Hamilton v. Oakland School District

26 P.2d 296, 219 Cal. 322, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 395
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1933
DocketDocket No. S.F. 14589.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 26 P.2d 296 (Hamilton v. Oakland School District) 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
Hamilton v. Oakland School District, 26 P.2d 296, 219 Cal. 322, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 395 (Cal. 1933).

Opinion

THE COURT.

Plaintiff brought this action for the purpose of enforcing a compromise alleged to have been entered into by plaintiff with defendant school district. The trial court found the compromise was unsupported by consideration and therefore unenforceable against defendants. From the judgment based on this finding this appeal has been taken.

The facts giving rise to the controversy are not substantially in dispute, and are as follows:

In November, 1928, plaintiff as general contractor, and defendants by and through the Board of Education of the City of Oakland, entered into a contract for the construction of a school building to be known as the Allendale-Fruitvale school in said city. The contract provided that the building should be completed on or before July 31, 1929, and time was expressly made of the essence of this provision. The contract further provided:

“Should the contractor fail to complete his contract and the works provided for herein within the time fixed for such completion as stated above, due allowance being made for unavoidable delays, he shall become liable to the Board in the amount of Fifty ($50.00) Dollars per calendar day for each day said work remains uncompleted beyond the term for completion. ... If it appears to any contractor that he will not complete the work provided in his contract in the time agreed, he shall make written application to the Board at least thirty (30) calendar days prior to the expiration of the time for completion, stating the reasons why and the amount of extension which he believes should be granted. The Board may then in its discretion grant or deny such extension.”

The building was not completed until December 3', 1929, 124 days after the time specified in the contract for its completion. The amount still due and owing plaintiff at that time was about $48,000. After the building had been formally accepted by defendants, the board directed the auditor to draw a warrant in favor of the plaintiff for the remainder *325 of the contract price less the sum of $6,200, that amount being claimed by the board as liquidated damages for the full 124 days at $50 per day as provided in the contract. In the meantime subcontractors and materialmen of the plaintiff had filed stop notices against the amount still owing to plaintiff. The evidence shows that if the full $6,200 claimed by defendants were withheld, there would not then have been a sufficient sum remaining owing to plaintiff to pay all the subcontractors and materialmen. The plaintiff objected to the deduction of the full $6,200. To adjust the matter hearings were had before the board on February 25 and March 4, 1930. At these hearings the plaintiff was present with his then counsel, Mr. Beardsley, and the matter was discussed at some length. Mr. Beardsley finally offered to compromise the $6,200 disputed claim of the board for $2,000. At the conclusion of the hearings the board accepted the offer and adopted the following resolution:

“Upon motion of Director Sturgis, seconded by Director Komhaus, the following report and recommendation of the committee of the whole was approved. . . .
“That the amount of liquidated damages to be exacted of the Hamilton Construction Co. on account of the delay in the completion of the Bret-Harte (Allendale-Fruitvale) school as stated in the minutes of December 5, 1929, be changed from $6,200 to $2,000.
“This action was taken after a conference with Mr. Charles A. Beardsley, attorney representing the Hamilton Construction Co., the contractor agreeing that if the board reduced the amount of liquidated damages to $2000, he would secure releases of withhold notices filed against his contract, and file with the Board of Education bonds in the amount of 125 per cent of the withholds for all disputed claims, in order that the balance due on the contract may be released for distribution to the subcontractors.”

Before a warrant drawn pursuant to the foregoing resolution was delivered to the plaintiff the board was advised by the district attorney that in his opinion the liquidated damage clause of the contract was valid and could not be waived by the board; that “if an actual dispute exists between your board and the contractor as to the number of days in which the latter was in default, your board may compromise such dispute, and may adjust its claim for such damages upon *326 that basis only”. The district attorney further advised the board that the provision on the part of the contractor to pay the subcontractors and other claimants and to bond against certain claims referred to in the resolution could not form the basis of a valid compromise, for the reason that the contractor was already bound to perform these acts, in any event.

Following the receipt of this advice the board immediately by resolution rescinded its action of March 4th approving the offer - of compromise. A warrant for the balance of the contract price less $6,200, the full amount claimed, .was issued to and accepted by plaintiff, subject to his right to prosecute his claim for the additional $4,200, according to the terms of the compromise. A claim for this amount was presented to the board and rejected, whereupon this action was brought, resulting in a judgment for the defendants.

In reference to the compromise the trial court found that plaintiff, before the date of the alleged compromise, disputed the right of defendants to retain $6,200, and claimed that out of the 124 days’ delay, 23 days of delay were due to causes beyond plaintiff’s control; that plaintiff requested an extension of time for the 23 days, which request was denied; that thereupon plaintiff “offered to compromise all differences between the parties arising out of the contract upon payment to him of $4,200 of the total amount of $6,200 withheld by defendants as aforesaid and urged his inability to pay his subcontractors and materialmen as the chief reason for reaching an agreement”; that defendants agreed to the compromise “solely by reason of a desire upon their part that said subcontractors and materialmen be paid”; that it is not true that the resolution of March 4th accepting the compromise “was predicated upon the respective claims and contentions made by the parties at the board meeting of March 4, 1930, and in order to avoid litigation, but it is true that defendants entered into said compromise agreement in the belief that they were thereby making funds available to plaintiff to pay said subcontractors and materialmen, and that their action as taken would result in such payment; that defendants expressly rejected all other reasons advanced for reaching said compromise agreement, and that there was no other consideration therefor; that said compromise, by reason of the facts herein determined, was wholly without *327 consideration and beyond the power of said defendants to consummate, and therefore was invalid and of no force or. effect and did not constitute a valid obligation”.

Prom this finding the trial court concluded that there was no valid basis for the compromise, and that the agreement to compromise was not a binding obligation of the board.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 P.2d 296, 219 Cal. 322, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-oakland-school-district-cal-1933.