159 Mich. 122 | Mich. | 1909
This is a suit brought to recover the price and value of materials used in building a public
Appellant relies upon the rule of Jackson v. Evans, 8 Mich. 478; Swan v. Thurman, 112 Mich. 416 (70 N. W. 1023); Taylor-Woolfenden Co. v. Atkinson, 127 Mich. 633 (87 N. W. 89). It would, of course, have been competent to prove by the teamsters that they delivered to the contractor all material which they were directed to deliver to him. And if such testimony had been produced, it is probable that no objection would have been made — none would have been proper — to admitting the account in evidence. There was testimony which, with inferences therefrom which it was proper for the court to draw, tended to prove that the account correctly tallied or numbered the loads of material which were furnished. The contractor —or its representative — said that it wanted gravel enough and did not want any left over. When material was needed it was ordered by messenger or by telephone. It was delivered, not at one point, but at different points along the line of the sewer where it was used. The teamsters were in the employ of plaintiff. As loads left the pit, they were directed by the foreman where to deliver the material and the loads were tallied. The foreman testified :
“ I used to get my orders, and I used to have to send teams where the orders were to go. If I got an order to send to the Big Ditch [the sewer] I would send them over there. I kept track of the teams that went out on the different contracts, and when night came I would go into the house and give Mr. Kuennan the account and he would mark them off. * * * I know that when I would send a team to go to the Big Ditch they went right there. * * *”
Plaintiff testified:
“ Every evening or in the morning the names were put on the slips where he [the foreman] was to send material. Frequently I went down to see if they had any material or were running out. When I went there I could see they were using our material. I used to go down once in*126 a while with this Heath, their superintendent, to check up once in a while, and he would ask me how many loads I had, and he would look up his.”
It is a reasonable, if not necessary, inference from the testimony that the contractor kept account of the material delivered by plaintiff, and that the two accounts, when comparisons were made,' agreed. Without questioning the rule that performance of a contract to deliver articles may not be proved by books of account, or the one that when goods are delivered by agents and entries in books are made from their memoranda, or statements, the agents or some one having knowledge must be called to prove delivery, we are of opinion that the spirit and reason of the rules were not violated in holding that the books of account were admissible in evidence. Practically, there was a single fact to be established by the account, and that one not whether plaintiff performed his agreement with the contractor, but how many loads of material were required to do it. This fact, from necessity, must be proven by some memorandum. The circumstantial evidence of the trustworthiness of the memorandum produced is so convincing that it would be unreasonable to doubt it.
“An act to insure payment of wages earned, and for materials used, in constructing, repairing, or ornamenting public buildings, and public works.”1
What is required by the statute is “security by bond, for the payment by the contractor, and all subcontractors, for all * * * materials furnished. * * * ” The bond in suit was tendered and was accepted. By the terms of the statute:
“ Such bond may be prosecuted, and recovery had, by any person, firm, or corporation,' to whom any money shall be due and payable on account of having * * * furnished any materials in the erection * * * of such building or works. * * * ”
The plaintiff is a person strictly within the provision of the statute above set out. Appellant refuses to pay because, it says, its liability is dependent upon the validity of the contract made by the city and the contractor, and that the contract is invalid because the contractor, a foreign corporation, is not admitted — has no legal right — to do business within the State. It is assumed that the appellant is organized for the purpose of furnishing the security demanded by the statute, charging and receiving a sufficient consideration for its undertaking. It would seem that its legal liability to laborers and materialmen ought at least to be co-extensive with the legal liability of the contractor to the same men. In its written undertaking are no conditions avoiding its liability excepting the one that the contractor itself pay such obligations as are due and payable. It is not contended that the construction company is not under legal obligation to pay the plaintiff. It had the benefit of plaintiff’s material in the work. I think decision might be safely rested here. The same conclusion is arrived at, and for the same reason, when it is considered that the construction company is
The judgment is affirmed.
3 Comp. Laws, § 10743. See, also, Act No. 187, Pub. Acts 1905.