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Hart, J., (after stating the facts). 'The main reliance of the defendants for a reversal of the judgment is that the verdict is not supported 'by the evidence. The evidence of the plaintiff as to the amount of crushed stone hauled under the contract is based upon the measurement of the beds of the -trucks in which the crushed stone was hauled. A measurement of the beds of two of the trucks shows that t-hey held a fraction over two yards each, and the other, three yards of crushed stone at a load.
The witnesses for the plaintiff testified that the beds of the trucks were well filled at each load.
It is contended by the defendants, however, that this method of measuring the amount of crushed stone hauled is not accurate. . They introduced evidence tending to show that a more correct method of ascertaining the crushed stone was to measure it after it had been spread on the roadbed. Hence they contend that the measurement made by the engineer of the road district in this way should govern. This may be true, but their contention is not conclusive. The -evidence for the plaintiff shows that the measurement of the truck bed was a correct and convenient way of ascertaining how much crushed stone had been hauled under the contract. The testimony of the plaintiff also showed th-at this method had been used by the party with whom -the first contract to haul rock had been made, and that, when lie was substituted for that party, it was understood that the amount of crushed stone hauled under the contract should be ascertained by measuring the truck beds and filling them up as each load was hauled. Hence the jury had a right to use this method in ascertaining the amount of stone hauled under the contract.
It is also contended by the defendants that the estimates made by the engineer of the road district were more accurate as to the number of yards of stone hauled. This may be true, but it cannot be said that the evidence of the plaintiff is not' of a 'substantial character, and therefore -cannot support- the verdict. He testifies in positive and definite terms as to the amount of stone hauled by himself and by two other parties for him. His testimony in this respect is corroborated by the two persons who hauled stone for him. The jury had a right to believe the testimony of these witnesses and to base its finding upon their testimony.
Again, it is insisted by the defendants that the plaintiff accepted the estimates made by the engineer of the road district, and, having received payment based upon the percentage he was to receive under the contract, he is concluded by the settlements, and the district is only liable to him for the retained percentage of 25 per cent. We do not think the testimony of the 'defendants on this point is uncontradicted. Under the contract it was the duty of the plaintiff to roll the stone after it was placed on the surface of the road. According to his testimony, the defendants would not pay him for stone which had been hauled by him and which had not been rolled at the time the monthly payments were made. In this way he accounts for the shortage in payment, and says that the defendants would not pay him for' stone which had been hauled and spread on the road but which had not been rolled at the time the settlement was made. Hence it cannot be said that', under the undisputed testimony, he is bound by the settlements made with the defendants as shown by the report introduced in evidence by the defendants.
Again, it is insisted by the defendants that the undisputed evidence shows that the defendants paid $800 to repair the government trucks borrowed from the county, and that it was the duty of the plaintiff to make these repairs. Hence they insist that the judgment should be reduced by this amount in any event.
There are two answers to this contention of the defendants. While it is true that the uncontradicted evidence shows that the defendants paid $800 to repair the trucks, still the uncontradicted evidence does not show that these repairs were necessary to place the trucks in as good condition as they were when they were received from the county. According to the testimony of the plaintiff, all that was necessary to place the trucks in as good condition as they were when received from the county would be to put in a missing differential in two of the trucks. This would not cost anything near the sum of $800. In the second, place, we cannot know but that the jury might have allowed the whole of the $800 in arriving at its verdict.
Besides the testimony -of the plaintiff, abstracted above, he testified that the defendants owed him $2,456.93, for the 25 per cent, retained by them under the contract. His testimony as to this amount is unequivocal, and he says that it is based on the actual .yardage of crushed stone hauled by him. In the same connection he testified that the defendants owed him an additional sum of $1,137 for stone hauled and for which they had made no settle‘ment with him. He also claims an additional amount for damages because they stopped him from completing hiscontraot, and thereby prevented him from earning a profit of something over $1,000 for stone which he was not allowed to haul.
But it is insisted by the defendants that the testimony of the plaintiff is inconsistent, and in some respects contradictory, and that this is shown by the fact that the verdict of the jury is not based on the estimates made by the plaintiff, but is in the nature of a compromise between the claim by the plaintiff and that made by the defendants.
The contention of the defendants in this respect cannot operate to reverse the judgment. If we were trying the case ele novo, it would be proper to consider it in order to determine whether the finding of facts made by the chancellor was against the weight of the evidence. This is an appeal from a judgment at law, however, and we can only review it for errors made by the circuit court in trying the case. We cannot undertake to determine whether or not the verdict of the jury is in all respects consistent. Under the settled practice in this testimony in this respect is contradicted by that of the State, the verdict of a jury must be upheld on appeal if there is any evidence of a substantial character to support it. We are not required, and indeed we are' not permitted, to inquire into the consistency of the verdict of the jury. The jury has the exclusive right to weigh the testimony and to accept all or any portion of it which it believes to be true.
While, according to the plaintiff’s. testimony, if accepted by the jury in its entirety, he. was entitled to a larger verdict, yet his testimony is of a substantive character and is sufficient to support the verdict for a less amount.
Finally, it is insisted' by the defendants that the suit was prematurely brought, and for that reason the judgment should be reversed. Their contention is that the record does not show that the road was completed at the” time the suit was brought, and that, under the contract, the defendants were not liable for the retained percentage until the road was completed.
This would he true if the defendants had allowed the plaintiff to complete his contract of- hauling. According to their testimony, the plaintiff breached the contract, but according to his testimony the defendants breached the contract and prevented him from completing it, and thus the contract was ended in so far as he was concerned. The plaintiff testified that he was not given the right to haul the sand as provided in the contract, -and, while his defendants, yet the verdict-of the jury in his favor is conclusive upon us. Hence it can not be said that the suit was prematurely brought.
We find no reversible error in the record, and the judgment will therefore be affirmed.
Document Info
Citation Numbers: 157 Ark. 89, 247 S.W. 393, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 118
Judges: Hart
Filed Date: 2/5/1923
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024