23 S.E. 39 | N.C. | 1895
The rules of law governing special contracts and quantum meruit have been so fully and so often declared by this Court that they are easily understood and their application is not difficult when the facts are clearly presented. In this case, as frequently happens, the confusion grows out of the informality of the pleadings and the difficulty of understanding from the records what really occurred in the proceedings in the Superior Court. If in such cases we miss the point, it results from our inability to rightly apprehend the procedure below.
We gather the following from the record in this case:
That Coghill contracted with defendant to build him a prize (85) house of specific dimensions and for a specific price, the house to be covered with good shingles. Subsequently they agreed to modify the contract by substituting a tin roof, with additional compensation, and Coghill engaged the plaintiff to put on the tin roof, and later gave an order to the plaintiff for $300 for tinning roof, drawn on the defendant, who accepted the same "if roof proves satisfactory." The issues submitted were:
"1. Was the roof mentioned in the pleadings constructed according to the contract?
"2. If not, what damages has the defendant thereby sustained?
"3. Is the defendant indebted to the plaintiff, and if so in what amount?"
The first two were offered by defendant and the third by plaintiff, without objection.
The balance due on plaintiff's account, as presented by him and his evidence, was $180.34, and the jury answered the first issue "No," the second "$90.17" and the third "$90.17," and judgment for plaintiff was rendered for the latter sum and costs.
The parties entered the trial and offered evidence of the defective *62 character of the roof, the payments made, the repairs by the plaintiff of leaks in the roof when discovered, and it is admitted that the defendant accepted the building and has used it for storing tobacco ever since.
It is evident that the action was commenced upon the specific contract, that is, upon the order accepted by the defendant conditionally, and we think it equally clear that the parties on the trial treated it as one also on the quantum meruit for work and materials furnished. This we infer from the evidence, the charge of the court and the presence of the third issue without objection, and the responses of the jury to the several issues. Upon no other theory was the third issue (86) appropriate. No instructions were asked for by the defendant, and his exceptions to the charge were upon the theory that the trial was upon the special contract exclusively, which we find was not the case. The defendant having received and used the building for his own benefit, the plaintiff was entitled to recover as upon the common count for work and labor done (Dover v. Plemmons,
Judgment affirmed.
Cited: Morrison v. Mining Co.,