Parish v. Gilmore

Cole, J.

This action was commenced in a justice’s court, to recover damages resulting from the alleged negligence of the defendant in cutting and fitting a cloak for the plaintiff’s wife. It is claimed that the defendant disregarded instructions, and cut the cloak too short. The complaint was oral, and it is now insisted on the part of the defendant that it is radicaily defective and insufficient. No objection was taken to the complaint on the trial. The parties went to trial on the merits, and although the complaint is quite informal, it must be held sufficient after verdict and judgment.

Considering the case upon the record, we are inclined to thirfk the judgment of the circuit court was correct. Of course there is and can be no doubt about the correctness of the proposition, that where a party undertakes for hire to perform a particular act in his trade or employment, he is bound to the exercise of due care and skill about the act he undertakes to perform. If the defendant, being a cloakmaker, undertook to cut a cloak for the plaintiff, he was doubtless bound to the exercise of reasonable skill and care in his business, and to perform the work in a workmanlike manner. This principle is elementaiy. Moreover, if the defendant was directed to cut the cloak as long as the cloth would allow, it was his duty to obey these instructions. About all this, there is no room for controversy. If it appeared that the defendant did not use a degree of skill adequate to the due performance of the work he undertook to do, or disregarded the instructions which were given him to cut the cloak as long as the cloth would allow, he would be liable for any loss or injury sustained by the plaintiff. But the diffi*611culty with tbe case is, that the testimony does not show that the defendant did not cut the garment as long as the cloth would admit of. It is assumed on the part of the plaintiff that there were two yards .of cloth in the piece, and that from that quantity of cloth the cloak might have been cut longer than it was. But there is no positive evidence in the record that there were two yards in the piece. It does appear that the plaintiff’s wife intended to buy two yards of cloth, and that .she paid for that quantity. The witness H. J. Stetson says that he sold her two yards of beaver cloth for a cloak, and measured it himself. He does not, however, say that he knows that she got full measure, and that he made no mistake in measuring the cloth. On the contrary, the defendant says there was not full measure, and we are inclined to think from the evidence that there was not. The probabilities are, we think, that the merchant made a mistake in his measure. And as the plaintiff did not prove the fact that there were two yards of cloth in the piece, he failed in the most material part of his case. He should have shown that there was cloth enough, so that the cloak could have been cut longer than it was.

For these reasons we think the judgment of the. circuitt court was correct, and must be affirmed.

By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.