88 Ind. 460 | Ind. | 1882
— The appellant sued the appellee for work and labor performed under a written contract, a copy of which is filed with the complaint. 11
It is alleged in the complaint that the appellant was to make all the excavations and construct the necessary embankments in grading sections twenty and twenty-one on the appellee’s road in Hendricks county, Indiana, and do all the grubbing, «hopping and clearing necessary to be done on said sections; that the appellee was to pay the appellant twenty-six cents per cubic yard for all excavations on section twenty, and for •embankments on section twenty-one the appellee was to pay twenty-five cents per cubic yard; for grubbing and clearing, $10 for each station of 100 feet, and for chopping and clearing, $6 for each station of 100 feet; that the contract was afterwards so altered, for a valuable consideration, by a memorandum endorsed thereon, and signed by the president of the appellee, as to provide that excavations on said section twenty should be paid for at the rate, of thirty-four cents per cubic yard; thirty cents for embankments on section twenty-one ; for excavations on said section twenty-one, twenty-one cents per cubic yard. It is averred that the appellant fully performed said contract on his part, doing all the work required by its terms; that the excavations made on said section twenty amounted to 65,000 cubic-yards; that excavations made on section twenty-one amounted to 7,500 cubic yards; and thatall the embankments required and made on section twenty-one amounted to 16,500 cubic yards; that the appellant cleared and grubbed fifteen stations and chopped and cleared two other stations, of 100 feet each, upon said sections twenty and twenty-one, as required by, and in conformity with, said contract, whereby the appellee became liable to pay to the appellant $28,707, of which sum $7,000 remain unpaid.
It is then averred that the appellee’s engineer pretended to make a full and complete estimate of all the work done on said sections, but that in fact ho only estimated 5,000 cubic yards of excavation on section twenty-one, when in fact the amount
So much of the contract as bears upon the question presented for decision in this case is as follows :
10. "Monthly estimates, during the progress of the work, will generally be made by the engineer of work done, to such an amount as shall in his judgment be a fair average value of the same, agreeably to this contract, and of the ■amount so estimated the contractor will be paid eighty per cent, in currency, and when the whole of the sections hereby contracted for shall have been accepted and measured finally by the engineer, as completed agreeably to this coxxtract, the balance shall be forthwith paid to the said John Kistler, his heirs, executors or administrators.”
The appellee demurred to the complaint for want of facts. The demurrer was sustained at special term, and the appellant excepted. The appellant then asked leave to amend his. complaint. Leave was refused by the court. The appellant, excepted, and has properly reserved the exception. Final judgment was rendered for the appellee, and the appellant appealed to the general term of said court, assigning as error the ruling of the court in special term upon the demurrer to the complaint and refusal of leave to amend. The court in general term affirmed the judgment at special term. The error assigned in this court is that the court in general term erred in affirming the judgment of the court in special term.
It is not alleged in the complaint that the engineer of theappellee, in making the final estimate of the work done by the-appellant under said contract, acted corruptly or fraudulently? nor is it expressly averred that in making said estimate there was any mistake made by the engineer. But it is averred that though the estimate so made by the engineer was claimed to be full and complete, yet the engineer did not in fact estimate the grubbing and clearing and the chopping and clearing done by the appellant on said sections. If the engineer-failed to estimate this work, it is clear that his estimate was-not full and complete, and that palpable injustice was done-the appellant. It is equally clear that the omission must have been the result of mistake and oversight, or purposed neglect on the part of the engineer. If either the one or the other, the /estimate was not conclusively binding upon the appellant. ^The demurrer admits this averment of the complaint. ^he estimate of the engineer, in cases such as this, if based upon a mistake or misapprehension of fact, is not binding. P|erce says that a mistake of fact by which the engineer
In the case of Starkey v. DeGraff, 22 Minn. 431, it was held that where the work was'to be estimated by the engineer, his refusal or neglect to measure the work done by the contractor entitled the latter to sue and prove the quantity of work done, by other competent evidence. See cases cited by Pierce in his work on Railroads, p. 382.
It is said, however, that, by the contract, the parties made the engineer the sole umpire of all differences that might arise between them, and thus precluded themselves from the right to resort to the courts for the settlement df.such differences. If the eleventh clause of the contract means this, we think it against public policy, and void. Redfield says i\ “A stipulation, that no action shall ever be brought upon a contract, or, what is equivalent, that all disputes under it shall be referred to arbitration, is a repugnancy, which if carried out'literally must render the contract itself, as a mode of legal redress, wholly idle.” 1 Redf. Railways, p. 454; Scott v. Avery, 5 H. L. Cas. 811.
It is contended* by the appellee that the complaint shows
It was the duty of the appellee to see to it that its engineer duly estimated the work performed by the appellant. It had no right to insist upon a partial estimate. If, as the appellant avers, the estimate was partial, omitting entirely the grubbing, etc., the appellee had not discharged its duty under the con
We think the demurrer to the complaint should have been overruled, and that the court in general term erred in affirming-the judgment of the court in special term.
Pee Cubiam. — It is ordered, upon the foregoing opinion,, that the judgment below be reversed, at the costs of the appellee.
Elliott, J., was absent.