55 W. Va. 395 | W. Va. | 1904
The Ealeigh Coal and Coke Company complain of a judgment of the circuit court of Ealeigh County, rendered against it on the 28th day of July, 1903, for the sum of $930.00, at the suit of Leon Barrett. The plaintiff obtained a judgment on a former trial, which was brought here by the defendant and reversed. Barrett v. Coal Co., 51 W. Va. 416. On a second trial, the jury rendered a second verdict in favor of the plaintiff, which on motion of the defendant, was set aside by the circuit court. On the third trial, the defendant probably fearing an adverse verdict against it which might not be set aside, demurred to the evidence so as to cast on the court the duty of deciding the law in the case applicable to the evidence. The circuit court overruled the demurrer, and entertained judgment for the defendant. Hence this writ of error.
The first question that presents itself is as- to what rule should govern in cases of demurrer to evidence, the new rule of Maple v. John, 42 W. Va. 30, supported by Talbott v. Railroad Co., 42 W. Va. 560, and Teal v. Ohio R. R. Co., 49 W. Va. 85, or the old mle as held in Shaver v. Bdgdl, 48 W. Va. 502 (37 S. E. 8), sustained by Hogg’s Pleadings and Forms, 537. Or can and should these rules be reconciled to mean virtually the same thing, except that the old rule is modified by the holding of this Court in the case of Johnson v. Burns, 39 W. Va. 658.
In the case of Shaver v. Edgell, 48 W. Va. 512, Judge BRAN-NON says: “I hesitate not to say that if this ease had been wholly left to the jury, and it had found a verdict for the defend-antj the Court must have set it aside as unwarranted by the evidence, and this being so, the circuit court in this ease was warranted in giving judgment for the plaintiff. upon the demurrer. Gunn v. Ohio River R. R. Co. 42 W. Va. 681.”
In the latter case it is said “If the evidence is such that, if there were a verdict in favor of the demurree, the court ought not to set it aside, then on demurrer to the evidence the court ought to give judgment against the demurrant.”
Both these cases were decided since the case of Johnson v.
This makes judgment on demurrers to evidence harmonize with the later decisions founded on the verdicts of juries following the case of Johnson v. Burns. Miller v. White, 46 W Va. 68; Limer v. Traders Co., 44 W. Va. 175; Davidson v. Railway Co., 41 W. Va. 407 (23 S. E. 593).
Following this rule, the judgment in favor of the demurree
The first question raised by the demurrant is that the writing introduced by the defendant is not a completed contract binding on the defendant, because not signed by its president and sealed with its corporate seal, but is only signed by its superintendent, William Lang. Nevertheless it was received by the company, and acted on between the parties as a completed contract, and on the former appeal to this Court no such objection was interposed, but the contract was admitted so that the court cannot do otherwise than treat it as a binding contract between the parties thereto, and a jury would have the right to find that it was ratified and confirmed by the conduct of the parties in relation thereto, and such finding could not be disturbed.
The plaintiff’s case is that he was to make and bum 500,000 brick for the defendant at the price of $5.00 per thousand to the satisfaction of the superintendent, on the defendant’s land; the defendant to furnish the clay and the coal necessary to burn the bricks; that he proceeded to get ready to make and burn the whole amount of brick by preparing the yard and securing the necessary implements; that he made and burned sixty thousand (60,000) of such brick; that he was then notified by the then superintendent. Mr. Bunn, not to make any more brick as the company had all the brick it needed, and more too; that he then saw the president, who told him not to make any more brick; that when they needed any more they would make another contract; that plaintiff’s contract was a mere memorandum, not binding on the defendant; that plaintiff answered that he would see whether it was not a binding contract, and refused to sign a receipt in full oh payment of his hands for the labor performed by them, claiming that the defendant should pay for the preparation made for making the five hundred thousand brick. This the defendant refused to do. The plaintiff then brought this suit, claiming as due him a prospective profit of $2.00 per thousand on the whole 500,000 brick, deducting therefrom the amount already received by him, leaving a balance, with interest, as ascertained by the jury, amounting to $920.00 The plaintiff’s proof undoubtedly sustained the
Defendant’s second position is that Mr. Bunn had no authority to stop Mr. Barrett from completing his contract, and that in fact that neither what Mr. Bunn nor Mr. Ducado, the president of the company, said to him was a sufficient breach of the contract, to authorize the plaintiff to stop work thereunder. On these propositions the feigned verdict is for the plaintiff and the plain and decided preponderance of the evidence does not controvert the same. On the contrary, it is fully sustained by the evidence, for it shows that the defendant had changed its superintendent, and with him its plan for future work, and therefore did not intend or need to carry out its contract with plaintiff.
Defendant’s third position is that if the contract is held valid, and that the defendant has broken the same, that such breach is warranted by the inability of the plaintiff to make such brick as are .specified in the contract. This is an after consideration, and was not given to plaintiff at the time it refused to permit him to proceed with his contract, as a reason for such refusal. Plaintiff’s answer to this is that he made just as good brick as could be made with the clay and coal furnished him by the de fendant, and that the defendant accepted those already made, and did not interpose this objection until after suit was brought, and that the bricks could have been sold to other parties for $6.00 per thousand, but the defendant refused to allow them to be sold. On this proposition, the evidence is conflicting, and does not plainly and decidely preponderate in favor of the defendant so as to overthrow the feigned verdict in favor of the plaintiff.
The defendant’s fourth position is that the plaintiff has not shown in his evidence that his profits would have amounted to $2.00 per thousand, but that the evidence shows that if he had' been permitted to fulfill his contract, he would have suffered a loss instead of gaining a profit. On this question also the evidence is conflicting, and the plain and decided preponderance is not in favor of the-defendant. The court is not able to' say how a jury would have found on this question, but the defendant
It is sufficient to say that plaintiff’s own evidence fully sustains his case if there was no other evidence in the case. His evidence is contradicted to some extent by the witnesses for the defendant, but it is supported by his own witnesses. As to the credibility of the witnesses the jury is ordinarily the sole judge. Smith v. N. & W. Ry. Co., 48 W. Va. 69; Trump v. Coko Co., 46 W. Va. 238 (33 S. E. 1035); Young v. Railroad Co., 44 W. Va. 218 (28 S. E. 932); Sisler v. Shaffer, 43 W. Va. 769 (28 S. E. 721); Akers v. DeWitt, 41 W. Va. 229 (23 S. E. 669). With the credibility of the witnesses, the court has nothing to do on a demurrer to evidence, as a general rule, for the demurrer admits the credibility of the demurree’s witnesses as established. If the defendant had stopped the plaintiff from fulfilling his contract, for the reason that he was- unable to make and burn brick to its satsfaction, and had given him such reason for stopping him, the plaintiff might have had no cause of action, tut it stops him because it does not need any more brick, because apparently of a change of superintendent and plans without giving him any other reason and then after it is sued on its contracts, it sets up the various after considered pretexts that there was no binding contract, that its servants did not stop the execution of'the contract, that plaintiff could not make good brick, and that plaintiff would have lost money if permitted to execute the contract. These are contradictory, evasive, issues, instead of meeting plaintiff with a square issue yet if any of them were fully sustained by a clear and decided preponderance of the testimony, a jury would have been bound to have found in favor, of the defendant. They were thrice submitted to different juries. The first two found for the plaintiff and the defendant virtually admits that the third would have done likewise. It may be that the juries were moved by the apparent lack of fairness on the part of the defendant in dealing with the plaintiff. But however this may be, the evidence being decidedly conflicting, and the facts being determined by the demurrer in favor of the plaintiff, there is no question of law presented by the evidence that‘will enable this Court to
The damages appear to be excessive. This was a question for the jury and not for the court, and the defendant made no motion to set aside the verdict because of excessive damages, if such motion was even proper, on the return of the third verdict.
Defendant claims that the damages are speculative, and not certain. Beatty Lumber Co., v. W. U. Tel. Co., 52 W. Va. 410; Douglas v. Railroad Co., 51 W. Va. 523; Bodkin v. Arnold, 48 W. Va. 108; Hare v. Parkersburg, 24 W. Va. 554; Jones v. Adams, 8 W. Va. 568. In the case of the United States v. Behan, 110 U. S. 339, the rule is stated to be, in case a contractor sues for the profits on a contract which he is prevented from fulfilling by breach of his employer without fault on his part, is the difference between the cost of doing the work and what he was to receive for it. 3 Sunderland on Damages section 743; B. & O. R. R. Co. v. Stewart & Co., 79 Md. 487.
The plaintiff is not bound to prove such profits with absolute certainty, but with only reasonable certainty, and the fact that the employer might reject the work as not done to his satisfaction when completed, would not render such profits uncertain, especially if the contractor might get a larger price for the brick when completed than his employer agreed to pay him for the same.
There is evidence tending to show that the plaintiff could have received $6.00 per thousand for the brick made and burned if the defendant had rejected the same absolutely and permitted him to sell them. The defendant had no right to reject the br.ck as not according to the contract, and at the same time retain the same and refuse the plaintiff the right to sell and make his expenditures therefrom. If the brick were rejected, plaintiff was entitled to a lien thereon for the money, time, and labor, expended in producing them, although the defendant might be entitled to hold them for its advances.
The probability that the defendant might have rejected all the brick when completed, and that the plaintiff would have thereby sustained the complete loss thereof is too uncertain a contingency to render plaintiff’s estimate of his profits so un* certain as to prevent a recovery therefor. All that the plaintiff was required to prove was that the profits claimed were reason
Defendant claims that the evidence shows that the plaintiff would have incurred a loss instead of realizing a profit- out- of his contract, and implied by that defendant deserves a reward for stopping him instead of being compelled to pay his estimated profits. This might have been urged before a jury as the evidence is conflicting, but it is not a question for the court unless it is clearly and decidedly plain that the plaintiff would have suffered loss instead of having made a profit on his contract.The court cannot so determine.
The various questions raised by the defendant are questions of fact, dependent on the evidence which is highly contradictory and conflicting, and on most material points- favorable to the plaintiff. For this Court to overrule the circuit court, and sustain the demurrer to the evidence, the Court must hold that the evidence plainly does not justify a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for any sum whatever. The defendant has placed itself in the position of saying to the court if the plaintiff is entitled to any rqcovery, he is entitled to the full amount of the conditional verdict of the jury.
The character of the evidence in this ease, as to the binding force of the contract; the alleged breach thereof; the ability of the defendant to fulfill it, for the want of experience, lack of means or character of material to be used, or the satisfactory character of the work already done; and as to whether there would result a profit or loss and the amount thereof, demanded a submission to a jury as the proper triers of all such and similar questions of fact, and the jury’s verdict rendered on a fair hearing should have ended the controversy. As to the questions of fact, and these are all that are left for consideration, on conflicting testimony of witnesses, the plaintiff was entitled to a trial by jury, and the defendant could not deprive him of ¿such trial by demurring to the evidence, unless it could present a. plain legal ground, not subject to disputed questions of fact, which would preclude any recovery on the part of the plaintiff.
No such decisive legal ground appearing, this Court must affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
Affirmed,.