Summary
In Moffet v. Sackett it was held that while the General Term on appeal had power to reject a claim of either party where its extent had been definitely fixed or determined, yet it had no authority to determine the facts and direct a judgment or order based thereon.
Summary of this case from Matter of ChapmanOpinion
March Term, 1859
Nicholas Hill, for the appellant.
A.J. Vanderpoel, for the respondent.
The plaintiff claims in his complaint that the defendant is justly indebted to him in the sum of $197.25, together with interest thereon, on an account for goods, wares and merchandise sold and delivered to the defendant by the plaintiff, and for work and labor done and performed, and for cash paid, laid out and expended by the plaintiff for and at the request of the defendant. The account referred to in the complaint was for gas fixtures, and for work, and labor and money advanced in reference to them. It was proved on the trial that the defendant was to have such fixtures at the same prices that his brother, Amos M. Sackett, was to pay for similar articles. The defendant contends that the contract was special, and should have been particularly set forth in the complaint. There was nothing special about it except as to the price; and in such case the general indebitatus count was sufficient under our former system of pleading, and a similar general allegation is, I think, tolerated by the Code. The only change absolutely required in this kind of action by the Code is, that the plaintiff is bound to deliver to the defendant, simply upon demand, a copy of his account. Besides, it is well settled that if a special agreement has been performed so as to leave a mere simple debt or duty between the parties, there can be a recovery under a general count of indebitatus assumpsit.
That the requisition in the 142d section of the Code, that the complaint must contain a plain and concise statement of the facts constituting a cause of action, is satisfied by the general allegation of indebtedness for goods sold and delivered, was decided by this court in Allen v. Patterson (3 Seld., 476).
The referee deducted $2 from the price charged for "the basket harp with globe," to make it correspond with what the defendant's brother paid for a similar article. In that he was right.
The plaintiff was allowed for seventeen globes one dollar and twenty-five cents each instead of fifty cents, which was the price paid by the brother for similar articles. It seems that after the contract had been made, and while it was being performed, the plaintiff told the defendant that he could not have the globes unless he paid the additional price. The defendant claimed to have them at the price mentioned in the original agreement, but the plaintiff answered that if he would not take them at the additional price he should not have them at all. It was after that conversation that the defendant directed that the globes should be sent to him. The plaintiff had not, of course, any right to change a part of the contract upon his own volition. The proposed alteration, to bind the defendant, should have been positively assented to by him. The evidence was not, in my opinion, sufficient to prove such assent. In giving the direction that they should be sent to him he may have relied upon his rights under the original agreement. He insisted, as he had a right to insist, that the articles should be delivered to him at the price originally specified. The plaintiff, certainly without any sufficient reason, demanded the additional price. No agreement was directly made at the time. I think that under the circumstances the plaintiff should be held to his agreement, and that the referee erred in allowing him the additional compensation.
The plaintiff, in his complaint, claimed compensation for work and labor, thus admitting, in effect, that they were embraced in his contract. It was proved on the trial that the plaintiff engaged to put up the fixtures in the defendant's house. The plaintiff put up two chandeliers and charged $45 for each, that being the price paid by the defendant's brother. The defendant contended that one of the chandeliers had been imperfectly and insufficiently fastened, and claimed a deduction on that account. That chandelier fell upon the floor of the parlor, but it was after the commencement of this suit, and it was contended by the plaintiff that any evidence as to that accident was, therefore, inadmissible. It seems to me that such evidence was properly admitted, if it had a tendency to show any original imperfection in the article, or any fault in the work of fastening it to the ceiling. A gas-fitter testified that "the defect consisted in the iron rod which ran through the pipe and the connections; the connections embrace the screws; they were too large for the screws on the rod; the male screw was not large enough for the female screw," and that "it could not be screwed tight or home." The same witness testified that the chandelier, as it was in the ceiling, immediately previous to its falling, was worth from $20 to $25, about $15 less than if it had been, as he said, "well put up, so that it would not fall." The referee found that the value of the repairs and putting up of the chandelier was from $12 to $15; but he refused to make any deduction, because, as he thought, it could only be claimed by way of recoupment (which was not claimed in the answer) and not as a reduction in the price or value of the chandelier. In this the Superior Court differed from him, and in doing so that court was clearly right. The stipulated price was not solely for the chandelier, but was also for putting it up in the defendant's house. That is clear, not only from the testimony of the defendant's brother, but also from the fact that no separate charge was made for the work. The two chandeliers are charged in the plaintiff's bill at $90. If a plaintiff charges in his complaint for a general indebtedness for goods, and work and labor bestowed upon them, and proves that there were specified prices, and it appears from his evidence, or the evidence of the other party, that there were defects in the goods or work, it follows that there was never an indebtedness to the extent claimed, and the amount allowed to him should be limited accordingly. It requires no counter claim to reduce the amount. The court below endeavored to cure the difficulty by reducing the recovery; but in attempting to escape from one gulf they fell into another. The referee stated, in effect, that the difference in value between a chandelier properly fastened to the ceiling and the one which fell upon the floor was from $12 to $15, thereby intimating that it might exceed the smaller sum. The Superior Court, however, allowed a deduction of $12, and by that enabled the plaintiff to recover some twenty-five cents more than what the defendant had paid into court. Where that court could find any authority thus to determine the amount of unsettled damages, and where the uncertainty was apparent from the manner in which the statement was made, I have been unable to discover. It is undoubtedly competent for a court sitting at general term, on an appeal from the special term, to allow or reject a claim of either party where its extent has been definitely fixed or can be clearly determined; but where the amount is indefinite and uncertain, it cannot be determined by the court without assuming the province of a jury. The judgment should be reversed and there should be a new trial, the costs to abide the event of the suit.
The manner in which a defence is to be set out in an answer is prescribed by the 149th section of the Code. It must contain, first, a general or specific denial of each material allegation of the complaint which it is intended to controvert; second, a statement of any new matter constituting a defence or counter claim, in ordinary and concise language, without repetition." The question upon this appeal is, whether the denial in the answer that the goods, services and money, for which the plaintiff sought to recover, were worth the amount which the plaintiff claimed, and the assertion that they were not worth more than a certain sum, which was less by some $24 than what he so claimed, fairly embraces a reclamation on account of the want of care or skill in putting up the chandelier. The allegation in that part of the answer referred to would suggest no other idea than this, that upon the footing of a quantum valebant the plaintiff could not recover so much as he had claimed. This is a denial of the complaint pro tanto, and not the setting up of any new matter. The defence made upon the trial, so far as this question is concerned, did not consist in questioning the market or intrinsic value of the articles sold, and the attempt to state his damage in such language as to make it appear to bear upon such value was absurd. If the defendant had any ground for resisting the plaintiff's demand, as I suppose he had, it arose out of a new and distinct matter, to wit, that the plaintiff's workmen, for whose conduct he was responsible, had acted negligently and unskillfully in putting up the chandelier. It is clear that the answer did not allude to this defence; indeed it could not, for it was not known at the time the answer was put in. The proper course for the defendant was to put in a suplemental answer, according to section 177 of the Code.
It follows that the decision of the referee was correct. The general term had no authority to make the deduction of $12, whether the referee decided erroneously or not, but should, on its own principles, have granted a new trial. But as I think no error was committed by the referee, I am in favor of affirmance.
All the other judges concurring,
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered