Aldridge v. Tully Plumbing & Heating Co.
Aldridge v. Tully Plumbing & Heating Co.
Opinion of the Court
The question of primary importance in this case is whether or not the plaintiff was authorized by the defendant, expressly or impliedly, or upon any principle of estoppel, to install the Croswyn closets and the Premier heater in defendant’s home in lieu of the cheaper fixtures originally specified, so as to render defendant liable to plaintiff for the additional cost here sought to be recovered. On this issue defendant requested the general affirmative charge, which was refused : ' and the insistence is that the issue was improperly submitted to the jury in the absence of any evidence supporting plaintiff’s case.
If the question were merely whether the building superintendent, Holmes, or the foreman, Cooper, had authority to change the terms of the original contract between plaintiff and defendant, the answer would clearly be in the negative, as declared by the trial judge in some of the instructions given to the jury, and as well demonstrated in the brief of defendant’s counsel. But that -is not the question. The terms of the contract specifying the kinds of fixtures to be installed were tentatively changed by the parties themselves, so that different fixtures were contemplated, to be selected by defendant, and — by necessary implication — to be seasonably made known to plaintiff; and the real questions were whether the added cost, if any, was covered by the original bid of $4,050, or were to be paid for additionally, and also whether the substituted fixtures were selected by defendant actually, or by' implication properly deducible from the circumstances and from the conduct of defendant.
It is true there is no evidence directly showing that defendant definitely selected the fixtures, nor any directly showing that he personally informed plaintiff of such a selection, or directed his agents Holmes and Cooper to do so. Yet, assuming the jury’s finding, as they might have reasonably found, that defendant had discussed with plaintiff the matter of changing the fixtures, and had been advised of the unfitness or undesirability of those first specified; that he had actually priced the ones installed, and had agreed to make the selections he desired, and impliedly agreed also to seasonably inform plaintiff of these selections, and that he had failed to personally report thereon to plaintiff; that Holmes had, with the apparent authority or approval of defendant, directed and had done by plaintiff additional items of work on the job, which were not included in the original contract, and for which additional charges were made and paid, and that a statement was rendered to defendant after the completion of the job showing that additional charges considerably in excess of the original contract-price were being made, to which defendant did not then object — under these Qircumstances, plaintiff was entitled to assume that defendant had left the communication to be made by his superintendent and foreman who were on the ground in charge of the work, and entitled to rely upon the instructions received from them as emanating from their principal in so far as these fixtures were concerned. The proposition involves, we think, an element of estoppel, and the facts stated are deducible from the testimony of defendant and his several witnesses. No doubt this theory of the case was in the mind of the learned trial judge when he refused to charge the jury affirinatively for defendant, and at the same time, without inconsistency, charged that Holmes and Cooper had no authority to change the terms of defendant’s contract. This latter instruction did not — as we have indicated above — require the jury to find for defendant, and hence their failure to do so was not a valid ground for setting aside the verdict as contrary to the instructions given.
The trial court was not in error in refusing to charge at defendant’s request that *569 “the burden of proof is on the plaintiff to reasonably satisfy you from the evidence in this case that the defendant owes him the amount claimed in the complaint.” The charge is misleading in its implication that plaintiff1-could not recover anything unless he proved that the entire amount claimed was due. This, of course, is not the law. Under the pleadings, the burden was on plaintiff to show an amount due in excess of defendant’s tender, but any such amount was recoverable though less than the amount claimed.
The chief ground urged in support of defendant’s motion for a new trial was the discovery of new evidence, viz., that his superintendent Holmes would testify that he had no authority to make any contract with plaintiff ; that he was not authorized to make any change in the type of closets or heater to be used in the building; that at no time did he have any conversation about them with plaintiff or his superintendent Staley; and that he did not tell them that he was authorized by defendant to direct any such changes. Defendant’s insistence is that he'was surprised by the testimony of plaintiff and Staley that Holmes directed the use of the substituted fixtures, and that he could not have anticipated such a claim, nor what Holmes would say about it.
Even if it be conceded that the alleged newly discovered evidence was of such nature and effect, and its late discovery so free from negligence, as to meet the requirements of the law in those respects, yet as defendant, in the face of the adverse testimony, made no complaint of the surprise during the trial, and made no motion for a continuance or postponement, but was content to speculate upon the chance of a favorable result on the evidence as it stood, “he was in no position, after the case was decided against him, to ask for a new trial on the ground of such alleged surprise.” Simpson v. Golden, 114 Ala. 336, 21 So. 990; L. & N. R. Co. v. Abernathy, 192 Ala. 629, 637, 69 So. 57. The trial court was not in error, therefore, in overruling the motion for a new trial.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
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