126 A. 577 | Vt. | 1924
The plaintiff furnished certain lumber and other building materials for a house being constructed for the defendant under a contract to furnish the "millwork" on the house on the basis of cost of the lumber when kiln-dried, plus 10 per cent., plus milling at $1.50 per hour for man and machine, plus trucking to be charged at cost. The plaintiff furnished all the millwork for the exterior and interior finish of the building, which included practically all the material for the house with the exception of the frame, rough boarding, roofing, lathing, and plastering. It had nothing to do with the construction of the building, that being done by the defendant. From time to time as the material was furnished the plaintiff invoiced the lumber and work and the defendant made payments on account. The invoices totaled $12,613.55 and the credits amounted to $7,311.75, leaving a balance claimed by the plaintiff of $5,301.80 for which the action on contract is brought. The defendant filed no answer, so under the rules of court the general denial is to be treated as filed. The trial was by jury resulting in a verdict for the plaintiff for $500. The case is here on plaintiff's exceptions to the admission and exclusion of evidence and the refusal of the court to set the verdict aside.
The amount of lumber furnished was not in dispute. The defendant relied upon the claims that the lumber was charged to her at a rate greatly in excess of its cost; that the plaintiff overcharged for labor; and that the lumber was not properly kiln-dried, as a result of which the woodwork shrank and did not retain its shape after it was installed in the house. These issues were submitted to the jury in a charge to which the plaintiff did not except. The first exceptions briefed raise the question whether the defendant was entitled under the pleadings to recoup her damages resulting from plaintiff's failure to kiln-dry the lumber properly. Testimony as to the cost of taking down and replacing work which was defective because the wood was not properly kiln-dried was admitted under exception against the objection that recoupment is not permissible under the general denial.
Prior to the adoption of the Practice Act it was settled by repeated decisions that proper subject-matters of recoupment *219
need not be specially pleaded, but could be shown under the general issue. Gregory v. Tomlinson,
The discussion of a group of exceptions to the admission of evidence involves the construction of certain provisions of the contract. The "millwork" which the plaintiff agreed to furnish included lumber and the labor required to prepare it for use in the building. By terms of the contract the defendant was to pay for the lumber on the basis of its cost when kiln-dried plus 10 per cent., and for the labor milling it at $1.50 per hour for man and machine. Among the articles manufactured by the plaintiff for the building were door frames, doors, book *220 cases, storm sash, and shutters, as to which the defendant specially questioned the charges for labor. The plaintiff's evidence tended to show that the time charged was actually spent on the work. Under exception the defendant was permitted to show by expert testimony the amount of time that should be required for a workman of average skill to perform the several pieces of work, which evidence tended to show that the defendant had been greatly overcharged. Considerable of the lumber furnished was pine and basswood for which the plaintiff charged $100 per thousand. To meet the plaintiff's testimony that the lumber of the grade furnished, including kiln-drying, cost the amount charged, the defendant was permitted to show under exception the market value of that grade of lumber at the time in question, which was considerably less than the price charged. It had appeared from plaintiff's evidence that much of the lumber had been bought at a considerably less price "log run" and that the best quality, such as was furnished the defendant, was sorted out.
The court held, construing the contract, that the plaintiff was entitled to charge on account of labor only for the time actually and necessarily spent and for the lumber furnished the defendant no more than its actual cost — what it actually paid for it, including the expense of kiln-drying, which was agreed to at $6.00 per thousand. This was as favorable a construction as the plaintiff was entitled to, and was satisfactory, for the charge on the subject was not excepted to. The evidence respecting the time required for a workman of average skill to perform the work in question was objected to on the ground that the test under the contract was the time actually expended on the work and not how long it ought to take to do the work. But the objection falls when full effect is given to the contract. The agreement to pay for the work by the hour implies an understanding that only the time reasonably necessary to perform the work shall be charged for. Not only must the plaintiff show that the time charged was actually spent but, if questioned, that it was properly spent — in other words, that it was reasonably necessary. It is not to be supposed that the parties to the contract intended any thing short of this. The cases in other jurisdictions illustrating this principle are collected in notes found in 2 A.L.R. 126 and 27 A.L.R. 48. The time reasonably necessary to perform *221 the particular work in question being in issue, it manifestly was not error to admit the testimony objected to.
Nor was it error in the circumstances to admit evidence of the market value of the lumber furnished. The compensation fixed by the contract was the actual cost to the plaintiff. It would be entitled to no profit on the lumber except the 10 per cent., and could charge only what in good faith was paid for it plus the agreed profit. If the plaintiff had purchased the lumber already graded, it should seem that its market value would be material in determining whether a reasonable price was paid for it. Certainly, when, as here, the plaintiff charges not what was actually paid for the lumber, but what it is deemed to be worth when graded, the market value of the particular grade is properly resorted to to test the reasonableness of the charge. Indeed, it is held in some cases that the charge for materials under a cost plus contract should not exceed their fair market value. SeeLytle, Campbell Co. v. Somers, Fitler Tood Co.,
The plaintiff treats the exception to the evidence of market value as saving the objection that the witness was not shown to be qualified. After the objection was interposed, additional testimony relating to the qualification of the witness was introduced. Thereupon, the court ruled: "Now you may have an answer to the other question," to which the plaintiff was allowed an exception. It thus appears that the exception was not to the implied ruling that the witness was qualified, but to the testimony as to market value. But given the scope claimed by the plaintiff, the exception avails nothing. There was evidence tending to show that the witness was qualified to speak, which made the question of qualification a preliminary question for the court and not reviewable. Brown v. Aitken,
Defendant's Exhibit B was a document containing a detailed estimate of the cost of the millwork in question made by Mr. Remington, the plaintiff's general manager, who, as a witness for the plaintiff, testified in support of the charges for the labor and materials. It was the basis of a lump sum bid on the identical work at $7,987, submitted in the fall before the contract in issue was entered into but not accepted by the *222 defendant or her contractor. Reference is made to this offer in the correspondence which embodies the contract as follows: Under date of May 5, 1922, the defendant's agent inquired, "can you give us any idea how much difference this proposition (the cost plus offer) will make in the total cost of the mill work from your price of last fall, $7,987? If possible I should like to arrive at some approximate sum to be spent on mill work to finish the job." In a letter to the agent under the same date (May 8, 1922) as the letter to the defendant containing the proposal that was accepted, Mr. Remington writing for the plaintiff said: "You ask me in your letter if I should give you any idea about what the discount would be under this new arrangement. I would say that there would be approximately a discount of fifteen per cent. under this arrangement." After suggesting how expense might be reduced by cooperation, the letter continues: "We are very anxious to keep down the expense on the job and if it would be considerably less than the fifteen per cent. it would be to our advantage to do so." By letter under date of May 9, 1922, the agent accepted the plaintiff's proposal for the defendant. These four letters were introduced in evidence by the plaintiff to prove the contract. In Mr. Remington's direct examination he was inquired of somewhat in detail concerning the prior offer and the reference to it in the correspondence. In cross-examination he testified without objection that he had made a bid on the millwork the fall before of $7,987, which the witness later characterized as "an estimate" and again as "the upset figure." The witness had testified that the millwork he was to do was not shown on a detailed statement, and that he did not to his knowledge receive such a statement from the defendant's representative. He was shown Exhibit B, and testified that it had not been in his possession when the estimate was made, and that he couldn't say in whose handwriting the figures relating to the estimate were. The defendant's evidence tended to show that the millwork furnished by the plaintiff was itemized in the exhibit; that the document was delivered to Mr. Remington in the fall of 1921 for the purpose of having him make an estimate of the millwork; that it was later returned by him with the penciled figures on it giving the estimate in detail, aggregating the amount of the bid; and that it did not have the figures on it when delivered to him. The exhibit was then offered as bearing on the reasonableness of the charges for labor and for the purpose *223 of contradicting Mr. Remington's testimony. Numerous objections were interposed, but we have occasion to consider only such as are adequately briefed.
The principal ground of objection is that under the cost plus contract it was not a question of value of services and materials, nor of reasonableness of the charges, but that the plaintiff was entitled to recover on the basis of cost and time expended regardless of whether the charges were reasonable. It is argued that where the parties agree to a certain price, they are bound by the agreement whether the prices are reasonable or not, and that to admit evidence of an estimate which was rejected would allow a recovery upon an entirely different basis than that agreed upon. But as we have seen the question of the reasonableness of the charges for labor was a proper issue in the case. It is not claimed, nor could it well be, that plaintiff's estimate of the cost of certain work, for which twice or three times as much was charged, did not tend to show that the charge therefor was unreasonable. The jury were instructed respecting the use to be made of the exhibit as evidence in a manner not excepted to. There is no force to the objection that the estimate was made between different parties, at a different time and under conditions not shown to be the same as existed at the time the work was performed. It was a proposal for the same work, giving an estimate of the time required. The significance of the evidence lies in the fact that the time charged so greatly exceeded the time estimated — a discrepancy which the plaintiff would have an opportunity to explain but which, unexplained, would certainly warrant the jury in finding the charge to be unreasonable. The reference to the estimate and the use made of it in the correspondence which embodied the contract disposes of several of the minor objections. The exception to the admission of the exhibit must be overruled.
The defendant was permitted to show in cross-examination of the plaintiff's treasurer that less was charged for native pine lumber furnished other customers during the time in question than was charged the defendant. Plaintiff's book of accounts showed that the same descriptive words, "native pine," were used in the several instances. The ground of objection was that it had not been shown that the lumber was of the same grade as that furnished the defendant. This objection is now relied upon, notwithstanding evidence was later introduced sufficient *224 to make that a question for the jury. It follows that the exceptions taken when the evidence was admitted should be overruled.
The plaintiff argues exceptions to the admission of letters marked defendant's Exhibit C and D. The former was a letter written by the defendant's architect addressed to the plaintiff under date of October 21, 1922, after the work was nearly or quite completed, and the latter the plaintiff's reply dictated by Mr. Remington. The letters were admitted in connection with Mr. Remington's cross-examination. The plaintiff had introduced testimony tending to show that the defendant's representative, Mr. Salisbury, had invoices from time to time containing charges for the lumber and labor, and had checked up the records of the plaintiff at its office in Rutland, without complaint that the defendant was being overcharged. The purpose of this evidence was plainly to afford a basis of an argument against the defendant. In this state of the evidence it would be material for the defendant to show that the charges were objected to. For this purpose at least defendant's Exhibit C was admissible, it being the best evidence of the complaint. It was objected that the letters did not relate to matters of proper cross-examination. If so, their admission at that time would not be reversible error, the order of the testimony being a matter of discretion. The plaintiff more particularly complains of the references in the letter to the lump sum offer; but it could not possibly have been prejudiced thereby, since the facts with reference to the matter already appeared in evidence for the most part introduced by the plaintiff itself. It is not claimed in the brief that the plaintiff was harmed by the admission of Exhibit D. It contained nothing inconsistent with the claims made at the trial, but, on the other hand, sought to justify the charges. It seems more probable that the plaintiff was benefited by the admission of its reply than that it was harmed thereby. It must be held that these exceptions do not present reversible error.
A witness called by the defendant had testified to delivering Exhibit B to Mr. Remington and its return with the figures thereon to which reference has already been made. The plaintiff offered to show in cross-examination that the same work was submitted at or about the same time to a concern in North Adams which made a bid of $12,000. On objection the offer was excluded, and the plaintiff had an exception. It is a sufficient *225
answer that the offer was outside of proper cross-examination, and it must be presumed in support of the ruling, the contrary not appearing, that the evidence was excluded on that ground.Read Davis v. Reynolds,
The remaining exception was saved to the action of the court in denying a motion to set aside the verdict. The grounds of the motion were that the verdict was inadequate and insufficient, that it was contrary to the weight of the evidence, and that it was contrary to law. The plaintiff recognizes that such a motion is addressed to the discretion of the trial court and reviewable only when abuse of discretion is made to appear. Hannah v.Hannah,
As we have seen, the evidence made an issue for the jury as to the reasonableness of the charge for lumber and labor and as to the amount of damage on account of defective wood work due to faulty kiln-drying. The total amount of lumber according to the plaintiff's computation was 24,782 feet, which was charged to the defendant at $100 per thousand. On the evidence, it cost the plaintiff from $35 to $80 per thousand, log run. The total number of hours charged was 5,392. There was evidence tending to show that for a very substantial part of the work the time charged was at least double what should reasonably have been required. Finally, there was evidence tending to show that the defendant's damages which she sought to recoup amounted to $4,000. It requires no argument to show that the verdict can be justified by the evidence. The issues were submitted to the jury with eminent fairness, and, as well, to the plaintiff's satisfaction, for no exception was taken. In the circumstances, the trial court could not well do otherwise than to deny the motion to set the verdict aside. It is suggested in argument that the account should be treated as settled to August 1, as the bills were paid in full to that date; but that was not the theory on which the case was tried and submitted, as fairly appears from the record. The payments were made on account, *226 so the record says, and there is nothing to show that the defendant was precluded from a defense covering all of the questioned items.
Judgment affirmed.