Mannix v. R. L. Radke Co.

136 P. 52, 166 Cal. 333, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 327
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1913
DocketS.F. No. 5908.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 136 P. 52 (Mannix v. R. L. Radke Co.) 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
Mannix v. R. L. Radke Co., 136 P. 52, 166 Cal. 333, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 327 (Cal. 1913).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This is an appeal by defendants from a judgment against them, and from an order denying their motion for a new trial in an action brought by plaintiff for a balance of $5,075 alleged to be due him for doing the lathing and plastering work in the construction of two certain wooden office and store buildings in San Francisco known respectively as the Delbert and Countryman buildings, which were erected during the summer and fall of the year 1906, almost immediately after the great conflagration of April of that year. The case was tried by a jury, which rendered a verdict in plaintiff’s favor against the corporation defendant for four thousand dollars, and also against each of the defendants, R. L. Radke and R. H. Countryman, for $1,333.33, being his one-third share as a stockholder of said corporation, of said four thousand dollars. Judgment was entered accordingly.

Plaintiff alleged in his complaint that “within two years last past” he “performed work and labor for, and furnished materials to said R. L. Radke Company in lathing and plastering two certain buildings . . . for a portion of which the said corporation agreed to pay plaintiff the sum of eleven thousand five hundred ($11,500) 'dollars; that for the balance of said work, no price was agreed on between them, but the reasonable value thereof is and was the sum of eleven hundred and fifty ($1150) dollars.” The complaint acknowledged credits in the sum of $6,350 in money, and $1,224.80 in laths sold and delivered to plaintiff by said corporation, and alleged a balance due plaintiff of $5,075.20. There was no other allegation of the ultimate fact of reasonable value of any of the work or materials than such as is contained in the foregoing. The verdict awarded plaintiff only $74.80 in excess of the amount that would have been due for the work and materials *335 for which defendants “agreed to pay” eleven thousand five hundred dollars, according to plaintiff’s claim, if there had been no claim for extra or additional work.

The only denial of the allegations of the complaint in regard to the work and materials contained in the answer is as follows: “and deny that plaintiff at any time ever made any agreement with the defendant corporation to do or perform for said defendant corporation any work or labor for, or to furnish any materials to, or did perform any work or labor or furnish any material to the defendant corporation, or agreed to pay for any work or labor or material of any kind, nature, character or description, and deny that any of said defendants is indebted to said plaintiff in any sum of money, or at all. ” As a separate answer and defense, defendants substantially admitted the allegations of the complaint as to the agreement to pay eleven thousand five hundred dollars for certain work and materials, going further into the details thereof as to the work agreed to be performed by plaintiff, and also alleged certain particulars wherein plaintiff had failed to comply with his contract, and a failure on plaintiff’s part to diligently prosecute the work, all to its damage in the sum of fifty thousand dollars. It denied the allegations as to extra work, and also denied that plaintiff had ever performed his contract. By way of cross-complaint, defendants alleged the contract between plaintiff and the corporation, by which plaintiff agreed to do the work of lathing and plastering said buildings for eleven thousand five hundred dollars, and his failure to properly or promptly perform his contract, to its damage in the sum of one hundred and one thousand five hundred dollars, for which sum judgment was asked.

The evidence showed without conflict that a portion of the work was undertaken on an express promise for the payment of said sum of eleven thousand five hundred dollars. The additional claim of one thousand one hundred and fifty dollars was for extra work not embraced in the original agreement. It was conceded by all parties on the trial that the contract for the work to be done for eleven thousand five hundred dollars was not wholly reduced to writing, or recorded as required by section 1183 of the Code of Civil Procedure, such section providing that “all such contracts shall be in writing when the amount agreed to be paid thereunder exceeds one thousand *336 dollars, and shall be subscribed by the parties thereto; and the said contract, or a memorandum thereof, . . . shall, before the work is commenced, be filed in the office of the county recorder of the county, or city and county, where the property is situated, . . . otherwise, they shall be wholly void, and no recovery shall be had thereon by either party thereto.” In fact, the only writing signed by anybody was a bid written on a card and signed by plaintiff, as follows:

“$11500.
Two coats of hair mortar
30c. per yard sand finish
27c per yard two coats of brown mortar
“Thomas Mannix.”

There was some dispute in the trial court on the argument on motion for a nonsuit as to the effect of this section where the controversy is one between' the owner and contractor only, no right of any third party being involved, and the matter is very fully discussed in the briefs of the parties in this court.

The decisions of this court in Laidlaw v. Marye, 133 Cal. 170, [65 Pac. 391], and Congdon v. Donahue, 160 Cal. 749, [118 Pac. 113], the latter of which was decided since the trial of this case, clearly enough declare the effect of the provisions of section 1183 of the Code of Civil Procedure, that we have quoted, as to the rights of the parties to a contract which has not been executed and filed in the manner prescribed thereby. It is unnecessary to discuss these decisions further than to say that in such event neither party may maintain any action based on such contract against the other; that the sole remedy of the contractor is an action for the reasonable value of the labor and materials furnished, which in no event must exceed the price fixed by the invalid contract, which must be taken as the utmost limit of his recovery; and that the contractor cannot recover at all without showing a substantial compliance with the terms of such attempted contract. The reasons for these conclusions are fully stated in the opinions in the cases last cited, and need not be repeated here.

It thus appears that the sole remedy of the plaintiff in this case, in so far as the labor and materials to be done and furnished for eleven thousand five hundred dollars are concerned, was an action for the reasonable value of the labor and materials furnished, in no event to exceed the price fixed, eleven *337 thousand five hundred dollars, which must he taken as the utmost limit of his recovery, and that he could not recover at all without showing a substantial compliance with the terms of the attempted contract.

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Bluebook (online)
136 P. 52, 166 Cal. 333, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mannix-v-r-l-radke-co-cal-1913.