Monahan v. Fitzgerald

45 N.E. 1013, 164 Ill. 525
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 45 N.E. 1013 (Monahan v. Fitzgerald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monahan v. Fitzgerald, 45 N.E. 1013, 164 Ill. 525 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Appellate Court affirming a decree of the circuit court of Cook county dismissing appellants’ bill for want of equity, filed to establish a mechanic’s lien for lathing and plastering an apartment building. The bill alleged full performance by appellants according to the contract, specifications and directions. The defense was, that the work and materials were so defective that a large portion of the plaster fell off of the ceilings within a few weeks after it was put on, and that the cost of repairs exceeded the amount claimed by the ajipellants to be due under the contract. It is not disputed by appellants that large portions of the plaster fell from the ceilings of the different flats into which the building was divided, soon after the work was completed and the building heated, as shown by appellee, but their contention is that such falling was not due to any defect in their work or materials, but to other causes over which they had no control, such as the settling of the building, the shrinkage of lumber, the exposure to weather by leaving the building open, and the sagging of joists caused by heavy materials to deaden sound being placed between the floors and ceilings. The master found, in substance, that the falling of plaster was due to the fact that the plaster was not sufficiently keyed to hold it in place, and that this defect in the work arose from the use of laths of too great width, the failure to leave sufficient space between them and to use sufficient force in applying the material, so as to force the plaster through and form a proper key.

The contract and specifications provided in detail for a first-class job of plastering and for the use of first-class materials. It was provided, among other things, as follows: “Mortar shall be * * * applied so that the key will be solidly filled, and work to be gauged with plaster paris, so as to allow the work to set up quickly. * * * Entire job to be carefully done, so as to leave in perfect order when finished. The entire work is to be done under the immediate supervision of the superintendent, and any work done without his instruction or not as specified, and also all work done badly or injured by the weather, must be taken out and done over. All patching and re-patching to be done, wherever found necessary, without extra charge.” Payments were to be made upon certificates of the architect.

It appears that in November, 1893, and before the work was completed, Warren, the architect and superintendent, went to Europe and did not return until the following March. He had, however, employed one In-graham to act as superintendent, who looked after the work for him as it progressed, both before and after his departure. Appellee also employed this superintendent to perform other duties about.the building for him, and there is evidence tending to show that appellee agreed with Warren that Ingraham should act as superintendent in Warren’s absence. The architect left with his stenographer certain certificates signed in blank, with directions to deliver them on agreement of the parties. Before his return the work was completed, but some of the plaster had fallen, and upon the promise of appellants to patch up and finish work of this character, In-graham, who was the acting superintendent, directed the issuing of the architect’s certificates to appellants, and they were filled up and delivered accordingly. After appellants received these certificates and had repaired the work where the plaster had fallen before the receipt of the certificates, further and larger quantities of the plaster fell from the ceilings of a large number of the rooms and hallways of the house, damaging the "building and requiring great additional expense in repairs. These repairs appellants refused to make, alleging that the fault was not in their work but in the work of others, as above stated. The acting superintendent undertook to recall and cancel the certificates, but appellants refused to surrender them, and upon appellee’s refusal to pay, filed their bill to, establish their lien.

The master found that the certificates were not binding on appellee, for the reason that they were not issued in accordance with the contract; that the contract required that the architect must himself determine whether the work had been properly done before issuing the certificates, and that he could- not delegate this duty to another, bnt found further, that appellants were not bound to wait until the architect should return from his trip abroad, and that the architect’s certificate as a prerequisite to payment was waived by his absence. He further found that said Ingraham daily inspected the work as it progressed, and that the defective manner in which it was done was waived by his failure to object, and by his apparent acquiescence in the manner in which appellants were performing the contract on their part, and recommended a decree allowing the complainants their demands. Both parties excepted to the master’s report so far as its findings were adverse to them, respectively, and the circuit court overruled complainants’ exceptions and sustained all but two of those filed by defendant, and held complainants were not entitled to a decree, and dismissed the bill for want of equity.

A great volume of evidence was taken on the different phases of the case, and while we have examined and considered it all, so far as counsel have presented it to us by their abstracts and - arguments, it will not be necessary to refer to it at any considerable length in the disposition of the case. Much of the testimony related to the alleged inferior material used in making the mortar, but as the evidence abundantly shows, and the master found, that the plaster fell because it was insecurely and insufficiently keyed, we do not regard it important to determine whether the exceptions to the master’s findings that the material was not defective should have been sustained or not. The chancellor sustained the finding of the master that because of the excessive width of the laths, of the manner in which they were put on, and of the lack of sufficient force in applying the plaster, no sufficient key was formed to hold the plaster in place, and that in that respect the contract was not complied with. This finding is in accordance with the prepondera anee of the evidence, and must be sustained.

We agree that the certificates issued were not in accordance with the contract, and were invalid; and even if it be conceded that appellants were not bound to wait for the return of the architect, but that by his absence the necessity of first procuring his certificate was waived, still appellants were not entitled to a decree without proving compliance on their part with the contract in other respects. If the plaster was so improperly put on that it could not sustain its own weight, but fell from the ceilings almost before it was thoroughly dry, the mere fact that the superintendent did not object to the work as it progressed would not amount to a waiver of the provisions of the contract relating to the character of the work and the manner in which it should be done. Appellants were bound to know of such a fatal defect in their work and of their departure therein from the contract. If the superintendent also knew of it as it was being done, he was a party to the fraud; and if he did not know of it, but it was concealed from him, there was no approval by him by acquiescence.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.E. 1013, 164 Ill. 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monahan-v-fitzgerald-ill-1897.