Redding v. Snyder

89 N.W.2d 471, 352 Mich. 241, 1958 Mich. LEXIS 438
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1958
DocketDocket 51, Calendar 47,636
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 89 N.W.2d 471 (Redding v. Snyder) 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
Redding v. Snyder, 89 N.W.2d 471, 352 Mich. 241, 1958 Mich. LEXIS 438 (Mich. 1958).

Opinion

Edwards, J.

Plaintiff in this case is a builder and defendant the carpenter subcontractor whom he hired to do the carpentry work upon a particular house.

It appears that after many- vicissitudes the house was completed to the general specifications of the buyer; but on delivery it was ascertained that the first floor was not level and that the windows did not fit properly. Plaintiff claims that primarily as a result of these 2 defects (although defendant alleges others were likewise involved), he was forced to reduce the sale price of the house to the purchaser by $2,000. Thereafter he filed suit against defendant for that $2,000, alleging that the 2 defects referred to resulted from defendant’s failure properly to perform his carpentry contract, and claiming damage in the amount of $2,000 therefor.

This case was tried before judge and jury, and the jury awarded plaintiff $1,000. Defendant appeals to us for a new trial, claiming prejudicial error in the judge’s admission of certain testimony, and in the judge’s charge.

*244 The purchasers of the house involved were a Mr. and Mrs. Hedberg. They chose the lot in question and entered into an agreement with plaintiff Red-ding to build the house and sell it to them. Plaintiff had the job done by subcontractors, and it is undisputed that defendant Snyder had only the carpentry subcontract as his responsibility.

In 1 of the counts of plaintiff’s declaration, plaintiff alleged:

“3. By virtue of said contract, the relationship established, and the trade customs and practices resulting from the relationship, a duty was imposed upon defendant to exercise due care to avoid damage and injury.to plaintiff by performing all of the carpentry work in connection with the house so that upon completion the house would be constructed in a good and workmanlike manner.”

Defendant denied the existence of any such trade custom as alleged by the plaintiff, and 1 of his principal arguments on appeal pertains to the admission of evidence pertaining to trade custom and practice.

The most disputed issue involves the question of who was responsible for the level of the floor. It appears that the house to be built ivas a ranch-type, 1-story house; with a basement. The house was built in wintertime, with the foundations and basement dug into a clay soil. The plans called for a steel I-beam to run the length of the house and to be supported by steel posts in the center and a cement foundation at each end. It is undisputed that this beam was installed by defendant Snyder and that the steel posts weré of á “jack” type which allowed for adjusting the height of the beam, and, hence,’ the level of the floor which they supported.

Plaintiff claimed that after the house was roughed in by defendant, but before the interior plastering was done, heat was installed in the building to thaw *245 out the basement and the foundations under it. He claims further that the thawing of the ground occasioned contracting of the clay base, and as a consequence that the foundations of the I-beam referred to dropped down, pulling the I-beam out of level and occasioning settling of the first floor. Plaintiff claims that he called defendant Snyder, told him these facts, and requested him to do what was necessary to make the floor level.

He presented various witnesses who testified that the leveling of the floor prior to plastering was a part of the responsibility of the carpenter subcontractor under the trade custom in the area and at the time concerned. The following testimony on this point went into the record, without objection, from a carpenter-contractor called as an expert witness by plaintiff:

“Q. I want to ask you whether in the late winter of 1954-1955 there was an established custom existing in the area of 6013 84th street in the city, of Grand Rapids, regarding the responsibility for determining that the, or assuring that the floors were even after the rough carpentry?
“A. That definitely is the responsibility of the carpenter contractor who contracts to take the labor, that he does his work in a workable way to the satisfaction of the customer, and to the approval of all building inspection. .
“Assuming that the sagging of the beam had taken place after the roughing in of the fireplace, but before the application of the plaster and the other finished work, in my opinion this could have been corrected in less than, half an hour time with 2 men, simply by putting a jack under and screwing up the post.
“Q. Who, according to the custom that you have mentioned existed in this vicinity would have been responsible to see that is done?
“A. Carpenter-contractor.”

*246 In addition to evidence pertaining to defendant’s alleged responsibility for the level of the floor based on trade practice, plaintiff presented evidence calculated to show that defendant had actual knowledge that the floor was not level before the plastering-work was done.

The bricklayer on this house, one Myron Oatman, testified that when he was roughing in the basement fireplace he noticed the I-beam in question to-be out of line, and had a conference about it with defendant. Oatman’s testimony is as follows:

“Q. And will you tell us what the conversation was?
"A..Well, about the steel beam, what he was going to do about it.
“Q. Tell us what you said and what he said?
“A. I told him it was over an inch out of level in the span that I had to work — you want to know exactly what he said?
“Q. Yes.
“A. ‘To hell with it,’ that is what he said.”

On appeal, the first of the issues presented by appellant is a claim: of. error in the trial judge’s admission of evidence pertaining to trade practice.

On the issue of admissibility of such evidence, this Court has said as follows:

“It is a general rule that, if there is a general usage applicable to a particular profession or business, parties employing an individual in that profession or business are supposed to.deal with him according to that usage. It is said that all trades have their usages, and, when a contract is made with a man about the business of his craft, it is framed on the basis of its usage, which becomes a part of it, except when its place is occupied by particular stipulations.” Kar wick v. Pickands, 171 Mich 463, 471.

See, also, California Lettuce Growers, Inc., v. Union Sugar Co., 45 Cal2d 474 (289 P2d 785, 49 *247 ALR2d 496); 55 Am Jur, Usages and Customs, § 24; 25 CJS, Customs and Usages, § 9; 3 Corbin on Contracts, § 556.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 N.W.2d 471, 352 Mich. 241, 1958 Mich. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redding-v-snyder-mich-1958.