123 A. 431 | Vt. | 1924
The action is book account to recover the balance of the contract price of a monument and marker furnished by the plaintiff to defendant. Heard by the court. Judgment for the plaintiff to recover of defendant $398.42, the balance found due. The defense relied upon is that the right of recovery, if any, is based on an entire contract for the monument in question and full performance is necessary to entitle the plaintiff to recover.
The case comes here on defendant's exceptions: (1) To the finding of the court as not warranted by the evidence in the case and as contrary to the evidence for that the evidence established that the monument as set differed materially from the monument described in the contract and there was no evidence in the case warranting a finding of compliance by plaintiff with the terms of the contract; (2) to the judgment as unwarranted by the facts found.
We pass over the first exception, because granting that the defendant is right concerning the question raised thereby, the judgment must stand if supported by other findings. It appears that the contract was in writing, dated April 10, 1920, and provided that plaintiff should furnish and set up in the cemetery at Shelburne, Vermont, a monument and marker; the marker to be set before May 30, 1920, and the monument to be set within a reasonable time. The base and die of the monument were to be of dark Barre granite and were to be surmounted by a marble statue of special design, all to be nine feet in height. *397 Both monument and marker were to be finished and set up in a good workmanlike manner and the job was to be a first-class job in every particular. The price for the entire job was $700, of which $125 was to be, and was, paid when the contract was executed, and the balance was to be paid in cash on delivery.
It is thus seen that the contract was executory in its nature; and if when the monument and marker were completed and set up they did not conform, substantially, to the requirements of the contract, it was optional with the defendant to reject them or accept them and seek redress in damages.
She could accept or ratify the sale without waiving her claim for deduction in price for defects. Esty v. Reed,
Acceptance may be shown in various ways. Payment, in whole or in part, of the contract price, after the work has been delivered, is very convincing evidence of acceptance. In the instant case, it is found that defendant paid $200 on this job, June 27, 1921, and since under the contract nothing was due until the monument was delivered and set up, we may fairly assume that it had been delivered and set when the $200 was paid.
In these circumstances, the trial court might have fairly inferred an acceptance of the job by the defendant, and in support of the judgment this Court will assume that such inference was drawn. Bowers Granite Co. v. Drew Daniels GraniteCo.,
That this question was not noticed by counsel in the presentation of the case is immaterial, because the judgment will be affirmed if it can be on any legal ground, whether raised or not. Goupiel v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co.,
Having affirmed the contract, the defendant is left to her *398 redress for damages, if any, which she may have suffered. The case was fully heard and the balance due found by the court.
Judgment affirmed.