Lunden v. County of Los Angeles

233 Cal. App. 2d 811, 43 Cal. Rptr. 849, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1421
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 26, 1965
DocketCiv. 28474
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 233 Cal. App. 2d 811 (Lunden v. County of Los Angeles) 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
Lunden v. County of Los Angeles, 233 Cal. App. 2d 811, 43 Cal. Rptr. 849, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1421 (Cal. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

HERNDON, J.

Defendant, the County of Los Angeles, appeals from the judgment entered against it following a non- *813 jury trial of an action brought by respondent to recover the reasonable value of the portion of the architectural services which he had rendered in conformity with the provisions of a written contract and which remained uncompensated at the time said contract was cancelled by the appellant.

Since the facts are undisputed, the issue presented for our determination is a legal question which can be stated in relatively simple terms. All but one of appellant’s assignments of error are predicated upon its interpretation of a rather incomplete and poorly adapted form of contract—an interpretation which the trial court rejected and which we also find unacceptable.

Appellant does not deny that respondent, in good faith, actually performed valuable and unrewarded services, nor does it argue that the judgment now under review is in any real sense inequitable or unjust. The county’s principal contention is that the contract necessarily must be so construed as to bring into operation section 32 of article IV of the state Constitution 1 and section 23006 of the Government Code. 2 As indicated, appellant argues that said statutory and constitutional provisions are operative and that their effect is to prohibit any payment for the services in question.

We shall undertake now to develop the relevant facts and to state as clearly as we can the reasons which properly impelled the trial court to reject appellant’s arguments and to render the judgment which we are about to affirm.

On March 28, 1956, appellant entered into an -agreement with respondent to obtain the benefit of his architectural services in connection with the development of an air conditioning plant for the Los Angeles County General Hospital. The agreement was prepared by the county counsel by means of typewritten insertions upon the printed form of a "standard” architectural contract.

*814 In the usual or ordinary architectural agreement, for which the standard form was designed, the general scope and nature of the project presumably are rather definitely fixed in advance. It is therefore possible to break down the architect’s performance into five successive stages and to provide for installment payments upon the completion of each stage with the assurance that these installments will be roughly equivalent to the percentage of the services completed from time to time.

In the instant case, however, the ultimate extent or scope of the contemplated project was undetermined at the time the agreement was entered into, and to a large degree, respondent’s services were intended to be, and actually were, directed to the purpose of assisting the county in developing and determining what the general scope of the project should be. The contract itself provided as follows:

“ [T]he County intends to construct a Central Air-Conditioning Compressor Plant, located at the Los Angeles County General Hospital, 1200 North State Street, Los Angeles, California, for all existing and future requirements of said hospital, as determined by the Chief Administrative Officer of the County, based on a Comprehensive Engineering and Economic Analysis Report to be prepared by the Architect. Said report shall contain sufficient detailed drawings and estimates for the accurate determination of initial cost, operating cost, and additional construction requirements as the Los Angeles County General Hospital develops. The drawings and details shall include distribution system, project location, and plant layout; and this facility shall provide all necessary appurtenant work for a completely operable plant; all hereinafter referred to as the project.” (Italics added.)

By the terms of the agreement, the 1 ‘ tentative estimate of construction cost” was stated to be $1,000,000, but it is undisputed that this round figure was used merely to give substance to the initial agreement and bore no particular relationship to the eventual construction cost which would be determinable only after the general scope of the project had been fixed by the board, in part, upon the basis of estimates to be developed as products of the above described services to be rendered by respondent. In this connection, the agreement provided:

“The General Scope of the Project shall be defined by the Board, by resolution in accordance with the Schematic Plans approved by the Board, and said general scope as thus defined shall automatically become a part of this contract as though *815 fully set forth herein, or it may be defined by written amendment to this contract. In the event the County desires to increase the scope of the work and the tentative estimate of the construction cost, then the Board may, by resolution, authorize such increase in the scope of the work and tentative estimate of construction cost.”

Respondent was to receive as compensation 6% per cent of the eventual tentative estimate of construction cost. The agreement also contained a provision relating to “Extra Services,” but this section had no direct applicability in the instant case since it did not relate to the services to be performed by the architect in order to assist the county in determining the actual scope of the work desired, and, until this had been done, there obviously would be nothing to which the term “extra,” as used in this section, could rationally be referred.

By December 28, 1956, respondent had submitted to appellant the schematic plans which marked the first stage in the development of a standard architectural project and therefore entitled him to the first installment payment provided by contract which purported to deal with such a standard development. At the same time respondent also submitted an initial Engineering and Economic Report as required of him by the contract. On October 1, 1957, the board ordered the adoption of the following recommendations:

‘ ‘ 1. That your Board approve the attached schematic plans and specifications and Engineering and Economic Report for the Central Air Conditioning Compressor Plant at Los Angeles County General Hospital, as prepared by Architects Lunden, Hayward & O’Connor, 548 South Spring Street, Los Angeles -13.
“2. That your Board instruct the County Engineer and the architects to determine the site for the proposed Plant and submit this information to the Board of Supervisors for approval.
“3. That the County Engineer be instructed to expedite preparation and submit to the Chief Administrative Officer the necessary resolution concerning the ‘General Scope of the Project’ as required by Article XV of the architectural services agreement.
“4. That said General Scope of the Project shall revise the tentative estimated cost of construction to be $2,128,931.
“5. That the Clerk of the Board be instructed to inform

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 Cal. App. 2d 811, 43 Cal. Rptr. 849, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lunden-v-county-of-los-angeles-calctapp-1965.