Filed Date: 6/13/1957
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Appeals from two judgments entered on a verdict of a jury rendered at a Trial Term of the Supreme Court, Franklin County. The first action is by the owners of a house against a plumber for improperly installing heating equipment; the second action is by the plumber against the owners of the house for the unpaid balance of labor and materials. After a trial of both actions together before a jury, lasting substantially three days, in which the controversy between the parties was fully explored, verdicts were returned in both eases in favor of the plumber. The owners of the house appeal. It is argued that the verdicts are against the weight of the evidence. When we sift the record in detail we find a controversy about what the plumber agreed to do. The owners were building a new house. They consulted with the representative of a radiator company about heating equipment. He made calculations as to the kind of equipment needed based on the plan of the house presented to him. There is a dispute whether a single zone system which was at first installed by the plumber was decided upon by the house owners or by the representative of the radiator company; but the jury was justified in finding on a controverted record that the plumber installed the kind of a zone system which the owners instructed him to install. It proved inadequate in some respects and the owners bought from the plumber, and asked him to install, a different boiler; and this not fully correcting the condition, another plumber was hired to install a third boiler and perform additional work. The owners argue that the jury ought to have found that they relied entirely on the plumber in this action to provide an adequately working heating plant; and not having done this, that he should not only fail to recover the balance of his plumbing and heating bill, but should be answerable in their action against him for the bill of the second plumber who made the additional installation. There is evidence from which the jury could find, and on this appeal we are required to examine the record in an aspect most favorable to the findings of the jury, that the installation made by the plumber in these actions followed instructions given him; that corrections could in any event have been made by relatively inexpensive changes in zoning and that in these