delivered the opinion of the Court:
This action was brought to recover the balance due for grading done in the construction of appellant’s road. Whether anything was due appellee, depends upon what the contract between him and the company was, and the construction that shall be given to it. The testimony is flatly contradictorv, but we are of opinion the weight of the evidence is with appellee. The jury were warranted in finding the work done was not to be measured under the “ Saulpaugh contract,” and when that fact was found, little else remained but to make the assessment of appellee’s damages.
Appellee claimed for finishing work, originally included in his contract with Hawes & Brewster, mainly on the McEjndly farm; for excavating the cuts on the north and south ends, and for some other work of no very great importance.
If the jury allowed for all this work, and there was evidence that would justify them in doing it, then, after deducting all payments, the verdict, as found, was authorized by the testimony. Had the $-500 in dispute been deducted, even then the judgment, as rendered, after the remittitur, would not be excessive.
The engineers that measured the work for the company allowed but a small portion of the work done on the cuts, for the reason that, under the “Saulpaugh contract,” if the “haul,” as they designate it, was less than 1400 feet to a “fill,” nothing was to be estimated. "Whatever .may have been the true rule for estimating the grading, if it had been done by Saulpaugh, under his contract with the company, it certainly can not be maintained the same rule is to be adopted in measuring the work done by appellee on these cuts. There is no satisfactory evidence appellee knew how the grading under the “ Saulpaugh contract” was to be measured; but there is a still stronger reason why this could not have been the understanding between the parties. The contract to do the grading on the cuts was not made' until the work appellee was to do under the original contract with Hawes & Brewster, which had been assumed by the company, was nearly finished. There were then no fills in which the dirt could be used, and the largest portion, necessarily, had to be wasted.
The construction contended for would involve the absurdity of appellee agreeing to do this very considerable work for the trifling sum the company’s engineers might be willing to allow upon the estimates for waste. We are unwilling to adopt an interpretation of the agreement between the parties that will do such rank injustice.
There is no warrant in the evidence for saying there had been a full and final settlement of the matters in controversy. What is claimed as a final settlement took place at Bushnell. The chief engineer, Sweet, telegraphed appellee to meet him there. It was at night when the parties met. The engineer handed appellee a receipt through the car window, and told him he wanted him to sign it, which he did. He then gave appellee a package of money, containing §1232.09, and told hint that was all he could pay. Appellee replied he was not satisfied with the amount, but would sue the company the next day. It would be absurd to call this a final settlement, understandingly made, in that sense that would bar all further-investigation into the state of the accounts between the parties.
The affidavit filed does not aid appellant’s motion for a new-trial. '
The principal.ground,of surprise is, that appellee testified’ the credit of §500 was in payment for the 4200 cubic yards-grading done, under' the contract with Hawes & Brewster,’ before they abandoned the work. It is alleged, in the affida-vit, that, on a trial previously had before a justice of the peace, appellee made no claim that the $500 paid him was to be applied upon the grading done as a sub-contractor tinder Hawes & Brewster. It is a complete answer to the position' assumed, that the affidavit itself shows the .company had in-its possession a receipt which, it is alleged, proves the payment was made as an advance, and not for past services, and no reason whatever is given why it was not produced. The company had within its power, by its own showing, the evidence to contradict the testimony of appellee which it is now urged was a surprise. If it failed to produce that evidence, or show some sufficient reason for not doing it, the failure must be attributed to its own neglect, against which no relief can be had; but, aside from this view, appellant was not injured by the production of the testimony, for, had the §500 been allowed as an advance for future work, the judgment could still be maintained, if the jury gave credence to the other testimony offered by appellee.
Again, it is charged, on the previous trial, appellee claimed for only 1500 cubic yards of excavation, for removing hay, and for a bridge foundation. A bill of particulars was on file, which afforded notice appellee, in addition to those items, claimed for 2500 yards of excavation on the McICindlv farm, at the other cut, and the company can not be heard to say it was surprised that evidence was offered to sustain the demand.
Ample opportunity was thus given to procure the evidence that, on a previous trial, appellee had not insisted upon so large a demand as now claimed, but no effort was made to do so. The evidence, if produced, was not of a high grade, nor of a conclusive character. At most, it would only tend to impeach the testimony of appellee, and it is seldom, if ever, a case is opened to let in that kind of testimony.
It is not necessary we should remark upon the evidence or state any account between the parties. The testimony, in our opinion, fully sustains the verdict. It was contradictory in the extreme, but it was the province of the jury to weigh and consider all the evidence, and give it, and each part of it, such weight as they may believe it entitled to receive. This they have done, and we can see no reason to be dissatistied with the conclusion reached. Upon the principal points relied on for a reversal of the judgment, the case of The Chicago and Great Eastern Railway Co. v. Vosburgh, 45 Ill. 311, is an authority exactly in point, and is conclusive of the case.
Perceiving no material error in the record, the judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.