Tryon v. White & Corbin Co.

20 L.R.A. 291, 25 A. 712, 62 Conn. 161, 1892 Conn. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 30, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 20 L.R.A. 291 (Tryon v. White & Corbin Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tryon v. White & Corbin Co., 20 L.R.A. 291, 25 A. 712, 62 Conn. 161, 1892 Conn. LEXIS 49 (Colo. 1892).

Opinions

Robinson, J.

The defendant is a corporation with three stockholders, White, Corbin and Prescott, and these three stockholders make up the board of direction. The plaintiff *168 is a mason and builder, and was engaged as a sub-contractor to do certain work and furnish certain materials in his line in the alteration of the factory buildings of the defendant, and in the erection of a picker-house for the defendant, the entire job having been let to one Arnold as the principal contractor. The plaintiff in doing the work and furnishing the materials essential to his part of the work, claimed that he furnished extra labor and extra materials for which he was entitled to extra compensation, and this suit was brought by him against the defendant to recover such extra compensation. It was tried to the jury, and a verdict was returned for the plaintiff to recover $1,817 and costs.

The defendant has appealed to this court for claimed errors in the admission of testimony and in the charge of the court. The defendant sets up ten reasons of appeal, but the second and third subdivisions of the first reason of appeal are the most noticeable and to my mind the most serious errors assigned in the case. They are those which are claimed to have arisen in the admission against the defendant’s objection of the declarations of Corbin and Arnold to Tryon touching the matter of the claimed extra work. Mr. Corbin was one of the directors of the defendant corporation, and it appears had taken some part in the matter of arranging the location of the picker-house hereinafter referred to, and was claimed to be in fact the particular officer who made the last change in its location. Mr. Tryon was permitted by the court to testify that, after he found that the excavation necessary for a firm foundation for the picker-house in its changed location required a greater depth than was shown by the plan, he went to see Mr. Prescott, one of the other directors, who was also the treasurer and general manager of the company, about this matter, and informed him that in view of this change very much more stone work would be required and a larger amount of stock would be necessary to complete the work, and that he should expect more pay; but that Mr. Prescott refused to pay for extras ; and that he, Tryon, thereupon informed Prescott that he should be obliged to stop the work, and that he could not *169 give the company that amount of extra work, and that Prescott thereupon told him that he could stop work and that he, Prescott, would not pay him for any extras; that directly after this Tryon went to see Corbin, and told him how the matter stood and what Prescott had said; and Try-on was allowed, against objection, to testify that Corbin made reply to him, that if the facts were as stated by him, if there was extra work he ought to have pay for it; that they were intending to have a meeting of the directors of the company at noon that day, and he would then bring the matter up and would send word by Arnold, the principal contractor, to him, Tryon, of the result, and that Corbin further said that he did not want the work stopped, and then and there told him to go ahead and the company would pay. The plaintiff, Tryon, was also permitted against objection to testify that, after having this conversation with Corbin and at the hour named, Arnold went to the office of the defendant, and returned from that place to Tryon, and stated to him that the company would pay him for the extra work and that he was to go ahead.

All this was denied by the defendant, but whether it is true or false is not the question in this case. The jury had the right and the power to find it to be true. The only question is, was the testimony admissible in any view of the case and did it legitimately and properly tend to establish any obligation on the part of this company to pay for this extra work and material.

Supposing it to be true that Corbin did have this talk with Tryon and did tell Tryon that the directors were to have a meeting that day at noon, and that he, as one of those directors in that meeting, would bring up the matter of this claimed extra work and extra pay, and that he would send word to him by Arnold of the result. And suppose Arnold did in fact go to the company’s office at the hour named and did in fact come to Tryon from that office on that day and hour and say to him—“ The company will pay you for the extra work; you are to go ahead.” Supposing all this to be true, are there not other facts and circumstances *170 in this case which, taken in connection with the above, would create some kind of an obligation on the part of the defendant to pay the plaintiff for such extra work and extra material ? Is there not a view that can justly and properly be taken of this case that makes this testimony entirely admissible ?

Suppose the trial judge had rejected this testimony, and the plaintiff had come here claiming error in its rejection, how could this court have justified such rejection ? Could we say that in no aspect, and for none of the purposes of this case, was this testimony admissible ? Let us keep this also in mind as we review the situation.

Now after this talk with Corbin and after Arnold had delivered this communication, Tryon goes forward and completes the work, and the company refuses to pay on the ground that it owes no obligation to him. They say that no debt was created and that this testimony should not have v been admitted because Corbin had no authority to bind the company to pay Tryon, and because what Arnold said was merely hearsay.

Should the company under all the circumstances be permitted to avail itself of this claim, and can it justly say that no obligation on its part to pay Tryon has arisen out of all the facts ?

Suppose Corbin, instead of making the communication through Arnold, had himself made it directly to Tryon, would not Tryon have had every reason to believe that Cor-bin was telling him the truth as to the action of the company? Would he have had no right to rely upon such a statement coming from such a source, or should it be refused the place of a factor in this case because there was no evidence of any express authority to Corbin to bind the company? A majority of the directors at least had full knowledge that Tryon claimed to be doing extra work, and that if he did it he should expect extra compensation. He had told both Prescott and Corbin this, and they saw him from day to day doing this work; in fact all the directors from time to time saw him going forward with it; the work *171 was in fact extra work and the company to-day retains the benefit of it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 L.R.A. 291, 25 A. 712, 62 Conn. 161, 1892 Conn. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tryon-v-white-corbin-co-conn-1892.