27 Vt. 700 | Vt. | 1855
In regard to this case, which is certainly more or less wanting in many of the essential grounds upon which we have finally sustained Herrick’s case, in part, I have, at times, greatly hesitated, whether the bill ought not to be altogether dismissed, as one of the members of the court was, at first, inclined to think as to both cases.
A decree setting aside an award, or judgment, like any decree reforming a contract, as such a decree as here sought always is, is quite in the discretion of the court of chancery, and of this court, on appeal. By discretion, as applied to a judicial tribunal, we understand, of course, a legal discretion; a discretion to be regulated by general rules, and exercised according to settled precedents, in contradistinction to the mere arbitrary will of the judge. But, among the general grounds, upon which such redress is always denied, one is, where the party seeking to reform the contract, or set aside the former decision, omitted, for a long time, to make objection to the contract or proceeding which he now seeks to avoid. The general rules of law, governing the courts bpon this subject, will not allow a readjustment of an allowance, under contracts of this character, unless complaint was made in regard to all the estimates sought to be reformed, at the very time of their being made. In attempting the application of this rule to the present case, I do not find that any complaint was made of the estimates, previous to June 24, 1846. Mor is there anything in the case to show that, up to that time, the plaintiffs had any expectation that the future estimates would increase the allowance already made for
We think, therefore, the plaintiffs are justly entitled to have an allowance for what was deducted from the estimates of their work, done after June 24, 1846.
The mistake, too, of ten feet in the bench, if it should clearly appear that it affected the monthly estimates made to the plaintiffs, should be set right. I question whether it will appear that this mistake affected the monthly estimates, as it probably must have done the proximate estimates, but I have not examined the matter so as to feel any confidence in my conjectures. This will be examined by the commissioners or masters.
The result to which the masters came, in this case, seems to have been reached by allowing 25 yards a day to each shoveller, in all weather and in all earths, as a kind of average. But this is by no means satisfactorily established by the proof, in my judgment, notwithstanding the testimony of Kennedy, that they will do twice that, and near sixty yards, in sand. This, in my opinion, is a sufficient impeachment of his practical skill in the business. But his willingness to venture such an opinion, ought, perhaps, to be regarded as some evidence of his general sincerity and .honesty,
There is no satisfactory evidence, in this case, that the company connived at any improper estimates by the engineers. The only ones for which the plaintiffs are allowed to recover, were undoubtedly made in good faith, so that the bill, upon the principles laid down in Herrick’s case, must be dismissed as to the company, and only retained as to Belknap’s estate. It is perhaps worthy of remark, as tending to rebut the inference that incorrect estimates were made, in this case, to the plaintiffs, that they were mostly made by Samuels, who is shown to have been quite above the common grade of the company’s resident engineers. The 10,000 yards slide, and the one of 50,000 yards are sufficiently disposed of by the decision of the engineers rejecting them. And the same is true of the culvert condemned, and the stone excavated and not removed. It would seem, too, that if any recovery could be had for either of these claims, aside of the conti act, it could be had at law. There seems to be no necessity of any resort to a court of equity in regard to them.
There is, too, a kind of staleness, an odor of after-thought, about this case, which creeps out at every stage of its progress, which is a legitimate species of evidence, and which would induce any one, in the very great uncertainty of the testimony, and its apparent dramatic character, and all its principal pivots being made to rest almost exclusively upon the shoulders of Stephen Herrick and Walter Forsythe, who, with every disposition to believe in their perfect honesty and sincerity, and especially the former, — I know less of Forsythe, — seem to me, in spite of my wish to find it otherwise, to be, to some extent, laboring under a kind of idiosyncracy upon this subject. All this would, almost of necessity, I think, induce any fair-minded person to solve the doubts in the case in favor of the defendants.
Decree of the chancellor reversed, and the report of the masters set aside, and the case remanded to the court of chancery, to be disposed of according to the decretal order on file, q. v.
No such question was made when the case was in this court, and now that it has been in the court of chancery for months, wo should certainly not make any additional order.
said, as an individual, and without examination, he could entertain no doubt of the power of the chancellor to allow such a motion, upon sufficient reasons, and that it would be no contempt of the mandate of this court: but as a court, they could give no intimation of the law in this way.