In this case, the question being whether a contract was made by
the defendants as co-partners or for a corporation, it was held
that the instructions to the jury on the subject were proper.
Where, by a contract, the defendants were to erect machinery on
a steamboat in 60 days from the date of the contract, and the
plaintiff did not furnish the steamboat until after the expiration
of the 6O days, and the defendants then went on to do the work,
they were bound to do it in 60 days from the time the boat was
finished.
A supplemental contract between the parties construed as to its
bearing on the original contract sued on.
A counterclaim or recoupment must be set up in the answer to be
available.
An objection to the competency of an expert witness to testify
overruled.
Page 121 U. S. 576
This was an action at law to recover damages for nonperformance
of a contract. Verdict for the plaintiff and judgment on the
verdict. Defendant sued out this writ of error. The case is stated
in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action at law, brought in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Southern District of Ohio by the American
Pressed Tan Bark Company, a New Jersey corporation, against
Theodore J. McGowan and Robert C. Bliss, partners under the firm
name of the McGowan Pump Company, doing business at Cincinnati,
Ohio, to recover damages for the alleged breach by the defendants
of a contract for the construction and erection of machinery upon a
steamboat. The petition by which the action was commenced sets
forth a contract entered into on the 23d of June, 1881. After a
trial before a jury, which occupied thirty days, there was a
verdict for the plaintiff for $18,000 and a judgment accordingly,
to review which the defendants have brought a writ of error.
The petition alleges that the plaintiff, being the owner of
patents for the manufacture and sale of pressed tan bark, entered
into a contract with one Mack, of Cincinnati, for the construction
of a steamboat which was to receive, carry, and operate machinery
to be erected on it by the defendants under the contract sued upon,
and was to be constructed, by agreement with the defendants, under
their control and supervision, and to their acceptance, and that
the boat was so constructed by Mack, and was accepted by the
defendants. The contract
Page 121 U. S. 577
between the plaintiff and Mack for the construction of the boat
was in writing, and was made on the 17th of June, 1881. It
contained the particulars as to the size and material and mode of
construction of the boat, and stated that its construction and
acceptance, on the part of the plaintiff, was left with "Theo. J.
McGowan & Bliss," and that it was to be finished and delivered
afloat to the plaintiff on or before August 26, 1881. The petition
alleges that this contract with Mack was made with full knowledge
on the part of the defendants of the purpose for which the boat was
being constructed, and with their direction, counsel, and
advice.
The written papers constituting the contract between the
plaintiff and the defendants were as follows:
On the 23d of April, 1881, the defendants, using the signature
"Theo. J. McGowan & Bliss," wrote from Cincinnati to A.G.
Darwin, the president of the plaintiff, the following letter:
"CIN'TI, O., April 23, 1881"
"A.G. Darwin:"
"DEAR SIR: We here with submit plan for bark press, two views,
one plan and the other elevation. They were gotten up in great
haste, and are not as full as they should be, but they show what
our ideas are. The operation is 2 12 hyd. presses, E E, one on each
side of 20' hyd. press D, to remove the bark from containing cyl.
G, alternately, after being pressed in 20' hyd. press, D. They pass
from the hyd. press E to hyd. press D by a track, and are filled at
top end from floor above, and the bale is also delivered from top
end of containing cyl. onto the floor from which cylinders are
filled. F is a chamber 40' in diameter and 12 feet high, and is
supplied with water and air by steam pump A, which keeps up a
pressure in F to 300 lbs., to operate the hyd. presses rapid at
beginning pressure in hyd. press beyond 300 lbs., hyd. pumps B and
C have raised the pressure in hyd. press beyond 300 lbs., the
check-valves close and shut off connection between hyd. presses and
pressure chamber. Then the hyd. pumps B and C complete the pressure
until bale is pressed in 20' press, and bale removed from
containing cyl. The hyd. pump C is used exclusively for
Page 121 U. S. 278
20' hyd. press, and hyd. pump B is used for the two 12' presses
E E. The hyd. pumps are independent of each other, and each has its
own steam cyl. The steam pumps use the water over again from tank
from which it has been delivered from hyd. presses. The operation
is about as follows. The containing cyl. is filled from upper
floor, is run under 20' press, and pressed up to desired pressure;
it is then run on track to 12' press, where it is forced from
containing cyl., which is again filled and operation repeated, and,
while cyl. is being emptied, the other is going through 20' press,
and so on. Work is done very rapidly and well. 20' press can be
used up to 1,500 tons pressure."
"Trusting this hurried explanation is satisfactory, and that we
may have your favors."
"Yours &c.,"
"THEO. J. MCGOWAN & BLISS"
"P.S. Time required for each pressing and delivery of bale 2 1/2
minutes. We guarantee the whole."
On the twentieth of May, 1881, the following letter, signed "The
McGowan Pump Co.," was written to Darwin:
"CINCINNATI, O., May 20, 1881"
"A.G.D., Chicago:"
"Yours 18th to hand, and contents noted. By enlarging press, as
per your suggestion (which we think very good), we are of opinion
that we have large surplus power in presses, and almost agree with
you in your ideas as to amount, but we are inexperienced with the
nature of tan bark to press into a cylinder and remove therefrom,
and have been governed entirely by the calculations given us by Mr.
Hill, and we think there will have to be some little experimenting
before you can accomplish just what you want. We do not know how
much compression there will be to make bale and weight required,
nor how bulky the bark will be, when loose, to make bale of
required size. We do know the motions can be made in 2 1/2 minutes
and the pressure 1,500 tons given, but what kind of
Page 121 U. S. 579
bale it will be we do not know. We are constructing this
machinery to make these bales 14' x 16', and not much clearance. We
think it would be advisable to have more clearance made, by
extending columns further out, to permit a large bale being made,
by enlarging cylinder, as you suggest. This would necessarily make
the press cost more money. The bars would have to be extended
further out, and the castings made heavier to resist pressure. If
you come to the conclusion to have enlargement made, notify us at
the earliest moment possible. We have now got scale drawings about
complete, and when the boat is procured or other selection made for
erection, we will have to add to our plan the supports for the
support of presses to foundations. It will materially change our
plans if changed from boat to land, as presses are very long, and
on a shallow boat would throw them above main deck. Will be glad to
see you."
"THE MCGOWAN PUMP CO."
On the 23d of June, 1881, the following written contract was
executed:
"CINCINNATI, O., June 23, 1881"
"The Am'r Pressed Tan Bark Co., of 240 Broadway, New York"
"GENTLEMEN: We hereby propose to furnish you the following
machinery:"
"1. 14' x 24' engine, and all necessary trimmings for grinding
bark."
"2. 14' x 28' engine and all necessary trimmings for propelling
boat."
"3. 3 boilers, 42' x 26', and all necessary trimmings for
propelling boat."
"3 bark mills, and all necessary trimmings and gearing;"
"1 bark elevator; 2 elevators with platforms, for raising and
lowering pressed bark to and from hold of boats, to be provided
with safety catches and unwinding device; 3 heaters -- 1 for bark
engines, 1 for boat engines, and one for steam pumps; 1 steam pump
for boiler feed; 1 deck hand pump; 250 feet of rubber hose,
couplings, and 3 nozzles; 2 hoppers and scales to
Page 121 U. S. 580
weigh bark; all the necessary shafting, hangers, pulleys,
beltings, and all steam and escape pipes; also one 20' hyd. press
and two 12' hyd. presses, with their necessary fixtures and
connections, together with the necessary hyd. steam pumps, tanks,
etc., for pressing bark into bales; all to be done in a workmanlike
manner and of first-class material, and set up aboard your boat in
Cincinnati, Ohio, for the sum of twenty-three thousand seven
hundred ($23,700) dollars, the above machinery to have a sufficient
capacity to do the required work, and guaranteed to pass government
inspection."
"THE MCGOWAN PUMP CO."
"To be completed in 60 days."
"We accept the above."
"Accepted June 23, 1881."
"AM'R. TAN BARK Co."
"By S. H. BEACH, Atty."
On the 30th of June, 1881, the following letter was written by
Darwin to the McGowan Pump Company:
"NEW YORK, June 30, 1881"
"To the McGowan Pump Co., Cin'ti, Ohio:"
"Mr. S. H. Beach hands us contract for presses, engines,
boilers, etc., entirely satisfactory, as we understand -- that is,
that the capacity of the presses, etc., are in keeping with
guaranty expressed in you letter of April 23, 1881, which we
consider a part of your contract insofar as guarantee of the
presses are concerned. Please give us formal acknowledgment of
same."
"Yours respectfully,"
"A.G. DARWIN"
"Pres't A.P.T.B. Co."
On the fifth of July, 1881, the following letter was written by
the McGowan Pump Company to Darwin:
"CINCINNATI, Ohio, July 5, 1881"
"A.G. Darwin, N.Y."
"DEAR SIR: Your favor of June 30th to hand and noted. Our
contract is in accord with ours of April 23. Of course,
Page 121 U. S. 581
we do not know nor could we guarantee anything in reference to
whether the bark will bale or not, or weight or size of bale. That
we consider an experiment, and can only be demonstrated by
test."
"Yours, respectfully,"
"THE MCGOWAN PUMP CO."
At the trial, the plaintiff offered evidence, in connection with
the contract with Mack, tending to prove that that contract was
drawn up in the office of the defendants and read over by the
parties before it was signed, in the presence of the defendants,
and was left in their safe until safe until some time in November,
1881, when the boat was launched by Mack, and evidence tending to
show that the defendants agreed to superintend the erection and
construction of the boat and took upon themselves the supervision
and control of the same, and undertook to accept the same for the
plaintiff; that the boat was constructed for the purpose of
receiving and operating the machinery of the defendants, according
to plans of construction discussed between the agents of the
plaintiff and Mack and the defendants, and approved by the
defendants, and that the defendants did superintend the
construction of the boat and accept the same.
The petition alleges that the contract of the 23d of June, 1881,
was a contract whereby the defendants agreed and guaranteed to
construct, erect, complete, and have in operation on board of the
boat, within sixty days from the date of the contract, the
machinery specified in it, for the purpose of pressing tan bark
under the patented process, and according to plans, specifications,
and details furnished by the defendants, and that the defendants
guaranteed that all of the machinery should be done in a
workmanlike manner and of first-class material, and set up on board
of the boat at Cincinnati, and that all of said machinery should
have sufficient capacity to do and would do the required work and
would pass government inspection, and that the hydraulic machinery
would sustain and work up to a pressure of 1,500 tons, and that the
time necessary for pressing and delivering each bale of bark would
be 2 1/2 minutes.
Page 121 U. S. 582
The breach alleged in the petition is that the defendants have
failed to construct, erect, and complete the machinery according to
the contract, and have failed to erect and complete it within the
time set forth in the contract; that the machinery constructed and
erected on board of the boat by the defendants is of insufficient
and inferior material, is inferior and defective in character and
quality of workmanship, and fails to do the work required by the
contract, and that the hydraulic machinery constructed will not
give, sustain, or work up to the 1,500 tons pressure, as guaranteed
by the defendants, and is defective in workmanship and unsafe. The
petition further alleges that the plaintiff has wholly performed on
its part the contract of the twenty-third of June, 1881, and paid
to the defendants, on account of the $23,700 to be paid thereby,
the following sums at the following dates: November 5, 1881,
$4,500; November 26, 1881, $2,500; January 24, 1882, $3,000;
February 28, 1882, $2,500, and March 30, 1882, $4,000; making a
total of $16,500.
The defendants put in answer denying generally the averments of
the petition on which the case went to trial. On the third day of
the trial, by leave of the court, the defendants filed an amendment
to their answer in the following language:
"Second defense. These defendants, protesting that the contract
dated June 23, 1881, described in the petition, was not made with
them, but with the McGowan Pump Company, a corporation of Ohio, say
that if it shall appear upon the trial of this cause that the
contract was made with them as partners, under the name of the
McGowan Pump Company, and not with said corporation, then they say
that said contract, as made June 23, 1881, did not provide, as a
part of said contract, that the hydraulic machinery would sustain
and work up to a pressure of fifteen hundred tons, or that the time
necessary for pressing and delivering each bale of bark would be
two and a half minutes, as alleged in said petition. The defendants
say that said contract, as originally executed, contained neither
of said provisions, and that if it shall appear that, by a
subsequent modification of said contract, such
Page 121 U. S. 583
provisions were added to and became a part of said contract,
then they say that the same were wholly without consideration."
"Thirdly. And for a further defense in this behalf, these
defendants, protesting that the contract dated June 23, 1881,
described in the petition, was made with the McGowan Pump Company,
a corporation of Ohio, say that if it shall appear upon the trial
of this cause that it was made with them as partners under the name
of the McGowan Pump Company, then that on and before the 30th day
of March, 1882, extra work, not required by said contract, to the
amount of fifteen hundred and eighty-two dollars and fifty-one
cents, had been furnished to the said American Tan Bark Company,
being the same extras described in the contract hereinafter copied,
and that in consideration of the transfer to the American Pressed
Tan Bark Company of all the machinery embodied in the said contract
of June 23, 1881, and said extras, with receipts in full for all
material and machinery furnished T. G. McGowan and Bliss by other
parties for steamer Tan Bark, the said contract of June 23, 1881,
has been wholly released and discharged, and other terms of
agreement substituted therefor, by reason of the fact that on the
30th day of March, 1882, a contract was executed and delivered by
and between the parties to the contract of June 23, 1881,
viz., the McGowan Pump Company and the American Pressed
Tan Bark Company, and which contract of March 30, 1882, if it shall
turn out that it was made by the defendants as a partnership, under
the name of the McGowan Pump Company, was made and delivered for
the benefit of the same McGowan Pump Company which executed the
contract of June 23, 1881, which contract is still in full force
and binding between the parties, and is in the words and figures
following, to-wit:"
"CINCINNATI, O., March 30, 1882"
" In consideration of 11,200 dollars to be paid us, we hereby
transfer to the American Pressed Tan Bark Company of New York all
the machinery embodied in our contract, and extras, with receipts
in full for all material and mach'y furnished
Page 121 U. S. 584
T. J. McGowan & Bliss by other parties for steamer Tan Bark.
The terms of this sale are as follows: to continue all former
agreements and guarantees except time required to press bark into
bales and removal from cylinders. We further agree to transfer to
said Co. all special patterns made for our hyd. machinery, and also
agree to transfer to said Co. our exclusive interest in the
accumulator and double end arrangement on hyd. press for bark
purposes only. It is hereby agreed that the above guarantee,
covering hyd. mach'y, extends only to the strength of material only
up to the fifteen hundred tons pressure. We hereby acknowledge
receipt of four thousand dollars, balance to be paid on
presentation of receipts, as above."
" All erasures and changes made before signing."
"THE MCGOWAN PUMP CO."
"AMERICAN PRESSED TAN BARK CO."
"By S. H. BEACH, Attorney"
"And the defendants further say that the four thousand dollars
described in the petition as paid on the 30th day of March, 1882,
was paid to the said McGowan Pump Company under and in pursuance of
the said contract of March 30, 1882, at the date of its execution,
and is the same sum therein named and receipted for, but that no
further or other payments have been made under said contract,
although the same has been wholly complied with by the said McGowan
Pump Company."
"Fourthly. And, by way of a fourth defense in this cause, the
defendants, protesting that the said contract of June 23, 1881, was
made by the McGowan Pump Company, a corporation of Ohio, and not
with the defendants as partners under the name of the McGowan Pump
Company, nevertheless, if it shall prove upon the trial of this
cause that it was made with them in such partnership capacity, by
way of further defense say that in the month of March, 1882, the
plaintiff took possession of and accepted the machinery constructed
upon the said steamer Tan Bark as and for full performance of said
contract, and waived any claim for further performance thereof, and
have prevented the defendants from
Page 121 U. S. 585
making further performance thereof, if such were necessary,
which the defendants by taking the same into their exclusive
custody and possession, and have made divers and sundry changes in
said machinery themselves, so as to prevent and render impossible
any further performance thereof, if any such were necessary under
said contract, and have employed the McGowan Pump Company of
Cincinnati, Ohio, being the same company which entered into the
contract of June 23, 1881, described in the petition, to do work to
be used in making other changes and alterations, which last-named
work done by the McGowan Pump Company, and which, if said company
turn out to have been a partnership, was done by the defendants as
such partnership, amounts to the sums of $1,384.96 and $146.50, for
which an action is now pending against the said plaintiff on behalf
of the said McGowan Pump Company, as aforesaid, and said plaintiff
have removed said steamer Tan Bark, and all said machinery so
altered, from the jurisdiction of this Court and into the State of
Tennessee, where the same now is, and have appropriated the same to
their own use."
The plaintiff put in a reply to this amended answer. In regard
to the second defense, the reply denies that the provisions of the
contract that the hydraulic machinery would sustain and work up to
a pressure of 1,500 tons, or that the time necessary for pressing
and delivering each bale of bark would be two and a half minutes
were without consideration, and denies the other allegations of the
second defense. As to the third defense, it alleges that the
instrument of the 30th of March, 1882, was executed by it on the
faith of representations made to it by the defendants that they had
operated and tested the hydraulic machinery up to a pressure of
1,000 tons, and that the bales of bark pressed by them on the trial
of the machinery made by them on the 27th of march, 1882, had
received a pressure of 1,000 tons therefrom, and that the machinery
as so constructed had been operated by the defendants under said
pressure of 1,000 tons; that those representations were untrue;
that had the plaintiff known that fact, it would not have executed
the instrument; that on discovering
Page 121 U. S. 586
the untruth of the representations, it immediately notified the
defendants that the agreement set forth in the instrument was null
and void; that the same was thereupon abandoned by the parties
thereto, and that the hydraulic machinery never has worked, and
never will work, up to a pressure of 1,500 tons, and wholly fails
to comply with the agreements and guarantees made by the
defendants. It denies the other allegations of the third defense.
As to the fourth defense it avers that, after the defendants
refused to do any further work on the machinery, it made, at heavy
expense, alterations in it to make it operative.
The bill of exceptions states that the plaintiff gave
evidence
"tending to prove that the defendants were partners under, and
signed, the name of T. J. McGowan & Bliss and the McGowan Pm p
Company, and tending to show that at the time the contract of June
23d was signed, the defendants, upon being asked the reason for
using the name of the McGowan Pump Company, said it was to retain
the old name;"
also that the plaintiff gave evidence
"tending to show defendants had negotiated with plaintiff as a
firm under the name of the McGowan Pump Company prior to June 23,
1881, and that the defendants contracted with the plaintiff, June
23, 1881, as a firm, under the name of the McGowan Pump Company,
and that all the plaintiff's dealings with the defendants were as
such partnership,"
and evidence tending to show that the plaintiff was a
corporation duly organized under the laws of New Jersey, and owned
valuable patents for the grinding and pressing of tan bark which it
expected to utilize in this machinery, and the use thereof, and
evidence tending to show
"that the machinery named in the said contract of June 23, 1881,
was not completely finished and put upon the said boat within the
sixty days named in said contract, nor for a long time thereafter,
and that when completed, it was of insufficient material, and not
of sufficient power or strength to press a bale of tan bark with a
pressure of fifteen hundred tons in two and one-half minutes, nor
within any time; that the entire machinery was wholly insufficient
to accomplish the purpose for which it was constructed, and was
Page 121 U. S. 587
very rough, and was made in an unworkmanlike manner; that, in
consequence thereof, it suffered great delay in the use of the said
boat and machinery, and great damage in having to expend a large
sum of money upon the same, and that it lost a very large sum of
money by the breach of the said contract before it was finished,
and after that, because of the insufficiency of the said machinery
and its defective character."
The contract of March 30, 1882, was in the words set forth in
the third defense in the amendment to the answer. The plaintiff
gave evidence tending to show that it had, prior to the 30th of
March, 1882, paid to the defendants, on account of the machinery
and work, $12,500; that a few days after signing the last-named
contract, it paid the $4,000 named therein; that no machinery had
been put in the boat on the 10th of November, 1881, and that there
was nothing ready on the boat by December 5, 1881, and evidence
tending to show that after it took possession of the boat and
machinery, it made additions thereto costing some $1,200, a part of
which the defendants did for it under a written contract of the
19th of April, 1882, mentioned hereafter.
The bill of exceptions also contains the following
statements:
"The plaintiff offered evidence of experts tending to show that
the machinery and material of which it was constructed were poor
and insufficient to sustain the required pressure, and, upon
cross-examination upon this point, the said witnesses gave evidence
tending to show that a single hydraulic cylinder could not be made
of cast iron so as to bear 1,500 tons pressure; that the water
would permeate and pass through the iron, and, upon examination by
the court, evidence tending to prove that it was not practicable to
get such pressure with one cylinder of the kind, but that it might
be done with three cylinders, of a pressure of 500 tons each upon
one platen; and, on further cross-examination, they gave evidence
tending to show that water would force itself through cast iron at
700 tons pressure; that cast iron is not safe for more than 600
tons. And the plaintiff gave evidence tending to show that the
machinery was only of the value of scrap. The plaintiff also gave
evidence tending to show that at and
Page 121 U. S. 588
before the contract of March 30, 1882, was entered into, McGowan
had stated that he had had a pressure, on previous tests, of 800 to
1000 tons on the machinery in pressing bark, and that said
representations were false, and that plaintiff was thereby induced
to enter into said agreement. Plaintiff gave evidence tending to
show that the defendants had tested the machinery, and it was found
defective on the 27th of March, 1882, before the execution of the
contract of March 30, and defendants gave evidence tending to show
the contrary, and that they made no false representations, and that
plaintiff knew, from its employees present at the test, what
pressure it bore at the time, and reported to the plaintiff that it
had never borne a pressure of over 400 tons, and that there was no
more on it at that time. They gave evidence tending to show that
McGowan claimed that the failure of the machinery was caused by the
insufficient foundations of the boat, because the machinery was not
adapted to the boat; that they had done all that was practicable
under the condition of the boat upon which the machinery was to be
placed. But the plaintiff gave evidence tending, on the contrary,
to show that it was practicable to construct such machinery of cast
iron and place it upon said boat. . . . The defendants offered
evidence tending to show that any such boat, with machinery upon
it, had never before been known and used; that it had in no way
been tested, and that it was an experiment. They also offered
evidence tending to show that the plaintiff had possession of the
said boat immediately after she came off the ways, on or about the
first of November, 1881, and received the boat from Mack, and that
it had witnessed experiments of pressing bark made with the
machinery in January, February, and March, 1882, and was familiar
with the condition, strength, and workmanship of the same before
entering into the contract of March 30, 1882, and had knowledge
before that of the amount of pressure which the defendants had used
thereon. . . . The defendants offered evidence tending to show that
they were not boatbuilders, had no knowledge of boats or of
boatbuilding, as the plaintiff knew, and that defendants refused to
take any responsibility about the boat, and had nothing to do
with
Page 121 U. S. 589
planning, constructing, supervising, accepting, or controlling
it or its foundations; that they supposed Mr. Mack would attend to
that; that the boat was not launched, or presented for the
machinery, until November, 1881; that they supposed, when they
commenced to put the machinery upon it, that it would be
sufficiently strong; that the foundations, as they proceeded,
proved wholly insufficient for that purpose, being too weak; that
they reported it to the plaintiff's agent; that he said to them to
go ahead and put it on, and he would guarantee that they would
stand; that the defects in the boat, and the bad management of the
machinery by the plaintiff, caused all the difficulty and breakage
in the machinery and all the expense in repairing. And in addition
thereto, the defendants also offered proof tending to show that the
boat was not ready for their work until about the 10th of November,
1881, and that they used due diligence in the manufacture of the
machinery and in putting it upon the boat, and that the delay
therein was due to the delay in finishing the boat and in the
character of the boat when presented for the machinery to be put
upon the same. They also offered proof tending to show that the
material of which the said machinery was constructed was of
sufficient strength to work 1,500 tons and more. They also offered
proof tending to show that in March and April, 1882, the plaintiff
took possession and control of said machinery, and that it was
built and set up on its boat by the defendants under the contract
of June 23, 1881, and afterwards, to make it more perfect,
effectual, and useful, entered into the contract of April 19, 1882,
with the defendants, and the defendants furnished the labor and the
material provided for in said contract, and that the plaintiff used
it on the said boat. The defendants also gave evidence tending to
show that the machinery for pressing the bark was constructed of
the very best cast iron, and that that was the only material of
which said machinery is ever constructed; that the same was of the
very highest and best character, and that the workmen upon it and
the workmanship were of the highest and best character, and that
they endeavored in every way they could to make this machinery as
strong and as well as it could be
Page 121 U. S. 590
made. They also offered evidence tending to show that after the
boat was launched and ready for the machinery, they proceeded to
put the machinery upon the boat, and thereafter they worked with
due diligence in putting the same upon the said boat. The
defendants also offered proof tending to show that they had
fulfilled their contract and were not liable for any damage to the
plaintiff, but, on the contrary, the plaintiff owed them for said
work and under the agreement of March 30, 1882, the sum of
$8,731.46. The defendants also offered evidence tending to show
that they never examined Mack's contract, and that there was
nothing said about the character of the foundations of such
machinery; that they supposed that, Mack being a boatbuilder, he
knew what foundations for the machinery would be necessary. They
also gave evidence tending to show that the McGowan Pump Company
was a corporation at the time of entering into the contract of June
23, 1881, and was so acting in making the contract, and that the
plaintiff was so informed of it before the signing of the contract.
. . . They also offered evidence tending to show that the boat was
not constructed to carry freight or passengers, and the propelling
machinery was to be plain, unornamented machinery, to propel the
boat from landing to landing at a rate of from two to two and a
half miles per hour, and that, on her trip to Paducah and her trial
trip upstream, she did more than that. "
"All the letters of defendants, copies of which are attached in
the exhibits, had the following letter-head printed on them:"
"
Established 1862"
"
Theo. J. McGowan R. C. Bliss"
" Senior partner of late McGowan Bros."
"Manufacturers of railroad water station supplies, water
columns, tank valves, steam and power pumps, wrought and cast iron
pipe, etc."
" OFFICE OF THE MCGOWAN PUMP CO."
" Nos. 141 AND 143 WEST SECOND STREET"
" CINCINNATI, _____, 188_"
Page 121 U. S. 591
"being the printed letterhead that was in use prior to June 20,
1881, except"
the letter of April 23, 1881, which had the same letterhead,
omitting the word "The" before "McGowan Pump Co.," and a letter
dated May 8, 1881, signed "The McGowan Pump Company," and addressed
to Darwin. The bill of exceptions does not purport to set forth all
the evidence that was given at the trial.
After the verdict and before judgment the defendants moved for a
new trial, and, in case it should not be granted, then in arrest of
judgment, and, in case neither of such motions was granted, then to
restrain the issuing of execution in this case to the amount which
should remain after making the deduction of the amount sued for in
the suit mentioned in the fourth defense in the amendment to the
answer. These motions were denied, and the defendants excepted.
The first error assigned relates to the question whether the
contract of June 23, 1881, was made by the defendants as
co-partners, or was made by a corporation called "The McGowan Pump
Company." If by the latter, the action must fail.
The court, under exceptions by the defendants, gave the
following instructions to the jury:
"1. If the jury find from the evidence that defendants, prior to
the making of the contract of June 23, 1881, held themselves out to
plaintiff as partners, and that plaintiff dealt with them as such
prior to the making of said contract, and entered into said
contract believing them to be a firm, and without notice of a
corporation, then said defendants are liable on said contract even
though they should find that defendants were not in fact a firm,
and that there was a corporation called 'The McGowan Pump
Company.'"
"2. If the jury find from the evidence that the defendants were,
prior to June 23, 1881, doing business as partners under the name
of 'The McGowan Pump Company' or 'McGowan Pump Co.,' and that
plaintiff dealt with them before said date as such partners, and
had no knowledge of any change in said business, then said contract
is the contract of defendants, and defendants cannot avoid or
escape liability thereon, even if on
Page 121 U. S. 592
that date a corporation existed called 'The McGowan Pump
Company,' with which defendants may have been connected, and to
which they had turned over their entire partnership business and
assets."
The court also charged the jury as follows on the question of
partnership, no part of which charge was excepted to by the
defendants:
"The plaintiff has sued the defendants as partners, and can
recover against them only as individuals, jointly, equally, and
severally liable upon their contract. The two defendants, McGowan
and Bliss, undeniably negotiated and executed the contract, but
whether as individuals or as the representatives and agents of a
corporation is the question you are to determine. On the facts of
this case, which are not disputed, the law charges them as partners
in their liability on the contract with the plaintiff, unless they
have established by proof that they were, in making the contract,
only the agents of a corporation, and disclosed their agency to the
plaintiff, or that this in fact was otherwise known to the
plaintiff. It is wholly immaterial, if they were in fact partners
or held themselves out to the plaintiff as partners, which is
precisely the same thing as if they were partners in fact by what
name they did their business or made this contract, whether they
were known or contracted as 'Theodore J. McGowan & Bliss,' as
'McGowan Pump Company,' or as 'The McGowan Pump Company,' or
whether they used any or all of these names indifferently or
interchangeably. Now if they held themselves out to the plaintiff
as partners, it is unimportant whether they were a corporation or
not in fact. Your inquiries are 1st, were they partners in fact in
making this contract? If so, they would be liable as partners. 2d,
did they hold themselves out to the plaintiff as partners? If so,
they would be liable in that relation. 3d, were they in fact the
authorized agents or representatives of a corporation competent to
contract as a corporation, or did they assume to be so authorized,
and in that representative capacity make this contract? If so, they
cannot be held as partners, provided they disclosed their agency to
the agents acting about this business for the plaintiff corporation
--
Page 121 U. S. 593
namely, Darwin, Beach, or Hill, or any of them, or if these
agents of the plaintiff corporation otherwise knew that fact. If
the jury find that on the 23d of June, 1881, there was in existence
a corporation called 'The McGowan Pump Company' qualified to do
business when the contract of that date was signed in that name,
and that the defendants were authorized to act for it, and informed
Beach that it was that corporation making the contract, the verdict
must be for the defendants, because the corporation is not here
sued. And in ascertaining whether the corporation existed in fact,
if you find that the entire amount of capital stock of 'The McGowan
Pump Company' was subscribed, and the subscribers met and elected
directors, and the directors elected Theodore J. McGowan president
and Robert C. Bliss secretary, and said president and secretary
made the contract of June 23, 1881, in the name of 'The McGowan
Pump Company,' and informed the agent of the plaintiff at the time
that the McGowan Pump Company was a corporation, and was
contracting in that capacity, then the defendants are entitled to a
verdict notwithstanding it may appear to the jury that the
subscribers to the articles of incorporation failed to certify to
the Secretary of State, as required by law, that said subscription
of stock had been made. But as a corporation in Ohio can only act
by or under the authority of its board of directors, and on the 23d
June, 1881, there is no evidence tending to show any action of the
board of the corporation known as 'The McGowan Pump Company'
authorizing the contract in this case to be made, and authorizing
either McGowan or Bliss to contract for the corporation, you should
consider the fact that they had no such authority, on that date, to
make a contract for the corporation, in determining whether they
did in fact undertake to contract for the corporation, and whether
the signature to said contract was the signature of the
corporation, or of the defendants as partners. But while you should
give this fact its due weight, also the fact that the final
organization sought to be proved was only a few days prior to the
contract, together with all the other facts relating to the
formation of the corporation, it is proper to say that, in the
opinion of
Page 121 U. S. 594
the court, the want of direct authority conferred by a board of
directors would not, in this controversy, so affect the contract as
to convert it into one of partnership, because that is a question
between the corporation and its officers assuming to act for it.
Wherefore, if you find that notwithstanding this want of authority,
the defendants assumed, in their corporate capacity, to contract
with the plaintiff, and notified Beach that they were so assuming
to act, or he otherwise knew it, your verdict must be for the
defendants irrespective of any want of authority. This point of
notifying Beach is one of direct conflict of testimony between the
parties, which you must settle under the rules to be hereafter
mentioned, the court being content to say here that it is a matter
in this law suit of paramount importance to both parties which
demands your most careful consideration. In determining these
questions submitted to you on this branch of the case, you may look
to all the facts in proof having any bearing on the questions. . .
. I invite your attention to certain features of the evidence on
this branch of the case. From the origin of the transaction in
controversy in this case, found in Darwin's letter of March 12,
1881, and even prior to that time, as shown by the defendant's
dealings with him as president of another company, it is undisputed
that the defendants dealt, in the negotiations with the plaintiff's
agent, as partners, no matter under what name, until at the very
earliest, about the 20th May, when the alleged transfer of assets
to the corporation is said to have taken place, and it may be you
will find in the disputed facts that they so dealt down to about
June 20, 1881, when the minutes of corporate organization, in
proof, show that a more complete organization was attempted or
perfected. The exact status of this corporation between these dates
might be under some circumstances a matter of grave importance, as
to which it would be the duty of the court to instruct you more
fully. But here the court has, in the instructions already given,
indicated the greatest influence it can have on this issue between
the parties. Perhaps a fuller explanation of the legal effect of
the proof about the status of this corporation may aid you. It
cannot be denied that the defendants were partners
Page 121 U. S. 595
from the date of their partnership articles to the dissolution
of the partnership by the substitution of a corporation; nor can it
be denied that as early as 1880, more than a year before this
transaction began, the defendants took the primary step to organize
a corporation, but nothing more until May or June, 1881, a short
time before this contract was made; but it is equally undeniable
that they negotiated and dealt with plaintiff as partners,
necessarily so, until the corporation was more thoroughly
established than it was by this primary step. Now there is no proof
tending to show the plaintiff's agents had any sort of knowledge of
the corporate existence of the McGowan Pump Company, in fact down
to the very moment of signing the contract of June 23, 1881, when
the defendants testify they told Beach of it, and that they were
contracting as a corporation, which is denied by the plaintiff. . .
. There is no proof whatever that plaintiff's agents . . . were
ever informed by defendants of their own corporate capacity, be it
what it may at any time prior to the signing of the contract, or
that by other means they had such information. Therefore the court
charges you that, by their relations, in fact the course of their
dealings with the plaintiff, as shown by their letters and repeated
interviews with each other throughout the negotiations, from the
beginning to the moment of signing the contract, the defendants are
estopped, in fact and law, to deny that, as to the plaintiff, they
were partners in making the contract, unless you believe that they
then disclosed their corporate character to Beach. If you find that
to be a fact, the court has already told you that your verdict
should be absolutely for the defendants. If you do not find that to
be a fact, but, on the contrary, believe the plaintiff's proof that
no such disclosure was made, the defendants are liable as partners
for whatever damages you may find for the plaintiff on the merits
of the case."
The court also gave the following instruction at the request of
the defendants:
"2. If, before the 23d day of June, 1881, the McGowan Pump
Company had become incorporated and organized under the laws of
Ohio, with Theodore McGowan as president and Robert C. Bliss as
secretary, and if, when the
Page 121 U. S. 596
contract of that date was made, the plaintiff was informed by
the defendants that the McGowan Pump Company, which entered into
said contract, was a corporation, then the plaintiff cannot recover
against the present defendants."
The court refused to give the following instructions asked by
the defendants, and to each refusal the defendants excepted:
"If the McGowan Pump Company, which entered into the contract of
June 23, 1881, was in fact an incorporated company and not a
partnership, then the plaintiff cannot recover in this case,
whether the plaintiff supposed it to be a partnership or not."
"31. If the agent of the plaintiff, sent here to make a contract
for this work, did contract with the McGowan Pump Company, and had
it explained to him that the said company had organized as a
corporation, and the defendants went on under said corporation, and
did the work provided for, which the plaintiff subsequently took
from said corporation, they cannot now deny that they dealt with
the said corporation."
It is objected by the defendants that the court did not specify
any limit of time prior to the making of the contract of June 23,
1881, during which the holding out of the defendants to the
plaintiff as partners, and the dealing of the plaintiff with them
as such, would have the effect, in the absence of notice to the
plaintiff of the change from a partnership to a corporation, to fix
the liability of the defendants as partners; that although the bill
of exceptions states that the plaintiff and the defendants were in
correspondence prior to the organization of the corporation, it
does not state that there had been any dealings between them, and
that especially there was error in refusing to charge proposition
31, above quoted.
The bill of exceptions does not show that there was any evidence
that the defendants went on doing the work as a corporation, or
that the plaintiff took the work from the corporation. There was no
exception to the general charge of the court on the subject above
quoted. The court, in its general charge, distinctly instructed the
jury that if McGowan, as president of the corporation, and Bliss as
its secretary, made the contract of June 23, 1881, in the name of
"The McGowan
Page 121 U. S. 597
Pump Company," and informed the agent of the plaintiff at the
time that the McGowan Pump Company was a corporation, and was
contracting in that capacity, the defendants were entitled to a
verdict. Again, the court instructed the jury that if,
notwithstanding any want of authority in McGowan and Bliss to
contract for the corporation, they assumed, in their corporate
capacity, to contract with the plaintiff and to notify the
plaintiff's agent, Beach, that they so assumed to act, or he
otherwise knew it, their verdict must be for the defendants
irrespective of any want of authority. Again, in its general
charge, the court instructed the jury as follows:
"If the jury find that on the 23d of June, 1881, there was in
existence a corporation called 'The McGowan Pump Co.,' qualified to
do business, when the contract of that date was signed in that
name, and that the defendants were authorized to act for it, and
informed Beach that it was that corporation making the contract,
the verdict must be for the defendants, because the corporation is
not here sued."
This disposition of the question of partnership by the court
seems to us to have been proper, and to have been as favorable to
the defendants as they were entitled to ask.
The criticism as to the want of the specification of the limit
of time has no force. The bill of exceptions does not purport to
state all the evidence that was given at the trial. It does not
show what dealings had been had between the parties prior to the
making of the contract of June 23, 1881, nor does it appear by the
record that the attention of the court was drawn by the defendants
to this point of the limit of time, or that any request was made in
regard to it.
It is next objected by the defendants that the petition of the
plaintiff alleges that the contract sued upon was fully performed
by the plaintiff, and alleges, as a breach, that the defendants
failed to erect and complete the machinery within the time set
forth in the contract; that the averment of performance by the
plaintiff is inconsistent with a recovery based on the theory that
the defendants waived the performance by the plaintiff of the part
of the contract relating to the time when the boat was to be
furnished; that the plaintiff could not recover,
Page 121 U. S. 598
on the averments of the petition, without proving that the boat
was ready to receive the machinery in time to allow it to be
erected on the boat before the end of sixty days from June 23,
1881, and that the proof was that the boat was not ready for the
machinery until about the tenth of November, 1881.
On this subject, the court charged the jury as follows, under
the exception of the defendants:
"If the jury find that the contract was made, as alleged, with
defendants, and that, after the day named for the completion of the
contract, the work not being then completed, the boat was not then
in readiness to receive it, yet, if the boat was thereafter made
ready by James Mack, and the defendants proceeded under the
contract, they were then bound to complete it within the same
length of time contemplated by the original agreement, and such
additional time as may have been lost in the prosecution of the
work, occasioned by Mack's delay in the construction of the boat;
and, failing in this, they are liable for the consequences of such
failure and delay. Therefore the court charges you that the
defendants are only liable for any damage caused by delay for the
period of delay found by application of the above rule to the proof
in this case."
The defendants contend that this was not a proper charge under
the issues, and that if the boat was not ready for the machinery
within the sixty days provided for by the contract, the agreement
of the defendants, if they proceeded to construct the machinery,
became an agreement to deliver it within a reasonable time after
the boat should be made ready to receive it. In accordance with
these views, the defendants asked for the following instructions,
each of which was refused, and to each refusal they excepted:
"4. That the contract sued on is entire, and required the
plaintiff to have the machinery therein described built and set up
on board a boat to be furnished by the plaintiff within 60 days
from June 23, 1881, and that if the plaintiff failed to furnish
such boat until after the said period of 60 days from June 23,
1881, had expired, and, by reason of such failure, the defendants
were unable to begin to set up such machinery on board said boat
until after the expiration of said period of 60 days from
Page 121 U. S. 599
June 23, 1881, then the defendants are entitled to recover."
"21. That if the boat was not ready for the machinery in time to
have the same put up within sixty days from the date of the
contract, but the parties subsequently proceeded at the request of
Beach, to put the machinery upon the boat, they were only bound to
proceed with reasonable diligence under the circumstances, and were
not bound to complete the same within sixty days thereafter, if the
boat, or the foundations provided for the machinery, were so
insufficient as to prevent such completion within said time."
"23. That as the machinery was to be put up on a boat to be
furnished by the plaintiff, to require of the defendants that they
have the machinery finished and put up on the boat within the sixty
days, the plaintiff must have had the boat ready and fit for the
purpose in time to enable the defendants to have put the machinery
in place upon the boat, the same being ready therefor, within the
sixty day; and if the boat was not ready in such time, then the
plaintiff cannot recover damages for not having the said machinery
so completed within sixty days. In such case, the defendants were
only bound to proceed with due diligence under the
circumstances."
The argument on the part of the defendants is that the
plaintiff, by failing to have the boat ready in time for the
performance of the contract according to its terms, prevented such
performance; that there was no mere postponement of it for the
number of days of delay caused by the plaintiff; that there is
nothing to show that the defendants agreed, or would have agreed,
to erect the machinery within sixty days after November 10, 1881;
that although both parties went on to perform the contract, the
element of the fixed time was eliminated from it, and that the true
rule is that the contract was to be performed in a reasonable time,
having regard to the nature and circumstances of the
performance.
The bill of exceptions states that the plaintiff
"gave evidence tending to show that the machinery named in the
said contract of June 23, 1881, was not completely finished and put
upon said boat within sixty days named in said contract, nor for a
long time thereafter;"
that in consequence
Page 121 U. S. 600
thereof, it
"suffered great delay in the use of the said boat and machinery
and great damage in having to expend a large sum of money upon the
same, and that the plaintiff lost a very large sum of money by the
breach of said contract before it [the machinery] was
finished."
The petition contains an allegation of special damage from the
loss of tan bark occasioned by the delay in not erecting the
machinery within sixty days from June 23, 1881, but the bill of
exceptions does not show that there was any evidence tending to
establish this special damage except as it may be inferred from the
general charge of the court that such testimony was offered. But
the court, in its general charge, instructed the jury as
follows:
"The contract bound the defendants to complete the machinery and
set it up on the boat within sixty days. It is too plain for
argument that the failure of the plaintiff to have the boat ready
would excuse the defendants from strict compliance with this part
of the contract, and that all delay which occurred before the boat
was ready is out of the case. The plaintiff was as much responsible
for that as the defendants, or sufficiently so to preclude him from
complaint on that score."
It is therefore claimed by the plaintiff that no damages were
included in the verdict on account of the delay in not erecting the
machinery within sixty days from June 23, 1881. This appears to be
a sound proposition. We see no error in the charge of the court
that if the defendants proceeded under the contract, they were
bound to complete the work within the length of time contemplated
by the original agreement, ands such additional time as was lost by
the delay in the construction of the boat. There is nothing in the
bill of exceptions to show that the machinery could not have been
erected within sixty days after the boat was ready to receive it.
The parties treated the contract as in full force except as to the
time in which it was to be performed, and the work was done and the
payments were made under the contract as thus extended in time. The
defendants made no claim, before the suit was brought, that the
contract was rescinded by reason of the nonreadiness of the boat
until the 10th of November,
Page 121 U. S. 601
1881, or that there was any reason in that fact which prevented
them from complying with their part of the contract within the
sixty days after the delivery of the boat. No such defense is set
up by them in their answer, and they introduced no evidence to that
effect, so far as the bill of exceptions shows. These views are in
accordance with the ruling of this Court in
Phillips Co. v.
Seymour, 91 U. S. 646. The
plaintiff went on paying the defendants on account for the
machinery, and the defendants proceeded in erecting it without
complaining of the delay in the furnishing of the boat, and without
any claim that they were not required to furnish the machinery
within the sixty days after the furnishing of the boat.
See
also Graveson v. Tobey, 75 Ill. 540.
The next assignment of error relates to the effect of the
contract of March 30, 1882, set up in the third defense in the
amended answer. The theory of the defendants is that this contract
was substituted for all prior contracts, and ought to have been the
basis of the suit. The circuit court treated it as merely waiving
the provision of the original contract in regard to the time
required for pressing and delivering each bale.
The court, in its general charge, charged as follows in regard
to the contract of March 30, 1882, under exception by the
defendants:
"But the plaintiff has not sued on that contract nor averred any
breach of it in that respect. It has sued for breaches of the
guarantee for a good machine, and nothing else. This contract is
pleaded by defendants as a defense to a claim of breach, and,
setting it up, the only question is whether it constitutes a
defense. It is only a supplemental contract to that of June 23. It
continues the guarantees of that contract, with the exception as to
time. It does not make new guarantees for a new consideration, but
obligates the defendants to carry out the old contract with the
named exception, and imposes on defendants new obligations about
the patters, etc., which are independent and separable from the old
contract and the old consideration. The court therefore charges you
that its only effect is to reduce the original guarantee of the
capacity of the machine,
Page 121 U. S. 602
in respect to the time for pressing the bale, if you find there
was no fraud in procuring it. If there was such fraud, it leaves
that guarantee still in force."
And, again:
"The defendants claim that its proper construction requires that
the 1,500 tons only applies to strength of material to endure that
pressure as a maximum of endurance, not for a continuous working
pressure. It belonged to the plaintiff to say what it wanted, and
to defendants to consider it when they made the contract, whether
they could give that which was wanted. There is no proof tending to
show that the proper construction is that the plaintiff only wanted
a machine of sufficient strength to endure a test of 1,500 tons,
but, on the contrary, read in the light of the circumstances
proved, the language of the contract clearly means that the
plaintiff wanted a machine by which it could deliver on each and
every bale a compression of 1,500 tons, if it chose so to use it,
and which would endure the work for the length of time such a
machine would wear under prudent and reasonable management by the
plaintiff."
Still further:
"If the jury find that the terms of the guarantee provided by
the contract are in writing, as expressed in the letters of April
23 and July 5, 1881, then, while the McGowan Pump Co. did not
guarantee that bark would bale, it did guarantee to furnish
practical machinery, set up on board of the boat, that was capable,
in its design and in all its parts, of being worked to apply 1,500
tons pressure to press a bale of bark every two and one-half
minutes, or within a reasonable time, if the contract of March 30th
be valid, and capable, with reasonable care, in view of the
character of such machinery and of the nature of the work, of
continuous operation for the ordinary duration of such mechanism
constructed for similar uses. . . . If the jury find that the
contract of March 30, 1882, was duly made and is binding between
the parties, it in nowise affects the right of the plaintiff to
recover for any breach of the original agreement between the
parties upon which this action is founded, or of the guarantees
contained in such original agreement, except for the failure in
respect to the time required to press bark with the machinery into
bales, and to
Page 121 U. S. 603
remove them from the cylinders. All the other obligations and
guarantees of the original contract would remain in full force, and
the plaintiff's right to recover for their breach would remain
unaffected by the contract of March 30, 1882."
The defendants requested the following instructions, each of
which was refused by the court, and to each refusal the defendants
excepted:
"5. That the plaintiff cannot recover, upon the issue in this
cause, if it appear to the jury, from the testimony, that the
contract which has been read in evidence, bearing date March 30,
1882, was in good faith executed and delivered by both the parties
to this cause."
"10. That the plaintiff does not entitle itself to recover upon
the contract of June 23, 1881, by showing that the defendants
failed to comply with the contract of March 30, 1882;"
"That even if it be true, and believed by the jury from the
testimony, that the contract of March 30, 1882, was broken by the
defendants by nondelivery of the receipts, or of assignments of
patent rights therein described, nevertheless such breach does not
entitle the plaintiff to recover in this case upon the contract of
June 23, 1881."
"12. A breach of the contract of March 30, 1882, entitles the
party who did not break such contract, if it suffered damages by
reason of such breach, to recover in an action for such damages
founded upon such contract, but it furnishes no ground for recovery
in this case, upon the contract of June 23, 1881, for damages
suffered by reason of a breach of the last-named contract."
"14. That by the contract of March 30, 1882, the parties waived
and withdrew all previous agreements and guarantees relating to the
hydraulic machinery, except only that the material of which it was
composed had sufficient strength to work up to a total pressure of
a thousand tons, and that the defendants are not liable to damages,
in this action, for any defect in said hydraulic machinery, if said
material had sufficient strength to work up to such pressure,
unless, under the charge of the court, the jury believe, from the
testimony, that the said contract was procured by fraud or false
representation, and is therefore not binding upon the
plaintiff."
"28. If it appear in this case that the machinery contracted for
in the contract of March 30, 1882, was not possible
Page 121 U. S. 604
to be made as working machinery, because the material of which
it was to be made was not capable of sustaining any such working
pressure, yet that the material used by the defendants was of the
strength of 1,500 tons, then the contract of the 30th March, 1882,
must be construed as relating to the strength of the material, and
not to the working capacity of the machinery."
The argument on the part of the defendants is that the
instrument of March 30, 1882, contained a new contract, and that
the effect of it was to withdraw all guarantees relative to the
hydraulic machinery, except that the strength of the material would
be such as to bear 1,500 tons' pressure; that the new contract did
not modify the original guarantee that the boilers and machinery
for propelling the steamboat would be made in a workmanlike manner
and of first-class material, with sufficient capacity to do the
required work and to pass government inspection, but that all
guarantees in regard to the hydraulic machinery intended to press
the bark into bales were withdrawn, except the one relating to the
strength of material, and that, as to that, all guarantees were
withdrawn except that the material would bear 1,500 tons' pressure,
not for continuous work, but a pressure up to 1,500 tons, without
bursting upon test.
The view taken by the court upon this subject is shown by the
following instructions given by it, to each of which the defendants
excepted:
"5. The written contract, if the jury find it was made between
the plaintiff and the defendants, requires the machinery to be made
under it to be constructed in a workmanlike manner and of
first-class materials, and to be set up aboard of the plaintiff's
boat in Cincinnati. The machinery is to have sufficient capacity to
do the required work, and is guaranteed by the McGowan Pump
Company. The contract having thus defined the character of the
work, it cannot in that respect be varied by parol evidence, which
is admissible only to enable us to properly interpret the contract.
It required the machinery to be constructed in a workmanlike manner
and of first-class materials."
"6. The machinery being constructed to be set up on the
plaintiff's boat, it is for the
Page 121 U. S. 605
jury to determine what the boat was that was referred to, and,
if the boat intended was one provided to be constructed by one
James Mack, of a kind, and of dimensions, and with bulkheads and
foundations then defined and understood by the parties, then this
contract to construct the machinery required the McGowan Pump
Company to furnish whatever was necessary for the efficient working
of the machinery upon the boat and bulkheads so defined and
understood by the parties, for rendering the machinery stable to do
the required work, when set up aboard the boat."
The court also refused to give the following instructions asked
by the defendants, and they excepted to each refusal:
"18. If the machinery contracted for in this case was in fact
incapable of working up to the pressure of 1,500 tons required by
contracts between the parties, and this incapacity resulted, not
from any defect of workmanship or construction, but from the fact
that such machinery, of the character and description provided for
by said contracts, cannot be made capable of working up to such
pressure, and if the machinery was in fact made of first-class
material and in a workmanlike manner, and was capable of receiving
the greatest pressure machinery of the description called for by
said contract could be made to work up to, then the fact that said
machinery will not work up to such pressure does not entitle the
plaintiff to recover any damages based on such incapacity to work
up to such pressure; . . . that the guarantee referred to in the
contract of June 23, 1881, is a guarantee of the machinery to be
made, and not a guarantee as to its operation upon the boat which
the plaintiff might present for that purpose to the
defendants."
The defendants also excepted to the following parts of the
general charge of the court:
"But if you find that within the range of mechanical art, such
pressure could have been delivered to the bark, it was their
obligation to do it. The whole field of mechanical engineering was
open to them except so far as it was restricted by the necessity of
placing the machine upon a floating foundation, to be furnished by
the plaintiff, of which more hereafter will be given you in
Page 121 U. S. 606
charge. They were not restricted in plans, specifications, or
materials, and were bound to select such plans and materials as
were available and capable of doing the work. It was their
misfortune if the price demanded was not sufficient to cover the
cost, but that fact, if it be one, cannot relieve them. In short,
they contracted as 'mechanical engineers' and as manufacturers, and
are bound by the contract as they made it in this respect."
In regard to the foregoing matters, the defendants allege as
error that the circuit court held that the contract was broken
unless the hydraulic machinery had sufficient capacity to do the
required work, was constructed in a workmanlike manner and of
first-class materials, and would work efficiently and be capable of
continuous operation for the ordinary duration of such mechanism
constructed for similar uses, and be able to deliver a pressure of
1,500 tons to the bark, and that the plaintiff could by it compress
every bale to the extent of 1,500 tons' pressure, for the length of
time such a machine would work under prudent and reasonable
management.
The contract of March 30, 1882, did not, as erroneously stated
in the 28th request of the defendants, contract for any machinery.
It refers to the machinery as being in existence, and provides for
the transfer to the plaintiff of the title to it and to certain
extras, and adjusts the amount due under the original contract at
the sum of $11,200. It contains a modification of the original
contract in respect to the time required for each pressing and
delivery of a bale, and provides in substance that the original
agreement, with its guarantees as to the hydraulic machinery, shall
otherwise remain unaltered. The court, in its general charge to the
jury, charged on these matters as follows:
"But it is insisted this contract of March 30, 1882, is not
binding, and can have no effect in this suit, because defendants
have not performed their part of the consideration -- namely the
delivery of the vouchers or receipts mentioned, the transfer of the
patterns, the interest in the patents for the accumulator, and the
double end; that as to the latter there is no patent, and can be no
performance. The defendants insist, on the other hand, that the
balance of
Page 121 U. S. 607
the money has not been paid by plaintiff, and it cannot complain
of nonperformance, and there is proof tending to show defendants
have still pending an application for this patent. The court
regards all this subject as immaterial to this controversy, and
charges you that the obligation to perform these things by the
defendants does not arise until the money is tendered or paid, and
no breach could be averred until that has been done. But the
plaintiff has not sued on that contract nor averred any breach of
it in that respect. It has sued for breaches of the guarantee for a
good machine, and nothing else. This contract is pleaded by
defendants as a defense to a claim of breach, and, so setting it
up, the only question is whether it constitutes a defense. . . .
The court therefore charges you that its only effect is to reduce
the original guarantee for the capacity of the machine in respect
to the time for pressing the bale, if you find there was no fraud
in procuring it. If there was such fraud, it leaves that guarantee
still in force. But you must understand that the failure, if any,
of the defendants to deliver the vouchers, patterns, etc., does not
at all contribute to any alleged breach of the guarantee for the
capacity and quality of the machine, and such failure does not
entitle plaintiff to recover for anything sued for in this
suit."
We are of opinion that the court rightly disposed of the
questions involved in the foregoing branch of the case.
It is also alleged by the defendants as error that the court
instructed the jury that if they found for the plaintiff, they were
not to make any deduction from the amount of damages on account of
any balance claimed to be due from the plaintiff to the defendants
on account of the contract for the machinery, or on account of any
other contract. The defendants claimed to recoup the sum of $7,200
as remaining due to them under the contract of June 23, 1881, or
that of March 30, 1882, and the further sum of $1,531.46 for extra
work alleged to have been performed by them; but they did not, in
any of their pleadings, set up any counterclaim or right of
recoupment as to those items, and it is alleged in the fourth
defense in their amended answer that an action is pending against
the
Page 121 U. S. 608
plaintiff by the McGowan Pump Company to recover the
$1,531.46.
It is also alleged by the defendants as error that the court did
not instruct the jury, as requested by the defendants, that
although the machinery was in fact incapable of working up to the
pressure of 1,500 tons and the incapacity resulted from the fact
that machinery of the character and description provided for by the
contract could not be made capable of working up to such pressure,
the fact that it would not work up to such pressure did not entitle
the plaintiff to recover any damages based on such incapacity. The
bill of exceptions states that the plaintiff gave evidence tending
to show that the machinery was only of the value of scrap, and it
does not state that there was any testimony given to show that,
without the capacity called for by the contract, it was of any
value beyond its value as scrap iron, or that there was any
testimony tending to show that the loss of actual value upon the
machinery was less than the amount found by the jury, or that the
machinery had any value except that of old iron, if the pressure
with which it would work would have no effect in doing the needed
work upon the tan bark. The rule of damages laid down by the court
was as follows, and was not excepted to:
"The rule for measuring the plaintiff's damages is to find the
difference between the money value of the machinery contracted for,
if it had been constructed in all respects according to the
contract as it has been construed for you by the court, and the
money value of the machinery as it was actually constructed and
delivered to the plaintiff, to which may be added the items of
expense for keep of the boat during the delay, caused solely by the
delay."
As to the refusal of the court to give the 24th instruction
requested by the defendants, we are of opinion that the general
charge of the court properly covered the matter involved, and that
the court made no error in refusing to charge as requested in
regard to the contract of April 19, 1882.
There are other matters arising on the charge, and the refusals
of the court to charge, which are either covered by
Page 121 U. S. 609
the observations already made, or upon which, although the
questions raised in regard to them have been considered by the
court, it is not deemed necessary specially to remark.
The objection to the competency of the testimony of the witness
Kemplin as an expert was properly overruled. He was a hydraulic
engineer, and had been engaged in the construction of steam engines
and other machinery for many years, although he had never built any
steam engines to be used on the western rivers. He was on board of
the boat during its trip from Cincinnati to Paducah, and saw the
propelling machinery in operation and examined it, and gave
testimony as to the value of propelling engines for such a boat,
and as to what it would cost to make them good. The question as to
the weight of his evidence was one for the jury, in view of his
testimony as to his experience.
On the whole case, we are of opinion that there is no error in
the record, and the judgment of the circuit court is
Affirmed.