Heple v. Kluge

250 P.2d 694, 114 Cal. App. 2d 473, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1195
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 1, 1952
DocketCiv. 14867
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 250 P.2d 694 (Heple v. Kluge) 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
Heple v. Kluge, 250 P.2d 694, 114 Cal. App. 2d 473, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1195 (Cal. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

GOODELL, J.

Plaintiff, a building contractor, sued for $19,354.38 for money advanced and services rendered at defendants’ special instance and request, in the construction of a building in San Jose. Defendants pleaded that plaintiff had contracted to construct a building for $22,490 according to certain plans and specifications but had failed to do so. They also filed a cross-complaint for $30,000, of which $5,000 was claimed as damages for the demolition of the alleged unsuitable structure and $25,000 for other accrued and prospective damages. A verdict for. $18,669.47 was returned in plaintiff’s favor and against defendants on their cross-complaint. From the judgment entered thereon this appeal was taken after a new trial had been denied.

At the trial 17 witnesses were examined, and their testimony covers 730 pages.

The jury was instructed that the evidence was “uncontradicted that the plaintiff . . . expended . . . $19,869.47 for labor, materials, equipment rental and contracting services.” *475 It was also instructed on the rule of substantial performance. The fact that the verdict was for a sum $1,200 less than the $19,869.47 figure would indicate that they followed the substantial performance instruction and deducted the $1,200 for deviations or variances.

Defendants, who are sisters, conducted a curtain laundry in leased premises in San Jose and decided to put up a building on a lot of their own on West San Carlos Street a short distance from their old location. Their purpose was to occupy half the ground floor for their business and rent the other half to tenants until such time as their business warranted their occupancy of the whole floor. The upper floor was to be apartments.

Plaintiff did not enter the picture until a year or so after defendants had started on their project.

Defendants first employed Kress and Gibson, San Jose architects, to design the building, but determined that its cost, according to the plans and specifications, was more than they could afford. They then employed Leonard Clover, an architectural draftsman, to prepare other plans. As he was not then licensed, he engaged Mark Thomas, a licensed engineer, to do the engineering part of the work. New plans were drawn by Clover and delivered to defendants by him, and in September, 1946, he and Thomas were paid in full for their services. Many months later defendants submitted these plans to plaintiff for bidding, and on June 26, 1947 he made defendants an offer reading as follows: “We propose to bid the sum of $22,490.00 for constructing your building ... as per plans and specifications with the following items eliminations and substitutions [detailing items not involved herein] . . . The price quoted, $22,490.00 is a guaranteed cost. We are, however, willing to perform the work above specified on the guaranteed cost with the alternative of a cost plus setup. (Cost plus 5% overhead and 10% profit.) That is, if the cost plus is not in excess to [sic] our bid price, the owners shall accept the cost plus price.” This was orally accepted by defendants on September 10, 1947.

On April 6, 1948, construction work on the building then about 80 per cent complete, was brought to a halt when defendants wrote plaintiff as follows: “In regard to your contract . . . please be advised that efforts are being made to arrive at a prompt determination of the responsibility for variances which have occurred in the construction as related to the original plans and specifications. We plan very shortly *476 to arrive at some proposal to submit to you after consulting with the various parties who have worked over the plans and with the Building Inspector. In the meantime, please do not continue your building operations.”

By that time upward of 20 controversies had arisen, the major one of which concerned the partition dividing the lower floor. Defendants wanted a partition which could be removed whenever the time arrived for them to make over the lower floor for their sole occupancy. However, a bearing wall was built instead of a temporary partition. Since this is the basis for the principal legal questions in this case, the evidence on that subject has to be set forth rather fully.

The evidence is without contradiction that when Clover assumed the job of making the plans, defendants discussed fully with him their reasons for requiring a temporary and removable partition. Thomas, who did the engineering work on the plans, was employed by Clover, not by defendants, and there is no evidence in the record that Clover or anybody else ever explained to him or to any of his associates or employees that the partition had to be removable, or gave him defendants’ reasons for wanting it so. Furthermore, there is no evidence in the record that defendants ever told plaintiff anything about the removable partition or their reasons for it, or that Clover or anybody else did so.

Clover’s original plans provided for an I-beam running lengthwise of the building, designed to support its upstairs part, which I-beam would, at the same time, permit of a partition beneath it and aligned with it.

Clover’s contract with defendants was that he would produce plans which would meet all the requirements of the building laws. And while he was preparing the plans. Clover told defendants that he was checking with the building inspector so that no changes would be necessary when a building permit was applied for, and that defendants would get workable plans which would pass the building inspector. Defendants testified that when they received the plans they understood they were getting such plans, and that that was what they paid Clover to produce. They said they understood that if the plans did not pass, Glover would make whatever revisions were necessary to comply with his agreement.

Plaintiff submitted the plans for approval shortly after his contract was made, but a building permit was refused.

Robert Lotz, Superintendent of the Department of Building of the City of San Jose, a witness for the defendants, *477 testified that he denied the permit ‘ ‘ Because the structure, as shown on the plans, wouldn’t comply with the city or state regulations. Q. In what particular, as to the lateral bracing ? A. Principally the lateral bracing,- there were some other things, also. Q. What were the other things, if you recall? A. One was that beam that has been discussed so much; I checked that since you were in my office a couple of weeks ago, and that beam, as shown on the original plans, was too light to carry the required load. Q. You didn’t order the beam out, though, did you? A. No, sir, I may have ordered it changed to a heavier beam . . . Q. You did not so order; in other words, principally your orders were to take care of the lateral bracing forces under the Riley Act, is that correct ? A. That, and the vertical loads, we checked for ... all things in connection with the fireproofing, exits, I mean a total check on the place. Q. I see, but the principal reason for denying the permit was that there was an over-stress on the beam, the I-beam, and in addition there were insufficient lateral bracings in the building, is that correct? A. That’s correct.” (Emphasis added.)

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Bluebook (online)
250 P.2d 694, 114 Cal. App. 2d 473, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heple-v-kluge-calctapp-1952.