123 Minn. 222 | Minn. | 1913
On September 26, 19.11, plaintiff, a corporation, let a contract for the erection of a building to the defendant John A. McLeod. McLeod was required to furnish plaintiff a bond to secure the performance of the contract. This bond in the sum of $4,000 was given by McLeod as principal and the defendant, the American Surety Co., as surety. McLeod in February, 1912, abandoned the
Appellant’s first contention is that plaintiff failed to prove the -contract which the bond was to secure. The contract alleged by plaintiff provides that the building should be erected “as shown on the drawings and described in the specifications prepared by Frank X. Tewes, architect, which drawings and specifications are identified by the signatures of the parties hereto, and become hereby a part of this contract.” The plans and -specifications were not so identified, hence, according to appellant, there is no contract nor -can one be proven. A month after the contract was executed, and when the construction of the building was already in progress, appellant executed this bond. At that time according to plaintiff’s testimony the plans and specifications were complete, with a slight ■exception hereinafter alluded to, and the work was being done pursuant to the same. Appellant should not now be heard to deny the ■existence of the' contract which by its very terms the bond admits .•and secures. The evidence was ample to identify the plans and specifications under which the building was erected. And this is permissible by oral testimony. Hooper v. Webb, 27 Minn. 485, 8 N. W. 589; White v. McLaren, 151 Mass. 553, 24 N. E. 911; Snoqualmi Realty Co. v. Moynihan, 179 Mo. 629, 78 S. W. 1014; Haag v. Hillemeier, 120 N. Y. 651, 24 N. E. 807; Hayden v. Cook, 34 Neb. 670, 52 N. W. 165. The decisions in Williamette v. Los Angeles College Co. 94 Cal. 229, 29 Pac. 629; Donnelly v. Adams, 115 Cal. 129, 46 Pac. 916, and West Coast Lumber Co. v. Knapp,
Appellant claims to be released because notice of default was not given within 10 days after knowledge thereof by plaintiff, as stipulated in the bond. The building was to be completed by December 15, 1911, and no notice of default in any respect was given until January 6, 1912. Of course plaintiff knew on December 15 that the contract was not completed. But plaintiff is not complaining of the failure to finish on time. Nor is time made the essence of the contract, but by the very terms thereof it is seen that delay on either side is not to be material unless loss is sustained thereby. Furthermore, when appellant did receive notice of default on January 6, with full knowledge of the terms of the contract, for it was furnished with a copy thereof when the bond was made, and apprised by the tenor of the notice that the building was still unfinished, it did not then nor in subsequent negotiations suggest that it was released because a notice that McLeod had not finished the building should have been given within 10 days after December 15, 1911. It ought not now to he heard to urge that the time of finishing the building was so material a part of the contract that failure to give seasonable notice of default in that respect released the .bond. But, be that as it may, this case is well within the rule of Lakeside Land Co. v. Empire State Surety Co. 105 Minn. 213, 117 N. W. 431; George A. Hormel & Co. v. American Bonding Co. 112 Minn. 288, 128
As to the assertion that there was an extension of time of 10 days given the contractor by plaintiff without knowledge of the surety, it is sufficient to say that no such defense is pleaded. And even if it had been it should not avail, because, after being notified of the situation on January 6, 1912, appellant expressed a hope that the contractor could still be induced to complete the building in accordance with the contract. Again, when by letter of January 29 appellant was informed of the extension and failure to perform within the extended time, no suggestion was then made that the surety was thereby released. Nor was there any intimation of such defense until the motion to dismiss was made at the trial.
Appellant also seeks to avoid liability on the ground that it appeared at the trial that a payment of $2,000 had been made by plaintiff to the contractor on January 18, 1912. When plaintiff’s attorney admitted that this payment was so made, he stated that he did not understand how it was material. This defense of payment after default, assuming that it might violate a condition in the bond, was not pleaded, and it certainly was necessary to do so if it was to be asserted. In view of the manner in which the date of the payment came into the record it cannot, in fairness, be said that a defense based thereon was litigated by consent. On the contrary a defense was set up that appellant was released because payments to the contractor were not made as fast as provided by the contract. The payments were to be made upon certificates issued by the architect as the work progressed, but there is no evidence that the $2,000 was not paid in strict accordance with the terms of the contract.
The issues of fact were fully and fairly submitted to the jury. The verdict was slightly in excess of the sum demanded in the complaint, but the amount thereof finds fair support in the evidence. The trial court so considered. In that situation no error can be predicated upon the order denying a new trial on condition that plaintiff consented to a reduction of the verdict to the amount claimed-in the complaint, less $93.55, admitted on the trial to be due the contractor, for extras. Plaintiff consented. It has been held ever since Craig v. Cook, 28 Minn. 232, 9 N. W. 712, that a court may reduce excessive verdicts even when there is foundation for the claim that the excessive amount resulted from passion and prejudice. This rule applies to actions on contract and for tort, Pratt v. Pioneer-Press Co. 35 Minn. 251, 28 N. W. 708. And where the excessive amount in the verdict springs neither from passion or prejudice, nor from insufficiency of proof, but merely from a too modest demand in the complaint, the propriety and justice of a conditional order such as was made in this instance is apparent.
We find no error warranting a reversal.
Order affirmed.