North Bros. & Strauss v. Mallory

51 A. 89, 94 Md. 305, 1902 Md. LEXIS 17
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 16, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 51 A. 89 (North Bros. & Strauss v. Mallory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Bros. & Strauss v. Mallory, 51 A. 89, 94 Md. 305, 1902 Md. LEXIS 17 (Md. 1902).

Opinion

Page, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The declaration in this case contains seven counts; six of them are common counts in assumpsit; the seventh sets out substantially that the plaintiff and defendants agreed in writing that the former should furnish, deliver and erect in the basement of the defendants’ building, a steam plant, for which the defendants were to pay the plaintiff $2,000 ; that the said steam plant was to be, one 9x12 ball automatic engine (Erie) 45 horse power, second hand but guaranteed to be in first-class condition, and one horizontal tubular boiler 60 inches diameter 13 ft. long, actual 70-horse power; the same to be equipped set up and connected as detailed and specified in the written agreement; that subsequently the said parties further agreed that in lieu of the boiler originally contracted for in the written agreement, the plaintiff should furnish a new boiler, for the sum of $300 additional, “making the total amount of the contract price of said work and material $2,300, which ” the defendants agreed to pay, and promised to permit and suffer the plaintiff and his workmen and employes to enter upon their premises and complete the work, and that the plaintiff “did commence and in part perform and furnished a portion of said materials, &c., and expended large sums of money in and about the purchasing of said materials and for woi'k done,” &c.; yet the defendants would not permit him to proceed with or complete the work, &c., but wrongfully dis *312 charged him and prevented him from completing the work, whereby he lost the profits which otherwise would have accrued to him from the completion of the work, and “ the value and price of the work and material actually done and provided.” The defendants plead the general issue pleas, and after trial and judgment for the plaintiff have appealed.

There are but two bills of exception. The first raises a question of evidence; the second brings up for' review the action of the lower Court upon the prayers that were severally offered by the parties.

In the first exception, the question presented arose as follows. The plaintiff offered the written contract, which provided among other things that the boiler should bean “horizontal boiler 60 inches diameter, 13 ft. long, actual 70-horse power second hand but in good condition also evidence tending to show that he had delivered on the premises such a boiler. He then offered a paper purporting on its face to be a certificate of the State Inspector to the effect that the said boiler was in good condition and capable of sustaining a pressure of 100 lbs. to the square inch. To the admission of this paper the defendants objected, “unless the plaintiff proposed to follow it up by identifying the boiler furnished by the plaintiff with the boiler mentioned in the certificates.” The plaintiff then offered proof tending to prove that “]. C. Smith, the State Inspector,” gave the certificate to the plaintiff and that “he saw, examined and tested the boiler again in the basement of the defendants’ factory, and that it was the boiler covered by the certificate.” The Court thereupon permitted the paper to go to the jury. After much testimony had been taken, and all the evidence on both sides was in, the defendants moved the Court to exclude the certificate from the jury for the reasons, 1st., that there was no identification of the boiler inspected with that furnished by the plaintiff, and 2nd., “because there was no proof of the alleged signature of the State Inspector.” The Court overruled the motion, and the defendants excepted. There had been no additional testimony offered between the time of its admission by the Court and that of the entering *313 the motion. The motion therefore was nothing else than a request of the Court to review and reverse its previous ruling. That ruling the defendants had permitted to pass without reserving an exception, as they might have done. If they desired to raise any question as to signature of the Inspector, it was open to them at the time the paper was offered to do so. They should have done so at that time, and it was too late to make the objection after the Court had ruled upon its admission, unless something had intervened that gave them notice of objections of which prior thereto they had had no information. In Dent v. Hancock, 5 Gill, 127, this Court said, it was the duty of counsel, if aware of the objections to the admissibility of evidence, to object at the time it is offered, or if unapprised of such objections at the time the evidence had gone to the jury, he must raise his objections within a reasonable time thereafter. “To allow a greater latitude, as to the time of raising such objections to testimony, might be productive of much inconvenience and injustice.” Hagan v. Hendry, 18 Md. 188; Davis and wife v. Patton, 19 Md. 128; Marfield v. Davidson, 8 G. & J. 213. We find no error in this ruling of the Court.

The plaintiff offered five prayers, all of which were granted; the defendants, nineteen, of which eight were granted, eight rejected, and two rejected as offered but granted with modifications. The original written agreement was proved, as set forth in the narr. The plaintiff commenced the work and delivered on the premises a boiler and proceeded to connect it as provided in the agreement. On the 1 ith of January, 1900, the defendants wrote to the plaintiff, that “the boiler you have placed in our factory does not come up to the terms of your contract,” and in the same letter proceeded to state many other things in which, they claimed, the plaintiff had not complied with the terms of his contract.' There was also evidence tending to show that prior to the date of that letter there had been complaints of the boiler, and that the plaintiff had offered to substitute therefor a new boiler, and install that in the factory at an increased cost to the defendants of three *314 hundred dollars On the tenth day of January, 1900, the defendants wrote, “we agree to this on the following conditions,” viz. (among others) that the original contract of November 29th, should be still in force except “so far as we now agree to change it; ” no rights to be surrendered under that paper ; the new boiler to be made “according to specifications furnished by the Maryland Casualty Company,” copy to be furnished by the defendants ; and the “work of removing the boiler now in, not to be begun until the weather will permit us to run our business without heat in the building; and must be finished within a reasonable time, say thirty days from time you start to put boiler in,” This qualified acceptance of the plaintiff’s offer was in turn accepted by him, as will appear from his letter of February roth. There was also evidence tending to prove that if the plaintiff had been permitted to continue his work, he would have completed it with “due diligence and dispatch,” and would have been able to make.,the alterations and corrections which were incidental to the unfinished state of the work ; and that he had offered to make such alterations and corrections.

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Bluebook (online)
51 A. 89, 94 Md. 305, 1902 Md. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-bros-strauss-v-mallory-md-1902.