Friedland v. McNeil

33 Mich. 40 | Mich. | 1875

Cooley, J:

It is not very clear from this record that the court erred in admitting evidence of the value of McNeil’s services as superintendent. Undoubtedly it was the duty of the parties who employed him to furnish and pay the superintendent. This is not only the custom in such cases, but the nature of the duties to be performed by a superintendent are such that it would be highly improper that he should be appointed or controlled by the contractor. He is to oversee the work of the contractor, and to exercise a quasi judicial authority in determining upon its suitableness and sufficiency under the contract; and this fact would seem to preclude all idea that he was to superintend for his employers his own work. The two positions of contractor and superintendent of the contractor’s work are inconsistent, and it is no less than an absurdity to imply a contract on the part of the employers to pay him for accepting on their behalf his own work. Nor is it very manifest that, if the superintendency went no farther, the contractor would be put to any extra trouble. As contractor he must see that his own work is sufficient, .and as superintendent he could do no more. If, therefore, the builders left him to act as superintendent, while there might be a strong inference that they expected to confide in his judgment, discretion and fairness as to the character of the work and materials, it would be on a very violent presumption if it were to be assumed that they expected to pay him for superintending himself.

But it does not distinctly appear from the record that McNeil was not to superintend the work of others. His contract was for mason work only, and it does not affirmatively appear that he superintended nothing else. All reasonable intendments are to support the rulings below; if it were legally possible for the employers to make their con*43tractor superintendent, we must infer that the proper showing was made. There was certainly no difficulty in the way of his being made the superintendent of the work of others, and therefore no error in admitting evidence tending to show an employment. 'Whether the evidence went far enough to make out a case is another question, and one upon which nothing in this record enables us to pass.

Complaint is made that the church trustees -were not allowed to show a loss of pew rents in consequence of the contract not being completed in season. It may be questionable whether the provision in the contract, authorizing them after three days’ notice to take the work into their own hands and complete it at the contractor’s expense if he failed to proceed with due diligence, is not to be regarded when acted upon as a remedy agreed upon as a substitute for future damages (Clark v. Babcock, 23 Mich., 164); and if not, whether the extension of the time for completion by consent or acquiescence was not a waiver. The question is not very material here, because a further difficulty is insuperable. The contract upon which suit was brought was not one the completion of which w^as to put the building in condition for the renting of pews. A large amount of other work would still remain to be done, and large expenditures to be made, with which this contractor would have no concern whatever; and the building might never be put in condition for the renting of pews and yet he be in no way responsible. It can never be said that the loss of rents is a necessary, natural or probable result of a particular default, when had no default occurred, the necessary conditions to rent would still be wanting, and might never be supplied. Any claim against this contractor for damages resulting from loss of rents must assume that the trustees had the ability and inclination to proceed at once to complete the church, and were only delayed by the contractor’s default; but damages so remote and contingent would require to be specially claimed by the pleadings, if recover*44able at all, which is doubtful. — See Michigan Central R. R. Co. v. Burrows, supra, p. 6.

The offer to show damages by reason of the trustees being deprived of the privilege of giving to McNeil a fifteen thousand dollar, six year, eight per cent, mortgage for part of his demand, was not sufficiently specific to warrant the proffered evidence, if no other objection existed. The offer was to show that by reason of McNeil’s failure to complete the contract in season, they were compelled to borrow money at a higher rate to complete it themselves. It was not proposed to show that the current rates for six year loans were higher than eight per cent., nor that the loans made by the trustees were any thing more than- mere temporary loans. If by reason of McNeil’s default they lose the benefit of an eight per cent, credit for six years, it does not follow that they suffer damages therefrom, unless the current rates of interest are such that money cannot be borrowed on that time without paying more. This the defendants did not offer to show. A temporary loan can afford no proper standard of comparison for a loan of six years.

But it may be questionable whether all rights under the stipulation regarding the mortgage were not gone when the trustees took the work into their own hands. Where the contractor completes the work, there is no difficulty in enforcing such a stipulation, since if he refuses the mortgage, he is precluded from recovering the compensation until the credit to be given by the mortgage has expired. But when the employers take the work into their own hands, the stipulation becomes incapable of specific enforcement, because they then do the work at his expense, and are likely to be his creditors instead of his debtors. Nothing then remains but the question of damages; and these would be ' damages not for a refusal to take a mortgage as agreed, but for neglect to complete the work so as to have earned the mortgage. The loss of the opportunity to give a mortgage would *45consequently be only one of tbe elements which go to make up damages from a failure to perform the work in season. There are- serious difficulties in the way of holding that dainages can legally be predicated of the loss of an opportunity to give a mortgage at a rate of interest exceeding that fixed by law, and which, as a legal presumption, must usually be deemed adequate compensation for the use of money; difficulties so troublesome that when suggested by a contract any alternative which the contract presents may well be supposed to have been provided as a substitute.

Now this contract provides in substance that when the contractor completes the work he shall take a mortgage for fifteen thousand dollars in part payment. It also provides that if he does not complete it, the trustees may do so at his cost. Is it a legitimate inference from these stipulations that it was contemplated by the parties that a failure on the part of the contractor to complete the work should subject him to damages for not putting himself in position to be required to receive the mortgage in part payment? This does not appear to us so simple a question as it was assumed to be by counsel for the trustees.

There can be no legal presumption that it is to oire’s advantage to give a mortgage at eight per centum interest. On the contrary, when a stipulation for such a mortgage appears in a contract, the presumption is reasonable, where nothing appears in the contract to qualify it, that it was for the benefit of the party who was to receive the mortgage, rather than of the one who was to give it. And this presumption would be stronger in proportion to the time the mortgage was to run; because in the- money market, if the security is ample, the rates are usually diminished as the time is increased. It could not, therefore, be held as a presumption either of law or fact that the trustees would be damnified by losing the opportunity to give such a mortgage to the contractor, or that they would lose any thing by taking the work into their own hands at the contractor’s expense. The giving of the mortgage might prove to be for his benefit *46rather than for theirs; this would depend upon contingencies not to be fully foreseen when the contract was made; and these contingencies would strengthen the probabilities favoring a construction of the contract that if the trustees took the work out of the contractor’s hands this stipulation would be waived. We are inclined to regard this as the legal construction.

The fourth exception taken by the plaintiffs in error we have not been able to overcome. They offered to show what the finishing of the work cost them after they took it into their hands, and that they paid the current rates. This offer was excluded. It is true they were permitted afterwards to put in the testimony of experts on the same point, but this did not cure the error. If the excluded evidence were cumulative merely, it should have been received; but it was really something more; it was or should have been more satisfactory and conclusive upon the question of cost than any mere opinions. No opinions can be so satisfactory or conclusive as the actual test, if fairly and honestly carried out. It is true, as was urged on the argument, that the cost to defendants was not the proper test of. what they were to charge the contractor; but they offered to show that they paid only the current rates, and this offer made the evidence admissible. We regret the necessity for sending the case back for a new trial, but there seems to toe no alternative. It will be so ordered.

The other Justices concurred.