Moore v. Lea's Adm'r

32 Ala. 375
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 32 Ala. 375 (Moore v. Lea's Adm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Lea's Adm'r, 32 Ala. 375 (Ala. 1858).

Opinion

RICE, C. J.

Tbe contract for tbe breach of wbicb tbis action was brought, is “ a contract for tbe letting out and hiring of work by tbe great, or, as it is more commonly called, job or taskwork,” — a contract to build a church, tbe employer agreeing to furnish all tbe materials, “ except tbe stone, &c., for the pillars,” wbicb tbe undertaker agreed to furnish. — Addison on Con. (edition of 1857,) 443. Tbe employer was bound to do every thing that was necessary to be done on bis part to enable the undertaker to execute bis engagement and earn tbe hire or reward, (Addison on Contracts, 446;) and as no time ivas appointed for peformance on bis part, be was bound to> perform within a reasonable time. — lb. 234. Tbe undertaker was bound to enter upon his employment without delay, and to be active, industrious, careful, and diligent in tbe performance of tbe work; to do it according to orders-given and assented to; to complete it within a reasonable-period, if no precise time bad been agreed upon for its* fulfillment; and to exercise a reasonable amount of care- and skill in its execution. — Addison on Contracts, 457,. 458. And after tbe materials wbicb the employer bad agreed to furnish were delivered under tbe contract, and put under tbe control of tbe undertaker, tbe general law of bailment for hire regulated his liabilities as to them, and be was bound to take tbe same care of them that a prudent and cautious man ordinarily takes of bis own property ; to exercise all reasonable and ordinary forethought and precaution for their protection and preservation ; and if a loss occurred from inundation, be must show that he bad taken all such precautions as are ordinarily taken by prudent men to guard against tbe mischief. — Addison on Con. 459, 461.

In tbe present case, Lea (tbe plaintiff’s intestate) was the employer, and Moore (tbe defendant) the undertaker. By tbe contract between them, Lea was to furnish all tbe materials, “except tbe stone, &c., for tbe pillars,” which Moore agreed to furnish. Moore agreed “ to have all tbe [380]*380work done as soon as possible after the materials ” were furnished; and nothing was said in that contractas to the quality of the materials which Lea was to furnish. Evans was not a part)’ to that contract. The evidence tends to show, that Lea made another and different contract with Evans and another, by which the latter agreed to furnish the lumber which Lea in his contract with Moore had agreed to furnish, and that the lumber should be of good quality. Moore was not a party to that contract. It is evident that the verdict and judgment in the present suit cannot be evidence for Evans in another suit, except to prove the mere fact of their rendition, for which purpose they would be evidence for every body; and, therefore, Evans is a competent witness for the plaintiff, under section 2302 of the Code, even if it were conceded that he was interested in the event of the suit. According to that section, interest in the event “goes to his credit only,” but does not render him incompetent, “unless the verdict and judgment would be evidence for him in another suit” — that is, evidence for him to prove something beyond the mere fact of their rendition. They could not have been evidence for him here to that extent, because they could not have.been evidence against him, to that extent, had they gone contrary. — Atwood v. Wright, 29 Ala. Rep. 346; Harris v. Plant & Co., at the present term.

[2.] There was evidence tending to show, that the lumber which Evans and another had agreed with Lea to furnish was delivered by them at the place contemplated by the contract between Lea and Moore — the place where the church was to be built; and that it was delivered in the winter of 1852. The defendant having proved by Evans, on cross examination, that he (the defendant) went to the church “ about the first of April, 1853, with his work-benches and some workmen ; and that he examined the timber or lumber on the ground, and found fault with some of it, because worm-eaten; the plaintiff then offered to prove, by said witness, that he then told defendant, that he had delivered more lumber than the bill furnished called for, and to go to work at it, and if it turned [381]*381out that there was not good timber enough for the job, he would furnish more, and that he should not be delayed in his work.” To the introduction of what the witness told defendant, the defendant objected, but the court permitted it to go to the jury, and he excepted.

The defendant proved by a workman, that he and defendant “went to the church about the first of April, 1853, the time spoken of by Evans, with their benches and tools, with a view of going to ivork; and that they did not do so, because defendant examined the lumber, and pronounced much of it unsuitable for the job,” &c. “ The plaintiff, in rebutting, offered to prove, that the defendant, in the spring of 1853, undertook and erected a steam saw-mill in the neighborhood of Whitesburg, (the place where the church was to be built,) in which he was himself interested; but there was no further proof as to when he commenced or finished it, except that it was finished in the summer of 1853. The defendant objected to the testimony, but the court admitted it, and he excepted.”

The plaintiff also offered to prove, “ that while building said mill, and about the month of March, the defendant told witness, that as soon as he finished it, be would do the ivork on the church ; to which the defendant objected, but the court admitted it, and he excepted.”

The evidence embraced by these three exceptions, was admissible, at least, to repel the following inference, which might otherwise have been drawn from the defendant’s evidence, to-wit, that the defendant ivas really ready and willing, at the time he and his workmen went to the church, to do the work on it, and that he would then have begun the work but for the uusuitableness of the lumber which had been furnished for the purpose. The plaintiff had the right to show, that the defendant was really not ready and willing; that he did not goto the church, with his workmen and benches, for the purpose of going to work there; that the benches and tools and workmen he had with him there, were really intended for use in erecting the steam saw-mill in the neighborhood; and that the pretense of the uusuitableness of the lumber, and of his [382]*382readiness to go to work there, was a false pretense,, designed to cover np his foregone determination not to do' the work on the church before he had finished the steam saw-mill, if he did it at all. And as the plaintiff had this right, we cannot say that the evidence embraced by the three exceptions now under consideration, was irrelevant or illegal, or that it was improperly admitted. — Malhuish v. Collier, 15 Ad. & El. (N. S.) 878; Rutherford v. McIvor, 21 Ala. 750; Watkins v. Gaston, 17 Ala. 665.

[3.] The opinion of Evans, who was the owner of a saw-mill in the neighborhood, and gave it his personal attention, and was a lumber-dealer, as to the quality of the lumber delivered by him for the job in controversy, was certainly good in part. The objection was to the whole of his opinion. As part of it, as offered, was admissible, there was no error in overrulingthe objection.

[4.J All the evidence is set forth in the bill of exceptions.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ala. 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-leas-admr-ala-1858.