143 Ala. 198 | Ala. | 1904
There Avas evidence adduced on the trial tending to sIioav that I. B. Bates, the husband of the defendant, Mrs. Marie A. Bates, Avas her agent in respect of having her house painted, and that as such agent he made the contract with Hogan for the work ancl! material, and agreed Avitli the plaintiff to retain out of the money he was to pay Hogan enough to pay plaintiff’s bill for paints and oil sold to Hogan and used in the work, and that Avlien Hogan completed the work according to the contract he would pay plaintiff’s said bill.
Hogan assented to this arrangement and, as the evidence further goes to sIioav, a part of the contract price was withheld from him for the purpose of carrying it out. The work Avas never completed by Hogan according to the contract, but nearly so, Avhen it Avas delayed by Bates on account of his Avife’® absence, and after that Hogan became ill, and the plaintiff then sent competent men there to complete the work, but Bates would not allow them to do so. There was also evidence tending to show that the work remaining undone Avas of the value of not exceeding ten dollars, the contract price being-turn hundred and twenty-five dollars, of which only one
Charges 1, 2 and 3 requested by defendant are bad under the foregoing views.
Charge 4 was in substance given to the jury in one or more other instructions asked by the defendant.
The court on the motion for a new trial ruled that the tendencies of the evidence to which we have adverted were of sufficient probative force to support the .verdict of the jury. We are not prepared to affirm that the court erred in this-: it does not appear to us that the verdict was plainly and palpably against the weight of the evidence.
The verdict was not excessive, even if it be assumed that the stun retained by defendant was only seventy-five dollars, instead of ninety-five, as one aspect of the evidence goes to show it was.
Affirmed.