Long Beach City School District v. Dodge

67 P. 499, 135 Cal. 401, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 815
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1902
DocketL.A. No. 975.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 67 P. 499 (Long Beach City School District v. Dodge) 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
Long Beach City School District v. Dodge, 67 P. 499, 135 Cal. 401, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 815 (Cal. 1902).

Opinion

HAYNES, C.

The defendants are sureties upon the bond of one Theodore Lutge, to secure the performance of a building contract made with the plaintiff for the erection of a high-school building. Lutge abandoned the work before completion, and this action is brought against said sureties to recover certain damages specified in the complaint. The cause was tried by the court without a jury, and findings were filed and judgment entered for the plaintiff, and defendants appeal therefrom and from an order denying a new trial.

Lutge's contract was made August 25, 1897. He was required to furnish all the material and labor, and complete the building, in accordance with the plans and specifications, on or before the first.day of February, 1898. The price to be paid was $11,269. Payments were to be made upon monthly estimates, made by the architect, of the value of the work done, ■ irrespective of materials on the ground and not put into the structures, based upon the contract price, and warrants were to be drawn by the board of trustees for seventy-five per cent of these estimates in favor of the contractor, and the remainder was to be paid upon final completion upon the architect’s cer *403 tificate thereof, and upon evidence that all material and labor had been paid for. The contract further provided that the contractor should pay ten dollars per day, as liquidated damages, for each day the building should remain incomplete after February 1, 1898.

Lutge commenced work under said contract, and continued in the performance of it until December 8, 1897, when he quit and abandoned the work, and refused and neglected to prosecute it further. The plaintiff; thereupon advertised for bids, and let a contract for the completion of the work to one Driskill, for the sum of $5,658.50.

The principal item contested in the court below related to plaintiff’s claim for an alleged excess paid under the original contract and the new contract together, over the original contract price; and the question whether such excess was in fact paid depended upon the question whether the assignment of a certain warrant for $912.18 issued to Lutge and by him assigned to the receiver of the Willamette Steam Mill Lumber and Manufacturing Company, before he abandoned the work, but which had not been paid at the time of abandonment, was valid. If it was, then it was a payment to Lutge, and if not, that amount was still in the hands of the trustees. The trustees promptly brought an action to enjoin the payment of said warrant to Lutge’s assignee, and a perpetual injunction was granted by the court below, but that judgment was reversed on appeal. (See Long Beach School District v. Lutge, 129 Cal. 409.) That case, however, had not been decided by this court at the time the present case was heard in the court below, and that court, after finding fully the facts above outlined, including the fact that the appeal in the former case had not been decided, found in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $501.50 and costs, “but without prejudice to plaintiff’s further recovering against these defendants, in case plaintiff is required to pay said sum of $912.18, or any part thereof, to Lutge or his assignees,” or to laborers or material-men; and the judgment was so entered. No question is made as to this provision in the judgment by either party.

The other grounds upon which plaintiff sought to recover were,—1. Damage resulting from delay in the completion of the building; and 2. Additional sums which it is alleged the *404 plaintiff was compelled to pay in addition to the contract cost, for correcting imperfections in Lutge’s work.

1. Lutge’s contract, as set out in the complaint, contained the following provision: “The said contractor shall pay ten dollars per day to the party of the first part as liquidated damages for every day the said building shall remain incomplete after the first day of February, 1898.” The complaint alleged that, by reason of the failure of said Lutge to perform his contract, “the plaintiff was not able to have the said building completed until the seventh day of April, 1898, and being sixty-six days after the time when the said Lutge contracted and agreed to have the said building finished, and the said delay was caused and made necessary wholly by the-failure of the said Lutge to perform his said contract; and plaintiff was damaged by the said delay in the sum of' $660.00.”

Upon the trial the plaintiff put to its witness the following question: “Do you know anything with respect to the effect upon the district from the failure to have a proper high-school building?” Defendants objected that it was irrelevant and immaterial and not within the issues. Another question of like character was put also, for the purpose of proving that the-damages could not be adequately ascertained, and that therefore the parties had a right to stipulate the amount of the damage. The objection was overruled, and the defendants-, excepted. Other testimony was received for the same purpose, and the court found the damages for delay, in accordance with that provision of the contract, in the sum of $280.'

The principal question presented is one of pleading. The plaintiff assumed, and, I think, correctly, that the damages; stipulated in this contract could not be recovered without evidence; that it would be impracticable or extremely difficult to fix the actual damage. As an illustration that such evidence is necessary, suppose the high school during this period occupied a leased building equally as well adapted to the purposes-, of the school as the one contracted to be erected: the damage-sustained by the district would obviously be the rent of the-building, and in such case stipulated damages could not con-. trol. Upon this subject the Civil Code contains the following provisions:—

“Sec. 1670. Every contract by which the amount of" *405 damage to be paid, or other compensation to be made, for a breach of an obligation, is determined in anticipation thereof, is to that extent void, except as expressly provided in the next section.
“Sec. 1671. The parties to a contract may agree therein upon an amount which shall be presumed to be the amount of damage sustained by a breach thereof, when, from the nature of the case, it would be impracticable or extremely difficult to fix the actual damage.”

The first of these sections having declared all contracts fixing liquidated damages in advance to be void, except as provided in the next section, it is clearly incumbent upon the party seeking to recover upon such agreement to show by averment and proof that his case is within the exception, for without an allegation bringing his case within the exception the complaint in that regard is insufficient, the presumption being, in the absence of such allegation, that such agreement is void. In Jack v. Sinsheimer, 125 Cal. 564, the action was to quiet title to land. The answer set up a lease in which the lessee agreed that upon his failure to pay rent he would vacate the premises upon thirty days’ notice, and would pay one thousand dollars ‘1 as settled and liquidated damages. ’ ’ A demurrer to this answer was sustained, and, defendant refusing to amend, the plaintiff had judgment, and upon appeal the judgment was affirmed. In

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Bluebook (online)
67 P. 499, 135 Cal. 401, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-beach-city-school-district-v-dodge-cal-1902.