Washington, Alexandria, & Georgetown Steam Packet Co. v. Sickles

51 U.S. 419, 13 L. Ed. 479, 10 How. 419, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1474
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 28, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 51 U.S. 419 (Washington, Alexandria, & Georgetown Steam Packet Co. v. Sickles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington, Alexandria, & Georgetown Steam Packet Co. v. Sickles, 51 U.S. 419, 13 L. Ed. 479, 10 How. 419, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1474 (1851).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GRIER

delivered the opinion of the court.

Sickles and Cook, plaintiffs below, filed their declaration in assumpsit, containing two counts.

The first sets forth a parol contract made with William Gun-ton, president of the steamboat company and general agent thereof, in which it was agreed that the plaintiffs should construct and place on board the steamboat Columbia a certain machine invented by Sickles, called a “ cut-off,” at their own cost; that the machine should be tried, and, if it was found to produce any saving of fuel, that the cost of putting it in operation, not exceeding two hundred and fifty dollars, should be first paid out of the savings of fuel effected by the machine; that the machine should be used by the defendants during the continuance of the patent, if the boat should last so long; and after paying for its erection, the savings caused thereby in the consumption of fuel should be divided between the plaintiffs and defendants in the proportion of one fourth to defendants and three fourths to plaintiffs. The mode of ascertaining the amount of saving is specially set forth, — and the plaintiffs aver that they erected their cut-off on said steamboat at the *438 cost of 1242, on the 9th of November, 1844, and* that it was afterwards ascertained in the mode agreed upon, that the saving of fuel caused by using plaintiffs’ cut-off exceeded that of. the “ throttle cut-off,” before used by defendants, by 34x911 per cent.; and that the amount saved over and above the price of erection when this suit was brought was $ 2,500. For the amount of the $ 242, and three fourths of the latter sum, this suit is brought.

There is a second count, for putting the machine on the boat at request of defendants, with a quantum, meruit.

On the trial of .the cause below, evidence was given tending to prove the special contract as laid in the first count, and that the experiment to test the value had been made in the manner agreed upon, with the result as' stated in the declaration. The plaintiffs then offered to show experiments made by practical engineers on other boats, and the result thereof, with the opinion of the said engineers as to the' value of their cut-off. This evidence was objected to, and its admission is the subject of the first bill of exceptions, sealed at request of defendants.

The objection to this evidence is, that the mode of ascertain^ ing the value of plaintiffs’ cut-off is specially stated in the declaration, and no other could be resorted to. But we think that, even if there were no other count in the declaration than that on the special contract, this objection cannot be sustained. The plaintiffs had given in evidence the experiment made in pursuance of their alleged agreement, and as this testimpny tended only to corroborate it, and not to contradict it, or enlarge the claim of the plaintiffs beyond that ascertained by the experiment made by the parties, it cannot be said to be irrelevant or incompetent; at most, it could only be said to be superfluous. But assuming that it was .irrelevant on the first count, it is clearly not so as regards the common count on a quantum meruit. The plaintiffs had an undoubted right to give evidence which might enable them to recover on the latter count, in case the defendants should succeed in establishing their plea of non-assumpsit as to the first. In this view .of the case, the competency and relevancy of the testimony cannot be doubted.

To support the issue on their part, the defendants then called William Gunton, the late president of the company, who wholly denied that he made such a contract as that declared on by plaintiffs, and stated that plaintiffs expressed to him a desire to bring their “cut-off” to the favorable notice of the government, with a view of introducing it on board the national steamships. That he gave them leave to erect their machine on the boat at their own expense, and agreed that, if, on trial, the machine should be approved by the defendants, they would *439 párchase it, oil terms to be afterwards agreed upon; but if not approved, or the terms of purchase offered by plaintiffs should be such as defendants would not accept, then plaintiffs should have leave to take off their machine at their own'expense. That afterwards, when the plaintiffs’ terms were asked, they said defendants should have the machine on the same terms as the steamboát Augusta and other boats, but would not then or at any other time state definitely what those terms were, or what price the Augusta. had given, or the plaintiffs would be willing to take, so that it could be laid before the company for their approval. That defendants had never refused permission to plaintiffs to take away the machine from the boat, if they so desired to do. Certain letters were also given in evidence, the contents of which it is not necessary to state in order to understand the instructions given to the jury which are now the subject o.f exception.

Four several bills of exception have been taken to the refusal of the court to give four items of instruction to the jury. Two of these only are relied on here. The first may be briefly stated thus': — That if the jury believed the testimony of William Gunton, and that the contract between the parties was such as he stated, defendants were entitled to a verdict. This instruction was refused by a divided court.

We are of opinion that the defendants were clearly entitled to have this instruction given to the jury, as the testimony, if believed by them, fully supported the defendants’ plea, and showed that the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover on either count in their declaration. They could not recover on the first count, for this testimony showed that there was no such contract between the parties as that set forth in it; nor on the count on a quantum meruit, for the use of the machine, for that would be a repudiation of the contract as proved. If the plaintiffs put their machine on board of defendants’ boat for the purpose of experiment, on an agreement that defendants should pay for it if on trial they approved it, and-were willing to give the price asked, otherwise the plaintiffs should have leave to take it away, — it certainly needs no argument to show, that, without stating their terms, or offering to fulfil their contract by a sale of the machine, the plaintiffs cannot repudiate it and sue for the use of the machine. This would be a palpable fraud on the defendants.

The only other exception urged to the charge of the court below is in the answer given by the court to the fourth instruction prayed; which is as follows : —

“ If, from the evidence, the jury shall find that William Gun-ton, the president of the defendants’ company, and acting as *440

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Bluebook (online)
51 U.S. 419, 13 L. Ed. 479, 10 How. 419, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-alexandria-georgetown-steam-packet-co-v-sickles-scotus-1851.