Johnson v. Slaymaker

9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 500
CourtSandusky Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 500 (Johnson v. Slaymaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Sandusky Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Slaymaker, 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 500 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

King, J. (orally.)

This action was commenced in the common pleas court by H. J. Johnson, plaintiff in error, against the defendants, Slaymaker, and The American Surety Company, and on the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of defendant, Slaymaker, for $4,432.00, and also judg[501]*501ment in favor of The American Surety Company for its costs. This judgment the plaintiff in error seeks here to reverse. The record is extremely long and contains a large number ot exceptions to the admission and rejection of evidence and the charge of the court and its refusal to charge as requested by plaintiff.

THE ISSUES.

Plaintiff in his amended petition set forth that on February 21,1896, he entered into a contract with Slaymaker to build for him (the plaintiff) upon the plaintiff’s premises, a building known as the Oak Ridge Sanitarium, situated near the village of Green Springs, Ohio, a copy of the contract is attached to the petition and made part thereof, together with the specifications for the construction of the building. He avers that the defendant contractor departed from the contract in many respects, particularly, that the footing courses in the wall should be of large flat limestone ; the range work to be of first-class white limestone laid in straight level courses, and the water tables of Berea blue sandstone. And he avers that the contractor did not use túortar and cement as he agreed, did not put in the kind of stone in the footing courses, range work and water tables required, that the door frames and window-irames were not set as called for in the specifications, but some fourteen inches higher; that he did not use the character of lumber for door frames agreed on; and that he did not construct the building within the time limited in the contract, to-wit, June 20, 1896, and avers that by reason of the breaches of the contract set forth and the failure to complete the work an additional period of five months was necessary to finish it and that he was kept out of the use of the building as a sanitarium during the summer and fall season of the year, a time when it would have been most valuable to him, and was thereby damaged in the sum of $7,300.00. The contract set forth that the contractor was to do the work between thedayof the contract and June 20th. That he was to be paid by monthly estimates made on the first day of each and every month for the material and labor put into the building on the last preceding month and of said amount that plaintiff was to pay eighty-five per cent, retaining 15 per cent, until the building should be completed and accepted by the plaintiff. There was a provision in the contract that no liens should be created by or through the- contractor, and that he should purchase, furnish and provide labor and material so as to not make Johnson liable, and so that, there could not be placed upon the building any liens. A further provision was to the effect that no extras were to be charged except as might be agreed upon by, the parties in writing in advance of doing the work, it was further stipulated that the contractor should give bond in the sum of $10,000.00 which he did, with the defendant, The American Surety Company, as surety.

Defendant, Slaymaker, in his answer admits the making of a contract and the bond ; admits he began work under it and continued until June 20, 1896; admits that he had not on that day completed the work according to the contract. Admits he had not constructed a sun house provided for in the contract strictly as provided for in the specifications. He denies all other allegations of the petition alleging breaches on his part and by way of counter-claim he sets forth eight causes of action or counter-claims.

And as his first cause of action he says that the plaintiff Johnson, attempted to buy him off, and failing to do this, maliciously and wrong[502]*502fully obstructed and delayed him in the prosecution of the work and caused liens to be taken out on his property and represented to divers person that he was not applying ihe money paid him to the payment of bills and was squandering the same, whereby he says he was damaged $2,000.00.

And second, he avers that the d lant maliciously held money due him and maliciously stated to the Surety Company that defendant was wrongfully refusing to pay for labor and material and was squandering his money in intoxicating drink to his damage $2,000.00.

For a third cause oí action he says, plaintiff wrongfully requested and procured men, men who had furnished labor and material to perfect liens, to defendants damage $1,000.00.

Fourth, that after he commenced work and after plaintiff had designated the place where the building was to stand, he came and objected to placing the building at that place, and requested it to be built in another place. That this required him to do an additional amount of work at great expense, to his damage $600.00.

For his fifth, 'he alleges that because of numerous changes-made and caused by Johnson, he was entitled to reasonable time for the completion of his work, that on June 20, 1896, an estimate was made and at that date he had performed work and furnished material _ amounting to $10,176.00. That on June 22d, two days later, Johnson maliciously and forcibly ejected him from the building and lett unpaid on the contract $6,376.00; and further avers that he would have made a profit of $2,000.00 if allowed to continue, and he asks judgment for both said sums.

In the sixth cause of action he states that a contract was made by which he agreed to lay certain rough floors not included in the original contract, for which Johnson agreed to pay him $545.00 for $425.00 cash and $120.00 in glass for material of the plaintiff.

In the seventh he avers that by agreement with plaintiff he constructed a thirteen inch wall instead of an eight inch wall, for which he asks $25.00.

The eighth cause of action alleges the performance of extra work upon certain steps'for which he asks $5.00. I should have stated that the contract provided, among other things, that the plaintiff should have the use of the old material on the ground. It was the refuse of a hotel or sanitarium that had stood on this location previously and had been burned.

The plaintiff in his reply denies all allegations in this answer of any consequence. He does, however, admit that the defendant not having finished the building, nor having it more than about one half constructed on June 20th, he did order him to leave, and as defendant was insisting on his right to come back and resume work he procured an injunction enjoining the defendant from entering upon the premises and molesting the plaintiff in the possession of the building. It was on these issues that the defendant recovered a verdict and judgment in this case. The exceptions taken in the course of the trial are so many in number, I can notice but a few of them.

THE LAW.

It was contended by the plaintiff on the trial, and is so argued here, that the defendant did not construct this work and building so far as he had progressed, according to the contract. That he used limestone [503]*503where sandstone was stipulated for and that he used blue limestone where white limestone was stipulated for and that he used poplar lumber instead of white pine. These are claimed in argument to have been the material deviations although many otheis were insisted on, but la->t and most important he so delayed the performance of the work that the building was not nearly completed on June 20th.

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Related

Banks v. Ogden
69 U.S. 57 (Supreme Court, 1865)
Hutchings v. Low
82 U.S. 77 (Supreme Court, 1873)
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Pickering v. Greenwood
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-slaymaker-ohcirctsandusky-1898.