30 Neb. 657 | Neb. | 1890
This action was brought in the district court of ■ Gage county by the defendant in error against Sweet & Wilson, as principals, and the plaintiffs in error, as sureties, on a bond given for the faithful performance of a certain contract for the erection of a dwelling house and barn in the city of Beatrice, entered into between J. L. McGee and Sweet & Wilson, who were contractors and builders, at Beatrice, as follows:
“Know all men by these presents, that Messrs. Sweet & Wilson, of Beatrice, Nebraska, principals, and C. G. Dorsey and J. B. Weston, as sureties, are held and firmly bound unto J. L. McGee, of same residence, in the penal sum of two thousand dollars, lawful money of the United States, for the payment of which sum well and truly to be made, we hereby bind ourselves, our heirs, executors, and administrators, firmly by these presents.
“Signed by us and dated this 6th day of April, 1887.
“The condition of the above obligation■ is such, that whereas the above named Sweet & Wilson have been awarded the contract of building a frame residence and stable and furnishing all materials, situated in lot No. 7 and south half of lot No. 8, in block No. 20, in Fairview addition to the city of Beatrice, Nebraska, according to
“Now if the said Sweet & Wilson shall perform their part of said contract with the true intent and moaning and conditions of the same, then the foregoing obligations shall be null and void, otherwise the same shall remain in full force and effect.
“Witness our hands this 6th day of April, 1887.
“(Signed)
Sweet & Wilson.
“C. G. Dorsey.
“J. B. Weston.”
The amended petition alleged a number of breaches of the condition of said bond, by reason of which plaintiff was damaged in the sum of $2,350, and asked judgment against Sweet & Wilson and C. G. Dorsey and J. B. Weston in the sum of $2,000.
To the amended petition, the plaintiffs in error, Dorsey and Weston, filed an answer admitting the execution of the bond as sureties, but allege as a defense thereto that after the execution and delivery of said bond the defendants Sweet & Wilson and the plaintiffs, without the knowledge or consent of these defendants, changed the contract plans and specifications'referred to in said bond, in material parts thereof, and erected said buildings mentioned in said contract in a different manner than that mentioned and agreed to be built in said original contract, and changed the plans and specifications for the erection of said buildings from the original contract plans and specifications as referred to in said bond, all of which was done by plaintiff and defendants Sweet & Wilson after the execution and delivery of said' bond, without the knowledge or consent of the defendants Dorsey and Weston.
■ To this answer a reply consisting of a general denial was filed by plaintiff. A trial was had by a jury, who
Separate motions for a new trial were filed by the defendants Sweet & Wilson and the defendants Dorsey and Weston, which were overruled by the court and judgment rendered against the defendants Sweet & Wilson as principals and the defendants Dorsey and Weston as sureties, to reverse which ruling and judgment, and for a new trial, the defendants Dorsey and Weston prosecute a writ of error to this court.
Counsel for plaintiffs in error, in the brief, do not present the errors upon which they rely, in the order in which they are stated in the petition in error, nor is it easy, in all cases, in following the argument, to apply it to the specific error intended. But I will take up the points as they are presented in the brief, and as no point is argued which is not stated in the petition in error, with more or less accuracy, I will spend but little time in endeavoring to point out their special application.
The first point of the argument is directed to the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict and judgment. In support of this proposition evidence is cited from the bill of exceptions tending to prove that after the execution and delivery of the bond upon which the plaintiffs in error were sued, the plaintiff, and Sweet & Wilson, his contractors, changed the contract plans and specifications referred to, and mentioned in the bond, in material points, without the knowledge or consent of the sureties, plaintiffs in error, and thereby released them from the obligation of the said bond. The first alteration to which attention is called is in the specifications for the plastering, where the figure “3” was substituted for the figure “2,” as fixing the number of coats of plastering for the building. The two defendants, C. A. Sweet and C. S. Wilson, testified that this alteration, which is plain and palpable upon the face of the specifications, was made by the plaintiff
The next change in the plans and specifications to which attention is called is that the plans were drawn for a building facing north and east, and that by direction of the plaintiff the house was actually built facing south and west. That this change was made is clearly shown by the evidence, but it does not appear that any change was made on the face of the plans or specifications, nor does it appear that any change in the drawings or written specifications was necessary for that purpose. The logic; of the position of the plaintiffs in error on this point is, that whereas Sweet & Wilson entered into a contract with the plaintiff to build a certain house according to plans and specifications, drawn by Mendelssohn and Eisher, of Omaha, and the plaintiffs in error entered into a penal bond conditioned.that they would build that identical house, and, by' direction of the plaintiff, they did not build that identical house, plaintiffs in error were thereby released from the obligation of their bond, and cannot be held for the failure of said Sweet & Wilson to build another and different house. The turning point is, Did the contemplated building, by reason of the premises, lose its identity? This question must be answered in the negative.
The other changes complained of, are, “An extra flight of stairs from kitchen to bedroom; inside finish of house was changed from white pine to yellow pine finish; change from No. 1 hardware to solid bronze hardware, and change of location of cistern.” The first was not a change merely, but an “addition,” and as such is amply provided for in
We now come to the consideration of the matter of payments. The contract betw<en the plaintiff and Sweet & Wilson provides for the payment by the former to the said contractors for the materials and work contracted for, of $300 for the barn when the same should be completed and finished; for the house, when the foundation is in and the frame erected, $1,000; when ready for plastering, $1,000; when finished woodwork is on, $1,000, and $50*0 when contract is completed and accepted by owner. The contract provided that the said house should be completed and finished by July 1, 1887, and the barn to be finished by April 15, 1887..
At the trial, upon his cross-examination as a witness, sworn and examined on his own behalf, the plaintiff testified that the first payment he made to Sweet & Wilson was $300, April 16, 1887; that he also paid them $15, April 25; $700, May 7; $300, May 16 ; $1,000, May 29; $35, May 29; $22, June 18; $295, June 18; $3, at the same date, and on the same date, $500; June 25, $300; $7.40 about the same date. He also testified that the barn
C. S, Wilson, one of the contractors, sworn-as a witness on the part of the defendants, testified that the foundation was put in and the frame-work erected for the house about May the 1st, according to his recollection. He was asked the following question, by counsel for defendants: Q,. When was the second money you received from McGee on this contract? Which question was objected to by plaintiff, and the objection sustained; no ground of objection was stated.
This witness had previously testified as follows: .
Q. When was this barn completed ?
A. Along about — the barn was completed as well as I can recollect shortly after -. We had received the three hundred dollars a little before the barn was -completed.
Q. When did -you receive the three hundred dollars?
A. April 16.
■ Q,. The barn was not completed entirely till about the 21st, was it? (Objected to, as leading; sustained.)
Q. When was the barn finished ? (Objected to, as irrelevant and immaterial, and as. repetition; sustained.)
* * * * ******
Q,. When was the foundation completed and the framework erected for this house? (Objected to, as irrelevant,
Q. When was the second money you received from Mr. McGee under this contract? (Objected to (no ground stated); sustained.)
By the Court: This comes in as rebuttal testimony for Mr. McGee.
Q. By Mr. Bates : When was the foundation completed and the frame-work erected for this house ? (Objected to, as irrelevant, immaterial, and inadmissible under the pleadings; overruled.)
A. About May the 1st, is my recollection.
It is to be regretted that the defendant Wilson was not allowed to testify fully as to the times when the barn was finished and when the foundation of the house was completed and the frame-work erected for the house; also, when the payment for the barn and the first payment of $1,000 on the house were made. As the evidence stands, it is proven that the first payment under the contract, to-wit, the $300 for the barn, was made before the barn was finished, and hence before the money was due under the terms of the contract. No advantage could be taken of this fact by the contractors themselves, but I think that it is otherwise in so far as the plaintiffs in error are concerned. All of the cases cited, r all that I have been able to find, follow the principle of law as stated by Brandt in his work on Suretyship and Guaranty, sec. 345: “Any dealings with the principal by the creditor, which amount toa departure from the contract by which the surety is bound, and which by possibility might materially vary or enlarge the latter’s liability without his consent, generally operate to discharge the surety.” To apply this principle to the case at bar, the plaintiffs in error were bound to the performance by Sweet & Wilson of the entire contract, as well for the completion of the barn as for the completion of the house, and any act of McGee that would release them from
At the close of the trial counsel for the defendants (plaintiffs in error), as appears by the record, applied to the court for “leave to amefid their answer, alleging that plaintiff did not pay Sweet & Wilson at the time named in the contract,” which was refused. This refusal of the court to permit plaintiffs in error to amend their answer in accordance with the evidence is assigned for error. Had application been made at the proper time to amend the answer so as to set up the payment by the plaintiff of the $300 for the stable before the stable was completed, and so before said money was due under the terms of the contract, the application should have been granted, as such amendment would make the answer applicable to and in accordance with evidence, which had been in part given by the
, As to the question of the inadmissibility of evidence to prove the dates of the payments actually made on the work by the plaintiff under the pleadings as they stand, there can be no doubt, either upon the theory that such payments, or some of them, were made before they were due under the terms of the contract, or that they were delayed and withheld for an unreasonable time after they became due respectively.
The instructions 2 and 5 asked for by defendants (plaintiffs in error) and refused by the court, state the law correctly, abstractly considered, but weré properly refused for the reason that there was no evidence before the court and jury, under the pleadings in the case, to which the same were applicable.
In addition to that which has already been said upon the point of the admitting and refusing to admit testimony there remains the consideration of the admitting in evidence of the records of the district court in the case of Henry & Coatsworth v. Sweet & Wilson et al.; also the answers and cross-petitions of the defendants in- the case, together with the decree, and also the testimony of the clerk of said court as to who paid the judgment of Henry $ Coatsworth.
It appears from the record, which was offered and received in evidence upon the trial, and is preserved in the bill of exceptions, that some time in the month of September, 1887, the Henry & Coatsworth Company, a corporation, filed its petition and commenced an action in the said district court of Gage county against C. G. Dorsey, Crump & Nicholson, Armacost & Co., Charles A. Swee.t and Charles S. Wilson, partners as Sweet & Wilson, J. L.
It further appears from the said record, that on the 9th day of December, 1887, the said cause came on for a hear
The introduction of this record in evidence was objected to by the defendants (plaintiffs in error) as immaterial, incompetent, and irrelevant, which objection was overruled and the evidence admitted.
There were three motions for a new trial, one by all the defendants together, one by the defendants Sweet & Wilson, and one by the defendants Dorsey and Weston, plaintiffs in error, separately. Neither one of them contains as ground for a new trial the admission in evidence of the said record specifically. The one made by Dorsey and Weston contains, among other grounds, “errors of law occurring at the trial.” Possibly under this head the question whether the court erred in overruling the objections to the admission of the said record in evidence might be inquired into.' I find no reason for the exclusion of the record from the evidence, in so far as the defendant C. G. Dorsey is concerned. Pie is a party to the record; was in court when it was made up; he is therefore not a stranger to the proceedings of which said x-ecord is evidence and he is bound thereby. (See Greenleaf on Evidence, vol. 1, sec. 522.) But Weston was a stranger to the said record, and by the same authority it was inadnxissible as evidence against him. But to render the error of the admission of this record in evidence against him available, he
It does not follow from the above rule that a trial court may not, where a motion is divisible, in its discretion, allow it in part and overrule it in part. But a failure or refusal to do so is not reversible error.
Counsel for plaintiffs in error-filed a supplemental brief, in which they take the ground that it was the duty of the plaintiff to retain the money, which, by the terms of his contract with Sweet & Wilson, he was to pay them in the several installments therein expressed, as the work progressed, until the expiration of sixty days after the same became due, by reason of the completion of so much of the work of the buildings, and that by making these payments sooner the plaintiffs deprived the plaintiffs in error of an indemnity for their obligation upon their bond, and thereby released them, citing the case of Taylor v. Jeter, 23 Mo., 244. Counsel, by this supplemental brief, but restate the position already disposed of with but a slight variation in its application. There was evidence before the court, of the date of the payments by the plaintiff to Sweet & Wilson, of the sum of $300 for the barn, and that the same was not then due, for the reason that the bani was not then completed; and, as we have already seen, this evidence was unavailable to the plaintiffs in error for the want of allegations of pleading, to which it was applicable. We have already seen that the several amounts paid by the plaintiff to Sweet <& Wilson, together with the dates of such payments, re
Affirmed.