W. H. Hoover Co. v. Niagara Fire Exting. Co.

32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 376, 19 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 129
CourtStark Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 376 (W. H. Hoover Co. v. Niagara Fire Exting. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Stark Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. H. Hoover Co. v. Niagara Fire Exting. Co., 32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 376, 19 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 129 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

MAEVIN, J.

The relation of the parties here is the reverse of their relation in the court of common pleas. The terms plaintiff and defendant as used in this opinion, will refer to the parties as they stood in the court below. Each of the parties is a corporation.

On March 24, 1906, a contract in writing was entered into between the parties, whereby the plaintiff undertook to equip the manufacturing plant of the defendant with an approved wet pipe system of the Niagara sprinklers and fire extinguishing apparatus, for which the defendants agreed to pay the sum of $5,500. The contract provided among other things, that this sum of $5,500 should be “in full for work and materials, as specified herein, including surveys, preparation of plans, board and car fare for men, and the final payment shall be due and payable thirty days after the work is completed, in accordance with the requirements of Ohio Inspection Bureau, under whose rules and regulations the work is to be performed.” The specifications made a part of the contract, contained the following clauses, among other things:

[377]*377“The foregoing proposition is based upon furnishing and erecting the necessary number of automatic sprinklers in your plant located at New Berlin, Ohio, together with all pipe, fittings, valves, gauges, clips, hangers and labor necessary to erect the-same in strict accordance with the requirements of the Ohio Inspection Bureau. * * * It is understood under this agreement that you (meaning the defendant) are to do all excavating and backfilling of trenches, and any carpenter and masonry work, and furnish piers for tank. Otherwise, we are to install a complete automatic sprinkling system, such as will be satisfactory to the stock insurance companies, and when completed will meet strictly with their approval.”

The plaintiff put into the manufacturing plant of the defendant a system of Niagara sprinklers and fire extinguishing apparatus which was to the satisfaction of the stock insurance companies and to the inspection bureau, and claims to have fully performed the contract on its part to be performed. The defendant by its answer, denies that the plaintiff has put in a complete automatic sprinkling system, and avers that the fact is that it is such system, when complete, and would have included all that which was put in, together with an electric alarm system, and that no such “electric system” was put in. Aside from this, there is no disagreement between the parties.

.The contract entered into was upon a printed form prepared by the plaintiff, to which was annexed the specifications, from which quotations have been made. This printed form consists of a proposition made by the plaintiff to the defendant, and accepted by it. The specifications are typewritten. It developed upon the trial that on March 17, 1906, the plaintiff had made a similar proposition to the defendant at a different price, to-wit, $6,000, which was not accepted by the defendant. The defendant placed upon the stand W. H. Hoover, who was its president and general manager, and who acted for it in the making of the contract sued upon. He testified that he had a conversation with Mr. Frazer, manager of the plaintiff at the time the contract was entered into, and then he was asked this question:

“Q. In that conversation did you- call his attention to the fact that there was no itemized statement in this proposition of [378]*378March 24th similar to the one set out in the proposition of March 17th?”

This question was objected to; the objection sustained, and an exception taken by the defendant. And the defendant’s counsel stated that he expected the answer to be that the witness called Mr. Frazer’s attention to the fact that in the proposition of March 17th there was an itemized list of the various things that were to make up said system complete, and that in the proposition of March 24th, there was no such itemized list.

This question was then asked of the witness:

“ Q. I will ask you if at that time, before the signing of the contract, you asked Mr. Frazer what this proposition, which was not itemized, and which is incorporated into the contract of March 24th, included?
“A. I did.
“Q. "What did he say?”

This question was objected to; the objection sustained, and an exception taken by the defendant, and the defendant’s counsel stated that he expected the witness to say, in answer to this question, that Mr. Frazer, who represented the plaintiff in the transaction, said that the proposition included in the contract of March 24th was the same, and included all the work and material the same as that set out in the proposition of March 17th; that it was their flat form of contract, and that it included everything that was itemized in the form marked “Defendant’s Exhibit A” (this Defendant’s Exhibit A being the proposition which the defendant claimed was made to it on March 17th).

Counsel for the defendant then said, “in connection with the testimony of this witness, the defendant offers the proposition, or blank contract of March 17, 1906, heretofore marked as its “Exhibit A.” Objection to this was sustained and an exception taken by the defendant.

If there was any error for which the defendant can properly complain in the trial of this case, it was the ruling of the court upon the several questions, and offers made by the defendant, shown in the foregoing. On the part of the plaintiff in error it is urged that this should have been admitted because it would have explained what the plaintiff meant or represented [379]*379to the defendant that it meant by the words used in the contract actually entered into when it said “otherwise we are to install complete automatic sprinkling system.” The word “otherwise” as here used is so used because immediately preceding it the defendant was to do certain work. This is seen by the quotation heretofore made of the clause preceding the word “otherwise.” So then, except as to the things which the defendant was to do and which precede in the specifications the word “otherwise,” the plaintiff was to install “a complete automatic sprinkling system.” It is said that what constitutes “a complete automatic sprinkling system” would not be understandable necessarily by an intelligent man, without some explanation, and that such explanation was furnished by the plaintiff, as would appear if the witness had been permitted to answer that when he asked Frazer what was included in it, he answered, that it included all that was included in the proposition of March 17, and if the court had then permitted the proposition of March 17 in evidence, the words “complete automatic sprinkling system” would, it is claimed, have been fully explained. The specifications attached to the proposition of March 17th contain these words:

“The foregoing proposition is based upon furnishing and erecting 725 automatic sprinklers in your plant located at New Berlin, Ohio, together with all pipe, fitting, valves, gauges, clips, hangers and labor necessary to erect the same in strict accordance with the requirements of the Ohio Inspection Bureau. We further estimate that it will require.” (Then follow twelve items of equipment, one of which is an “electric alarm system.”)

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 376, 19 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-h-hoover-co-v-niagara-fire-exting-co-ohcirctstark-1910.