Doucette v. Mendez

18 Mass. App. Dec. 61
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 1, 1959
DocketNo. 25577; No. 25673
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Mass. App. Dec. 61 (Doucette v. Mendez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doucette v. Mendez, 18 Mass. App. Dec. 61 (Mass. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

Welch, J.

There was a consolidated report in these cases.

In No. 25577 Justin D. Doucette seeks to recover in an action of contract the sum of $633.00 from the defendants as a balance due for labor and materials furnished the defendants in the construction of a single family dwelling house on land owned by the defend[62]*62ants in Hanson. The answer of the defendants was that the plaintiff had been overpaid and the defendants owe him nothing.

In No. 25673 Antonio Mendez seeks to recover in contract the sum of $494.00. Mendez alleged that Doucette on Dec. 20, 1956 made an agreement in writing to build a house for him for $8,000. The answer was a general denial.

Mendez’ testimony was as follows: Mendez and his wife in the summer of 1955 owned land in Hanson. They had a deed but did not know whether the title was good. Mendez talked with Doucette and asked him to get a set of plans. When they were obtained Mendez and his wife applied to the Whitman Savings bank for a loan of $8,000 which was granted. After the work was started, and the house half finished, Mendez was notified that his title was not good and that the bank would not advance any money. Thereupon, Doucette brought Mendez to attorneys who started to register the land. About Dec. 20, 1956 the bank was ready to go ahead, and paid Doucette for his labor and various bills for lumber.

Doucette said he was going to finish the house. An agreement was prepared and Mendez and Doucette signed it. Mendez testified that the price was to be $8,000 and that Doucette agreed to build the house for that price.

Doucette testified that he had built homes for eight or nine years; that in the summer [63]*63of 1955 he was building a house for another party which was close to the Mendez land. While he was building this house the defendants asked him about building a house for them. At Mr. Mendez’ request Doucette sent away for plans and they made inquiries from lumber companies and the figures given to build a house according to the plans in one .case was $10,700 and in another, $11,500. The bank declined to loan more than $8,000 on account of the neighborhood. Doucette told Mendez and his wife that the house could not be built for $8,000 and that he would have to cut corners. He worked only in the evenings, Sundays and holidays and Mendez and his wife knew this, and that he made no profit on the materials and the subcontractors. He started work in August, 1955.

In October the bank notified him that the title was defective. He had already done considerable work on the house and he agreed to continue so as to make the house tight against the weather. He kept working until this was done, which was on Oct 11, 1955. On or about Dec. 20, 1956 the bank paid him $1950 less $250 which they retained. The $1950 represented his own labor and the labor of men he had hired. On Dec. 20, 1956 he went to the attorneys and told them he was going to complete the house. An agreement consisting of two pages was drawn and Doucette signed it but did not see the figure. Doucette claimed that he was never fully paid for his labor and the labor of his men and everything was at cost plus.

[64]*64Doucette further testified that when the $8,000 advanced by the bank was exhausted he talked with Mendez about it and instead of leaving the job Mr. and Mrs. Mendez agreed to pay him at the rate of $2.00 for his labor and $1.50 an hour for his helper. Doucette finished the house and sent bills to Mr. and Mrs. Mendez. Before suit was brought he was told that Mrs. Mendez was getting the money out of her wages and that he would be paid. He was never paid.

The parties agreed in court that if there should be a finding for Doucette it would be in the amount of $633, and if the finding was for Mendez it would be in the sum of $494.09.

In the case of Doucette v. Mendez et al, No. 25577, Doucette filed requests for rulings and in the case of Mendez v. Doucette, No. 25673 Doucette filed requests.

The requests on which these appeals are pending and the action taken by the judge are as follows:

In No. 25577:

1. The evidence warrants a finding that the plaintiff is entitled to recover for labor and materials furnished the defendants in the construction of a house at 298 Monponsett Street, Hanson, on a quantum meruit basis in accordance with the plaintiff’s declaration. Denied, see special finding.

2. On the pleadings and the evidence, a finding for the defendants is not warranted. Denied, see special finding.

4. The evidence requires a finding that on or about August 16, 1955, the date of the oral understanding between the parties, that the parties did not have in contemplation a price of $8,000. Denied, see special finding.

[65]*655. The evidence requires a finding that the defendants understood that in undertaking to construct the house for the defendants, the plaintiff was seeking only to be compensated for the fair value of his own labor and reimbursement for the value of such other labor as he furnished to the job. Denied, see special finding.

6. The evidence requires a finding that the stoppage of the work on November 12, 1955 was due in no part to the fault of the plaintiff. Denied, see special finding.

7. The evidence requires a finding that the understanding between the parties on August 16, 1955 for the construction of the house for the defendant was on a so-called “cost plus” basis, the plaintiff not to share or profit on the cost price of the materials. Denied, see special finding.

8. The evidence warrants a finding that after December 20, 1956, the parties continued to carry on in the same fashion as they had prior to November 12, 1955 — that is to say that they continued to consider the job as being done on a “cost plusi” basis, the “plus” being both the labor furnished by the plaintiff himself and the labor of others procured by him. Denied, see special finding.

9. No consideration is shown for a change from a cost plus basis to a specified price. Denied, see special finding.

10. The evidence warrants a finding that both the plaintiff and the defendants understood the instrument of December 20, 1956 to be for the sole purpose of setting out in detail the work which the plaintiff was to do and which was left unfinished on November 12, 1955 and for no other purpose except to furnish the Whitman Savings Bank, construction mortgagee, an itemized list of the specifications in connection with the said bank’s obligation to advance money to the defendants under the construction loan agreement. Denied, see special finding.

11. The evidence requires a finding that the instrument of December 20, 1956 does not conform in material respects [66]*66to a properly executed and legally subsisting instrument under which the parties contemplate a full and complete contract. Denied, see special finding.

12. Upon all the evidence, the Court should disregard the instrument of December 20, 1956 insofar as it fixes a stipulated price for construction. Denied, see special finding.

13. The evidence requires a finding that the plaintiff continued to work and furnish labor after the mortgage proceeds of $8,000 had been exhausted. Denied, see special finding.

14.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Mass. App. Dec. 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doucette-v-mendez-massdistctapp-1959.