Limer v. Traders Co.

28 S.E. 730, 44 W. Va. 175, 1897 W. Va. LEXIS 106
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 28 S.E. 730 (Limer v. Traders Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Limer v. Traders Co., 28 S.E. 730, 44 W. Va. 175, 1897 W. Va. LEXIS 106 (W. Va. 1897).

Opinion

BeaNNON, Judge:

Limer brought an action of assumpsit against the Traders Company to recover pay for stone, furnished by him,' used in the foundation of the hotel at Clarksburg built by said company, known as the “Traders Hotel,” and recovered judgment. The corporation made a contract in writing- with the Wood Bros. Plaining-Mill Company for furnishing- all material and doing- all work in the construction of the hotel. The Wood Plaining-Mill Company sublet to McLain Bros, the stone work, which included the furnishing of stone, and McLain Bros, did build the foundation, and used stone furnished by Limer, Sehon, and Gill. The theory for Limer’s recovery is two-fold, — one that he had a contract with Jackson, a director, and Richards, who was the representative of Yost & Packard, the architects, to see that the work was according- to plan; and the other that, whether there was any express contract or not, the stone was used in the building-, as the directors knew, and the corporation, having received the benefit of it, must pay for it. The defendant denied that it had any contract with, or in any way knew, Limer, and claimed that he contracted with McLain Bros, to furnish the rock, and the company had no knowledge to the contrary, and had no idea that Limer would look to it for pay.

The court gave the following instruction for plaintiff: “The court instructs the jury that, where one person has conferred a benefit upon another in the way of property, service, etc., and cannot show a promise in fact by the latter to pay for them, the law will create a promisé, because of the receipt of the benefit, to pay what they are reasonably worth ; and if the jury shall find, from the evidence, that Limer conferred a benefit upon the Traders Company by his labor and materials in furnishing rock for its building-, and that said company knew of the conferring of said benefit, and has since used and enjoyed the same, then, unless the jury believe, from the evidence, that Limer had contracted with either Wood Bros., the McLains, or some other third party, he is entitled to recover against said company, even if he had no express contract therewith.” This instruction is wrong, as applied to this case, It said that if [177]*177Limer conferred a benefit upon the Traders Company by his labor and materials, and it knew of its conferring- the benefit, and enjoyed the same, and Limer had no contract with Wood Bros., the McLains, or some third party, then the plaintiff must recover. It ignored an important element of the case. As the company had contracted with the Wood Company for the complete construction of the hotel, and would fairly and reasonably suppose that that company was furnishing the rock, or having it furnished, it would not dream that it was being furnished under contract with it. Under these circumstances, before it could be charged with an implied contract to pay, it would have to appear that it knew the rock was not being furnished for the Wood Company or the McLains. It had the best reason to infer that the rock was being furnished under the building contract. Could it be made to pay for the rock furnished by the three different parties merely because it went into the walls and benefited the company ultimately, when it had reason to believe that its contractors were furnishing it under the contract? This instruction ignores the necessity of a knowledge on the part of the defendant that the rock was not being furnished in performance of its contract. If it had known that it was not being- furnished pursuant to that contract, then it might be charged, but not otherwise. This instruction excludes this element, arising fairly on the evidence, as unknown to the case ; that is, the question whether the defendant knew the rock was being furnished for it, or for the party with whom it had contracted to furnish it. It was misleading in the fact that it does not cover the whole scope of the case as presented by the evidence, binding the jury to a verdict on only part of the case. To repeat, under it the defendant would be liable, though it did not know but that Limer was employed by the chief contractor, the Wood Company, or the subcontractor. One, unwilling, ought not to be made liable for a debt, or when ignorant of facts making him liable. There oug-ht to be a request, or, if he is to be made liable because he derives benefit, he ought to have knowledge of such circumstances as would tell him that in law he would be liable. The proposition is that, if I employ A. to build a house, and B. does the work, and I [178]*178Rave no reason to suppose B. looks to me for pay, but may infer that he is acting- for A., yet I must pay B. though I had no contract with him, had no reason to know that he was looking- to me for pay, but had every reason to suppose that B. was working under A. A very similar case is Woodruff v. Railroad Co., 108 N. Y. 39, (14 N. E. 832). The syllabus is this : “Plaintiffs were subcontractors for the building of a portion of the defendant’s railroad, and had performed work under instructions from the engineer in the employ of the contractor in charge of the work, and under agreement with the engineer that such work should be taken outside of the contract; but no written order was given as required by the contract in such case. Held, that defendant was not responsible for such work, and the fact that it took possession of the road when completed, and had the benefit of the work, did not amount to a ratification.” The opinion was delivered by Judge Earl, who, in speaking of the contention that the railroad company enjoyed the benefit of the work performed by the subcontractor, says: “Nor is there any sufficient proof that the defendant in any way ratified the agreement alleged to have been made by the plaintiffs with the engineers. It is not -shown that it had any knowledge of the alleged ag-reement made by those engineers, or that it knew that the earth in question had been removed from the cut on its account, and outside of the contractwhich had been made for the construction of the road. It is true that, after the road was completed, it took possession thereof, as it had the right to do, and that in that way it had the benefit of the work done by the plaintiffs; but that was no ratification of the contract made by the engineers, and did not make it responsible for such work, unless it in some way agreed to pay therefor.”

The court gave the plaintiff the following instruction : “The court instructs the jury that if they believe, from the evidence, that Limer contracted to furnish rock for the building for the Traders Company, either with Jackson or some other party who professed and was believed by Limer to be acting for said company, and that Limer did furnish rock as agreed, and the Traders Company knew of his doing so, and said ■ rock were u sed in the construe[179]*179tion of its building, and it accepted the benefit arising therefrom, either by express words or by keeping silent when it should have spoken, then, although said Jackson or other party had no authority in fact to act for said company at that time, yet if said company accepted the benefit arising from said contract as aforesaid, it thereby ratified said contract, and is bound by it, unless they believe, from the evidence, that said Limer was acting under a contract with Wood Bros., the McLains, or some party other than the Traders Company.” Now, if the corporation, while Limer was furnishing the rock, did not know that he was doing so by order of Jackson, would it be debarred from accepting the completed house except under the penalty of assuming a debt to Limer? I say not.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E. 730, 44 W. Va. 175, 1897 W. Va. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/limer-v-traders-co-wva-1897.