American Type Founders' Co. v. Packer

62 P. 744, 130 Cal. 459, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 862
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1900
DocketSac. No. 686.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 62 P. 744 (American Type Founders' Co. v. Packer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Type Founders' Co. v. Packer, 62 P. 744, 130 Cal. 459, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 862 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

TEMPLE, J.

This action is upon a building contract entered into between plaintiff’s assignor, J. Grover, and defendant, whereby Grover contracted to build for defendant a pumping plant for a stipulated price. Plaintiff avers that the contract was fully performed by Grover. Defendant denies that the plant was constructed according to the contract, or at all. Judgment was rendered for plaintiff, and defendant appeals from the judgment and from an order refusing a new trial.

Objection is made to the specifications in regard to the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to support the findings. The requirement of the statute is for the benefit of the opposing party and to abbreviate the statement. If the specification is sufficient to enable the opposing counsel to determine what evidence should be put in the statement, and the judge to strike out redundant and useless matter, it is enough. The statute in this matter is not primarily for this court, but for the trial court. That court should not hear the motion unless the statement contains such specifications. Upon that subject the trial judge, who tried the case, has a decided advantage over -this court in determining whether the specifications are sufficient.

In many of the cases the specification seems to have been regarded as a pleading—as a sort of complaint in error, where all th'e intendments are against the pleader, and the moving party is not even allowed the benefit of the rule that errors shall be disregarded, if we can see that injury has not been done. Plainly, this is not correct. It is in the nature of a notice, the sufficiency of which should be tested by inquiring whether the opposite party is injured by defects. It is not even to be regarded with the strictness with which an error of the court must be. If error at all, it is committed by a party and in a matter in which great liberality should be exercised by courts. Whenever there is a reasonably successful effort to state “the particulars,” and they are such as may have been *462 sufficient' to inform the opposing counsel and the court of the grounds, and the trial court has entertained and passed upon the motion, in my opinion this court ought not to refuse' to consider the case on appeal, and especially where, as in this case, the transcript shows that all the evidence has be'en brought up.

The defense attempted is that the contract was not performed by plaintiffs assignor: 1. That the plant was not completed within the time agreed upon; and 2. That in many important and material respects it has never been completed.

Defendant also pleads a rescission, because of the failure of plaintiffs assignor to perform his contract.

As to the first point, the court finds that the defendant, by his acts and conduct, waived the performance within the agreed period of ninety days, and there is some evidence to sustain the finding. The evidence, however, upon this point is very close, and the court may have been influenced by its views as expressed in a further finding, that the plant was designed to pump water for irrigation, and it was agreed that it should be completed and in running order in not to exceed ninety days from the date of the contract, April 1, 1897, but the time “was not fixed and agreed upon between said parties and inserted in said contract for the express purpose of having said plant in position and completed so as to pump water and furnish water for the purpose of irrigation during the summer and irrigation season of 1897, and in that regard time was not of the essence of the contract.”

A new trial is necessary on other grounds, and, therefore, it is proper to say that this finding is plainly erroneous as matter of law. Neither at law nor in equity is a contracting party excused from performing his contract within the time agreed upon, further than that in certain contracts failure to perform strictly according to contract, as to time, does not authorize the other party to rescind. He may always, however, recover any damage he has suffered in consequence of such failure. In equity, in actions for specific performance, the court may in its decree provide such compensation. The statement that time is not of the essence of the contract is misleading in any case, and has no force whatever in an action at law. In such cases, to enable one to rescind for a breach on the part of the other party, the failure must be as to a material matter. “If the *463 omission or imperfection is so slight that it cannot be regarded as an integral or substantial part of the original contract, and the other party can be compensated therefor by a recoupment for damages, the contractor does not lose his right of action.” (Harlan v. Stufflebeem, 87 Cal. 508.) Whether the failure to complete the plant in time was sufficiently material to justify a rescission depended upon the circumstances of the case. Cases in equity in which this rule is applied are usually for the specific performance of contracts for the purchase of land. Often the failure is merely to pay at a specified date. A slight delay in such a case is usually of no great importance, and the detriment is easily compensated by interest. An agreement to construct machinery or to render services is quite different. There, as a general rule, time is of importance.

I think it quite clear that the finding to the effect that plaintiff’s assignor furnished and installed the pumping plant according to his contract, disregarding the question of time, is wholly unsupported by the evidence.

The important portions of the contract are, in substance, as follows: Grover agreed to furnish a pumping plant, installed on the property of defendant, “guaranteed to perform the following service and to consist of the following parts: The plant shall consist of one Hercules gasoline and distillate engine of eighty horse-power, set in position and connected by means of belting to one twelve-inch San Francisco Tool Company’s centrifugal pump, with all necessary pipe for suction and discharge, and such minor details as will be necessary to complete the plant; the same to have a guaranteed capacity of six thousand (6,000) gallons per minute, under a service of twenty-seven (27) feet,” etc.

This was the main pump for irrigation, and, in addition, there was to be a pump with a capacity of from three hundred to four hundred gallons per minute connected with the same engine. Then follows an enumeration of the fittings. Grover was to pay all steamer freight and to furnish cement. Packer was to do all necessary hauling, furnish gravel for cement, and make excavations.

It was further agreed that after the plant was completed and turned over to Packer he should have thirty days to operate *464 and test said plant, “and thereby ascertain whether or not the contract has been filled, as above specified.” If the test proved that the contract had b'een fulfilled, Packer must pay the contract price. “If, however, at the expiration of thirty days, it is found that the contract has not been fulfilled, then at the option of said George F. Packer the plant can be ordered re* moved from his property, and said removal made at the expense of said J. Grover.” Grover also warranted the engine for one year against breakage caused by flaws in material or faulty construction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 P. 744, 130 Cal. 459, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-type-founders-co-v-packer-cal-1900.