John Conti Co., Inc. v. Donovan

57 A.2d 872, 358 Pa. 566
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 5, 1947
DocketAppeal, 203
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 57 A.2d 872 (John Conti Co., Inc. v. Donovan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Conti Co., Inc. v. Donovan, 57 A.2d 872, 358 Pa. 566 (Pa. 1947).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Maxey,

This is an appeal from a judgment n. o. v. entered in favor of John P. Donovan, defendant, after John Conti Co., Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation, had recovered a verdict against him for $22,042.40 with interest from June 17, 1946 to May 14, 1947 in an action of assumpsit.

Plaintiff instituted its action to recover, payment for work, labor and materials furnished under a sub *568 contract to defendant (the latter being the general contractor for the erection of St. Elizabeth’s, Church, Wilmington, Delaware), with a profit of ten percent on the balance of the work which plaintiff was prevented from doing. Plaintiff claims that the defendant by using the results of its work was legally obligated to pay for it.

In its affidavit of defense, defendant alleges plaintiff breached its contract by failing to maintain a sufficient number of masons and other employees on the job; that it did not use the mixture for mortar required under the specifications; that it employed dirty and poorly shaped stones and set many of them in an unworkman-like manner; and that the joints of the face stone were not properly “raked out” as called for by the contract. Defendant filed a counterclaim for $2,846.04 to cover the additional expense which he incurred in correcting the allegedly unsatisfactory work of the plaintiff; and, also, for the excess cost of completion of the plaintiff’s work as called for under the contract and as computed at the time of the trial. Defendant also contends that he is an improper party to the action, that G-leeson, and Mul-rooney, Architects, were the proper party defendants in an action for an alleged wrongful termination of plaintiff’s sub-contract.

On or about October 23, 1945 plaintiff submitted to defendant a bid or estimate in the sum of $102,000 for all stone masonry, brickwork, and for setting all cut stone required for the construction of St. Elizabeth’s Church in accordance with certain plans and specifications proposed by Gleeson and Mulrooney, Architects. In its letter of acceptance, dated October 30, 1945, defendant specified that plaintiff was to start work at once and complete it as rapidly as possible without unnecessary delays or interruptions. Under the specifications, the Architect reserved the right to terminate the employment of any objectionable sub-contractor upon three days written notice to the Contractor and have the work continued by others with the costs thereof deductible *569 from tbe contract. It was also provided that “All work must be made satisfactory to the Architect before any payments on ivork will be allowed.” “Satisfactory” is defined under the terms of the contract as follows: “When the words ‘Approved, Satisfactory . . . are used: They shall be taken to mean as decided by the Architect.”

A series of letters dated March 12, April 25, May 3, May 8, June 14 and June 17,1946, containing complaints made by the Architect about the unsatisfactory progress of plaintiff’s work “due to the lack of stone masons”, was directed to the plaintiff and it was ordered to discontinue its operations. Plaintiff averred that it at all times had a sufficient number of skilled stone masons and laborers on the job and that, owing to defendant’s failure to complete the required excavation and to erect steel columns, commencement of its work under the contract was necessarily delayed until January 17, 1946. 1 It was not until receipt of the June 17,1946 communication that plaintiff finally stopped its work. Prior to that time, defendant endeavored to assist plaintiff in prosecuting its operations in a prompt, satisfactory and acceptable manner. At the trial the chief criticisms directed against plaintiff’s work were that the cement and lime content in the mortar mixture was deficient and not up to specifications. This resulted in “one-half the strength requirement and less than one-fourth of *570 the waterprofing .requirement”. By buttressing and waterproofing the walls, these conditions could be remedied. Mr. Kennard Seitz, superintendent on the job, when testifying as to the non-necessity of removing the portion of wall erected by plaintiff, said: “If I thought there was. it would have come down.” He stated: “. . . the factor of safety, in this case I will say, will take care of it, but we didn’t want to use up all the factor of safety in one place.” He also added that there was no need “for buttressing the wall.”

In granting defendant’s motion for judgment n. o. v., the court said: “Even if its theory of the ease were held to be that its effort was to prove caprice at the trial, the action must fail for not having-been brought against the only persons — -the architects — whose.caprice would be actionable. Plaintiff alleges only that its. discharge was ‘wrongful’ and directed its evidence solely to the purpose of showing that it was not in fact an objectionable sub-contractor. Whether it. was or not, whether it ;was too slow or provided enough masons, and whether the defendant caused the trouble by. holding, up the work and delaying the plaintiff — these were all questions for the Architects to decide, and their decision was final. There was nothing for- the jury to pass upon.”

Plaintiff does not dispute the architect’s authority to dismiss the contractor, or sub-contractor,- but contends: This is not a suit where the. plaintiff is trying to recover from the contractor damages for being dismissed from the job, for loss of reputation, or for other causes for which there might be damage of a similar nature; but this suit is for the work and labor performed and accepted by the contractor. It is also contended that defendant’s failure to tear down the wall constructed by plaintiff constitutes an “acceptance” of the work.

The pivot of this case is that the architect’s decision as to the defendant’s work being satisfactory or -unsatisfactory is final. Defendant’s failure to tear down work *571 adjudged by the architect to be ««satisfactory does not constitute under the facts of this case an “acceptance” of that work by the defendant. In Payne v. Roberts, 214 Pa. 568, 579, 64 A. 86, Justice Stewaet speaking for this Court, said:. . If they, [the work and materials] met the approval of the architects, that was the end of the controversy .... That is to say, the architects on reference to themselves having determined. that they were not satisfied with the walls, on appeal it might be decided by others for them that they were satisfied, notwithstanding they themselves thought and said they were not. . . . Such a provision as lhis, requiring the work and materials to meet the satisfaction of the architects, is neither unusual nor unreasonable. . . , Notwithstanding all we have said, however, and wholly independent of the reference clause, the plaintiffs would still have the right to maintain an action on the contract, if they could show that the dissatisfaction expressed by the architects, was brought about through collusion between the latter and the owner, in order to disturb and defeat the plaintiff in the lawful .exercise of their work. ... we fail to see anything in it [the testimony] that would warrant even reasonable supposition of bad faith on the part of the architects.

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Bluebook (online)
57 A.2d 872, 358 Pa. 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-conti-co-inc-v-donovan-pa-1947.