Chenowith v. County Court
Chenowith v. County Court
Opinion of the Court
This was an action of assumpsit brought in the Circuit Court of Ritchie county by Eli Chenowith and O. S. Fought, who sued for the use and benefit of W. H. Thomas and O. S. Fought, against the county of Ritchie to recover a balance of $798.15 alleged to have been due on the 29th day of August, 1884, upon a contract entered into between A. C. Barnard as president of the County Court of Ritchie county and said Eli Chenowith and O. S. Fought for the construction of a bridge across the North Fork of Hughes river near the house of E. R. Taylor, to be completed on the 1st of October, 1884, in accordance with specifications accompanying and referred to in said agreement.
This case seems to have been twice before a jury in the county of Ritchie, and, they failing to agree for cause shown to the court, it was transferred to the county of Doddridge, in which county a trial was had, which terminated on the 1st day of December, 1888, in a verdict for the plaintiffs for the sum of $1,002.30, with interest thereon from that date, and judgment was rendered against the defendant for that amount in said court. The defendant by its. counsel moved to set aside the verdict of the jury, and grant it a new trial, which
The first exception relied upon by the defendant, as constituting error in .the ruling of the court upon said trial, was in allowing copies of said contract and specifications to be given in evidence to 'the jury. In the second volume of Grconleaf on Evidence, p. 9, § 11, the author says: “A further preliminary observation may here be made applicable to every action founded on a written document, namely, that the first step in the evidence on the side of the plaintiff is the production of the document itself.” But our statutp (Code, c. 120, § 5) seems to have changed the common-law by providing: “A copy of any record or paper in the clerk’s office of any court, * * * attested by the' officer in whose office the same is, may be admitted as evidence in lieu of the original,” etc. I think therefore the court committed no error in admitting copies of said contract and specifications to be read as evidence before the jury, especially when the order of the County Court awarding the contract to construct said bridge to Chenowith and Bought, and accepting their bond for the performance of the same, directed that said bond and contract be 'filed in the office of the clerk of said County Court, and being so filed the clerk was authorized to make a certified copy of the same, and said certified copy was doubtless the best evidence the plaintiff could produce of said contract.
The second error relied upon by the plaintiff in error is, that the court erred in admitting an order of the County Court of Bitchie county appointing E. J. Taylor, E. R. Taylor, and James M. Wilson a committee to advertise for sealed bids for an iron bridge or wooden arch bridge to be erected across the North Fork of Hughes river near the residence of E. B. Taylor, prescribing the time that notice should be given, and requiring said committee to report their
The next point relied on by the plaintiff in error is, that the court erred in sustaining the objection made by plaintiff’s counsel to the question asked the witness, A. C. Barnard, who appears to have been a member of the County Court of I-titchie county, when said bridge was being constructed. The question objected to was as follows: “.Bid the County Court at any time accept that bridge or any part .of it and take it off the contractor’s hands?” We think the court erred.in sustaining said objection. It is true to some ex'tent, that a court can only speak by its record, but A. 0. Barnard although one of the members of the court, and a component part thereof when sitting as a court, was not the court nor any part of it, when said court was not in session and acting as a court; and -when he was asked to. state a fact, which might well be supposed to be within his knowledge, to wit, whether the County Court ’ did at any time accept said bridge or any part of it, it seems to us, he might state the fact ■ affirmatively or negatively without going to the order-book, and reading the orders made indicating the acceptance or rejection of said bridge. It does not seem
The fourth assignment of error is as to the action of the court in refusing to allow the witness E. E. Taylor to answer the following questions, to wit: “Was it or not this digging that caused the wing walls to fall down ?” and, “What caused the wing wall to fall ?” also ; “Were the committee and thé contractor upon the bridge-site, about the time the contract was entered into, for the purpose of ascertaining upon what the abutment would rest ?” And when the witness answered, “.Yes, sir; they ascertained upon what it should resthe was asked, “Upon what” and the court refused to allow him to answer. It will be remembered, that the plaintiff had already introduced and read in evidence the contract and specifications for the erection and construction of said bridge. These papers clearly show, that said abutments were to rest upon the solid rock, and the relevancy of the questions .is apparent, when it is considered, that the committee and contractors went upon the site to ascertain, whether it was possible or practicable to place the said abutments upon a solid foundation; and after making the examination the contract was drawn providing, that said abutments should set on solid rock base. This evidence tends to show, that the contractors did not enter into said agreement unadvisedly, but after examining the location with the committee, and it is not to he presumed, that they would have contracted to place the abutments on a solid rock base, if they had not ascertained that the rock was there. As to the other questions, he should have been permitted to answer the question, “What caused that wing to fall ?” because his answer to that question may have disclosed the character of the foundation, upon which said wing wall rested, and may have shown, that its fall was not occasioned by digging the dirt away from it.
The next exception relied on by the plaintiff in error is to the action of the court in overruling its objection to a question asked the witness, O. S. Fought, “as to the present
The sixth assignment of error claims, that the court erred in refusing to allow the witness, John P. Wildman, to testify in rebuttal. This witness was introduced as an expert stonemason, who stated that he had worked at the business since 1857 or 1858, and was introduced by way of rebuttal to the evidence of O’Kelly, Hart and Hibbs, who, after the plaintiffs had rested, were allowed to speak of the present condition of the abutment, after the court had allowed both parties to introduce such evidence; and when said witness had stated, that he had worked on pitch and range work and all kinds of work, arching tunnels, building abutments for bridges, and on house-work, and that he saw this abutment in February, 1885, and when he was asked to state what character of work that was, — the question was objected to by plaintiffs’ counsel, and the court sustained the objection. This ruling of the court, it seems to us, was erroneous, as other witnesses had been allowed to testify as experts for plaintiffs in regard to the character of the work, — the witness "Wildman should also have been allowed to testify in regard to the same matter by way of rebuttal.
Coming to the seventh and last assignment of error to wit, “in refusing to set aside the verdict of the jury and grant the defendant a new trial, because the same was contrary to the law and evidence,” we first look to the bill of exceptions, which was made a part of the record at the time of the trial, and find that in the conclusion the court certified, that the foregoing was all. the testimony offered in the cause instead of certifying the facts proved. When a certificate of this character is made, this Court has repeatedly held, “that it can not reverse the judgment of the court below for refusal to set aside the verdict as contrary to evidence, unless, by rejecting all the parol evidence for the exceptor, and giving full force and credit to that of the adverse party, the
Acting upon this well-settle'd practice, and rejecting the parol evidence offered by the defendant', the' question presented for consideration is : Have the plaintiffs shown themselves entitled to recover in said action. It is incumbent'on them to show affirmatively, not only what the contract was, but also that they have complied with it. By reference to the bill of exceptions it will be perceived, that they offered in evidence the contract including the specifications thereto attached and which were part thereof; and in that contract they agreed “ to build said bridge and abutments in accordance with the plans and specfications thereto attached and at the'price therein named;” and it was further agreed “that all of the above-named work should be done in a neat, substantial and workman-like manner, said abutments to be nineteen feet high, set on solid rock base.” It seems that Eli Chenowith, one of the contractors, assigned his portion of the contract to one TV. H. Thomas, who is one of the plaintiffs in this action. 0. S. Fought, 'one of the contractors, had himself sworn as a witness, and stated, that he built the bridge, just as he understood the contract and specifications, and he states twice, that, when they finished the stone-work, the committee composed of Taylor, Brown, and Gray received it and paid them for it; but he nowhere states, that, said abutments were constructed so as to be nineteen feet high; that the work was done in a neat, substantial arid workman-likd-manner; or that said abutments were set on solid rock base.
It will be seen that the plaintiffs in said suit contracted for said stoné-wórk and wood-work as an entirety arid not separately. ' Their contract was to build the bridge in accordance with the specifications, and, although they were-to b’e paid as the work progressed, the work was not to be received until the bridge was finished. The contract for the stone-work was not a separate contract from the wood-work, and the order of the' County Court of Ritchie,' dated the 17th of July, 1884, which was given in evidence by said
W. IT. Thomas, one of the plaintiffs, was also sworn as a witness, and -said, he saw Gray, Fought and E. R. Taylor measuring the abutment; that he bought -Chenowith’s interest in-the bridge, and completed the wood-work according to the contract; that the committee saw it, and made no objection-to it; that Brown, one-of the committee, said it was a very good job, if they would tighten up some of the.bolts and washers; that Taylor told the court, it-was a-good job of work, and ought to be protected; that he (witness) requested the court to make an order for shingles to cover the bridge, or, finish covering it, which the court declined to do, and he afterwards bought shingles himself to finish-covering it, and then sent for the committee to come, and receive it, and after they came he told them if they had any suggestions to make about anything he was ready to do it, and they made no suggestions about - anything but the bolts, and he. went home and-paid no more attention- t'o'it; that-he became a contractor after the-stone-work was-completed, etc.- It will be seen, that his testimony has reference mainly to the woodwork. He further says that -E; J-. Taylor- said to him,, when he was beginning the bridge, (evidently meaning the woodwork,) ■“ Hadn’t- you better wait until we investigate this thing a little ?” (meaning the abutment); that that was all the notice he ever had ; that ho-saw some places in the abutment under the ground, which- might have been better,;- that the committée called him to see the abutment about the-time they were beginning to raise the bridge; that he jobbed a 6rowTbar down, and felt something* — a log or a rock; that he at last became alarmed at the reports about the -deficiencies in the abutment, and went to E. J. Taylor and told him about these -reports that were being circulated, and- that Taylor said they were all lies started by old Chenowith and Granville
A. B. Wilson, a witness called by plaintiff, stated, that he was employed by the County Court to build an approach to said bridge in the fall of 1884, and received $240.00 for it in orders, which he filed with his deposition, that he was employed by Mr. Barnard, president of the County. Court, and J. M. Wilson, to make the approach, and he believes .he saw two men ride over it, — a Mr. Taylor and Mr. Wilson.
This was all the evidence offered by the plaintiffs in chief. They (the plaintiffs) called several witnesses by way of rebuttal buttal, one of whom, an expert by the name of Jacob Hibbs, stated on cross-examination, that he did not consider the work done in a workman-like manner; that ten or twelve feet of the wing-wall fell down ; that it would be hard for him to tell, whether it would have fallen anyhow, or the excavation caused it to fall, etc. He had before stated that he had been a stone-mason for forty five years, etc.
This is the ease presented by the plaintiff's evidence, and, excluding all evidence offered by the defendant, whether contradicted or not, it does not seem to me, that it would entitle the plaintiff's to the verdict rendered. It nowhere appears, that the abutment was built upon a solid rock foundation as the contract requires. On the contrary, the plaintiff Thomas says, he does not know’whether the abutment is on solid base
Reveb,sei>. Remanded.
Reference
- Cited By
- 9 cases
- Status
- Published