Placello v. Robbio

1 R.I. Dec. 178
CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 30, 1925
DocketNo.58288
StatusPublished

This text of 1 R.I. Dec. 178 (Placello v. Robbio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Placello v. Robbio, 1 R.I. Dec. 178 (R.I. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CAPOTOSTO, J.

This is an action in assumpsit brought by the plaintiff against the defendant for a balance due upon a building- contract and extras. The jury having- returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $2234.87, the defendant duly filed a motion for a new trial, alleging- the usual grounds. As a matter of fact the defendant’s only complaint is that the damages are excessive.

[179]*179The differences between, these parties should have been referred to an auditor and not to a jury, for the issue involved consists of an accounting between the contractor and the owner and nothing- more. While this fact was appreciated by the court during the c.ourse of the trial, yet the' real issue did not become clearly apparent until considerable progress had been made in the trial of the case.

On opposing the defendant’s motion, counsel for the plaintiff in substance argues that because the jury’s verdict was less than the entire amount claimed, showing that the jury must necessarily have disregarded some items in whole or in part, that, therefore, the court on a motion for a new trial should not disturb its finding- as to the amount due, for by doing so the court might again disallow in whole or in part the very item which the jury had already deducted from the original claim.

This argument is unsound in that if overlooks the court’s duty, on a motion for a new trial, to pass it& judgment upon the evidence and the weight thereof in view of -the jury’s verdict.

Tiziano and Pasco Placello, father and son, doing business as the Pla-cello Construction Company, entered into a contract on November 1, 1922, to build a dwelling house and stores for the defendant at S72 Cranston street, in the city of Providence, in accordance with certain plans and specifications, for the sum of $16,000. The plaintiff’s case rests entirely upon the testimony of the son, Pasco Pla-cello, the father, Tiziano Placello, not testifying. No books, vouchers, mem-oranda or notes of any kind1 were produced or used by this witness in presenting his claim. In many places his testimony bordered upon mere generalities, and in at least two instances, referring specifically to his demand for extra compensation for plastering ceiling of driveway and changing-floors (items 13 and 16 of bill of particulars), his claim was untenable that it was waived by counsel either during the trial or in argument.

The plaintiff claimed a balance on the contract of $4000', but- admitted that the defendant was entitled to a credit for -bills paid on plaintiff’s account in the sum of $2567.79, leaving an actual balance due him of $1432.21.

The defendant claimed a loss of rental of $984.49" for non-delivery of the premises in accordance with the terms of the contract. The plaintiff admitted his liability, but insisted that the amount should be $460. While the evidence on this point is conflicting, I believe that the plaintiff’s claim should be sustained. Deducting $460 from the admitted amount due plaintiff of $1432.21, we have a net balance of $972.21, which the defendant owed the plaintiff on the contract itself.

The plaintiff further seeks to recover a bill of extras amounting in all, according to his twenty items set out in his bill of particulars, to $2294.26. In considering this list of extras we will first. eliminate those items which were admitted, either at. the trial or in the course of argument, on his motion for a new trial, by the defendant or waived by the plaintiff. The defendant admits owing the plaintiff for one “balcony per contract in writing, $180.00,” Item 2; one ’’balcony without contract in writing, $150.00,” Item 3; “plate glass, $33.26,” Item 10; and does not seriously contest Item 6, “Sewer work done by Riceitelli, $170.00,” making a total of $533.26. The plaintiff waived claim to “plastering ceiling of driveway, $79.00'-,” Item 13, and to “Changing floors, $300'.'00,” Item 16, which amount to $379.-00. The remaining fourteen items on the plaintiff’s bill of particulars are contested by the defendant on the ground either that the work claimed is not an extra or that the charge is excessive. These items the plaintiff must prove by a [180]*180lair preponderance of credible testimony in order to establish his claim.

In passing- upon this part of the plaintiff’s claim the contract, plans and specifications must be read together. Moreover, the testimony of experts is that wherever the plans and specifications conflict or raise a question of interpretation, the requirements of the specifications control.

Item I. “Hardware installation, $185.00.” The plaintiff claims that he offered to do this work by contract for $50; that at the time he made this offer he knew he stood to lose $25 as the work would probably cost him $75; that the defendant did not accept this offer but preferred to instal the hardware himself by using- the plaintiff’s workmen, and that it took 135 hours at one dollar an hour to do the work. 1-Ie produced as a witness one Ulder-ico Decesario, a carpenter, who supported this claim in words but could not substantiate his testimony in any other way. The defendant claimed that he told the plaint'ff to instal the hardware for fifty dollars as suggested by the plaintiff. The experts for the defendant testified that in absence of any specific agreement, the cost of installation of hardware varied from 20 to 50 per cent, of the actual cost of the hardware itself. The hardware in this case cost about $174. In view of all the testimony I find that $87, or 50 per cent, of the cost of the hardware, is ample compensation.

Item 4. “Kawner Company, setting-in transoms, $174.00.”

The specifications call for “a complete store front frame as manufactured by the Kawner Co. as per detail furnished by the said company.” The plans did not indicate a metal setting for the transoms. The plaintiff maintains that the metal setting for the transoms is extra work. The defendant claims that the words, a complete store front frame,” includes the transoms and that the Kawner product calls for a metal setting for the transoms. I find that the plaintiff’s claim in this instance is not supported by the evidence. His claim of $174 is therefore disallowed.

Item 5. “Border in two dining-rooms and two parlor floors, $96.00.” The only dispute on this item is as to the amount. The plaintiff stated without going- into details that it cost $96.00. The defendant says that he had an understanding with the plaintiff to pay him for 40 hours at 90 cents an hour for this work. The plaintiff claimed throughout this case that he paid his carpenters $1 an hour. Fiore D’Anibrosio, testifying- for the defendant and whose cross-examination was waived, said that he put in the borders in question and that it took him 40 hours,. The plaintiff should be allowed $40 for this work.

Item 7. “Double walls for water-closets in store, $124:00.” This work concerned a change in the character of the partitions. The claim of the plaintiff is manifestly exaggerated. The defendant’s contention is that the plastering- was put in at the plaintiff’s own request and for his convenience, that the partitions as originally called for would in fact cost more, that at most the extra charge should be the value of six square yards of work at $1.50 a square yard in each closet. The weight of the evidence supports the defendant’s contention. The allowance should be $18 in favor of the plaintiff.

Item 8.

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Bluebook (online)
1 R.I. Dec. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/placello-v-robbio-risuperct-1925.