Sabin v. Cameron

133 N.W. 422, 90 Neb. 347, 1911 Neb. LEXIS 358
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1911
DocketNo. 16,863
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 133 N.W. 422 (Sabin v. Cameron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sabin v. Cameron, 133 N.W. 422, 90 Neb. 347, 1911 Neb. LEXIS 358 (Neb. 1911).

Opinion

Root, J.

This is an action against a contractor to recover for money paid by the plaintiff to relieve her property from the lien of a subcontractor. The defendant pleaded a cross-demand for extras. The plaintiff prevailed, and the defendant appeals.

This is the second appeal of this case.' The opinion, heretofore filed and reported in 82 Neb. 106, is referred to for a description of the litigant’s contentions. Subsequent to the reversal an amended and supplemental petition and an amended reply were filed.

The defendant’s first contention, that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the supplemental matter pleaded, will not be considered, for the reasons that he took no exception to instruction numbered 31,-, wherein the court peremptorily directed a finding in the plaintiff’s favor on her cause of action in the sum returned by the jury, and did not refer to the instruction in his motion for a new trial. Holloway v. Schooley, 27 Neb. 553; Richardson & Boynton Co. v. Winter, 38 Neb. 288; Wiseman v. Ziegler, 41 Neb. 886; Danforth v. Fowler, 68 Neb. 452. This leaves for consideration solely the errors assigned with respect to the trial of the defendant’s cross-demand. It is contended that the jury should have been instructed that the reply admitted that the defendant furnished the items described in the cross-petition. Neither the pleadings nor the proof raise any such an issue. The instructions fairly construed concede that the items were furnished, but leave it for the jury to determine the defendant’s contention that the items were extras, and the plaintiff’s theory that all of the items not extras were gratuitously furnished.

The remaining assignments meriting serious consideration are as follows: Permitting the plaintiff to testify over objections that, before the written contract was reduced to writing and signed, she talked with the defendant about all of the items included in his demand for [349]*349extras; instructing the jury that they should find from the evidence whether the extras were within the terms of the contract; and submitting to them as an issue of fact whether the extras, if any, were furnished gratuitously and without expectation of reward. The contract is as follows:

“contract.
“Mrs Sabin “Lincoln, Nlbr., 10-17,1904.
“The undersigned does agree to do all work described in the above article of agreement, build two bathrooms, one over the other, on east side of kitchen, with window in each room, and cut door from hall to bath on second floor, and cut door in same way on first floor. Board outside and paper and plaster the inside with hard wall and 4 ft. high with Keyn cement, and strike off to make imitation of tile. Give tile and tub three coats of enamel, color to suit owner. Fit the upper bath with closet, tub, and lavatory with old fixtures, put new tub with nickel plated waste and supply all standard or S. Wolff goods. Put in complete hot and cold water. Put in one 18x30 sink.
“This work will be done to comply with the city ordinances. Lay maple floors in bathrooms and finish in yellow pine. Give one coat of filler and two of hard oil, and paint all new work two coats to match old house as near as possible. Out openings from front room to next room north, and give owner choice of sliding door or one post grill. Take out closet door in front room, and put in hall in same closet. Out door from dining-room to kitchen. Take out all back stairs and close up door. Make old bathroom and back bedroom in one. Leave windows and doors as they are, and patch the floor in places needed. Put closet in north end of old bedroom, using old door now in hall. Put in one window in kitchen so as to alloAv a table under it. Fit up sink and pantry on west side of kitchen. Out back door to porch. Take off all rim locks on all doors on second floor and replace with mortice, No. 23 finish.
[350]*350“Back Porch.
“Build back porch 12x16 and make room under porch; close porch up to the east and north from lower floor to four feet above upper floor, then cap the inclosure and screen from there to frieze. Make stair from upper porch inside of the inclosure. Lay double floor on upper porch so as not to leak. Put on tin roof of good roofing tin. Move outside cellarway and one window. All the new rooms will be heated by the furnace now in the house with returns where needed. Put stone foundation under both and room under porch and make all work complete.
“Make a way to get to attic after the same plans of Mr, Hardy’s is. Gas can be made separate by changing riser pipes it will be changed but if not it can’t be changed. Move tank in back hall so as to make room for door. Contractor will take all old sash.
“(Sign) J. J. Cameron.
“(Sign) M. L. Sabin.
“Lincoln, Nebr., 10-19, 1904.
“I, the undersigned,, will do all'the described work and furnish all labor and material to be used for the sum of one thousand and ninety dollars ($1,090.00). If old closet and wash bowl is used 10.00
$1,080.00
“Money shall be paid as the work progresses, and when the final finish shall come the undersigned will furnish receipts for all labor and material and deliver to owner.
“(Signed) J. J. Cameron.”

The contract is not aided by specifications, and several of its terms are ambiguous. Some written contracts are to be construed solely by reference to their terms, but there are undertakings which should be interpreted in the light of extrinsic evidence to ascertain the things upon which the minds of the parties meet. In the first class the proper construction to be given the contract is • ordi narily a question of law for the court to decide, but in [351]*351the second class the facts which may aid a correct construction, if not admitted or undisputed, should be submitted to the jury under proper instructions, and the interpretation of the contract becomes in a sense a question of fact. Coquillard v. Hovey, 23 Neb. 622; Rosenthal v. Ogden, 50 Neb. 218; Meyer v. Shamp, 51 Neb. 424; Haskell v. Read, 68 Neb. 107.

This rule will not apply to those terms of a written contract .which have a plain and unmistakable meaning, and are so connected with the remaining parts of the contract that they require no interpretation, but speak plainly for themselves. Nor, in an action to enforce and not to reform the contract, does this rule open the door for the reception of oral evidence to show that, before the contract was signed, the parties talked about items plainly without the terms of the contract as written. We think that some of the terms of the contract under consideration do not carry on their face satisfactory proof of their meaning, but are ambiguous to a degree justifying proof of extrinsic facts to ascertain their import. The extra item, “To gas separate from loAver floor and back porch,” might come within the clause in the contract “Gas can be made separate by changing riser pipes it will be changed but if not it can’t be changed.” Whether the glass for the bathroom windows should be plain or chipped is not clear from the contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 N.W. 422, 90 Neb. 347, 1911 Neb. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sabin-v-cameron-neb-1911.