On Oсtober 22,1976, the appellant contracted to “provide all the necessary materials, equipment, insurance and labor” for repair of the roof on appellees’ building. The contract price was $18,000, “ [pjayment due in full upon completion of job.” The contract further provided “[a]ll work tо be performed in a workmanlike manner ...”
The appellant commenced work under the contract and progress payments in the amount of $14,000 were made by appellees. Although the appellant finished the job, no further payments were made to the appellant because the apрellees contended that the roof had not been repaired in accordance with the contract specifications and that it leakеd. The appellees instituted the instant action against the appellant, alleging that appellant’s performance under the contract “wаs so inadequate, incomplete and unworkmanlike as to constitute a complete failure of [its] contractual responsibilities and that [it is] therefore indebted to [appellees] for breach of contract in the sum of $14,000.00.” The appellees also sought $3,000 for damages to the wooden floоr of the building, alleged to be the result of the leaking roof and $12,000 for “loss of rental for the space under said roof area.” The appellant answеred, denying the material allegations of the complaint and filed a counterclaim seeking judgment for the $4,000 it contended was owed under the contract. In the main action, the jury returned its verdict in favor of the appellees and against the appellant in an amount of $10,000. The jury also found for the appellees on appellant’s counterclaim. Judgment was entered on the verdict and the appellant appeals.
1. The appellant enumerates error in the giving of the following instruction: “If you find that there are conflicts in the evidence, it is your duty under our law to reconcile those conflicts whenever possible so as to make all the witnesses speak the truth and not attribute a false statement to any of them, but if you find that this cannot be done, then yоu would believe the evidence most reasonable and credible to you and decide the case by the preponderance of the evidence.” We find the appellant’s argument that this instruction invaded the province of the jury to be meritless.
White v. Fulton,
2. On direct examination, one of appellees’ witnesses was asked a question which called for an opinion. Appellant’s counsel objeсted, giving as one of several grounds for the objection the failure to lay a foundation for “this witness to give an opinion as to that particular question.” The trial court, in ruling on the appellant’s objection, stated: “I think it has. I believe it’s been shown that he has experience in this sort of thing. I think the foundation is there and the facts are there. Overruled.” It is urged on appeal that this statement by the court in overruling the objection was, under Code Ann. § 81-1104, an impermissible judicial commеnt on the evidence. We find this argument to be totally without merit. “ ‘[W]hen an objection is made to evidence offered, the judge has a right, if he deems propеr, to give his reasons for his decision on the objections; and such reasons so given, if pertinent to the objections made, do not constitute such an exрression of opinion as to violate the code section above cited.’ [Cits.]”
Collins v. State,
3. Error is enumerated in the giving of the following charge: “A party to an entire contract who has partly perfоrmed it and subsequently abandons the further performance according to its stipulations, and voluntarily and without fault on the part of the other party, or his cоnsent thereto, can recover nothing for such part performance. Unanticipated difficulty does not excuse performance of a сontractual duty.”
The principle of law presented in the first sentence of the quoted instruction was a correct statement in the abstract.
Ala. Gold Life Ins. Co. v. Garmany,
The aрpellant apparently concedes that the charge on “unanticipated difficulties” contained in the second sentence of the instruction states an accurate principle of law and does not argue that it is erroneous for that reason. See generally,
Cannon v. Hunt,
4. In the remaining enumerations of error, which are addressed to the general grounds, the appellant argues in two of them that the verdict of the jury was “strоngly against the weight of the evidence.” “Even where an appellant proceeds directly by notice of appeal rather than by motion for new trial, the appellate courts undertake only to determine the sufficiency of the evidence, not to weigh it.”
Ridley v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
