Pence v. Dennie

182 P. 980, 41 Cal. App. 428, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 368
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 7, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2895.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 182 P. 980 (Pence v. Dennie) 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
Pence v. Dennie, 182 P. 980, 41 Cal. App. 428, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 368 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

SLOANE, J.

The plaintiff, a contractor and builder, brought this action to recover from the defendant an alleged balance of $1,066.84 on a building contract totaling $46,750, together with $1,282.16 for extras alleged to have been furnished at the request of defendant, and four hundred dollars claimed as a bonus under the contract, making a total for which judgment was demanded of $2,759.

The defendant, by answer and counterclaim, admitted the original contract price of $46,750, but alleges payment of all but $90.35, denies liability for four hundred dollars bonus, or any part thereof, and claims damages against plaintiff of $450 for delay in completing contract, $1,523 for items of material and labor not furnished as called for by the contract, and $1,685.15 for defective work and materials, and asks judgment on his counterclaim for $3,427.69.

On the trial of the case the court found that the original contract price due the' plaintiff was $46,750, and that he was entitled to extras in the sum of $205, and no more, and disallowed his claim of four hundred dollars as a bonus. The court further found that the defendant has paid on the contract $45,969.36, thus leaving a credit due the plaintiff of $985.64. As against this credit to the plaintiff the court found for defendant on his answer and counterclaim, $450 damages for delay in completing the contract, $25 insurance due from plaintiff, $1,349.70 for labor and material omitted in the contract work, and $1,553.68 damages for defective work and materials; but in its conclusions of law the court omits the item .of $450, thus leaving a balance due defendant of $1,942.74, after offsetting plaintiff’s claim. The judgment, however, was that neither plaintiff nor defendant recover on the respective claims, *430 but that defendant have judgment for costs in the sum of $39.40. • •

The result of the trial was that the court found, after crediting defendant’s payments and allowing the $205 extras, a balance due plaintiff amounting to about one thousand dollars, and found that the defendant was entitled to approximately three thousand dollars by way of offset. It is apparent, therefore, that there must on. this appeal be found an enlargement of plaintiff’s credits or reduction! of defendant’s offsets, or both, aggregating the., sum of two thousand dollars, before it will appear that the plaintiff is prejudiced by this judgment.

The plaintiff has appealed from the judgment in favor of defendant and from an order of the court denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. As the proceedings have tyeen taken since the amendment abolishing appeal on denial of motion for new trial, the matter comes up on the appeal from judgment alone, and is presented under the alternative method on the typewritten transcript of the record in ¡the trial court.

The only matter to be considered is the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings of the court as to the various items of claim and counterclaim. It has been no slight task to sift out the testimony, which is more voluminous than illuminating in many of the details, in order to ascertain if in each particular there is some substantial weight of evidence supporting the conclusions reached by the court as to the facts. . - ¡

The basis of the action purports to be a written contract for the construction of the building in question, with plans and specifications referred to as being annexed to the contract and filed therewith in the office of the county recorder. No plans and specifications were so attached or filed in the recorder’s office, but plans and specifications were produced and admitted in evidence which it was shown were accepted and acted on by the parties to the contract throughout the construction of the building. The contract itself is a matter of some uncertainty and much dispute between the parties as to some of its items. But we are satisfied that the court was justified in its findings as to the contract as actually agreed upon and executed. ¡

*431 The original agreement was that the building was to be constructed in accordance with plans and specifications to be prepared, for a total sum of $46,750. Work was begun, and certain excavation work and foundation completed, at a valuation of two thousand dollars. This was either before the contract was executed, or there was a second contract made of date July 17, 1913, after the foundation work was completed. This contract recites an agreed price of $44,750, and makes no provision for the foundation work, which had already been done and paid for, the aggregate making up the $46,750. It also fixes the time in which the work was to be completed as 92 working days, as against 120, and 105 days shown by other copies of contracts relied upon by plaintiff. There is no substantial dispute as to what the terms of the contract actually were, however, excepting as to the time in which the work was to be completed, and as to which party should pay the insurance during the construction work. In these particulars the plaintiff claims the contract was changed after its execution, in the copy produced by defendant, reducing materially the period in which the building was to be finished, and obligating the contractor to pay the insurance (which amounted to only $25). The defendant testified that these alterations were agreed to and made before the contract in' question was executed, and the court accepted in evidence, as the true contract, the one claimed to be correct by the defendant. As the circumstances tend to corroborate the defendant’s explanation of the changes, the court was justified in its ruling.

It is this difference in the period of completion of the work that determines the question as to whether plaintiff was entitled to a bonus for completing the work ahead of time or was liable in damages for the failure to complete the work as stipulated, and it was, we think, justifiably determined in favor of defendant, thereby eliminating plaintiff’s four hundred dollar claim for a bonus.

The next item of plaintiff’s claim also arises on a construction of the provisions of the contract and specifications, and the law applicable thereto. The court found that the plaintiff had actually furnished in the construction of the building, as alleged in his complaint, extras of the value of $1,282.16, but that the same were unauthorized under the *432 terms of the contract. The specifications adopted as part of the contract contain the following provisions: “No extras shall be allowed without written order from the architect. . . . Should any changes, additions or omissions in the work provided for in this contract be ordered, the contractor shall not be authorized to comply with such order without previously obtaining written authority therefor from the owner, and the contract shall not be deemed altered thereby, either as to time when the work shall be completed, ' contract price or work -to be done, excepting as expressly stated in such authority.” There is no pretense that either the architect or the owner ordered or authorized any of these extras in writing, or authorized them expressly in any way, excepting as to the item of $205, which the defendant admitted to having orally ordered, and which he consented to allow on plaintiff’s claim, and which has been allowed by the court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 P. 980, 41 Cal. App. 428, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pence-v-dennie-calctapp-1919.