207 Mass. 304 | Mass. | 1911
1. The defendant’s motion for the recommital of the auditor’s report with the instruction to the auditor to report all the evidence upon which was based the finding that the special contract had been annulled by the parties was addressed solely to the discretion of the presiding judge, and the defendant had no right of exception to the denial of the motion. This has been so often declared that we cite only a few of the later cases. Butterworth v. Western Assurance Co. 132 Mass. 489. Carew v. Stubbs, 161 Mass. 294. Craig v. French, 181 Mass. 282. Tripp v. Macomber, 187 Mass. 109, 110. Allwright v.
But upon these exceptions, as in Hunneman v. Phelps, 199 Mass. 15, even if we had authority to review the discretion of the judge below, we have not the means of doing so. • We do not know what facts, if any, were shown or agreed to before him; we could not say that his action was wrong upon the face of the report, and nothing else is before us.
2. Under the clear and distinct instructions given them, the jury must have found that the written contract between the parties was no longer in force; that either the defendant had prevented the plaintiff from performing that contract and so the latter had a right to treat it as no longer binding (Bailey v. Marden, 193 Mass. 277 ; Posner v. Seder, 184 Mass. 331, 333; Brown v. Woodbury, 183 Mass. 279), or else that it had been annulled by the consent of both parties. But the defendant contends that such a finding was unwarranted upon either ground.
The auditor found and reported that the contract had been annulled by the parties. This furnished prima facie evidence in favor of that contention. Fisher v. Doe, 204 Mass. 34, 39, 40. The jury had a right so to find. And the plaintiff’s testimony indicated that his proposition to abandon the work had been assented to by the defendant. Nickerson v. Weld, 204 Mass. 346, 357. An assent would be sufficient though given angrily and with an oath. This too was for the jury.
But the verdict may have been based merely upon the ground that the plaintiff was not at fault for not having completed his contract, but was prevented from doing so by the wrongful conduct of the defendant. Was such a finding warranted ?
It follows that the jury could find that the defendant did unjustifiably prevent the plaintiff from going on with his work under the written contract. They could find that the defendant’s refusal to make the payment due on June 7, or any future payments under the modified agreement, was not justified by the disputes that had arisen about plastering or the excavations to be made, or by the contention that the plaintiff’s woi-k had not been done to the defendant’s “ perfect satisfaction.”
These considerations make most of the defendant’s requests for instructions immaterial. So far as necessary, they are covered by what has been said.
Exceptions overruled.