74 F. 681 | 6th Cir. | 1896
The defendants in error, John W. Pertz and George R. Stewart, partners under the name of Pertz & Stewart, are patentees and manufacturers of certain machines called “automatic separators.” These machines were adapted to be attached to the orifice of a natural gas well, and purported to separate the oil and water which came to the surface intermingled with the gas, and to do this work automatically. They claim to have sold 32 of these separators to the city of Findlay, a municipal corporation of the state of Ohio, which owned and operated a plant for the distribution of natural gas to consumers within that city. This action was brought by said Pertz & Stewart against the city of Findlay for a balance alleged to be due on account of the sale aforesaid. There was a judgment for the defendants in error, and to review that judgment this writ of error has been sued out. A former judgment in favor of the defendants in error upon the same account was reversed by this court for reasons fully appearing in an opinion of this court then delivered, and reported in 13 C. C. A. 559, 66 Fed. 427 et seq. The defenses against the action upon the former trial are fully set out and discussed in the former opinion of this court, and need not be again here stated, except in so far as shall appear necessary to the determination of the questions involved upon the present writ of error.
Upon both trials there was evidence tending to show that the superintendent of the city gas plant, who bought these separators for the city, and through whom it was sought to charge the city as upon a contract, was at the time also the agent of Pertz & Stew
The error assigned for refusal to charge requests Nos. 1, 2, 4, and 5 must be overruled, because they were sufficiently covered by the charge as delivered.
Counsel for plaintiff in error have argued that this contract for the purchase of these machines was void under section 2702 of the Revised Statutes of the State of Ohio, which provides that:
“No agreement, contract or oilier obligation involving the expenditure of money shall he entered into, nor shall any ordinance, resolution or order for the appropriation or expenditure of money, be passed by the council or any board or officer of a municipal corporation, unless the auditor of the corporation ■* * * shall first certify that the money required for the contract, agreement or other obligation, or to pay the appropriation or expenditure, is in the treasury to the credit of the fund from which it is to be drawn,” etc.. I “* * * and all contracts, agreements or other obligations, and all ordi- * nances, resolutions and orders entered into or passed, contrary to the provisions of this section shall be void.”
It is enough to say that a careful examination of this record shows that this question is now* for the first time raised. No demurrer was filed to the petition of the plaintiffs below because if did hot affirmatively show that the contract sued upon had been authorized according to the terms of the statute, and no reference to any. such defense is made in any pleading or answer filed by the city. No. proof appears in the bill of exceptions concerning the action of the city council or of the authorities of the city of Find-
The third request involves a matter which has now become immaterial. It presented the question as to whether, under the pleadings, there could be a recovery by the plaintiff in error against the defendants in error of the money already paid by the city upon the contract, or of the difference between the sum paid and the value of the machines bought. Inasmuch as the jury have found a large sum due from the city, after crediting the sum theretofore paid, the question involved by this request is of no importance.
An exception was taken to the following portion of the charge to the jury:
•‘The court further charged the ;¡ury as follows: ‘The manner in which these machines did their work elsewhere Is not proof that these machines did their work well at Findlay, but Is a fact important and material, if you find the separators were all constructed alike, as showing whether the Find-lay machines were properly put on, properly cared for, a.nd fairly tested. Because two or more machines, equally well made, and similarly constructed and used, ought to work alike, and if one worked .well at Kokomo, Indiana, and another failed to work at Findlay, and both were tried and used under substantially similar conditions, the fact that the Kokomo separator did work is a circumstance which onglit to help you very much in deciding whether the failure of the separator to work at Findlay was from plaintiffs’ failure 1o properly make them, or from defendant’s failure to properly put them upon the gas wells, and properly care for and use them after they were attached.’ ”
Numerous exceptions have also been taken to the evidence upon which this portion of the charge bore. We think there was no error in the admission of the evidence, and none in the charge, in respect of its weight and force. If the jury should find that the city had elected to affirm the contract, it would then devolve upon them to determine whether the city was liable for the value as per full contract price, or was liable only for their actual value. There was evidence that the machines had been represented as capable of working automatically. There was also evidence tending to show that these machines upon the Findlay oil wells had not. worked automatically. The court charged the jury fully and clear-
The court charged the jury that if they found that the city of Findlay had ratified this contract, and waived its right to rescind the same, they should find for the plaintiffs, and for such amount to be due them as they should determine these machines were reasonably worth—
“Having reference to their market value as shown by proof, and from other evidence of value, which includes evidence of the way in which they discharged the purposes for which they were sold and designed; and upon such an amount you will give the city credit for the sum of $315, which they have already paid, and for the commissions which the plaintiffs say they are entitled to as stated in.the account.”
To this the court subsequently added:
“X deem it proper to call your attention to the fact that I said, in determining the value of these machines, you might consider, as one of the elements, the market price at which they were sold in the place where used. I still think that this is an element of consideration of their value, and I will let the charge stand as it is.”
Exception was taken to so much of the charge as permitted the jury, in determining the reasonable value of these machines, to look to the “market price at which .they were sold in places where used” as one of the elements of actual value. The market value, or the value at which the owner or producer holds them for sale and offers them on the market, is not conclusive evidence of actual value, but it is clearly a matter which may properly be taken into consideration in arriving at the actual value. Dwight v. Commissioners, 11 Cush. 201.
Other errors have been assigned and argued. We think there is no substance in any of them. The judgment must be affirmed.