Mosaic Tile Co. v. Chiera

95 N.W. 537, 133 Mich. 497, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 534
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1903
DocketDocket No. 28
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 95 N.W. 537 (Mosaic Tile Co. v. Chiera) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mosaic Tile Co. v. Chiera, 95 N.W. 537, 133 Mich. 497, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 534 (Mich. 1903).

Opinion

Hooker, C. J.

The defendant contracted in writing for the tilework in an elaborate Turkish bath.. By this contract the plaintiff promised to furnish and put in place, including the concrete foundation, “all the tilework for floors, walls, ceilings, and plunge pools required for a Turkish bath house,” etc. It Was further agreed that plaintiff would “ do the work and furnish the materials to the full and entire satisfaction of the superintendent of said building, J. W. Cotteral, Jr., and to the satisfaction of ” the defendant. Plaintiff further agreed:

“That it will warrant and guarantee the work put in the said building by them, and embraced in this contract, for the period of five years from the date of completion; and that they will, within ten days after receiving notice, replace and make good any damage to tilework caused by imperfect workmanship or materials, or which may be caused by the settling of floors or foundations due to any cause whatever; it being understood that this guaranty does not cover damage caused by accident, nor willful or malicious destruction by employés or the public. The said party of the second part further agrees to furnish bond for two thousand dollars ($3,000), signed by two responsible sureties, for the faithful performance of this contract. ”

The bond was given. Payment to the extent of 85 per cent, was to be, and was, made as the work progressed, and 15 per cent, was to be paid within 60 days after completion and acceptance. This 15 per cent, has not been paid, and this action was brought to recover it.

The declaration contained a special count upon the writing, and the common counts. With a plea of the general issue, the defendant filed a notice of recoupment, which alleged that the tiling had faded and lost its original color, and had never been replaced by the plaintiff, although requested, etc., and that the tiling and floor had settled out of shape, 'and had bulged so as to be uneven, and that it did not drain, and in consequence the water would stand in pools upon it, and that the material and labor were of inferior quality.

[499]*499The controversies of fact appear to have been, in the main, first, whether the plaintiff furnished the materials and did the work as required by the contract; second, whether the same was to the satisfaction of the defendant, and was accepted by him; third, whether the tile faded or lost their original color from any fault in the tile; fourth, whether the water stood upon the floor, and would not drain, through plaintiff’s fault, — all of which questions were submitted to the jury. A verdict and judgment for the plaintiff resulted, and the defendant has taken a writ of error. Upwards of 120 errors are assigned. We cannot consistently discuss each separately, and by far the greater number would furnish little excuse for so doing.

In his instructions to the jury, the learned circuit judge said that the plaintiff had undertaken that its work should be satisfactory to the defendant, and that, before it could be entitled to a verdict, it must show not only that it had done the work according to its contract, but that it had been accepted by the defendant. In that case it would be entitled to recover upon the contract the remaining 15 per cent, of the contract price; otherwise it could not recover upon the contract. He said, further, that if the work had not been accepted, or if the contract had not been fully performed, the plaintiff might recover, under the common counts, the value of the material furnished and labor performed, less such damages as the defendant had sustained through the failure of the plaintiff to carry out the contract. He instructed the jury that the contract bound the plaintiff to furnish good, substantial tiling, but not better than such tiling usually is; that much testimony had been introduced in regard to the cleaning of the tile, and the methods used by the defendant in that respect; and that this testimony had a bearing upon the questions whether this was good or poor tiling, and whether it had received proper treatment by the defendant. He said to the jury that if the water failed to drain off, and this was due to the 'furnishing of improper levels or slope by the defendant’s superintendent, the plaintiff was not liable for the [500]*500defect, and that, if the bulge and cracks in the bottom of the pool were due to a defective foundation furnished by the plaintiff, it was liable, while, if occasioned by work done by another contractor, it was not.

This was a clear and succinct charge of the main features in the case, and was easily comprehensible by the average juror. Defendant’s counsel has excepted to, and assigned error upon, each of his 28 requests to charge. Many of these requests are abstract propositions of law, without anything to indicate to the jury their application to the case; e. g.:

“Parties who are of full age and competent may make contracts, which it is the duty of courts to énforce as made.”
“The purpose of construction of a contract is to give effect to an instrument, not to defeat it.”
“An equity against the words of an express contract, where there is no want of capacity or legality, fraud or. mistake, shown in the making of the contract, cannot be recognized.”
“The intention of the parties, as expressed in their contracts, is to govern in the construction of them.”
“All the words in a contract are to be taken as inserted for some purpose.”
“An agreement was made with an artist, for a portrait, that it need not be taken or paid for if unsatisfactory. Held, that, however good the picture was, the customer is the only judge whether it suits him or not, and, if not, he cannot be compelled to pay for it.”
“In the absence of any ambiguity in a written instrument, it must be interpreted according to its plain terms, no fraud or mistake being claimed.”

Most of the others relate to questions of fact, which the court properly left to the jury; and, in our opinion, there is nothing in these requests, which the defendant was entitled to have the jurors’ attention called to, that was not covered by the charge.

Counsel’s eighty-seventh assignment is as follows:

“In charging the jury, if there had been an acceptance of the work, then there could be no recoupment, in effect, [501]*501which could only be applied if the recovery was based upon the quantum meruit alone.”

The court charged the jury that the plaintiff could not recover unless (1) it had faithfully performed the contract; (2) the defendant had accepted the work. He afterwards said that, if it sought to recover on the quantum meruit, there might be a recoupment. As it is patent that there could be no recoupment if the contract was fully performed and accepted, and the plaintiff could not recover on the contract unless there was such performance and acceptance, the defendant was not injured by the instruction, unless, by reason of a subsequent breach of the warranty, he was entitled to damages.

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Related

Snyder v. Snyder
429 N.W.2d 234 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
95 N.W. 537, 133 Mich. 497, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mosaic-tile-co-v-chiera-mich-1903.