223 Mich. 478 | Mich. | 1923
In the spring of 1919 defendant had a contract with the owner to construct a dike about certain land at Windmill Point, Wayne county, and to fill the enclosure with soil pumped by sand suckers from the bottom of the lake. It sublet the constructing of a certain dike and the leveling thereof after filling was done to plaintiff at a price of 50 cents per linear foot. When he had constructed 488 feet it was found that the dike was of insufficient height. He obtained a larger trenching machine to construct a higher dike for which he was to be paid 70 cents per linear foot, including both constructing and leveling. Thereafter 2,816 feet of dike were made. Plaintiff found that the dike was to cross the outlet of a creek. The parties agreed that the diké across the creek should be constructed at their joint and equal expense. The sand suckers encountered boulders and the filling was not completed until December. Plaintiff, then having done very little or no leveling, abandoned the contract. For one-half the cost of the dike across the creek plaintiff was entitled to credit for $166.90 and had he completed the work he would have been entitled to $1,971.20 for 2,816 feet and, $244 for 488 feet, making a total to which he would have been entitled of $2,382.10. He was paid
“Plaintiff further says that the actual cost to him for time, labor and material in the construction of the said dike amounts to the total sum of two thousand one hundred and twenty-five dollars and sixty-four cents ($2,125.64), to which he has added a fair and reasonable percentage of 25% ($531.41), for the use of his personal time and his essential machinery and equipment necessary to the construction thereof, which percentage is considerably below the usual contractor’s percentage for such work, making a total due of $2,657.05; of this amount he has received $1,488.50, leaving a balance due of $1,168.55, and he therefore brings suit to his damage in the sum of one thousand one hundred and sixty-eight dollars and fifty-five cents ($1,168.55).”
Defendant pleaded the general issue with notice of recoupment. It had testimony that the time for performance of the contract with plaintiff was indefinite and to depend upon the character of soil encountered
The plaintiff was permitted to testify of a cost plus agreement with defendant covering the work and the court instructed the jury:
“It is the claim of the plaintiff that they entered into a tentative arrangement whereby the defendant was to be reimbursed for this work and labor upon which is known as a cost basis and percentage; in other words, it is the claim of the plaintiff that the cost was to be computed, and upon that cost he was to receive twenty-five per cent, working basis for his remuneration. That, in substance, is what is claimed here. * * *
“He contends finally, gentlemen, that the cost of the work performed by him under this tentative arrangement with the defendant was $2,125.64; that under that arrangement he was entitled to twenty-five per cent, commission, or $531.41, making a total as claimed by the plaintiff of $2,657.05. He admits that the defendant company has paid him the sum of $1,488.50, leaving a balance due, as he claims, of $1,168.55.”
This was the theory of plaintiff’s case as given to the jury in the charge. Had the case been tried on that theory without objection probably the question would not require attention. But we think that counsel for defendant, by objections, few and rather indefinite it is true, have saved the question here raised for review. The court erred in submitting the case to the jury on a claimed contract or agreement not averred in the declaration. Probably the declaration, which is not claimed to be insufficient, was made on the theory that plaintiff had performed the contract in part, had been prevented without his fault from completing it, and was entitled to recover on the quantum meruit. The concluding and quoted paragraph of the declaration states merely plaintiff’s notion of measuring the damage. The declaration
As the case must go back for a new trial other questions should be discussed.
Whether plaintiff was justified in abandoning the contract when he did was, under the proof, a question of fact for the jury.
If plaintiff breached the contract a rule respecting recovery is stated in Fuller v. Rice, 52 Mich. 435:
“If the plaintiff had performed valuable services for the defendant under the contract, of which the latter had reaped the advantage, he was entitled to recover therefor at the rate fixed by the contract, less any damages the defendant may have suffered by reason of failure in complete performance. Allen v. McKibbin, 5 Mich. 454; Whipple v. Parker, 29 Mich. 369; Wildey v. School District, 25 Mich. 419; Burroughs v. Morse, 48 Mich. 520.”
See, also, Kitchen v. Hill, 215 Mich. 668; Williams v. Crane, 153 Mich. 89; International Text-Book Co. v. Jones, 166 Mich. 86; Howell v. Medler, 41 Mich. 641; L. R. A. 1916E, 790; 30 L. R. A. 33.
So if plaintiff breached the contract defendant should have been permitted to recoup damages, if any, occasioned by the breach.
If plaintiff did not breach the contract and if defendant prevented full performance, plaintiff may sue in assumpsit for the work and labor performed and recover the value thereof not exceeding the contract price. See Allen v. McKibbin, supra, and annotations of that case; 6 R. C. L. p. 976; 40 Cyc. p. 2830; Mitchell v. Scott, 41 Mich. 108; Hosmer v. Wilson, 7 Mich. 294 (74 Am. Dec. 716) ; Chapman v. Dease, 34 Mich. 375; Kutzner v. Stuart, 215 Mich. 270. The rule, where the provisions of a contract are apportion-able (see Manistee Navigation Co. v. Filer, 185 Mich. 302) is not applicable here.
Testimony of the total price paid defendant by the
Judgment reversed, with costs to defendant. New trial granted.