay off the hands and workmen of plaintiff and Smith, and deduct same from amount due them. A persistent refusal to comply with the provisions of the agreement was to work a forfeiture of the rights of plaintiff and Smith, and entitle defendants -to enter upon and take possession of the premises without let or hindrance, and to re-let the same. The plaintiff bought out Smith’s interest in the contract, and took an assignment thereof „o himself, and has brought this suit in his own name for an alleged balance due him under the contract for work done and [521]*521completed, and also for damages as net profits for the remainder of the work, alleging that he was wrongfully prevented from doing the same by the defendants, who took possession themselves and prevented him from proceeding with the work.

The defendants, by answer, set up the defense that they had fully paid the plaintiff in money, and by paying his hands large amounts for all the work that was done, and that the ten per cent, reserved had been forfeited to them, and deny that they wrongfully prevented the plaintiff from completing' the work. They charge that the plaintiff abandoned the work, and did not, although urged by them to do so, proceed with the work with sufiicient force to complete it by the first of June, 1870 ; and that, in compliance with the agreement, they took possession with a gang of hands of their own, so as to complete the same in time, etc.

When the case was called for trial the defendants insisted that it should be referred to a referee. The plaintiff wanted a jury trial, and the court refused to refer the case as asked by defendants, and to this ruling the defendants excepted.

Upon the trial before the jury, each party gave evidence tending to prove the issues as raised by each, and some objections were made as to the manner in which the witnesses were allowed ’to testify, giving their opinions as to estimates of damages on the facts as detailed by them. But it is unnecessary to notice these objections, as we do not think them material. The question of experts does not apply to the facts of this case. A witness can only he allowed to detail facts, and not mere opinions not based upon facts. But in estimating the cost of work, etc., he must give the facts, and may be allowed to state what his estimate is upon the facts detailed.

The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff for $4,375.43.

The only points necessary to consider in this case grow out of the instructions given and refused. At the instance of the plaintiff, and against defendants’ objections, the court gave six instructions. The first stated what admissions the pleadings made. The second reads: “If the jury find from the evidence that the defendants, in March, 1870, took possession of the work on sections 22 and 23, and thereby prevented the plaintiff from [522]*522completing said work, he is entitled to recover as damages the difference between the cost of the work remaining- to be done at the time the defendant took possession, and the price that defendant agreed by the contract read in evidencé to pay plaintiff for such work.” The third instruction merely lays down a rule for estimating the damages in case the jury should find for plaintiff, and does not seem to be objectionable. The fourth instruction reads : “If the defendants took possession of the work on sections 22 and 28, in March, 1870, and prevented plaintiff from completing said work, they have no right to retain the ten percent. reserved by them.” The fifth instruction asserts that a mere temporary suspension of the work, caused by mutiny among the- employees or other troubles, was not an abandonment of the work sufficient to justify the defendants in taking possession of the work and completing it themselves. The sixth merely states that it is admitted by the pleadings that defendants took possession on the 23d of March, 1870.

The defendants asked ten instructions. The first, fifth, sixth, seventh, ninth and tenth were given, and.it is therefore unnecessary to set them out. The second, third, fourth and eighth were refused. By the second the jury were told that “ if they believe from the evidence that the plaintiff failed or neglected to prosecute the grade and masonry to be done on said sections 22 and 23, with sufficient force to insure its completion by the first day of June, 1870, then plaintiff has broken the contract sued on, and is not entitled to recover on his claim for damages on account of the work remaining to be done on the 21st day of March, 1870, unless they shall further believe from the evidence that defendants, by their wrongful acts, prevented plaintiff' from completing said contract.” The third instruction asserts that if the defendants, by their agent Eaton, repeatedly requested plaintiff to prosecute the work with such speed as to insure its completion by the first of June, 1870, and plaintiff failed or neglected to do so, then he had broken his contract and is not entitled to recover damages on account of the work remaining to be done, unless the defendants by their wrongful acts prevented him from performing the contract. The fourth instruction recites a long [523]*523list of facts which, if found, it requires the jury to find for the defendants. The eighth instruction asserts that the estimate of the engineer in charge of the work remaining to be done is the rule and guide for the jury in making their verdict.

By the terms of the agreement sued on, the time for the completion of the work was of the very essence of the' contract. The defendants were original contractors with the. railroad company for the building of this road, and had bound themselves to complete it by a specified time; hence it became necessary, in letting out parts of the road, to have the sections so let out finished by a specified day. They reserved to themselves the right to require the work to be prosecuted with sufficient force and speed to effect the desired end; and if there should be a persistent refusal on the part of plaintiff to comply with any of the provisions of the contract, then defendants could enter upon and take possession of the sections without let or hindrance on the part of the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Mo. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzgerald-v-hayward-mo-1872.