Brookings Lumber & Box Co. v. Manufacturers' Automatic Sprinkler Co.

161 P. 266, 173 Cal. 679, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 465
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1916
DocketL. A. No. 3793.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 161 P. 266 (Brookings Lumber & Box Co. v. Manufacturers' Automatic Sprinkler Co.) 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
Brookings Lumber & Box Co. v. Manufacturers' Automatic Sprinkler Co., 161 P. 266, 173 Cal. 679, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 465 (Cal. 1916).

Opinion

• MELVIN,

We will treat this as an appeal from the judgment and from an order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, although respondents contend that no efficient appeal was made from the order, owing to the failure of plaintiff to serve them with proper notice.

Plaintiff entered into a written contract on July 7, 1910, with the Manufacturers’ Automatic Sprinkler Company, whereby the latter agreed for a certain consideration to install in the former’s box factory an improved “wet-pipe” system of automatic sprinklers and fire-extinguishing apparatus. On September 22, 1910, and while the sprinkler company was putting in the pipes for the installation of said system, a fire broke out in the box factory and destroyed it. The plaintiff corporation sued for fifteen thousand dollars damages alleging that when the fire occurred the work was being done in a dilatory manner; that the manufacturers’ company had agreed to install the system within three weeks following July 10, 1910; and that if this promise had been kept, or if within a reasonable time the work had been completed, the fire would have been extinguished and plaintiff’s loss prevented. The Automatic Sprinkler Company of America is sued as the successor to the obligations of the other corporation defendant. By a second count the latter company is sued for five hundred dollars money had and received from plaintiff on the twenty-ninth day of September, 1910.

After trial the court made findings substantially support *681 ing defendant’s contentions, namely, that the contract had been made as alleged; that the'Manufacturers’ Automatic Sprinkler.Company had not agreed that the apparatus should be installed within three weeks from July 7, 1910; that the said corporation had not represented or warranted that its system when installed would extinguish all the fires which might originate in plaintiff’s premises; that the Manufacturers’ Automatic Sprinkler Company had performed its contract until prevented by the fire from doing further work; that on September 22, 1910, when the fire occurred, plaintiff had not performed its part of the work, namely, the putting in of the underground supply pipes; and that had the apparatus been installed the fire could not have been extinguished. It was further found that plaintiff had a verbal agreement with an agent of the Manufacturers’ Automatic Sprinkler Company that the apparatus would be installed within three weeks following July 17, 1910, but said agreement was not binding because the agent was not authorized to make it. A waiver of the alleged oral agreement was found, and likewise a waiver of any breach of the contract by reason of delay in the performance thereof. The court also found that by its implied terms the written agreement was to be performed within a reasonable time, and that at the time of the discontinuance of the work a reasonable time for completing the installation had not elapsed. There were additional findings that any delay in the execution of the work was not a proximate cause of the loss by fire of plaintiff’s buildings. Regarding the payment of five hundred dollars, it was found that, this sum was a first installment on the contract, being money due under the terms thereof, and that plaintiff had waived any claim to said sum.

All of these findings are substantially supported by the testimony, and we discover no material error in the record to plaintiff’s prejudice.

Plaintiff’s counsel lay great stress upon the verbal promise made by Barney, the agent for the other, contracting corporation, that the installation of the sprinkler should be within three weeks, but it is evident that no dependence was placed on this promise by plaintiff’s officer, Mr. Brookings, who conducted the negotiations. It is true that he testified that this agreement as to the time of installation was the controlling feature of the contract, yet he did not cause it to be put into *682 that writing. The contract itself did not specify any particular time within which the work was to be done, and the court correctly found that therefore a reasonable .time was implied. (17 Cyc. 716; Peterson v. Chaix, 5 Cal. App. 525-527, [90 Pac. 948]; Standard Box Co. v. Mutual Biscuit Co., 10 Cal. App. 746-750, [103 Pac. 938].) By its distinct and unequivocal language any change or modification of the terms of the contract was prohibited unless indorsed in writing upon it by the president of the Manufacturers’ Automatic Sprinkler Company. This was ample notice that the agent was not empowered to vary the writing verbally. (Belden v. Union Central Life Ins. Co., 167 Cal. 740, [141 Pac. 370].) Moreover, the plaintiff unqualifiedly waived the oral agreement by permitting the work to be started five or six weeks after the written contract was signed, and two or three weeks after it should have been completed if the oral promise had been kept. On September 15, 1910, a check for five hundred dollars, the first installment on the written agreement, was sent by plaintiff to the Automatic Sprinkler Company of America. In the face of these facts it is clear that the proximate cause of the loss to plaintiff was not the failure to install the fire-extinguishing apparatus within three weeks from the date of the verbal contract, and it is equally clear that the plaintiff waived any rights it may have acquired under the oral agreement.

It is not necessary to analyze in detail the testimony upon the subject of the reasonable amount of time necessary to complete the work. There was testimony to the effect that the contract, under the rules of the manufacturing corporation, had to be sent to New York state for approval before the representatives of the contractor in this state could act upon it. So, also, there was testimony that the materials were only obtainable in Syracuse, New York, and that their shipment to Highland in this state, where the work of installation was to be done, consumed thirty-five days or more. The peculiar appliances necessary to complete the work were received by that defendant then busy installing the apparatus only on September 22d. Whether these delays were reasonable or not was a matter peculiarly for the superior court to determine and we will not disturb the findings of that tribunal based, as they were, upon conflicting testimony.

*683 There was a sharp conflict of testimony with reference to the proportion of the work completed at the time of the fire. One of the witnesses, Mr. Goodrich, testified that he had worked in the placing' of the fire-extinguishing apparatus in the box factory. By the terms of the writing, appellant was to put in the pipes for the underground supply, and Mr. Goodrich said that if no fire had occurred, and the “underground” had been put in, it would have taken him and the helper two days to complete the contract. It would have taken two days according to testimony on behalf of appellant" to conduct the water into the building and to connect it with the fire-extinguishing system, therefore, if the court accepted Mr. Goodrich’s statement as true, appellant was quite as much in default as was the contractor, and as the court justly found, if the apparatus had been installed on September 22, 1910, the fire could not have been extinguished because there would have been no water supply for the operation of the sprinklers.

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Bluebook (online)
161 P. 266, 173 Cal. 679, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brookings-lumber-box-co-v-manufacturers-automatic-sprinkler-co-cal-1916.