Hall v. Gargaro

17 N.W.2d 795, 310 Mich. 693, 1945 Mich. LEXIS 515
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1945
DocketDocket No. 34, Calendar No. 42,897.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 17 N.W.2d 795 (Hall v. Gargaro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Gargaro, 17 N.W.2d 795, 310 Mich. 693, 1945 Mich. LEXIS 515 (Mich. 1945).

Opinion

Boyles, J,

May 6,1941, these parties entered into a written contract whereby plaintiff agreed to furnish all the material and labor and erect a store building for defendant at the corner of Livernois and Chippewa avenues in Detroit, for an agreed sum. The building was completed, defendant made payments on the contract but withheld an unpaid balance of $1,539.90,15 per cent, of the total contract price, which defendant refused to pay, claiming stipulated damages of $10 per day for plaintiff’s failure to complete the building within the contract time limit, and damages for failure to erect the building in accordance with the plans and specifications. Plaintiff filed a declaration on the common counts with bill of particulars and defendant filed a cross declaration claiming damages as aforesaid. The case was heard by the court without a jury. The amount of the unpaid balance was not in dispute. The lower court gave plaintiff judgment for the full amount of his claim with interest, and defendant appeals.

The contract was received in evidence. It provides for a time limit for completion, and stipulated damages for delay beyond the time allowed for performance, as follows:

“Time of Completion: The work to be performed under this contract shair be commenced within 5 *696 days after tbe signing of the contract. The entire work shall be fully completed within 75 calendar days after the signing of contract. In the event of delay in the completion of the entire contract, the owner shall be paid damages for such delay in the sum of $10 for each and every day that the time consumed in said performance and completion exceeds the time herein allowed, and the owner shall have the right to deduct and retain the amount of such liquidated damages from any moneys due, or which may become due under this contract.”

The record shows that the contract was signed May 6,1941. The time within which work was to be completed, according to the contract (75 calendar days after May 6) ended July 20, 1941. Admittedly the work was not completed until some later date. There was testimony that .the premises (consisting of two stores in one building) were partially occupied by one tenant on November 7, 1941, but not fully occupied until December 7, 1941, a period of 140 days. There was undisputed testimony that the defendant had tenants waiting for completion of the building. Ten days before the completion date defendant wrote plaintiff, as follows:

“July 10, 1941
“Mr. Gordon B. Hall,
“14773 Mettetal Ave.,
“Detroit, Michigan.
“Dear Sir:
“Under the terms of your contract for the construction of store building on Livernois Ave., and we refer you to paragraph ‘Time of Completion’ we wish to call your attention to this paragraph which states, The entire work shall be fully completed within 75 calendar days after the signing of contract. This would place the completion date as of July 20, 1941.
*697 “Upon a recent inspection of the work, it would appear to the writer, that you are considerably behind schedule, and that steps should be taken by you immediately to speed up the work in order to complete same on time.
“We have given a lease on this building for tenancy upon completion of same. This means that in the event it is not completed by July 20, 1941, we will suffer a loss of rental.
“We call your attention to this matter, and urge, that all possible steps be taken in order that this building may be delivered to us within'the specified time for completion.
“Yours very truly,
“Don Gargaro.
“By John Robinson.”

A test as to whether a provision for stipulated damages is enforceable is the reasonableness of the amount.

“Courts will disregard the’ express stipulation of parties as to the damages for breach of a contract, only in those cases where it is obvious from the contract before them, and the whole subject matter, that the principle of compensation has been disregarded.

“In eases where it is difficult to accurately determine the damages which one party may suffer by the failure of the other* to perform his contract, the parties themselves may agree upon such sum as in their judgment will be ample compensation for the breach'.

“A provision in a building contract to forfeit $20 per day for failure to complete repairs on a dwelling house within the contract period is not per se excessive so as to amount to a penalty.” Ross v. Loescher (syllabi), 152 Mich. 386 (125 Am. St. Rep. 418).

This court has recently written on this question in Nichols v. Seaks, 296 Mich. 154, 161, where we said:

*698 “Where damages are difficult of ascertainment, courts will respect the honest attempt of the parties themselves to compute as best they can the just compensation from loss of the bargain by breach. Before accepting as conclusive the convention of the parties, it must be examined, and the court must determine whether the predetermined figure is really in the nature of an attempted computation of the actual damages likely to result or, whether it has the effect of exacting a penalty from the contract breaker. ’ ’

The building in question was to provide two stores, for which tenants were ready to pay rent on the completion date. One of the stores had been leased before the completion date. The record is convincing that the figure of $10 a day for non-completion was a fair attempt to estimate the actual damages.

In the contract itself we find no exception to plaintiff’s agreement to complete the building by-July 20th. Plaintiff sought to excuse performance by July 20th on the ground of unforeseen shortages of material, that he depended on -the defendant to furnish certain material, government regulations, and labor difficulties. While defendant ordered some minor changes, they were expressly permissible by a clause in the contract, without extending time of performance. The contract required the plaintiff as contractor to furnish all material without exception, and to deliver a completed building by July 20, 1941. Plaintiff seeks to excuse his delay on the ground that it was caused by the defendant, but there is no evidence that the defendant caused shortages of material, government regulations, or labor troubles, which apparently were the cause of the delay. Plaintiff, although a contractor with years of experience and familiar with existing con *699 ditions, did not protect himself in his contract against such contingencies. Plaintiff relies on Johnson v. Lyon, 75 Mich. 477. That case is little consolation for plaintiff, where this court said (p. 487):

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.W.2d 795, 310 Mich. 693, 1945 Mich. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-gargaro-mich-1945.