Meyer & Holler v. Bowman

8 P.2d 936, 121 Cal. App. 112, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1185
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 19, 1932
DocketDocket No. 532.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 8 P.2d 936 (Meyer & Holler v. Bowman) 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
Meyer & Holler v. Bowman, 8 P.2d 936, 121 Cal. App. 112, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1185 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

action was brought to recover for services rendered in preparing preliminary plans and specifications for the erection of a building. In a first cause of action it is alleged that “the defendant employed the plaintiff to prepare the design, drawings, plans and specifications, and estimate the cost of the building hereinbefore referred to, and to do all the engineering, architectural and other work preliminary to and in connection with the construction of said building, and agreed to pay the .plaintiff for said work an amount equal to the actual cost thereof, plus fifty (50%) per cent, of said actual cost”. In a second cause of action the plaintiff seeks to recover the reasonable value of the same services. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case, including the proffer of certain evidence, a judgment of nonsuit was entered, from which this appeal is taken.

The first question presented is as to whether the appellant is barred from a recovery by the provisions of the act regulating the practice of architecture (Stats. 1901, p. 641), and the amendment thereto. The appellant is a corporation. Upon its letter-head appear the words “Architecture, Engineering and Construction”. It appears from the evidence that neither Meyer nor Holler, who are the principal officers of the corporation, were certified architects, and there is no evidence that any stockholder or officer connected with the corporation was a certified architect. In a bill of particulars which was furnished it appears that twenty-two persons worked 1288 hours in preparing the plans and specifications which are the basis of this action. Only one of these persons, a Mr. Wilkinson, was a certified architect and it appears that he worked only forty-three *114 hours of the 1288 hours devoted to the preparation of the plans and specifications here in question. It is conceded that the defendant was never informed that the plaintiff was not a certified architect nor that the work would be done by other than certified architects. While Mr. Wilkinson testified that he was in charge of the corporation’s architectural department and that the work was done under his supervision, the bill of particulars furnished shows that the principal expense was for drafting during certain weeks and that during a number of these weeks no charge was put in for Mr. Wilkinson’s time.

In Force v. Hart, 209 Cal. 600 [289 Pac. 828, 830], the court said: “Neither plaintiff nor Davis, who was employed by him to draw the plans and specifications, was certified as required by said act. The act provides that it shall be a misdemeanor for any person to practice architecture without first having obtained a certificate to so practice, ‘provided, that nothing in this act shall prevent any person from . . . furnishing plans or other data for buildings for other persons, provided the person so furnishing such plans or data shall fully inform the person for whom such plans or data are furnished that he, the person furnishing such plans, is not a certified architect’. There is no evidence in the record that defendant was informed that the plans were to be prepared by an unlicensed architect. A contract for architectural services to be performed in violation of the terms of the statute is void. (Binford v. Boyd, 178 Cal. 458 [174 Pac. 56]; People v. Allied Architects Assn., 201 Cal. 428 [257 Pac. 511]; Payne v. De Vaughan, 77 Cal. App. 399 [246 Pac. 1069]; Jones v. Wickstrom, 92 Cal. App. 292 [268 Pac. 449].)

In Binford v. Boyd, 178 Cal. 458 [174 Pac. 56, 58], the court said: “The act is effective upon corporations only to this extent, that if it undertakes to do business of that character, either the persons whom it engages therein must be certificated architects under this statute, or, when contracting for- plans and specifications for the erection of buildings for other persons, such persons must be informed that the plans and specifications will be prepared by someone who is not a certificated architect. The act does not prohibit a corporation from contracting to furnish to another person plans and specifications which are to be pre *115 pared by a third person who is a certificated architect. Nor is there anything in the object of the act, or "the evils to be removed thereby, which would raise the necessary implication that it was intended to prevent such practice. The main object of the act, so far as furnishing plans and specifications alone is involved, was to secure the erection of buildings from plans prepared by those who were sufficiently schooled in the profession to secure a license from the state board and who had complied with the state law by securing such license. But it was deemed best to qualify the absolute prohibition of the law by allowing the owners of property and persons who were not certificated architects to contract freely with each other for furnishing such plans and specifications, provided the person furnishing the same informed the owner that he was not a certificated architect. It is obvious that if such plans and' specifications have been prepared by certificated architects, there could be no object in which the public are concerned which should prevent the sale thereof by the person who prepared them, or by someone to whom he has sold them. The act as a whole shows that it was not intended to prevent the sale of plans prepared by a qualified person, but to prevent their preparation by an unqualified person, unless the purchaser was informed of that fact. The act does not forbid a corporation to employ certificated architects, have them prepare plans and specifications, and then furnish such plans and specifications to other persons.”

In Payne v. De Vaughan, 77 Cal. App. 399 [246 Pac. 1069, 1071], the court said: “Under this statute there is but one way in which a person who has no certificate can legally render such architectural services as were to be performed by respondent. Such person can ‘inform the person for whom such plans or data are furnished, that he, the person furnishing such plans, is not a certified architect’. Therefore, if it be shown that the respondent practiced architecture, the burden is clearly upon him to prove that he brought himself within the exception just quoted by giving the appellant the required information. It is not contended that the respondent did this. Under such circumstances the task of the court is a simple one. It is merely to decide whether or not the work contracted to be performed constituted practicing architecture.”

*116 Appellant, while admitting that respondent was not informed of the true situation, and also admitting that the work was in a very large part performed by unlicensed architects, seeks to avoid the effect of this statute through the claim that Wilkinson, a licensed architect, was in charge of their architectural department and that the work was done under his supervision. It is argued that it is not the intent of the statute to prohibit a licensed architect from employing unlicensed and even nonprofessional help for such details as lettering, blue-printing and the like.

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Bluebook (online)
8 P.2d 936, 121 Cal. App. 112, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyer-holler-v-bowman-calctapp-1932.