Smith v. Stafford

14 Ill. App. 313, 1883 Ill. App. LEXIS 190
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 29, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Ill. App. 313 (Smith v. Stafford) 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
Smith v. Stafford, 14 Ill. App. 313, 1883 Ill. App. LEXIS 190 (Ill. Ct. App. 1884).

Opinion

Pleasants, J.

Appellants having contracted with the Peoria & Farmington Pail way Co. to grade that portion of its road lying between Monmouth and Keithsburg, sublet a section of three miles to the appellee, who, in September, 1882, brought this action before a justice of the peace to recover a balance claimed for his work done thereon. The trial, on appeal to the circuit court, resulted in a verdict for plaintiff for $175, on which, after a motion for a new trial had been overruled, judgment was entered, and defendant appealed.-

Appellee’s agreement, made June 14, 1881, was to do the work contemplated and receive payment therefor in the manner and according to the terms, conditions and specifications of thejoriginal contract, of which a printed copy was attached, and its provisions, as far as applicable, made binding upon him.

This provided, among other things, that the work should all be done subject to the general direction and orders of the company’s engineer as given from time to time, and to his satisfaction and acceptance; that between the first and tenth days of each month the contractor should furnish to the company his time book, verified, with duplicates of all orders issued by him against it in payment for labor, which orders the company might pay and charge to him, and that he should not pay for any labor except in such- orders, although he might cash them himself after they were issued and properly .indorsed; that about the first day of each month approximate estimates of tlie work done during the one preceding should be made, and on or before the twentieth, upon the engineer’s certificate thereof, paid for to the contractor, less fifteen per cent., and the amount of all labor orders issued by him during that month. The fifteen per cent, was to be retained until the final completion of the contract and acceptance of the work, which was to be commenced within twenty days and completed on or before the first day of October, 1881.

Appellee commenced the work in the latter part of June and continued until some time in the first week of September, when he left it unfinished and never resumed. He claims that he had substantially finished it as far as the grade stakes had been set, and that the engineer, although requested by him, neglected to lay out further work, so that he was compelled, without his fault, to leave it as and when he did. He further claims that he had subcontracted a portion to J. A. Giles, who continued to work until October 1st, when he and all the other contractors were, by the company and with the consent of appellants, ordered to suspend; but it is not claimed that he ever did, by himself, through Giles or otherwise howsoever, complete the work he contracted to do.

Appellants set up these defenses: First, that they had paid him nearly all that he could be entitled to in any view of the case, by labor orders issued to him and his men, and had the right to pay the small balance remainingyw rata to the men; and secondly, that he abandoned the work before it was completed and before the time fixed by the contract for its completion, without any justifying cause, and for no reason except that he found it to be, as he conducted it, unprofitable; that he had not substantially finished it to the point where he was when he left, and that the engineer had then complied with his request and staked out a thousand feet beyond it; that Giles’ work was done under contract, not with appellee, but with appellants, made after and because appellee had refused to go on, and that they paid Giles in full.

Smith testified that appellee refused to proceed because he was dissatisfied with the engineer’s measurement of what he had done, and not because more work was not laid out for him; and the engineer, that he staked out, for grading, an additional thousand feet very soon after he was requested and before appellee left; which the latter denied.

What the jury thought of this testimony, or whether they deemed it important to find as to the fact thus disputed, may be doubted, since they were instructed on behalf of the plaintiff, “ that if they believe, from the evidence, that Giles was a subcontractor under the plaintiff, Stafford, and entered upon the work belonging to Stafford, with Stafford’s consent, and with the consent of Smith & McFarland, and continued to so work on said job until the 1st of October, 1881, and that on that day there was a general order suspending all work on the line of the road, and Giles was so notified as the order of the railway company, and assented to by defendants, Smith & .«.McFarland, and in that way prevented the plaintiff from prosecuting the work and finishing said contract, then the plaintiff is not in default, and is entitled to recover any balance due on the contract for work already done, and the jury will find for the plaintiff.”

Being bound by his contract to complete the work on or before October 1,1881, it is manifest that an order of suspension issued on that day could not have abbreviated the time allowed, nor,- of itself alone, have deprived him of any opportunity or means of fulfillment to which he was entitled under that contract. So that if he was then in default, of whatever character or to whatever extent, the order alone could not relieve him. Flor do we perceive the bearing, in .this connection, of the subcontract with Giles and his entering and continuing upon the job as stated in the instruction, though made and done with defendants’ consent; for these facts would not work an extension of the time for performance, nor any other change in appellee’s contract with them. The proposition, then, in substance, is, that if Giles was a subcontractor under plaintiff] and worked on his own job, with defendants’ consent, until the time fixed for the completion of plaintiff’s contract with them, and then the company, with their assent, ordered a general suspension, they are liable to plaintiff for all that had been done under his contract with them, no matter how far short of compliance with it or who was responsible for such shortcoming. We think it was incumbent on him to show either a substantial performance within the time fixed, or a sufficient reason for the failure, or a voluntary acceptance by appellants of the work as done; and therefore that this instruction was too broad and unqualified. It withdrew from the consideration of the jury all the evidence on the part of the appellants tending to show that he abandoned the work before its completion and without good cause.

We discover no other error, in respect to instructions, of which appellant can complain. The one numbered 3, asked by them and refused, was in substance a repetition of another which was given, and the one numbered 6 was not applicable to the case between these parties without material qualification.

For proof of the amount of his claim, except for what was done under Giles, appellee relied solely on a statement of the account given him, a month or two after he quit, by appellant Smith — calculated, on the engineer’s final estimate of the amount and class of work done, at $1,111.11, and showing, by deduction of “15 per cent.” and payments for July and August, a balance in his favor of only $3.82.

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14 Ill. App. 313, 1883 Ill. App. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-stafford-illappct-1884.