Price Hill Colliery Co. v. Pinkney

122 S.E. 434, 96 W. Va. 74, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 67
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 122 S.E. 434 (Price Hill Colliery Co. v. Pinkney) 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
Price Hill Colliery Co. v. Pinkney, 122 S.E. 434, 96 W. Va. 74, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 67 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

MieleR, Judge:

Plaintiff brought this action in assumpsit for the balance alleged to be due it from defendant on an open account. De *76 fendant pleaded non-assumpit, and filed a notice of set-off and counterclaim, together with a statement of the amount alleged to be due him from plaintiff. The verdict of the jury-in favor of defendant was set aside by the trial court, and a new trial was awarded plaintiff.

Some time in the month of July 1918, defendant entered the employ of plaintiff as superintendent of its coal plant at Price Hill. Plaintiff agreed to pay him for his services a monthly salary of three hundred dollars, and in addition thereto, to furnish a house, Iig’ht and fuel for himself and his family. The contract on the part of plaintiff was made by its president and general manager, S. Dixon, defendant’s father-in-law. Defendant severed his connection with the company about the first of August 1922. During the period of his employment by the plaintiff, defendant did not occupy a house furnished by the company, except that for a part of the time he occupied quarters in a club house maintained by it. The principal items of his claim against plaintiff are for rent, light and fuel, which defendant says he was obliged to pay out because of the failure and refusal of the company to furnish him with a house at their plant at Price Hill. He includes also an item for $132.83, “on account of expense”; and claims interest on certain monthly balances in his favor. The balance of plaintiff’s account due from defendant, including an item of interest for $320.29, was $1,937.32; and defendant’s claim against plaintiff, exclusive of interest, was $2,372.83.

The verdict of the jury was: “We, the jury, find no difference as between the plaintiff and defendant.” The court directed'the jury that they should find either for the plaintiff or for the defendant, and returned them to the jury room for further consideration. Later, the jury announced that they had not made, any further finding. The court then inquired of the jurors if by their verdict they had found that the plaintiff had proved its claim of $1,937.32 against defendant, and that the defendant had also proved his claim against plaintiff in a like sum, to which all the jurors answered in the affirmative. The court thereupon reformed the verdict to read as follows: “We, the jury, upon the issues joined in this case, find that the plaintiff has proved its *77 claim against defendant in the amount, but we also find that the amount to which the defendant is entitled to set off under the evidence in this case is a like sum of $1,937,32, and equal to the amount to which the plaintiff is entitled herein.” The court read this amended verdict to the jury, and each juror announced that the same was his verdict. Upon motion of counsel for plaintiff, the jury was polled, and each juror affirmed the verdict as amended.

Plaintiff contends that this verdict was not complete; that it does not find for either party, so that a judgment for costs could be entered thereon for either. The verdict does decide all the issues presented to the jury. The jury found that the contract was as contended for by defendant, and that his claim was equal in amount to that of plaintiff. Plaintiff’s action was defeated by defendant’s defense. Defendant prevailed and is entitled to costs. In Lewis and Frazier v. Childers, 13 W. Va. 1, it was held: “Verdicts of juries are to be favorably construed; and if the point in issue is substantially decided by the verdict, it is the duty of the court to mould it into form. When the meaning of the jury can be clearly collected from the verdict, it ought not to be set aside for irregularity or want of form in its wording.”

There is no dispute that by the contract of his employment defendant was to have house rent, light and fuel, in addition to his salary. Plaintiff contends that defendant was to have one of the company’s houses at the mines; while defendant says: “I understood he (plaintiff’s general manager) would pay my house rent, lights and coal. I understood it was to be that or the equivalent.” Mr. Dixon, President and General Manager of the company, when asked what his understanding was with respect to the house to be furnished to defendant, answered: “The understanding was that he was to have a house and coal and fights. That is the understanding with the employment of every mine superintendent, and he had the same, and the house was on the place. ’ ’ Question: ‘ That is, provided he came to five there.” Answer: “Yes, Sir.” Question: “Would you have preferred him to five there?” Answer: “A superintendent should five on the place, and *78 naturally that is why the house is given.” Question: “Just answer the question. ’ ’ Answer: ‘ ‘ Surely, I did. ’ ’

It appears that at the time the contract was entered into, defendant’s wife and children were living on her father’s farm, near Richmond, Virginia. She says that she came on a visit to Price Hill in August 1918, to see if there was a place she could live, because she wanted to be with her husband, but there was no house; that the house which had been built for her in 1906, when her husband was employed by the company then operating the mines now owned by plaintiff, was occupied by a family who kept boarders, and that her father said he couldn’t turn them out, because the men meant money to him; that there was a four room flat over the store, which she would have been glad to have lived in, but the bookkeeper lived in it; that she then tried to secure a house at Mount Hope, but could not. She insists that she would have lived at Price Hill, if the company had furnished a suitable house. She says her father insisted that she return to his farm in Virginia, which she did. The first of October 1918, defendant’s family went to Richmond, where they remained for nine months, occupying a small flat, a “doll house”, Mrs. Pinkney called it, on the fourth floor of an apartment house, for which they paid a monthly rental of $45.00. The following September they removed to Beekley, about eight miles from Price Hill, where they took a four room flat, without bath, paying $33.00 a month rent. Here they lived for ten months.' At the end of this time they moved into and occupied defendant’s own house, which he had just completed at a cost of about twenty-five thousand dollars. Defendant and his family his wife and three children, continued to occupy his own house during the remainder of his employment with the company.

Defendant’s statement of set-off and counterclaim contains items for light and fuel amounting to $245.00, which he and his wife say was actually paid out by them at Richmond and Beekley; an item of $132.83, expenses paid out by defendant in connection with his employment; rent paid at Richmond, $415.00, rent paid at Beekley, -$330.00, and rent for defendant’s own house at Beekley, twenty-five months at $50.00 per month, $1,250.00, making in all for rent $1,995.00. In addi *79 tion to the above items, defendant claims interest on $460.00 from the first day of July 1919, on $1,780.00 from Jnly 30, 1922, and on $132.83 from December 30, 1921.

Plaintiff's statement introdnced in evidence, made np from its ledger account with defendant, consists of credits and debits in tbe account, with monthly balances.

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.E. 434, 96 W. Va. 74, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-hill-colliery-co-v-pinkney-wva-1924.