Perry v. Hunt

125 P. 295, 62 Or. 256, 1912 Ore. LEXIS 139
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 125 P. 295 (Perry v. Hunt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. Hunt, 125 P. 295, 62 Or. 256, 1912 Ore. LEXIS 139 (Or. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendants’ counsel introduced in evidence the original contract which provides that, after plaintiff and his associates had finished the grading and the work had been received by the engineer in charge thereof, the defendants were to have paid them for the removal, inter alia, of trap rock, basalt, or lava rock, 55 cents per cubic yard. Clauses of the contract deemed material are as follows:

“Any person or persons abandoning * * the work, shall hold no claim against the first party [the defendants]. * * After all proper deduction for wages, material, and supplies are paid by the second party [the plaintiff and [260]*260his associates] the first party upon receipt of estimate and work agrees to pay prices as aforementioned in this agreement to the second party.”

The plaintiff testified that the estimate of 27,000 cubic yards of solid rock, broken and removed in the construction work as stated in the complaint, was correct. This witness, in referring to the engineer in charge of the grading at the stations indicated, stated upon oath:

“I asked Ellis if he could give me figures on that work. I would like to get his figures of as many yards as there was on the work. He said they never figured that out. It was left to the engineer at Natron, Randall, I understood. * *”
' “Q. Did you ever ask the engineer at Natron to figure it?”
“A. No.”

Oscar Ellis, the engineer mentioned, testified that he had not been requested by plaintiff nor by any person for him to ascertain the amount of grading that had been done by Perry and his associate under the contract.

Testimony was admitted tending to show that on August 21, 1910, the defendants seized the plaintiff’s equipment, and at the same time took possession of the commissary supplies belonging to him and his associates. This testimony was denied by the defendants. It ■'■'•n-s, however, that, at the time last stated, the defendants placed on the part of the grading then remaining to be finished between the stations referred to other employees who used some of plaintiff’s tools.

Dominick Crosta, one of plaintiff’s associates, was asked: “Where were you on the 20th day of August?” and he answered: “In Eugene. * * ”

“Q. What did you come to Eugene for?”
“A. I came down to inform myself about the work.”
[261]*261“Q. What was the trouble?”
“A. The trouble was Mr. Hunt (one of the defendants) was charging too much for expenses, and we can’t afford to pay that.”
“Q. To what extent was he overcharging you?”
“A. Well, he overcharged over $1,000.”
“Q. And you objected to that?”
“A. Yes.”

Defendants’ counsel thereupon said:

“We object to that. It has nothing to do with the case.”

The court replied:

“Their contention (referring to plaintiff’s controversy) is that Hunt compelled them to quit. Your contention is that they abandoned it (meaning the grading). Now that makes an issue. If this is an explanation why he compelled them to quit, it is competent to go to the jury.”

To this observation an exception was taken, defendants’ counsel further saying:

“There is nothing in the evidence, your honor, to show that there was any obligation on the part of Hunt & Son to furnish them these things, -or on the part of these men to buy from Hunt & Son.”

The court:

“I don’t remember that the contract makes any provision for that. But if that is one of the things that brought about the severance of their relations, I think they have a right to go to the jury with it.”

To this observation also an exception was taken.

The foregoing are the only exceptions reserved, and it is maintained by defendants’ counsel that whether or not Hunt & Son were overcharging plaintiff and his associates for commissary supplies was not an issue in the case, and hence an error was committed in permitting Crosta to testify respecting a collateral matter that had no connection with the question involved. An exam[262]*262ination of the testimony inveighed against will show that the only complaint interposed by defendants’ counsel was that to Crosta’s objection to' overcharges for expenses made by Hunt & Son. It is quite probable, from the dialogue between the court and defendants’ counsel, that the objection was intended to have been made to the preceding question, “To what extent was he overcharging you ?”

1. The inquiry having been answered, however, before any complaint was made to the question, a motion should have been made to strike out the answer given.

2. But, however this may be, the remarks of the court will be treated as instructions to the jury, and, based thereon, the question to be considered is whether or not the language complained of was erroneous.

3. The written contract governed the oral agreement and afforded the means of computing the sum of money to be paid plaintiff for grading the roadbed by using his machinery, tools, etc., in breaking and removing solid rock. For each cubic yard of trap rock, basalt, or lava rock removed from the line of the road and deposited in the proper place, the defendants engaged to pay 60 cents, of which sum the plaintiff and his associates were to have received 55 cents and Perry the remainder. If, therefore, the plaintiff and his associates were prevented by the defendants from performing the terms of the written contract respecting the handling. of that kind of material, the plaintiff in like manner would be deprived of the compensation he might have earned by the use of his equipment, and hence any change in the written contract modified to that extent the terms of the oral agreement.

4. In the second cause of action the complaint, referring to the oral agreement, charges “that said defendants violated the terms of said contract in this: That on the 20th day of August, 1910, said defendants [263]*263wrongfully and unlawfully, and to terminate said contract, and in breach thereof, seized said equipment and outfit and took possession-of the same by force and prevented plaintiff from working the same, and while there remained 15,000 cubic yards of rock work to be done on said construction work above described and for which said plaintiff was entitled to receive from defendants five cents per cubic yard under the terms of said contract, and amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $750, and by reason of said breach of said contract, said plaintiff was and is damaged in the sum of $750.”

It will thus be seen that the only ground assigned in the complaint for plaintiff’s failure to complete the grading was defendants’ seizure of his equipment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 P. 295, 62 Or. 256, 1912 Ore. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-hunt-or-1912.