Mitchell v. Spurrier Lumber Co.

1912 OK 394, 124 P. 10, 31 Okla. 834, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 160
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 14, 1912
Docket889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1912 OK 394 (Mitchell v. Spurrier Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Spurrier Lumber Co., 1912 OK 394, 124 P. 10, 31 Okla. 834, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 160 (Okla. 1912).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, J.

This proceeding in error is to review a judgment wherein the defendant in error, as plaintiff, sued the plaintiff in error, as defendant, for the construction and completion of a certain dwelling house in the city of Pawhuska, the plans and specifications mutually agreed upon by said plaintiff and defendant alleged to have been in part written and in part in parol. Plaintiff declared in two counts: (1) For a balance on contract in the sum of $612.85, with interest thereon from September 4, 1906, at the rate of 7 per centum per annum; and (2) for $387 damages on account of wrongful interference on the paid of defendant. Defendant answered, admitting entering into a written contract with the plaintiff for the construction of said house, but denied that any of the plans and specifications rested in parol. Fie further pleaded a counterclaim in a sum' equal to the amount claimed by plaintiff. Plaintiff replied, and on the issues joined the cause was submitted to a jury and a verdict returned in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $612.85, with interest at the rate of 7 per centum per annum from September 24, 1906. In due time motion for a new trial was filed by the *836 defendant. It being overruled, the matter is now properly, before this court for review.

Instruction No. 21, given by the court at the request of defendant in error, to which plaintiff in error excepted, is as follows:

“You are further instructed that if you find from the evidence that plans, specifications, and detail drawings were furnished by the defendant, according to which the house mentioned in evidence was to be constructed by the plaintiff, and that such plans, specifications, and detail drawings were faulty and inconsistent, and it was not possible to construct a part or parts of the house according to the same, then, where such plans, specifications, and detail drawings were inconsistent, it was the duty of the plaintiff to reconcile or harmonize such faults or inconsistencies in a practical, workmanlike manner, so as to arrive at the fair and reasonable intention of the same, and to construct such house accordingly.”

In the original opinion in this case, we declined to review the action of the trial court in refusing this instruction, on account of rule 25 (20 Okla. xii, 95 Pac. viii) of this court, and stated in the opinion that, “where a party complains of instructions given or refused, he shall set out in totidem verbis in his brief separately the portion to which he objects or may save exceptions.”

The assignment of error relative to said instruction is as follows:

“Said court erred in giving instruction No. 21 for the defendant in error and excepted to by the plaintiff in error (record, p. 266), in that it instructed the jury that, if such plans, specifications, and detail drawings were faulty and inconsistent, and it was not possible to construct a part or parts of the house according to the same, then, where such plans, specifications, and detail drawings were inconsistent, it was the duty of the plaintiff to reconcile or harmonize such faults or inconsistences in a practical, workmanlike manner, so as to arrive at the fair and reasonable intention of the same, and to construct such house accordingly.”

In the petition for rehearing, the attention of the court is called to the fact that said instruction is set out in totidem verbis on page 108 of the abstract and brief. The plaintiff in error filed a voluminous abstract and brief in this case, containing 116 *837 pages. Had he directed the attention of the court to the fact that said instruction was so set out in such abstract and brief, rather than the record, the same would have been considered on the former hearing.

Whilst the plaintiff in error has not complied with the rule to such an extent as to facilitate the work of the court, yet we are convinced that he has in good faith attempted to comply with this rule, and we have therefore decided to consider this assignment.

In Perry v. Quackenbush, 105 Cal. 299, 38 Pac. 740, it is said:

“Nor does the finding that the difference between the value of the house as actually constructed and as it should have been was only $350 tend to show that the contract had been substantially performed. That might have been true, though the structure were totally unlike the house contracted for. The owner has a right to have built the structure as he contracted for, and not another. Even his caprices, if expressed in the contract, must be complied with, even though they would not have added to the value of the structure, or may have lessened its value. It is only when this plan has been substantially embodied in the work that the court can have 'an occasion to estimate the ■deficiencies. The authorities are very clear upon this point. There are a variety of cases to which the so-called modern equitable rule has been applied. One is where the contractor fails to complete the structure. In such case it is said, if the contractor lias done or furnished anything of which the owner avails himself, such owner may be made to pay the value of it, after deducting all damages resulting from the failure of the contractor. In such case it has been sometimes said that it does not matter why the contractor failed to perform. Another case is where there is a defect that can be remedied. Here the contractor may recover the contract price, less damages caused by the failure, including costs of supplying the deficiency. Another case is where the contractor has endeavored, in good faith, to perform his contract, and has substantially performed, but there are some unimportant defects arising through accident or inadvertence. Here,__ the defects not being such as defeat or materially change the design embodied in the contract, the contractor may recover, less damages occasioned by the failure. In such case there must be a substantial performance of every material covenant in the *838 contract, and the failure must not have resulted from design or bad faith; and whether these facts exist is a matter to be determined by the jury, or the court sitting as a jury. Substantial, performance'must be found. The rule is laid down in Kelly v. Bradford, 33 Vt. 35. The court says: ‘The party must have-intended, in good faith, to comply with the terms of the contract. The spirit of the contract must be faithfully 'observed, though the very letter of it fail. Flence a voluntary abandonment of the-agreement, or a willful departure from its stipulations, are not allowed. Still, if the contract is substantially kept, a failure in minor particulars, though plainly ascertainable, and patent to-observation, if consistent with good faith, if not wanton or willful,, will not prevent a recovery upon the quantum meruit.’ In Hayward v. Leonard, 7 Pick. [Mass.] 181 [19 Am. Dec. 268], it is said: ‘When we speak of the law allowing the party to recover on a quantum meruit or quantum valebat, where there is a special contract, we mean to confine ourselves to cases in which there is an honest intention to go by the contract and a substantive execution of it.’ In Elliott v. Caldwell, 43 Minn. 357, 45 N. W. 845 [9 L. R. A.

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1912 OK 394, 124 P. 10, 31 Okla. 834, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-spurrier-lumber-co-okla-1912.