165 F. 339 | 8th Cir. | 1908
This litigation arose out of a contract between the plaintiff in error and the defendant in error, whereby the latter undertook to do certain work and furnish certain materials in constructing for the former a building to be used as a mill for treating ores. The principal contract was in writing, specifying the character of the work to be done and materials to be furnished in the structure. In addition to asking judgment for a balance claimed as on perform
Many errors are assigned on the charge given by the court to the jury, none of which this court can consider, for the reason that no exceptions thereto were taken at the trial. The court’s attention was not called to any claimed error in the charge, so as to accord to the trial judge his locus pcenitentke; nor did counsel present any request for declarations of law, directing the attention of the court to the particular matters which they now claim were not embraced in the charge. As this is a law action, and this court can only review errors, to invoke its supervisory jurisdiction the errors complained of must have been manifested by the rulings of the trial court, duly excepted to, and specified in the assignment of errors. Eor instance, it is urged by counsel for defendant in error that, as the construction company had itself broken the contract, the action should have been predicated of a quantum meruit. The vice of this contention, in the first instance, lies in the fact that there was nothing on the face of the petition to indicate that the defendant in error had not in all respects kept and performed the written contract. If the fact was that it had in any respect breached the contract, it was developed only on the trial, and that was a matter to be submitted to and passed upon by the jury. If the plaintiff in error desired a finding by the jury on that particular issue, he should have, by requested instruction, directly presented it, or, if the court omitted in its charge to sufficiently submit it, it devolved upon the party complaining, by appropriate and timely action, to have called the court’s attention thereto, and duly excepted to its rulings, if claimed to be erroneous. This- counsel did not do.
Espfecial contention is made that the claim predicated of said item of $825, on account of loss of time by the workmen, is not sustainable, for the reason that such liability is not within the terms of the written-contract; This contract was in the form of a' letter from the defendant in error- to the plaintiff in error, submitting the terms, and the written acceptance thereof by the plaintiff in error. The paragraph on which the claim in question was predicated is as follows:
*341 “We will have our outfit on the ground in two weeks after being notified, and will complete the work, estimated at 3.000 cubic yards more or less, in 60 days after the same is ready for use. It is understood that you are to do all the excavating, and are to furnish all crushed stone and screenings, so as not 1o delay us.”
The obligatory promise to have the company’s outfit on the ground ready for work in two weeks after notice, and to complete the work within a given time thereafter, carried with it the implied agreement of the other party to be ready for the working outfit when it came after i-ucli notification. This mutuality of obligation carried with it accountability on the part of the plaintiff in error for the loss of time necessarily occasioned by the detention of the workmen from entering upon the construction work, after ha.ving been brought on the ground on notice from him that the preparatory excavation work was ready for the superstructure. This rule of law is aptly stated by Wagner, J., in Lewis v. Atlas Mutual Life Insurance Company, 61 Mo., loc. cit. 538, as follows:
“It very frequently happens that contracts on their face and by their express terms appear to be obligatory on one party only; but in such cases, if it be manifest that it was the intention of the parlies, and the; consideration upon which one party assumed an express obligation, that there should be a corresponding and correlative obligation on the other party, such corresponding and correlative obligation will be implied, as, if the act to be done by the party binding himself can -inly be done upon a corresponding act being done or allowed by the other party, an obligation by the latter to do or allow to be done the act or tilings necessary for the completion of the contract, will be necessarily implied. Pordage v. Cole, 1 Wm. Saund. 319; Churchward v. The Queen, 6 B. & S. 807; Black v. Woodrow, 39 Md. 194.”
The answer itself, in effect, concedes that the obligation alleged in the petition was imposed upon the plaintiff in error by the contract, as, after admitting the contract, it pleads facts iu extenuation and mitigation. Furthermore, no such question was raised bdew by the plaintiff in error, nor was the trial court asked to rule thereon.
Counsel for plaintiff in error have presented an elaborate analysis of the testimony to support their contention that the jury must have allowed in any event too much to the defendant in error on account of this item and too little on the counterclaim. ■ The insuperable difficulty in the way of any consideration of these contentions lies in the fact that counsel for plaintiff in error utterly failed to so present such questions on the trial as to enable this court to review them. As already staled, all the issues involved in the pleadings were submitted in mass to the. jury, and there was a general verdict. So far from counsel, if they desired to keep the issues submitted to the jury distinct, by requesting the court to direct them to return separate findings, for instance, as to how much was owing on the written contract, how much on the items for extra work, and how much on the item of ¡$825, and how much, if any, they found on the counterclaim, before the jury retired the court made the following inquiry of counsel:
“Bo you want two verdicts, gentlemen — one on the complaint and one on the cross-complaint — or one verdict? If you take two verdicts, you will have to consent that the court may strike a balance and enter judgment accordingly ; otherwise, I will direct the jury to return one verdict.”
“So far as the defendant is concerned, we will be satisfied with one form of verdict.”
As the jury returned a verdict in a sum less than that sued for and less than that finally conceded by the defendant in error to be recoverable by it, it is practically impossible from the record for this court to determine what items or claims entered into the calculations of the jury constituting the sum of the verdict; and the trial court by its inquiry indicated to counsel how they might avoid the complication into which they walked, and they now assign their mistake as an error of the court.
Other errors are assigned; but they are, in our opinion, without merit. It results that the judgment of the Circuit Court must be af- . firmed.