Gutleben Bros. v. Stevenson

268 P. 379, 92 Cal. App. 513
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 13, 1928
DocketDocket No. 6329.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 268 P. 379 (Gutleben Bros. v. Stevenson) 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
Gutleben Bros. v. Stevenson, 268 P. 379, 92 Cal. App. 513 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

STURTEVANT, J.

The defendant is the owner of the Hotel Miramar Annex at Santa Monica. Before building the hotel he employed an architect to draw plans and prepare specifications. Afterwards he engaged the plaintiff as manager and superintendent to build the building. A written contract was drawn up, executed, and recorded. By the terms of the written contract the plaintiff undertook to superintend all of the building, etc., to make bimonthly statements of his transactions, to pay the bills, and thereafter to submit the vouchers to the owner. All of these things were done and the record presents no question on the subject. The plaintiff agreed that the building would not cost in excess of $428,686. It was also agreed that changes might be made when authorized by a written order from said architect.” It was further agreed that the compensation of the plaintiff would be $24,000, “that should the architect at any time during the progress of the work require and order any alterations, deviations from, additions to, or omissions from the work shown in said plans and specifications, the same shall in no way injuriously affect or make void this contract, but the difference in value for work or materials omitted shall be deducted from the aggregate total of said contractor’s estimate by a fair and reasonable valuation, and said estimate shall be deemed to be modified accordingly ; and the value of any additional work or materials required shall be agreed upon between the contractor and the architect before such additional work or material is furnished, and the agreed value thereof shall be added to the aggregate total of said contractor’s estimate by a fair and reasonable valuation, and said estimate shall be deemed to be modified accordingly. Such agreement for omissions from or additions to the work shall state also any change in the time of completion as herein set forth which is to be granted by reason thereof. The contractor further agrees that any excess of said cost over the contractor’s estimate up to the amount of half of the total compensation to be paid the contractor shall be charged to and be borne by the contractor and offset against the final payment of the con *516 tractor’s compensation hereinabove referred to.” Numerous changes were made. Some of the changes constituted omissions and some were additions. At no time did the architect issue a written order, but the orders were all oral and at no time did the architect and the contractor agree on the valuation of an item to be omitted or the valuation of an addition to be made. At no time did they agree on the allowance to be made for the performance of the change so ordered. The contract contained a provision that the building should be completed by May 15, 1924, and for certain penalties if the building was not completed within that time. It also provided for a bonus in favor of the contractor for each day if the building was completed before May 15, 1924. All payments were made by the owner down to the date that the last payment fell due. At that time a dispute arose as to what was the liability of the owner. As the parties failed to agree the plaintiff commenced this action a short time after the owner had recorded the notice of completion.

The plaintiff pleaded his case in three different counts: (1) On the contract for the balance of the agreed price stated in the contract; (2) for moneys laid out and expended, and (3) for the reasonable value of services performed and material furnished. The defendant answered and a trial was had in the trial court before the court sitting with a jury. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $27,108.60. That amount included $16,000 of the $24,000 alleged to be unpaid, and $9,040.22 for moneys laid out and expended, together with interest on those two items. The defendant paid to the plaintiff $14,168.01 under a stipulation protecting the rights of both parties. From a judgment entered on the verdict the defendant has appealed. The appeal presents the question what sum, if any, should have been charged against the plaintiff by reason of an alleged excess of the total cost of construction. That question is presented under six different attacks.

The defendant requested, and the trial court refused to give, two instructions as follows:

“III.
“By the contract there was an estimate made by the plaintiff that the entire cost of labor and material neees *517 sary for constructing the Miramar Hotel Annex in the manner contemplated by the plans and specifications attached to said contract would not exceed the sum of $428,-686.00. In said contract is a provision that if the said cost exceeds the amount of said estimate then the plaintiff must forfeit the amount of the excess up to the amount of one-half of the contract compensation, that is, to the amount of $12,000.00. Changes in the manner of doing the work were made aftejj the contract was signed and recorded by the omission of some work and by the .addition of other work. The contract provides for such changes. You are to decide whether the cost of doing the work of constructing the Miramar Hotel Annex was increased or diminished by these changes for the purpose of deciding whether or not the defendant should be released from paying any part of the compensation provided for in the contract. To determine this the difference in value for work or materials omitted shall be deducted from the aggregate total of the contractor’s estimate by a fair and reasonable valuation and the value of any additional work or materials shall be added to the aggregate total of the contractor’s estimate by a fair and reasonable valuation to determine the modified estimate under change made. The difference between the modified estimate and the entire cost of the work will determine whether or not and to what extent the cost of the work has exceeded the estimate. If you find after deducting omissions from the contract estimate and adding additions to it the cost of the entire work does not exceed the amount of the estimate so modified then there will be no deduction made from the said unpaid portion of the contract compensation.
“IV.
“If you find after deducting from the estimate the value of omissions and adding to the estimate the value of the additions that the cost of the work exceeds the amount of the estimate so modified then there is to be deducted from the $16,000.00 remaining unpaid as part of the contract compensation the amount of the excess of the cost over and above such modified estimate to an amount not exceeding $12,000.00.”

The trial court did not err in refusing either instruction. The third instruction told the jury to subtract *518 from the contractor’s original estimate, $428,686, the “fair and reasonable valuation” of the things omitted. The instruction then told the jury to add to the remainder the “fair and reasonable valuation” of the additions that were made. The contract provided what should constitute the evidence, namely, the contractor and the architect should first agree on the amount of an addition and the amount so agreed upon should be inserted in a written order before any change was made. It is an admitted fact that such agreements and such orders were never made.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Nuttman v. Chais
225 P.2d 660 (California Court of Appeal, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 P. 379, 92 Cal. App. 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gutleben-bros-v-stevenson-calctapp-1928.