Donegan v. Houston

90 P. 1073, 5 Cal. App. 626, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 271
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 1907
DocketCiv. No. 342.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 90 P. 1073 (Donegan v. Houston) 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
Donegan v. Houston, 90 P. 1073, 5 Cal. App. 626, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 271 (Cal. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

TAGGART, J.

This is an action to recover for grading and excavating done by plaintiff for defendants on fifteen acres of land in the city of Los Angeles. Judgment was for plaintiff and defendants appeal from the judgment and order denying a new trial.

The complaint alleges the cause of action in the following language: “Now comes the plaintiff and says that within the last two years past, he did grading and excavating for the defendants, for which they agreed to pay him the sum of six thousand one hundred seventy-three dollars. ’ ’

By answer, counterclaim and cross-complaint defendants set out a special contract in writing between plaintiff and defendants, under which, it is alleged, all the grading and excavating involved in this action was done by plaintiff. By the terms of this contract the grading was to be done to the satisfaction of one S. 0. Wood, civil engineer, and be testified to by his certificate in writing. It is alleged that plaintiff failed to perform his part of the contract in time, or at all, was unable to procure the certificate of the engineer, and abandoned the Avork and failed to complete it; that defendants were compelled to expend certain sums in finishing portions of the work, and suffered certain alleged damages by reason of the delay and failure of plaintiff to complete the grading according to contract.

The plaintiff’s answer to the latter pleadings denies each and all the allegations mentioned, and the findings of the court expressly, or in effect, negative them all. .The court also finds that plaintiff performed work in grading and ex- *629 eavating for the defendants, and that they agreed to pay him therefor as alleged in the complaint. That all the work done by plaintiff was done on the property described in defendants’ pleadings, but that it was not all done under the contract pleaded therein. The court does not segregate the amount due for work under the contract from that due for other work, but finds there is now due to plaintiff from defendants $2,019 with interest, and the judgment is for that amount.

Appellants present their case on appeal as if the plaintiff had brought his action on the contract, and attempted to introduce evidence to excuse his failure to secure the certificate from the engineer without an allegation in his pleading to support it. They also contend that for this same reason the pleading does not support the finding of the court that “it is not true that the grading was not done in a workmanlike manner and to the satisfaction of the engineer or defendants or either of them” (following the language of the allegation in defendants’ pleadings).

It is further contended that the extra work testified to by plaintiff should have been excluded from the judgment because it could only be supported by a pleading counting on a quantum meruit, and there was and is no such count in the complaint. No attack is made upon the sufficiency of the complaint, by demurrer or otherwise, and no objections were taken to the testimony introduced and no exceptions preserved to the improper admission or exclusion of evidence.

There are seventeen specifications of insufficiency of the evidence to justify the decision, nine of errors of law, occurring during the trial, assigned (all of which relate to the findings of the court), and eight particulars in which the decision is said to be against law. Most, if not all, these specifications, errors and particulars pass out of consideration upon ascertaining and determining the character of plaintiff’s action, and applying the rule that this court will not look into the weight of the evidence supporting a finding if there be a substantial conflict in the evidence.

The complaint here is, in effect, an indebitatus assumpsit count at common law, and declares upon an executed contract. While it lacks the ordinary allegations of indebtedness and that the services were rendered at defendants’ request (Estee’s Pleadings [Boone], 4th ed., secs. 905, 912), these *630 averments are unnecessary when the consideration as well as the promise are implied from the nature of the transaction declared on. (McFarland v. Holcomb, 123 Cal. 86, [55 Pac. 761].)

Such pleading is allowable under our code (Farwell v. Murray, 104 Cal. 464, [38 Pac. 199]; Pleasant v. Samuels, 114 Cal. 37, [45 Pac. 998]), and its use carries with it the general rule applicable to such counts. (Castagnino v. Balletta, 82 Cal. 258, [23 Pac. 127].) It is said in Chitty on Pleading, *page 343 et seq.: “Several distinct debts due in respect of different contracts not under seal, of the same or a different nature, as demands for work, and debts for goods, moneys lent, etc., might always be included in one count of this, description ; and the plaintiff would succeed pro tanto, though he only prove one of such contracts. . . . Under an indebitatus count the plaintiff may recover what may be due to him although no specific price or sum was agreed upon (the promise being implied), and therefore it has been observed that the quantum meruit and quantum valebat counts are in no case necessary, and should in many eases be omitted to prevent unnecessary prolixity and expense. . . . However special the agreement was . . . and the terms of it have been performed on the plaintiff’s part and the remuneration was to be in money, it is not necessary to declare specially, the common indebitatus count is sufficient ” (*p. 348).

The plaintiff testified, and he is corroborated by his foreman, that he fully completed the grading and excavating according to his contract, the court so finds, and a case was made that justified such a pleading. Had he failed to sustain the burden of proving a completed contract his case must have failed as to any work done under the contract; and, without a quantum meruit or other count to support a judgment upon a part performance, he could have recovered nothing. The express promise as to the work done under the executed special contract and the implied promise as to the extra work could be declared on in the one count, since they together constituted the indebtedness due from defendants to plaintiff upon contracts that were fully executed. The indebtedness had become a single claim for money due for grading and excavating. The rule here is similar to the one applied to the more familiar form of common count, an account stated. All the items and transactions preceding the stating *631 of the account become merged in the one account stated. The law implies a promise to pay this, and permits an action to be brought upon the single sum ascertained to be due, without pleading any of the items or transactions from which the result was obtained. If defendants had desired to ascertain the items of the claim, they could have obtained them under the provisions of section 454 of the Code of Civil Procedure. (Farwell v. Murray, 104 Cal. 464, [38 Pac. 199].)

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Bluebook (online)
90 P. 1073, 5 Cal. App. 626, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donegan-v-houston-calctapp-1907.