Ritchey v. Sato

39 Haw. 500, 1952 Haw. LEXIS 24
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 1952
DocketNO. 2844.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 Haw. 500 (Ritchey v. Sato) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ritchey v. Sato, 39 Haw. 500, 1952 Haw. LEXIS 24 (haw 1952).

Opinion

*501 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

LE BARON, J.

This is an action to recover damages in the sum of $6,000 from a contractor for breach of contract to construct a divelling house for an owner in a workmanlike manner and with materials prescribed by the contract. It is brought by the plaintiff as the owner who paid the contract price of $7,600 in full to have the house so constructed. It is brought against the defendant as the contractor on the ground that he did not so construct the house.

Aside from issues of defective construction in breach of contract, the chief issues at trial were those of damages resulting from such defective construction as framed by the plaintiff’s complaint and the defendant’s answer of general denial. The issues of damages, so framed, were two in number. One issue involved damages to the plaintiff gauged by the amount of his “great inconvenience and expense * * in the amount of $1,000,” and the other, damages to the building measured by “the cost of correcting the defective construction * * in the amount of $5,000,” as alleged in both instances by the complaint. It is with this later issue of damages based on the cost of correction that this court is primarily concerned. Upon that issue the plaintiff, over the defendant’s objection, adduced evidence as to the cost of correction and the defendant then adduced evidence in refutation thereof. The amount of damages measured by cost of correction thus became an issue under the evidence as well as under the pleadings, The issue thereof was submitted to the jury over the defendant’s objection. The jury on such issue, as well as on the others, returned a general verdict in favor of the plaintiff and *502 assessed damages against the defendant in the sum of $2,000. In accordance therewith judgment was entered. The defendant prosecutes exceptions to this court.

The bill of exceptions contains fifty-three exceptions, upon forty-six of which the defendant expressly relies. He further relies upon thirty-seven alleged errors as set forth in a specification of errors. Those errors run to the admission and rejection of evidence, to the denial of motion for nonsuit, to the giving and refusal to give instructions and to the denial of motion for a new trial. Despite the voluminous presentation and argument upon them in an opening brief of one hundred and sixty-two pages, the specification presents but one question of law meriting consideration. That question challenges the propriety of applying one of two possibly applicable rules and favors that of applying the other in measuring damages resulting from defective construction to the plaintiff’s dwelling. It is whether loss or difference in property value between the dwelling as actually constructed and its value had it been properly constructed according to the contract, even though such loss was not within the accepted issues of damages under the pleadings and not a subject of the evidence of either party, is the proper measure of damages rather than cost of correction as an issue framed by the pleadings and a subject of the evidence of both parties.

The pertinent facts and circumstances with respect to the nature and extent of the defective construction, as established by substantial evidence, need only he briefly stated. The defective construction primarily pertained to the walls and roof and consisted of work done in an unworkmanlike manner and with an improper substitution of materials. It was mostly latent in nature. It was of such character that the house could not withstand the elements and as a result of them became' dangerous or useless for the purpose of a dwelling to the extent that its walls and *503 roof were of no practical value to shelter its occupants. This is evidenced by the effect of winds and rains in buffeting the house and in rendering it uninhabitable within a comparatively short time after completion. Nevertheless, there is further substantial evidence tending to prove that the defects of construction, even though extensive, were remediable in so far as their correction would not necessitate demolishment of the entire structure and, in the light of the uninhabitable condition to be remedied, would not constitute an unreasonable destruction of the work done. In correlation, such evidence tended to prove that the cost of correcting those defects, even though substantial, would not be grossly and unfairly disproportionate to the result of having an uninhabitable house made habitable in accordance with the contract.

Mr. Justice Cardozo, speaking for the Court of Appeals of New York in Jacob & Youngs v. Kent, 230 N. Y. 239, 129 N. E. 889, 891, laid down the rule of cost of correction or completion which has been adopted by the overwhelming great weight of authority and is peculiarly applicable to this case. He said: “It is true that in most cases the cost of replacement is the measure * * *. The owner is entitled to the money which will permit him to complete, unless the cost of completion is grossly and unfairly out of proportion to the good to be attained. When that is true, the measure is the difference in value.” Thus, only if the cost of correction is grossly and unfairly disproportionate to the good to be attained does the rule of difference or loss in property value become applicable at all. With this test in mind, the propriety of applying the measure of damages based on the cost of correction or completion is especially clear where correction or completion would not involve unreasonable destruction of the work done and the cost thereof would not be grossly disproportionate to the results to be obtained. (See 123 A. L. R. 520, par. II [a] for exhaustive *504 collection of authorities in cases of defective construction upon land of owner.)

The evidence of damages as to the cost of correction ranged in amount from the sum of $5,000 as alleged in the complaint to the zero point as answered by general denial. A comparable conflict existed in the evidence as to great inconvenience and expense alleged by the complaint, but denied by the answer, to be in the sum of $1,000. Those conflicts, however, Avere resolved by the general verdict in assessing damages in the sum of $2,000, Avhich thereby not only determined the issue of damages measured by cost of correction but that of damages measured by great inconvenience and expense. Nevertheless, .that sum will be deemed for the purposes of this opinion to represent only the cost of correction as an ultimate finding of the jury in measuring damages to the building, even though it constitutes in part the finding of the jury relating to the amount of the plaintiff’s great inconvenience and expense. But neither is such sum, so deemed, nor would the sum of $5,000 be grossly and unfairly out of proportion to the good to be attained in permitting the plaintiff to make his dwelling habitable, for which he had bargained and paid $7,600. Such being the case, the rule of loss in property value is patently inapplicable and evidence of that loss would have been immaterial had it been offered or adduced.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Haw. 500, 1952 Haw. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ritchey-v-sato-haw-1952.