29 Pa. 78 | Pa. | 1857
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought to recover the retained per centage on a contract to build a section of the Huntingdon and Broad Top Mountain Railroad. The contractors were paid by the company for all the work done, but reserved ten per cent, which they refused to pay on the ground that the contract had not been completed, and the per centage was forfeited to the company. To obviate this objection, the plaintiffs proposed to prove “ that the company failed according to the contract to pay the contractors, by reason- of which failure the contractors were unable to continue their work.” This was objected to by defendants, admitted by the court, and its admission is assigned for error here. Let us look at the record. In the first place, John Hohman and Josiah M. Christy bring an action of assumpsit against the company, filing a declaration containing all the common counts; also a count for balance due on settlement; the ten per cent, retained; a quantum meruit, and a special count on the contract. To all these the defendants plead unon assumpsit,” except the last, to which they demurred, and afterwards withdrew their demurrer. The plaintiff also filed a declaration in covenant, and the defendants added the plea of covenants performed absque
The first error being disposed of, the second and third must fall with it. The questions submitted to the jury, as complained of in these assignments of error, did arise on the pleadings, shown by the whole record. And the court fairly left it to the jury to say, whether the limiting of the expenditures by the defendants to the sum of $500 per month, and never paying their instalments in full, &c., were the causes which prevented the plaintiffs from pushing their work to completion. The charge was as favourable to the defendants as they could reasonably expect. The court said: “ If the jury believe that the work was abandoned by these
The judgment is affirmed.