Ashley v. Henahan

56 Ohio St. (N.S.) 559
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 56 Ohio St. (N.S.) 559 (Ashley v. Henahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashley v. Henahan, 56 Ohio St. (N.S.) 559 (Ohio 1897).

Opinion

Minshall, J.

In his first cause of action the plaintiff below sought to recover the balance, $365, due him upon a contract for making the excavations and putting in the foundation walls of a building, the defendant was then about to construct in Toledo. The answer discloses that it was done under a written contract, a copy of which was attached to her answer. This was admitted by the plaintiff. Under the contract he was to receive $9,365 for the entire work, and had received in payment, $9,000. The defendant claimed that the [568]*568work bad not been completed according to contract — that one of the walls had not been brought up to the required height, and that it would require great expense on her part, to complete it. This was denied ; but, on the trial, it appeared that the wall in question had not been brought up to the required height, by some ten or twelve inches, and that it would take some $200 to complete it. It was further maintained by the defendant, that no recovery could be had on this cause of action, because the plaintiffs had procured nocertifieatefrom the architect, as required by the contract, that the work had been completed to his satisfaction. It is admitted that this was not done; and the court refused to charge the jury that it was necessary.

The court properly charged the jury that the plaintiff could not recover on his first cause of action without showing a substantial performance on his part according to his contract. The law in this respect is stated with admirable clearness by Comstock, J., in Smith v. Brady, 17 N. Y., 173-190. He says : “There is, in a just view of the question, no hardship in requiring builders, like other men to perform their contracts in order to entitle themselves to payment, where the employer has agreed to pay only on that condition. It is true, that such contracts embrace a variety of particulars, and that slight omissions and inadvertences may sometimes very innocently occur. These should be indulgently regarded, and they will be so regarded by courts and juries. But there can be no injustice in imputing to the contractor a knowledge of what his contract requires nor in holding him to a substantial performance.” This does not conflict with the case of Kane v. Stone Co., 39 Ohio St., 1. Controlling effect was, in that case given to [569]*569the fact that Otis, the owner of the building had accepted it, and the variations seem to have been regarded of little consequence. Where there has been an honest effort on the part of the contractor to perform, and not a willful omission, substantial performance is all that is required. And the consequence of an omission, where there has been no willfulnes, may be saved by making a deduction from the contract price of the reasonable cost of what has been omitted. But this must be confined to very narrow limits, and to the cases where there has been an honest effort to perform. Allen v. Curles 6 Ohio St., 505 ; Goldsmith v. Hand 26 Id., 101; Kane v. Stone Co., supra. And see also I Beach Cont., section 111, and cases there cited.

But we think the court erred in its refusal to give the third instruction requested, nor was it in any way remedied in the general charge. In this the court was requested to instruct the jury, that if they found “from the evidence, that thb architect, Sturges, has never certified in writing that the work to be done was done to his satisfaction, then the plaintiff cannot recover on his first cause of action.” There is no claim that this was done, or that he was requested, and wrongly, or for any reason, refused to give such certificate; and the testimony of Sturges shows that he would not have done so, until the walls were brought to the height required by the contract. The contract provided for payment as the work progressed on estimates of the engineer, a certain per cent being retained until completion ; and that the final payment should be made within thirty days after the contract is completed, “provided that in each of said cases the architect shall certify in writing, that all the work upon the performance of which the payment is to become [570]*570due, has been done to his satisfaction.” Now, this has not been done by the architect, and there is nothing to show any waiver of it. Had the plaintiff shown that he had made application to the architect for the requisite certificate, and that he had obstinately and unreasonably refused to certify, he might then have established his case by other evidence. As said in Smith v. Brady supra. “The parties have seen fit to make the production of such certificate a condition precedent to the payment. The plaintiff is as much bound by this part of his contract as any other. It is not enough for him to bring his action and say he has completed the work which he undertook to do. He has agreed that the architects named should decide whether the work is completed or not. He cannot now withdraw the decision of this question from them and refer it to the determination• of a legal tribunal.” He might, however, as suggestedabove, on an averment supported by evidence that the architect had fraudulently or unreasonably refused his certificate, recover by showing a substantial performance of the work a,s required by the contract, but in the absence of such a showing against the architect, a recovery cannot be had without his certificate.

The most important question in the case so far as it depends upon the amount of the recovery sought, arises upon the second cause of action. This is upon an account for labor and materials furnished. If the under-pinning of the house on the west line of the walls and the lumber furnished and left in the trenches, were properly a .part of the work required to be done under the contract to make the excavations and construct the foundation walls of the building, or should be regarded as an addition, to that work, then the court [571]*571erred, in its charge to the jury, in saying that it-was not within the terms of the contract, and that if it was a benefit to the defendant and the work was done and the material furnished with her knowledge a recovery could be had on an implied promise to pay what the labor and materials were reasonably worth.

We think the under-pinning and the lumber furnished was part of the work to be done under the contract without additional compensation. By reference to the first clause in the contract, it will be seen that it required the contractor under the direction and to the satisfaction of the architect, todo all the work included in the “excavating,” “foundations,” “stonewalls,’’etc.,agreeably to the drawings and specifications, “including all labor and materials incident thereto. ” He was then to make the excavations and put in the foundations. No provisions were made for any unexpected difficulties in doing the work. He .undertook to do it, and was as familiar with the situation as the defendant. The proof showed that without underpinning the house and using the lumber, that was used, the excavations could not have been made nor the foundations constructed. They were therefore labor and material incident to the work. he had undertaken to perform, and for which, when completed to the satisfaction of the architect, he was to receive $9,365. In Stewart v. Cambridge, 125 Mass., 102, the plaintiff had undertaken by a written agreement to erect and complete the masonry of a building according to plans and specifications.

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Related

Weeks v. . O'Brien
36 N.E. 185 (New York Court of Appeals, 1894)
Smith v. . Brady
17 N.Y. 173 (New York Court of Appeals, 1858)
Stuart v. City of Cambridge
125 Mass. 102 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1878)
O'Keefe v. Corporation of St. Francis's Church
22 A. 325 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 Ohio St. (N.S.) 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashley-v-henahan-ohio-1897.