Erbeck v. Meadville & Conneaut Lake Traction Co.
Erbeck v. Meadville & Conneaut Lake Traction Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
A compulsory nonsuit in this case followed logically and inevitably upon the rejection of paintiff’s offer of a certain paj)er to show compliance on his part with the terms of the written contract on which his action was based, and thereby to establish his right of action. The suit was for the recovery for work and labor done and materials furnished in the contruction of a railway under a written contract which provided, among other things, that “in ten days after the work shall have been finished and completed the contractor shall be entitled to be paid in full, including the balance due on the aggregate of all amounts reserved, provided said Avork shall be accepted by said engineer, and he shall certify thereto in writing.” The engineer here referred to was the engineer of the defendant company under whose supervision, by the terms of the contract, the road was to be constructed. The declaration in the case contained no averment that the work done by the plaintiff had been accepted by the engineer, or that any certificate from him had ever been requested, or that this provision of the contract had been waived. The defendant’s promise to pay was conditioned on an
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
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- Syllabus
- Contract — Construction contract — Street railway — Acceptance-of worh by engineer — Evidence. In an action to recover for work and materials furnished in the' construction of a railway, it appeared that the contract provided that the contractors should be entitled to payment in full ten days after the work was completed, provided that the work should be accepted by the railway company’s engineer “and that he would certify thereto in writing.” The statement of plaintiff’s claim, though not demurred to, contained no averment that the work done had been accepted by the engineer, or that any certificate from him had ever been requested, or that this portion of the contract had been waived. The plaintiff offered in evidence a paper furnished at the request of plaintiff by the president of the defendant, which as explained by the letter accompanying it was a “list of moneys paid out for you, and to you on your contract,” with this statement following: “It is my intention to re-cheek the entire matter so as to make sure that all of the figures are correct.” The purpose of the offer as stated was to show an esti-mate by defendant’s engineer in favor of plaintiff amounting to a sum stated. There was no offer to follow up the paper by evidence supplementing it in any way; and there was nothing in the paper itself, or in the letters transmitting it which would warrant an inference , that the construction of the road had been completed under {he contract, or that it had been accepted by the engineer in charge. Held, (1) that the paper offered in evidence was properly rejected and (2) that a nonsuit was properly entered;