270 Pa. 186 | Pa. | 1921
Opinion by
Plain iffs, who owned properties fronting on West Main Street in the borough of Susquehanna Depot and
Apparently the borough became satisfied at the trial that plaintiffs’ complaints were well founded, for no objection was made to the court’s findings in regard thereto, and at the bar of this court its solicitor asked the affirmance of the decree forbidding the borough to pay any further money to Barber. As a result of this situation, plaintiff submitted, and the court below affirmed, the following point: “The jurisdiction of the court in this case extends to the granting of relief between codefendants, and such relief may be granted without cross bill or on filing of a cross bill by the borough.” Barber did not except to this ruling or assign it as error, and the effect is to eliminate appellant’s contention that some of the objections were matters for the borough only, re
Appellant for the first time now challenges the jurisdiction of equity to determine the questions raised by the bill; but this contention must be overruled for at least two reasons: (1st) Not having been raised “by demurrer or answer explicitly so stating,” and not having been decided “in limine before a hearing of the cause on the merits,” as provided by the Act of June 7, 1907, P. L. 440, it will not be considered here: McConville v. Ingham et al., 268 Pa. 507. The purpose and effect of this act is not merely to justify a court of equity in deciding a case wherein it has general jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and the only question is as to its right to proceed in the particular instance; for this was the legal situation before the act was passed: Adams’s App., 113 Pa. 449; Shillito v. Shillito, 160 Pa. 167; Penna. R. R. Co. v. Bogert, 209 Pa. 589; Smith v. McClure, 257 Pa. 168, 171. Nor is there any valid objection because of the constitutional provision as to jury trials, for it is only the “right” of trial by jury which is to remain inviolate (Bank of Columbia v. Okely, 4 Wheaton 235, 244; Capital Traction Co. v. Hof, 174 U. S. 1; New York & Penna. Co. v. New York Central R. R. Co., 267 Pa. 64, 78), and this may be waived, either expressly or impliedly, by a failure to follow the method prescribed for determining that the parties desire it: Krugh v. Lycoming Fire Ins. Co., 77 Pa. 15; Anderson v. Carnegie Steel Co., 255 Pa. 33. Since the act is a remedial one, and therefore must be so construed as to “suppress the mischief and advance the remedy” “if it can be done by reasonable construction in furtherance of the object” (Jones v. Beale, 217 Pa. 182; Rochester Trust Co. v. White, 243 Pa. 469), its'meaning necessarily is that wherever the court
The jurisdiction in equity being established, and the borough being in effect a party plaintiff, the principal questions remaining to be considered are issues of fact. The court below found that in at least eight particulars the specifications had been departed from, none of which findings are substantially disputed, and as to some of which departures the only excuse is “it did not pay to do [them] in that way.” True, some of them were of comparatively little importance, but taken altogether they resulted, inter alia, in the following conclusions; “Eighteenth. The pavements as constructed by the defendant Michael Barber did not comply either strictly or substantially with the contracts, plans and specifications.” “Nineteenth. The pavements as constructed, compared with those called for in the specifications and which
There being then no substantial compliance with the contracts, Barber cannot recover even for the work done (Gillespie Tool Co. v. Wilson, 123 Pa. 19; Hartman v. Meighan, 171 Pa. 46), for any other conclusion “would tend to demoralize the whole country”: Martin v. Schoenberger, 8 W. & S. 367. Indeed it was found as a fact that it would cost more than the balance of the contract price to put the work in the condition provided by the contracts. Under such circumstances it is well settled that a taxpayers’ bill to enjoin further payments under the contracts will be sustained (Pepper v. City of Phila., 114 Pa. 96, 112; Brobst v. City of Reading, 236 Pa. 627); and we need only again repeat the warning that in a proper case public policy requires this remedy shall be unflinchingly applied, since not otherwise can those who contract with the public be taught that it is just as
The conclusion thus reached disposes of all the other assignments of error which relate to the findings of fact and conclusions of law, for if all these assignments were sustained the decree would none the less inevitably follow the findings which we have quoted above; and hence we need only consider, in addition, the objections relating to the exclusion of certain evidence offered by appellant. As none of them were argued in appellant’s paper-book, we might treat them as abandoned; but, in any event, they do not disclose reversible error. In some of them the witness was asked his opinion as to the general effect, on the work, of Barber’s violating his contract in specified particulars; in others, his opinion regarding the substantial character of the work actually done, without reference to whether or not it complied with the contracts; and, in still others, his opinion generally as to whether or not he deemed the work actually done a substantial compliance with the contract, an inquiry he subsequently answered by saying it was “as good as the road required under the specifications”; and moreover this was a matter for the court and not for the witness to decide, especially in view of the admitted variations from the specifications and the facts set forth in the nineteenth finding above quoted.
The decree of the court below is affirmed and the appeal is dismissed at the cost of appellant.