Keiper v. Selfe

34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 6, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 507, 1906 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 325
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 6 (Keiper v. Selfe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keiper v. Selfe, 34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 6, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 507, 1906 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 325 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

MARVIN, J..

Suit was brought by Selfe against Frances H. Keiper and her husband, William Keiper, to recover for a balance claimed to be due to said Selfe, hereinafter spoken of as the plaintiff, upon a written contract entered into between said plaintiff and Frances H. Keiper, hereinafter spoken of as defendant, for furnishing materials and erecting a house by said plaintiff for defendant. The petition also claimed a judgment for certain labor and materials, which the plaintiff claimed as due for charges made in the contract involving additional expenses, and for certain labor and materials claimed as extras. Upon the trial the jury found for the plaintiff against the defendant Frances, and judgment was rendered against her. No judgment was rendered against ^William Keiper, and nothing further need be said about him.

The defendant answered the petition of the plaintiff, quoting a provision of the contract as to charges and extras; setting up that she had paid $25 for hardware, which she says by the terms of the contract she was to be credited with, but for which she says no credit was given, and says plaintiff is not entitled to recover for extras because he has not brought himself within the provisions of the contract.

She then sets up by way of cross-petition and as a counterclaim a failure on the part of the plaintiff to perform fully his contract in certain specified particulars, and she prays judgment against the plaintiff in the sum of $200 by reason of such counter-claim.

Mrs. Keiper prosecutes error to the judgment against her.

A bill of exceptions is filed here with all the evidence given or offered at the trial, together with the other proceedings in the case.

The verdict of the jury is against the defendant in the sum of $149.59, and then these words follow: “And we do find that there is due the defendant upon the cross-petition the sum of no dollars. We therefore find for plaintiff and assess his damages at $149.59.”

In its instructions to the jury, at the close of the charge as to the manner of preparing the verdict, the court said:

[8]*8“Taking into consideration all o£ the evidence, you will find out what in your judgment he is entitled to, if he is entitled to anything at all, and you will compute interest upon the same thus found from September 1st up to the first day of April of this year. You will then ascertain what sum, if any, is due the defendant on her cross-petition and your verdict will state what it may be. The form of verdict is this:. ‘We the jury in this case, being duly empaneled and sworn, do find for the plaintiff against the defendant, Frances H. Keiper, and assess his damages by reason of the promises at blank dollars, and we find that there is due the defendant upon her cross-petition the sum of blank dollars. We therefore find for blank and assess blank damages at blank dollars.’ ”

Assuming as we must that the jury understood this instruction, it would seem from the verdict that the amount found for the plaintiff was without any deduction on account of failure to perform the contract, because such failure was set up as a counter-claim, and the jury found that on account thereof the defendant is entitled to “No dollars.”

Since the amount found for the plaintiff is not above the balance claimed by him on the contract and is almost exactly what he claimed thereon with interest to the first day of the term at which the case was tried, it is urged by the plaintiff that we should asume that nothing was allowed him for extras or charges and that, therefore, whether there were errors or not in the charge or any refusal to charge on the matter of such extras and changes, no prejudice could have resulted to the defendant, and therefore the judgment should be permitted to stand. Were it not for the dispute of $25 for hardware this would have weight, but with this dispute we can not say but that the jury allowed plaintiff something for extras, and charged him with not having credited the $25 and so reached the verdict rendered. If this was done, it becomes necessary to determine whether the charge of the court was right on such extras and charges, and whether the court erred in refusing to charge as requested by the defendant.

The court was requested in writing by the defendant to give certain propositions to the jury before argument. The court declined to give such instructions before argument, saying:

[9]*9“I do not deem it necessary to read these requests at the present time, for the reason that in my judgment they “will be substantially taken care of in my charge to the jury when the time comes.”

By Sec. 5190 R. S. (Sec. 11447 G. C.) either party has the right to have instructions given before argument, provided they be proper under the law and applicable to the case. See Cleveland & E. Elec. Ry. v. Hawkins, 64 Ohio St. 391 [60 N. E. 558]; Monroeville v. Root, 54 Ohio St. 523 [44 N. E. 237],

We must then consider the requests made. The bill reads:

“Whereupon counsel for defendant presented to the court the following written requests, and asked the court to give them before argument:
“1st. The jury is instructed to return a verdict for the defendant, William F. Keiper, for the reason that there has been no evidence offered by the plaintiff tending to show that the contract or claim sued upon was the contract of said William F. Keiper.”

An examination of the evidence will show that that proposition was clearly true, but as the jury found no verdict against Keiper he is making no complaint, and the case would not be reversed because of failure to give that proposition to the jury.

“2d. The specifications which were a part of the contract under which the work was performed, forming the subject-matter of this action, contains the clause: ‘should any extra work or changes of the plan be required whereby any cost may be increased or diminished, all such changes must be determined and agreed upon before the change is made, and the amount, whether an increase or a decrease in cost, must be endorsed upon the back of the contract.”

That is the quotation from the contract itself, and then fol-. lows the following:

“No recovery can be had by the plaintiff for any extra work unless the jury finds that the above written provision has been waived by the defendant, Frances Keiper. The burden of establishing the proof of such waiver is upon the plaintiff, and such proof in order to entitle the plaintiff to recover, must be clear and convincing. Clear and convincing proof is more than the mere preponderance of the evidence, and such preponderance [10]*10must be of such character as to make the proof clear and convincing.”

It seems that with the grounds as well established as they are in Ohio, that in order to establish a change in a written contract proof must be clear and convincing, and that the contract under consideration, having the provisions which have been read, that there can be no doubt that that proposition should have been given to the jury. In the consideration of the case on the question as to extra work the proof must be such as is required in the change of the contract; but upon a careful examination of the language of the contract the parties agreed that the extras should come under the same provision as change in the contract.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 6, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 507, 1906 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keiper-v-selfe-ohcirctcuyahoga-1906.