Schnellbacher v. Frank McLaughlin Plumbing Co.

108 Ill. App. 486, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 330
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 27, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 108 Ill. App. 486 (Schnellbacher v. Frank McLaughlin Plumbing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schnellbacher v. Frank McLaughlin Plumbing Co., 108 Ill. App. 486, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 330 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case is before us a second time. The former opinion is reported in 85 Ill. App. 158. Appellee brought suit against appellants to recover an alleged balance of $1,810.12, as shown by the affidavit of merit accompanying the declaration, for plumbing and gas and steam fitting in remodeling the Prochazka Hotel in Peoria, Illinois. The first trial resulted in a judgment for $1,200. Upon a retrial there was a judgment for $1,800, from which the present appeal was prosecuted. As we said in our former opinion, there was a sharp conflict in the evidence as to the terms upon which the work was performed and materials furnished. The contention of appellants is that appellee contracted to do the work, and furnish the materials for the necessary plumbing work, in remodeling the hotel, for the sum of $3,175, less an allowance or deduction therefrom for old material in the building, which could be used again, the amount of such deduction to be determined as the work progressed. Also, that, there was to be a further reduction on account of cheaper fixtures being used than those bid upon, it being claimed by appellants that such deduction or difference in the cost of fixtures was agreed upon between the parties soon after the contract was let to appellee.

On the other hand, appellee insists that it did the work and furnished the materials under a quantum meruit. It also claims to have made various changes and alterations in the work differing from the original plan, and that these changes were made under the direction of Jobst, a contractor, who did the carpenter work; that under the arrangements between appellants and Jobst, the latter was superintendent of the building, and that his orders were binding upon appellants. But appellants contend that Reeves, the architect, was the superintendent of the building, and the only one whose orders were binding upon them.

We are inclined to hold that the evidence was sufficient to justify the jury in believing that Jobst was the representative and agent of appellants, and that his acts in ordering changes from the original plans were binding upon them. While the proof is not as satisfactory as it might be, we do not feel justified in disturbing the apparent finding of two juries, approved by two trial judges, that the contract was to furnish the material and perform the labor upon a quantum meruit.

Accompanying the declaration is an itemized statement of appellee’s claim. It does not appear to have been filed under any rule of court, but is referred to and treated by both parties and the trial judge as a bill of particulars. It consists of twenty-five pages, closely typewritten. It includes more than fifteen hundred separate items, and covers a period of time extending over practically every working day from April 12th to August 3, 1897.

Appellee offered in evidence a book called the journal. It is contended that it is a book of original entries, and under the proofs made should have been admitted in evidence. The court sustained an objection to it. The entries in the book were made by a bookkeeper who bad no personal knowledge of the correctness of any of the items. The information from which the journal entries were made was derived from time-books kept by numerous laborers themselves, time-books kept by McQuellon and McLaughlin, stubs from order books for material, bills from various firms for goods sold appellee, directions given the bookkeeper by an attorney for appellee, who confessed he had no knowledge of the items he was causing to be charged against appellants, and from other sources. There was no attempt to prove by the laborers, who kept a part of the books from which the journal was made up, that their books were correct, nor are these books in the record. Some of the entries were not made in the journal till long after the transactions to which they relate. If we determine that the journal was admissible in evidence, it must be from the testimony of Eva McLaughlin, the bookkeeper, Frank W. McLaughlin, her father, or Thomas McQuellon, the foreman. Eva McLaughlin expressly disclaims any personal knowledge of the correctness of the journal. She testified that the plumber’s books which were used in making the journal contained entries of the time each plumber claimed to have worked and the material used by him each day. Whether correct or not she did not know, but she transcribed these several entries into the journal. She also testified that of the material used on this job some went from the shop and some from where it was purchased directly to the hotel. McLaughlin, while being interrogated with reference to the journal and the material there charged, was asked: “ But in the main you have no independent recollection of this material concerning which you are testifying, have you % ” He answered: “ Only when I look over these items, it brings back to my memory they went from the shop. For instance, there would be certain loads of material I would not see go from the shop at all, but at other times I would be there, and I would help put the material on the wagon;' and I can remember those cases when I see them here.” McQuellon testified that while he kept the time of the plumbers and gasfitters who worked on the job from a certain date, that he kept .no account of the time of the helpers or laborers employed there; that the account of material kept by him had been lost. He testifies that independent of the journal or the bill of particulars which is a practical copy thereof, he was unable to state with any degree of certainty the amount of labor or material furnished by appellee which entered into the building. We hold that the proper foundation was not laid for the introduction of the journal in evidence.

notwithstanding the court refused to admit the journal in evidence, McLaughlin was permitted to go upon the stand and read page after page of it to the jury, and then state that using it as a memorandum to refresh his memory he knew of his own personal knowledge the entries referred to were correct. This course of examination was pursued over the objection of appellants, who also moved the court to strike out testimony of the witness based upon the journal. The court denied the motion. The witness admitted that independent of his reference to, and use of, the journal he would be unable to testify to the greater part of the items sworn to by him. While the court sustained the objection to the introduction of the journal in evidence, the course pursued gave appellee all the practical benefit it could have derived from an introduction of the book in evidence. So far as the jury was concerned, the book was by indirection, practical^ admitted. This was improper and highly prejudicial to the rights of the appellants. , Practically the same course was pursued in the examination of McQuellon with reference to the bill of particulars, which was a virtual transcript of the journal. Independent of the journal as evidence the record fails' to show that appellee has established a claim for the amount of the judgment recovered.

At the instance of the appellee the court gave the jury the following instruction':

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108 Ill. App. 486, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schnellbacher-v-frank-mclaughlin-plumbing-co-illappct-1903.