177 P. 252 | Mont. | 1918
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.
Plaintiff contracted in writing to furnish certain materials and perform tbe work necessary for tbe erection of a dwelling-house for defendant for tbe sum of $4,727. This action was instituted to recover a balance alleged to be due and to foreclose a mechanic’s lien. Upon tbe trial plaintiff abandoned bis claim for a lien, and tbe cause then proceeded as an ordinary action at law, resulting in a verdict in favor of tbe plaintiff for $500. Defendant appealed from tbe judgment entered on tbe verdict, and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.
The plaintiff counts upon tbe original agreement and each of twenty-five oral contracts supplemental thereto, but failed to separately state or number bis several causes of action. A demurrer for ambiguity and uncertainty was overruled. When plaintiff sought to prove tbe work done and material furnished under each of the supplemental agreements, an objection was interposed but overruled, and error is predicated upon tbe ruling.
The original contract contains this stipulation: “No charges for extra work will be allowed unless same be ordered in writing by tbe owner, price stated in the order and accepted by tbe contractor and owner, signed in duplicate, and tbe same applies to any change of material used.” Appellant insists that by overruling tbe demurrer tbe trial court must have held that tbe complaint states but a single cause of action, and upon that theory bis objection to the testimony should have been sustained. If tbe premise were correct, tbe conclusion might follow, but appellant is in error in tbe construction which be places upon
The provision of the contract above was manifestly intended for the protection and benefit of the owner,, and no reason can be suggested why it might not be waived. The authorities are
Appellant insists that plaintiff cannot recover at all except upon showing performance of the contract in its entirety, and if this reference is to the original contract as modified by the subsequent oral agreements, the correctness of the position is not open to argument. (Riddell v. Peck-Williamson etc. Co., 27 Mont. 44, 69 Pac. 241.) Plaintiff alleges that he fully kept and performed the agreement in all things by him to be kept and performed, and tendered evidence in support of his plea. It is true that defendant introduced evidence tending to prove substantial defects in material and workmanship, but the most that can be said of this is that it presented an issue for the jury. Under our Code practice, which requires a party to set forth the facts constituting the basis for any affirmative relief sought,
At the request of the defendant the court gave instruction No. 5, which, after referring to the character of the action, proceeds : ‘ ‘ The burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to show that he performed the contract for the construction of said building and the doing of the extra work in a good and workmanlike manner. The law requires substantial performance of the contract. By the term ‘substantial performance’ is meant that the work as done is free from all defects of a permanent character or such as cannot be remedied by slight alterations or without reconstruction. If you believe from the evidence that the building has not been constructed in such a substantial manner but that it contains defects which cannot be remedied without reconstruction, then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this action, and you wiil find the issues against him.”
Counsel for appellant err in assuming that' plaintiff concedes that he failed to perform the contract in substantial particulars. As we read the record, he does not ground his right to recover even upon substantial performance, but insists that he fully performed the original contract as modified by the subsequent
The contention of defendant that the court erred in refusing his offered instruction No. 14 was determined adversely to him upon the former hearing in this case. (Roberts v. Sinnott, 54 Mont. 114, 123, 169 Pac. 49.)
Defendant offered testimony to the effect that the roof of the
The evidence discloses that the new roof is materially different
We must assume that the jury observed the instructions, in
The cause seems to have been tried fairly. There is a [11] substantial conflict in the evidence, but it cannot be said that plaintiff’s case is so inherently weak that it ought not to have been submitted to the jury. It is a wholesale rule which requires this court to sustain a verdict if there is evidence, apparently credible, to support it. The rule is grounded in reason. The jurors have the advantage, denied to this court, of seeing the witnesses on the stand, hearing them testify, and observing their demeanor under examination. They are to be deemed more competent, therefore, to pass upon questions of credibility and the weight to be given to the testimony. This court will not assume to say that the jurors ought to have believed evidence against their own convictions as to the truth. The verdict in this case has the sanction of the jury and also the indorsement of the judge who presided at the trial and who enjoyed the same advantage of seeing and hearing the witnesses. The fact that the printed record appears to the members of this court to indicate that defendant should have prevailed does not of itself require or justify a reversal.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
'Affirmed.