Andrews v. Cunningham

233 P.2d 563, 105 Cal. App. 2d 525, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1505
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 18, 1951
DocketCiv. 14576
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 233 P.2d 563 (Andrews v. Cunningham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrews v. Cunningham, 233 P.2d 563, 105 Cal. App. 2d 525, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1505 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

*526 DOOLING, J.

Vella M. Andrews was the owner of land in Santa Cruz County on which she desired to have a house and other improvements built. To this end she entered into an oral agreement with Cunningham and Welch, a copartnership, who were general contractors. The agreement was entered into the latter part of 1946. Work on the improvements was begun in September, 1946, and was completed in the early part of 1947. The agreement, and the work performed pursuant thereto, resulted in the following litigation:

Vella Andrews filed a complaint against Cunningham and Welch for damages for breach of contract. An answer and cross-complaint were filed by defendants, and at the conclusion of the trial an amended cross-complaint was filed. These pleadings comprise action No. 22197. Cunningham and Welch filed a separate complaint for the balance claimed due them on the contract and to have the amount declared a lien on the property. Andrews answered and cross-complained. This was action No. 22226.

The actions were consolidated for trial. Hereafter Vella Andrews will be referred to as the plaintiff, and Cunningham and Welch as defendants.

The trial-of the action resulted in a judgment in favor of defendants for $5,080.81 from which the plaintiff appeals. The court found that under the oral contract the defendants were to be paid on a time and material basis plus 10 per cent, that This amounted for the entire job to $16,080.81, that $8,000 had been- paid on account and that plaintiff was entitled to an offset of $3,000 by reason of defendants’ unskilled, unworkmanlike and careless construction.

The findings were made by reference to the pleadings and after, an analysis of the pleadings and findings we are convinced that some of the material findings are not only not supported by any evidence but are expressly contrary to all of the evidence introduced on the subject by both parties, that by reason of this fact and the extremely general character of other findings the findings as a whole are so vague, ambiguous, uncertain and self-contradictory as to require a reversal of the judgment.

It is undisputed that the oral contract entered into by the parties was to build a home of hollow concrete tile in accordance with plans drawn by a firm of architects. It cannot be disputed that these plans expressly call for certain structural features alleged as a part of the contract in paragraph III of plaintiff’s complaint in the foolowing language: “that the *527 defendants . . . agreed to construct the . . . house and garage with top course 8" x 8" concrete bond course with two (2) %" rods horizontally ... to construct .... house and garage with . . . outside walls with %" iron rods horizontally every third course ... to construct . . . house and garage with concrete lintels over all openings ... to reinforce and construct the concrete floor slabs . . . with wire mesh. ’ ’

The court found that “(n)one of the allegations in the paragraphs numbered II and III is true except that the areas of the floor space of the house and garage . . . are 1060 square feet and 460 square feet, respectively, and except that plaintiff” owns the property. By reference to the allegations of paragraph III above quoted and the quoted finding in relation to it the court found, against all of the evidence introduced on that subject, that the parties did not agree to any of the four structural features therein alleged.

Since a departure from two of these features was admitted, the substitution of angle irons and hollow tile over the openings for concrete lintels everywhere but in the garage and of hollow tile for a concrete bond top course, and since the evidence, to put it mildly, heavily preponderates to support a finding that no wire mesh was placed in the concrete floors, and since the mason who laid the walls as a subcontractor expressly testified “I wasn’t asked to follow anything specified” and that rods were not placed horizontally in every third course (which testimony was supported by test holes made in several places in the walls), this express finding that none of these features was agreed to by the parties should itself result in a reversal, unless construing the findings liberally, as we are required to do on appeal, we can find that other findings so clearly correct this error of the court that it did not result in prejudice to the plaintiff.

It was defendants’ theory on the trial that the substitution of other material for concrete lintels and top course was a deviation requested and orally agreed to by plaintiff. There was no claim and no attempt to prove that the deviations in the omission of mesh from the concrete floors (if proved) and of horizontal rods in every third course in the walls was consented to by plaintiff.

In paragraph IY of the complaint it is alleged that defendants failed to erect the house and garage with a concrete top bond course, with horizontal iron rods in every third course, with concrete lintels over openings and with wire mesh in the concrete floors.

*528 The trial court found that ‘ ‘ (n) one of the allegations in . . . paragraph .... IV is true except that:

“1. Said defendants agreed to construct certain improvements . . . according to certain agreed plans from which during the course of construction, deviations and departures were made with the consent of said plaintiff;
“2. Said defendants commenced the construction ... on or about September 3, 1946 and . . . ceased work ... on February 19,1947; and
“ 3. A portion of the work of construction thereof was done in an unskilled, unworkmanlike and careless manner. ’ ’

The court further found:

“It will reasonably cost plaintiff . . . the sum of Three Thousand Dollars ($3000.00) to repair said house and garage and make it in the condition in which it would have been had defendants constructed the same in a skilled, workmanlike and careful manner.”

These findings are so general that they are little better than the general verdict of a jury. Since the court found expressly that the contract did not call for any of the four structural features- above discussed and which were embodied in the only plans before the court what plans did the court intend to find were the basis of the contract? If the court intended to find that the agreed plans were those which contained the four structural features which it had previously expressly found were not agreed upon what deviations did the court intend to find were agreed upon? And what deviations led the court to find that the defendants did the work in such an unskilled, unworkmanlike and careless manner that it would cost $3,000 to put it in a proper condition? If the court intended to find that none of the alleged deviations from the plans occurred the finding is not supported by the evidence. If the court intended to find that some of them occurred it is impossible to determine from the general finding of negligent and unworkmanlike construction which, if any, were in the mind of the judge.

It is elementary law, recently reiterated in Fairchild v. Raines,

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Bluebook (online)
233 P.2d 563, 105 Cal. App. 2d 525, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-cunningham-calctapp-1951.