Moellering v. Kayser

Decision Date28 April 1887
Docket Number12,575
Citation11 N.E. 604,110 Ind. 533
PartiesMoellering v. Kayser
CourtIndiana Supreme Court

From the Allen Circuit Court.

The judgment is reversed with costs.

A. A Chapin and W. S. O'Rourke, for appellant.

S. E Sinclair, S. F. Swayne and H. C. Hanna, for appellee.

OPINION

Mitchell, J.

Moellering sued Kayser on a note, payable in six months from January 12th, 1884, for two hundred dollars, with six per cent interest and attorney's fees.

The defendant filed an answer and counter-claim, in which he alleged, in substance, that the note sued on was executed for a balance claimed to be due the plaintiff, on a contract for the construction of a brick store building for the defendant. The contractor agreed to furnish the material and erect the building for fourteen hundred and thirty dollars.

It is averred that the plaintiff failed to complete the work according to the contract, and that the defendant sustained damages to the amount of six hundred dollars on account of the plaintiff's default.

Upon issues joined, there was a trial and verdict for the defendant.

The only question made here is, that the evidence does not sustain the finding. Recognizing the well established rule that where there is any evidence which sustains a verdict, a judgment will not be reversed by this court on the mere weight of evidence, the claim is, nevertheless, urged on behalf of the appellant, that there is no evidence to sustain the amount of damages assessed on the defendant's counter-claim. It is also claimed that the evidence does not sustain the allegations of the counter-claim, because the proof shows, without contradiction, that the work was not done under the written contract, a copy of which is set out with the pleading. There is no force in this last position. The evidence tends to show that after the contract was made, some slight changes were agreed upon which decreased the amount of work on the building. On account of these changes, the contract price was correspondingly reduced by agreement. The changes and reduction are in no wise involved in this controversy.

The counter-claim was for the recoupment of damages, alleged to have resulted from defective workmanship in doing that which was confessedly within the contract. The written agreement was, therefore, only incidental or collateral to the defendant's claim for damages. Proof of deviations from the contract, by mutual consent, was not an abandonment of the contract, nor was it fatal to the defendant's right to recover, to the extent of the damages sustained by defective workmanship.

It is, however, plainly apparent that the finding for the defendant is not sustained by the evidence in the record.

Adopting the testimony most...

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