Court Opinion

ID: 8271598
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 19:34:01.199854+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:32.347882
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Magte, Chancellor.
The assignments of error are directed to the refusal of the trial judge to direct a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in error (who was the defendant below), and to instructions to the jury.
The bills of exception disclose that the stokers which were the subject of the contract shown in the prefatory statement *651weré afterward connected with a boiler belonging to plaintiff in error, and that on November 1st, and November 4th, 1901, a test of some sort was made respecting the saving obtained by the use of said stokers over “hand-firing.” Whether the test exhibited a net saving of ten per cent, was in question.
After all the evidence was in, counsel for plaintiff in error requested the trial judge to direct a verdict in its favor. The. request was made upon the sola ground that the evidence showed that, by the usé of the stokers in question, there was not a' net saving of ten per cent, over hand-firing. In response to the motion, counsel for defendant in error did not claim that the evidence showed the net saving which was guaranteed, but onfy that the alleged test was not that which was required by the contract, and that defendant in error had afterward requested plaintiff in error to permit a test to be made under proper conditions, which request was refused.
The motion for the direction of a verdict was properly denied. Assuming, as was stated, that the alleged test had not shown the guaranteed saving, the contest between the parties was narrowed to the question whether that was the test required by the contract, and if not, whether another-test had been demanded and refused. As there was contradictory evidence on the first of- these questions, the case was one for the jury, and there was no error in refusing to withdraw it from them.
The trial judge then submitted to the jury the question whether the test of November 1st and November 4th was such as was required by the contract, and this submission is assigned for error. But as there was evidence tending to support the view that the test then made was not that required b]r the contract, this submission was not erroneous. We cannot review the sufficiency of the evidence to that effect.
The trial judge then instructed the jury that if they reached the conclusion that the test made at the time stated was not that required by the contract, then their verdict *652should be for the defendant in error, because plaintiff in error had refused to permit any further test to be made. This instruction was based on the uncontradictecl evidence that a demand for a further test had been made by defendant in error and refused by plaintiff in error. By a letter from defendant in error, addressed to plaintiff in error, dated November 29th, 1901, such a demand was made. By the reply of plaintiff in error, dated December 4th, 1901, the defendant in error was notified that no contract existed between them, and as “the stoker had not given the results represented” it should be removed by it.
The contract shown in this case was executory in character and the plaintiff in error was entitled to rescind it if the test which was required by its terms failed to show that the stoker fulfilled the requirements of the trial. Smith v. York Manufacturing Co., 29 Vroom 242. Upon evidence proper to be submitted to them, the jury were instructed to find whether the required test had been made. If they found it had not been made, the court was bound' to give them instructions as to the liability of the defendant in error. In performing that duty, the instruction excepted to was based upon the uncontradicted evidence of a demand that the required test should be made, or permitted to be made, and an unqualified refusal. The instructions were that, finding no test as required, and a demand and refusal, the verdict should be for plaintiff in error. The exception and assignment of error brings into review this instruction.
As this contract was in writing Ihere is no question of the statute of frauds, as in the case of Mechanical Boiler Cleaner Co. v. Kellner, 33 Vroom 544.
No objection was made below to this instruction on the ground that it directed a verdict for the contract price of the stoker. Nor has it been urged here that it was erroneous in that respect. Whether, when the stoker was on the premises of plaintiff in error and connected with its boiler, its refusal to permit the test required by the contract to be made established a liability to pay the whole contract price, *653or only a quantum meruit, lias not been argued. As' the declaration contained the common counts, and as there was evidence of value at least as great as the contract price, and no contradictory evidence, the question seems to be unimportant. It was not erroneous to direct a finding .of liability if the required test had been refused when seasonably sought.
No error being found, the judgment must be affirmed.
For affirmance — The Chancellor, Garrison, Fort, Hendrickson, Pitney, Swayze, Bogert, Yredenburgi-i, Yroom, Green, Gray. 11.
For reversal — None.