30 Wash. 178 | Wash. | 1902
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by respondent against appellant to recover a balance alleged to be due on a contract for furnishing certain equipments for a brewery then being constructed by the appellant. The contract was executed in writing and the provisions thereof material to be stated here were as follows:
“The American Copper, Brass & Iron Works agree to construct and build and deliver not later than the 1st of January, 1892, f. o. b. cars at Chicago, the following brewing equipments for the said Galland-Burke B. & M. Co. of*180 the size and quality of material and for the agreed price hereinafter stated, viz,: (Here follows a description of material.) All of said equipment to be furnished f. o. b. cars at Chicago for the sum of $5,800 (five thousand eight hundred dollars), which sum tire said Galland-Burke B. & M. Co. agree to pay for same, if up to specifications and contract and delivery made not later than Jan. 1, 1902. If later, then the said American C. B. & Iron Works are to deduct from said amount account of inconvenience, direct damage done to said G.-B. B. & M. Co. and as liquidated damages, the sum of $25.00 per day for each and every day that delivery is made f. o. b. later than said 1st Jany., 1902.”
The written contract is set out in haec verija in the complaint, and it is alleged that it was further agreed between the parties, at the time the contract was entered into, that the respondent should ascertain freight rates on the brewing equipment, and advise appellant, who was to decide and direct respondent whether to ship the equipment as a whole or “knocked down,” and that appellant also then and there agreed that the penalty claims would not be enforced except in the most extreme case of neglect; that said last mentioned stipulations were made a part of the contract, but by oversight or mistake were not included in the written contract. It is further alleged that pursuant to the agreement appellant was notified by respondent concerning the freight rates, but that appellant failed to advise or direct respondent how to ship, and thereby occasioned delay in the delivery of the equipment. It is also alleged that appellant extended the time in which the goods were to be delivered, and that respondent did not deliver the equipment by January 1, 1892, because of said extension of time, as well as because of the failure on the part of appellant to advise as to shipment; but that, as soon as respondent was directed as to the shipment, it complied with its part of the contract in every particular. The answer ad
It is assigned as error that the court permitted the witness Meinshausen, who was president of the respondent company, to testify as to the alleged statements made by Mr. Sam. Galland in relation to the shipping of the goods, it being claimed by appellant that Sam. Galland had no connection with its company, except that he owned some of its stock. The witness Meinshausen testified, in effect, that Sam. Galland waived for the appellant company the stipulation in the written contract that the goods were to be delivered on or before January 1, 1892. The respondent company and its manufacturing plant were located in Chicago, and the appellant company had ordered this brewing equipment to be manufactured for shipment to Spokane, to be used in appellant’s brewery, then being constructed in Spokane. Sam. Galland went to Chicago, arriving there soon after January 1, 1892. He says he went there to be educated as a brewmaster. Whatever may
It is next assigned that the court erred in refusing to admit in evidence, or order to be filed, a bill of particulars alleged to have been furnished by respondent. Early in the progress of the cause appellant moved the court to require respondent to furnish a bill of particulars showing on what dates respondent shipped the machinery. The motion appears among the files of the cause, but no order directing a bill of particulars to be furnished
“The Court: If you show it was filed in compliance with the order of the court— Mr. Thayer: Well, I state to your honor it was, and counsel do not deny the signature. Mr. Eorster: I haven’t any doubt but what it was properly served. I have no recollection about it at all.”
The court thereupon ordered the filing of the bill of particulars, but-, it subsequently appearing that no order had theretofore been made in the record, the court observed as follows: “1 will sustain the objection. The record does not show there even' was an order made for a bill of particulars. I do not remember any such order.” Respondent’s counsel stated that they did not have the original bill of particulars in their possession, and later in the trial appellant sought to introduce in evidence the aforesaid copy of what it claimed had been served upon it as a hill of particulars. One of respondent’s counsel was called to the witness stand, and, upon being shown the copy, was asked if he had ever before seen it, or the original bill of particulars. The witness having stated that he refused to answer, without stating the ground of his refusal, the following occurred:
“The Court: On the ground that whatever it is would be a communication between client and attorney? The witness: Ho-, sir. Upon the ground that there lias no order been made for a hill of particulars, and your honor ruled last Saturday that the bill of particulars, as given*185 by the attorney, was not competent without an order directing a bill of particulars.”
On further examination the witness stated that he had no recollection whatever about it. The copy bore date January 11, 1895, which was some years before the time of the trial. The action had been pending since 1S92. The purported signature of the witness to the copy was, however, not denied. The purported signature of the firm of his co-counsel was made by a rubber stamp impression, but what purported to be the witness’s signature was written with pen and ink. The copy recited upon its face that it was furnished in compliance with an order of the court theretofore made. Appellant offered it in evidence, stating as grounds in support of the offer that it was given in compliance with an order of the court; that it was a bill of particulars served by respondent’s attorneys, and signed by them in response to a demand. Objection was then made by respondent, and the grounds stated were that the record showed no order of court for a bill of particulars, and, further, that the signature of Forster & Wakefield was not attached to the copy. The said signature was the one already mentioned as purporting to be attached by rubber stamp. Ho objection was made, however, that the pen-written signature of J. W. Marshall, co-counsel of Forster & Wakefield, was not genuine. The objection was sustained, it being the court’s view that, in the absence of an order in the record directing a bill of particulars, the offered evidence was incompetent. We think this was error under the ruling of this court in Howells v. North American, etc., Trading Co., 24 Wash. 689 (64 Pac. 786). We there held that a bill of particulars voluntarily furnished upon the oral request of counsel was as binding as though furnished under the order of the court. In the ease at bar we think sufficient
It is assigned that the court erred in permitting the witness Pagenstacher to testify as to a conversation which he had with Mr. Meinshausen, the president of respondent company. As has already appeared, appellant claimed under the contract liquidated damages at the rate of $25 per day for each day the delivery of the machinery was delayed after January 1, 1892. The court ruled that, before appellant could recover damages under the liquidated damage provision of the contract, it must first appear that actual damage to a considerable amount had been sustained by reason of the delay in shipping the goods; and respondent sought to show that no considerable actual damage had been sustained, because it claimed that appellant’s buildings at Spokane were not ready to receive the machinery on January 1st, and not until after the machinery had actually been received at Spokane. In attempting to prove that the buildings were not ready respondent introduced the deposition of said witness Pagenstaeher. This witness had theretofore been in the employ of appellant, and had gone to Chicago, where he says he had a conversation with Meinshausen. He was asked what he said to him about the progress of the work upon appellant’s brewery buildings in Spokane. Objection was made to the question on the ground that it called for hearsay testimony, and that any statements the witness might have made at that time upon that subject would not be binding upon appellant. The objection was, however, overruled, and the witness was permitted to tes
It is assigned that the court erred in instructing the jury to the effect that, before appellant would be entitled to a deduction of $25 per day, claimed as stipulated damages under the contract, they must find that respondent failed to comply with its contract, and that such failure “did cause the defendants some material, considerable damage.” We think the instruction was erroneous under the issues of the case. Appellant was claiming the right to recover hy reason of the clause in the contract providing for stipulated damages, and the instruction had the effect to require it to prove actual damages before it could recover. It is true, under the modified agreement alleged by respondent it is claimed that it was agreed that liquidated damages would not be enforced unless there was substantial actual damage. But the alleged modified agreement was one of the disputed questions in the case. In Reichenbach v. Sage, 13 Wash. 364 (43 Pac. 354, 52 Am. St. Rep. 51), this court held that a provision in a building contract for the recovery by the owner of $10 as damages for each day the completion of the building was delayed after the time stipulated was a provision for liquidated damages, and not for a penalty, and could he enforced. The court at page 367 said:
*188 “ . there is an element of uncertainty as to the real damages which would he maintained by the plaintiff which renders it more or less impracticable to be determined by a jury. Values of rents are fluctuating, and dwelling houses of the character and description of this one are ordinarily not built for rent at all, but for the convenience and comfort of the owners, and inasmuch as the parties saw fit to settle in advance the question of damages, and it seems to he on an equitable basis, we do not feel justified in disturbing that contract and holding that it was a contract which the parties had no right to make.”
In the opinion in that case the court quoted approvingly and at length from Dwinel v. Brown, 54 Me. 470, a part of which quotation is as follows:
“Courts of common law cannot, like courts where the civil law prevails, award such damages as they may deem reasonable, but must allow the damages, whether actual or estimated, as agreed upon by the parties.”
To the same effect is Everett Land Co. v. Maney, 16 Wash. 552 (48 Pac. 243). The following cases hold that, where damages for the breach of a contract are liquidated, it is not necessary to show in what manner or to what extent the party claiming under it has been actually damaged: Pierce v. Jung, 10 Wis. 30; Kelso v. Reid, 145 Pa. St. 606 (23 Atl. 323) ; Sanford v. First National Bank, 94 Iowa, 680 (63 N. W. 459) ; Spicer v. Hoop, 51 Ind. 365.
It is last assigned that the court erred in instructing the jury that appellant, by its answer, admitted the contract to be as alleged in the complaint. It will he remembered that the written contract was first set out in full in the complaint, .and this was followed by allegations óf other matters, which it is averred were actually made a part of the contract, but were omitted from the written agreement by oversight or mistake. The answer first generally denies all the allegations of the complaint “save
“The defendant admits the allegations as to the corporate character of the parties hereto, and that the contract set forth in said complaint is a true copy of the contract between the parties hereto, excepting that the contract is not signed on behalf of the American Copper, Brass & Iron Works by the person named in said complaint.”
It seems manifest to us that the pleader did not intend to admit any portion of the contract alleged in the complaint, except what is referred to as “a true copy,” etc., evidently meaning the written contract copied in the complaint. The whole case was tried on the theory that appellant did not admit the allegations of the complaint as to provisions in the contract not included in the written one. We therefore think it was error to instruct the jury that the contract as set out in the complaint was admitted, since they may have been misled thereby.
For the foregoing reasons, we think a new trial must be granted. The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to the lower court to grant a new trial.
Reavis, C. J., and Fullerton, Anders, Mount, White and Dunbar, JJ., concur.