Monitor Iron Works Co. v. Ketchum

47 Wis. 177 | Wis. | 1879

Lyon, J.

A former decision of this cause was inadvertently reported in 44 Wis., 126, after a rearguraent had been ordered. The statement of the case there made will not be repeated.

The circuit court referred the cause to a referee to hear, try and determine. The reference was compulsory, and the question of its regularity, or the power of the court to mate it, was not raised on the former argument. The reárgument was granted mainly upon that question.

If the trial of any issue of fact in the cause required the examination of a long account, the reference was proper. Tay. Stats., 1499, § 25; R. S., 761, sec. 2864; Supervisors v. Dunning, 20 Wis., 210. The circuit court necessarily had to determine from the pleadings alone whether such examination was required; and if the fact appears from the pleadings, that is sufficient.

The action is for work and materials, and the bill of particulars contains scores, even hundreds of items, each charged at a separate price. It is not denied in the answer that the plaintiff did the work for the defendants and furnished the materials charged; and the prices charged therefor are not controverted. .But the answer states a special contract by the plaintiff to furnish certain machinery to the defendants at a stipulated price, which had been paid in full; and it is alleged therein that a large portion of the work and materials charged in the bill of particulars was done and furnished under the special contract.

It was unnecessary to examine the items of the account to ascertain whether the plaintiff did the work and furnished the materials charged, or whether the prices charged therefor were *179reasonable and just. All this stood admitted by the defendants. But it was necessary to examine the account, item by item, to ascertain which of the items (if any) wrere included in the special contract, and which were not. As was observed in Carpenter v. Shepardson, 43 Wis., 406, the admissions of the answer “tend to abbreviate an examination of the account, but still leave an account to be examined.”

The answer also contains a counterclaim for two sums of money, and another for goods, wares, merchandise, freight, work, labor and services, upon which issue is taken by a reply denying the same. Presumably a large number of items (or a long account) are included in these counterclaims. Probably the issues on the counterclaims alone would justify a compulsory reference under the statute. Carpenter v. Shepardson, 46 Wis., 557.

It must be held, therefore, that the cause was properly re-, ferred.

It is also assigned as error that the record fails to show that the referee was sworn to the proper discharge of his duties as such. On the authority of Gilbank v. Stephenson, 31 Wis., 592, it is sufficient to say upon this point that the record fails to show that the referee was not so sworn. If the oath is required, it must be presumed that it was duly made.

The learned counsel for the defendants insisted, on the re-argument, that the first opinion does not dispose of all the controverted questions in the case. Since the first argument the whole case has been carefully reexamined, and we have reached the conclusion that it was correctly decided in the first instance.

An extended discussion here of the testimony or the law of the case would be profitless." It must suffice to say generally, that, in our opinion, it was the duty of the defendants, under the contract, to prepare the foundation for the machinery; that they did prepare it under the superintendence of one Benjamin, who was their agent or employee for that purpose; *180that the defendants were responsible for the delay in starting their mill, except for three days, for which the referee allowed them damages at the stipulated rate; that if there was any défect in the machinery, the defendants failed to perform the conditions precedent to a recovery therefor, stipulated in the contract; that the items of plaintiff’s account allowed by the referee were not included in the special contract; and that the referee allowed the defendants all of their counterclaims which they proved. In short, we find no ground for disturbing the report of the referee or the judgment founded upon it.

By the Oowrt.— Judgment affirmed.

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