Salvatore v. City of Harper Woods

124 N.W.2d 780, 372 Mich. 14, 1963 Mich. LEXIS 263
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1963
DocketCalendar 3, Docket 49,751
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 124 N.W.2d 780 (Salvatore v. City of Harper Woods) 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
Salvatore v. City of Harper Woods, 124 N.W.2d 780, 372 Mich. 14, 1963 Mich. LEXIS 263 (Mich. 1963).

Opinion

Souris, J.

Defendant Oak Construction Company, a prime contractor of defendant city of Harper Woods, subcontracted part of its construction project to plaintiff Anthony Salvatore. Upon completion of the subcontract, Salvatore sued defendants in assumpsit for the balance due him on his subcontract with Oak.. Oak, in turn, filed a claim in ■recoupment against plaintiff. During trial, by consent of the parties, the city was dismissed from the case. A jury awarded plaintiff $40,675, the full amount of .his claim against defendant Oak Construction Company, and judgment was entered thereon, together with interest, from which judgment defendant Oak has taken this appeal.

Defendant’s principal claims, relating to the judge’s instructions to the jury, ,are that the trial court erred (1) in charging there was a contract when, if there wás a contract, it was oral and there •was conflict as to its terms; (2) in:,no,t charging the *17 terms of the contract it found to exist; (3) in refusing- to charge that the terms of the contract were fact questions for the jury, when the contract was oral and the parties disagreed as to its terms; and (4) in giving the jury a confusing charge on the alternative verdicts it could return.

In his declaration plaintiff alleged the formation of a contract between defendant and him, which allegation defendant admitted in its answer. In its recoupment claim defendant itself alleged the formation of a contract with plaintiff. Thus, the court did not err in charging that a contract existed. Indeed, 1 of defendant’s requested charges was:

“It is the claim of defendant, Oak Construction Company, that on or about June 1, 1959, plaintiff agreed to perform or cause to be performed certain labor and furnish certain materials as provided for in the prime contract between Oak Construction. Company and the city of Harper Woods.”

In support of its claim that the court erred in charging the existence of a contract, defendant quotes from Reinhard v. Grand Rapids School Equipment Co., 211 Mich 165, 177:

“The understanding of the parties to an oral contract is shown by the evidence of what was said-at the time by the parties who made it — not by their secret thought but by their expressed intention/ When their testimony conflicted it remained for the jury to determine what the contract was.”

Even as it stands this quotation from Reinhard does not aid defendant, for it does not say that in such circumstances the court may not charge that a contract existed, but rather, it says only that the determination of the terms of the contract is a matter' for the jury. In fact, Reinhard was a cáse very similar to this case of Salvatore in that no one’. *18 doubted that a contract existed, the only disagreement being over its terms. “Their, disagreement is not as to whether the minds of the contracting parties met, but upon what they met.” Reinhard, pp 175, 176.

The court did not and could not charge the jury as to the terms of the contract since, as defendant is sedulous to assert, there was conflict as to its terms. The court submitted plaintiff’s version of the contract, and defendant’s version and its claim that plaintiff ■ had not complied with its terms, and the court further instructed the jury that for plaintiff to prevail he must prove all parts of his claim by a fair preponderance of the evidence. Defendant could .properly demand no more.

Defendant claims that the court erred “in charging there' were 3 possible verdicts when he then- gave 4 possibilities and there were several more':” ■' The court’s language was:

“You haye your choice here of 3 verdicts:
“(1) We find for the plaintiff in the amount of blank dollars ;•
...«{■2).. We find for the defendant in the amount of blank dollars; and.then
“(3) We find no cause of action for either party.
■ “Noiv, in the- event that you should find for both pártiés, then you would deduct the smaller from the greater and bring in a verdict for the difference. You understand that, T presume, because -this i's a claim by- the plaintiff against the defendant and then the recoupment. So you have those 3 verdicts: [repeating].”

It would have been better had the trial court instructed the jury that it could return a verdict for either party, for neither party, or for both. However, since the given instruction might cause some confusion-only in the extraordinary event that the jury concluded that each party was entitled to pre *19 cisely the same amount, and since it is not even suggested that such was, or could have been, the jury’s finding in this case, we cannot say properly that the charge was prejudicially erroneous. In. any event, defendant failed to call to the trial court’s atten-, tion, when time still remained for corrective action,, the ambiguity in its jury charge. See Lober v. Sklar,, 357 Mich 166; and Gilson v. Bronkhorst, 353 Mich 148. What was said in Lober and Gils.on in this regard now, and since January 1, 1963,.can be found in GCR 1963, 516.2. * .

In addition to the defendant’s assertion of reversible.errors in the court’s instructions to the jury dis-, cussed above, the defendant also- claims the cpurterred by communicating with the jury in the absence of the’ parties and counsel.' After the jury had retired for deliberation and at a time when parties and' counsel were absent from the courtroom’, at about' the noon hour, the jury returned to the courtroom' to inquire about certain figures 1 of . .defendant’s: witnesses had placed on a blackboard-¡regarding its recoupment claim for $108,000.- The judge informed) the jury that the blackboard figures - were • not am exhibit and told the jury:

“That is his recoupment figure. You cannot bring in a figure higher’than * * * that figure, but, that was not an exhibit. It was merely— ’
“The Foreman: -We made a mistake,, then—
“A Juror: —if we didn’t copy those figures down.'
“The Gourt: That was never an exhibit. Those-were Mr. Osgood’s [defendant’s counsel] figures, you see. You can’t take 'that. It is your judgment *20 as to what those figures should be, if you are considering it at all.”

Since the jury was aware of the recoupment figure, had all the exhibits, and was told that the amount of recoupment was within its discretion up to the maximum claimed, it does not appear that defendant was prejudiced by this colloquy, especially since the jury returned no recoupment award at all. The blackboard figures would have been of use to the jury only if it had determined that some portion of defendant’s recoupment claim was due defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
124 N.W.2d 780, 372 Mich. 14, 1963 Mich. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salvatore-v-city-of-harper-woods-mich-1963.