38 Mo. 51 | Mo. | 1866
delivered the opinion of the court.
The case comes up on exceptions to the report of the referee. The petition is founded upon an account filed as a mechanic’s lien. The cause of action is upon a quantum me-ruit, and not upon the written contracts. There were several particular contracts in writing, in reference to different portions of the whole work. There were disputes as to whether the work had been done according to contract, and the defendant claimed that the contracts had not been performed and completed. The plaintiff abandoned the contracts, and sued on a quantum meruit for as much as the work was actually worth. The answer took no objection to this, and the trial proceeded accordingly. The referee took the contracts as governing the prices, and refused to allow the defendant to show, by way of damages, that the work had been badly done, and not according to contract, and that what he received was really worth much less than the contract prices. He decided that the claim of damages could not be taken into consideration. In Lee v. Ashbrook, 14 Mo. 378, it was held that, in such case, the party accepting the work ought still to pay the value of the work received, not exceeding the contract prices, if that value exceeded the damage he had sustained by reason of the failure of the other to complete the work as agreed. Such damages are to be considered in diminution of the contract prices. The plaintiff was entitled to recover on this petition only the actual value of the work done by him, and received by the defendant, within the limits of the contract prices. The matter of damages entered into the inquiry as to the actual value of the woi'k to the defendant, and that was the very thing in issue. The benefit and advantage which the defendant took by the work done, was the amount of value which he received, if any, after deducting the amount of the damage—Britton v. Turner, 6 N.
It was further excepted, that the referee had excluded the value of certain lumber received by the plaintiff of the lumber-yard of Brolaski & Becket, partners, on receipts in their names, for the reason that a joint debt could not be set off against an individual demand. There was evidence tending to show that this lumber was charged by the firm to the individual account of Brolaski the defendant, and that it was actually furnished by him to the plaintiff. Certain records also appear to have been offered in evidence by the plaintiff, to show the contrary. It appears to have been agreed, .that these records might be read here, without being set forth in the bill of exceptions. They are not produced before us; nor is it certain that we should read them if they were produced ; for this practice will not be allowed. The evidence must be set forth in the bill of exceptions, or its substance stated in such manner.that this court can judge of its legal-effect. Evidence was admissible, and should have been considered on this question; and if it appeared that the lumber was received from the defendant alone, and on his own account, in satisfaction of the demand of the plaintiff, it would show payment so far. But if it were received by the plaintiff .from the partnership firm on a wholly different transaction, and .the plaintiff were indebted to the firm for it, then, of course, it could not be allowed as a set-off in this suit. We are not satisfied that the ruling of the referee was correct on this point.
The judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded.