Robinson & Wilson, Inc. v. Stone

35 Cal. App. 3d 396, 110 Cal. Rptr. 675
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 16, 1973
DocketCiv. 12359
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 35 Cal. App. 3d 396 (Robinson & Wilson, Inc. v. Stone) 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
Robinson & Wilson, Inc. v. Stone, 35 Cal. App. 3d 396, 110 Cal. Rptr. 675 (Cal. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

Opinion

TAMURA, J.

This litigation arises out of a dispute over the interpretation of a contract for the construction of a medical building. Plaintiffs (general contractors) brought two actions against defendants (five medical doctors); one to foreclose a mechanic’s lien and the other for damages for breach of contract. Defendants cross-complained against plaintiffs and their surety on the performance and materialman’s bond for damages for alleged breaches by plaintiffs. Following a month-long, consolidated, nonjury trial, the court found for defendants and judgment was entered that plaintiffs take nothing on their complaint and that defendants recover from plaintiffs and their surety $36,382 plus costs on the cross-complaint. Plaintiffs appeal from the judgment and defendants cross-appeal from an order denying their motion to amend their cross-complaint to include an allegation and prayer for recovery of attorneys’ fees.

The basic facts necessary to an understanding of the issues presented by this appeal may be summarized as follows:

The project was initially conceived by a real estate broker (Carl Davis) and several others. Defendants later acquired the property to be developed, retained Carl Davis as their agent, and hired architects to prepare preliminary plans for a medical building. After obtaining a conditional construction loan commitment, the architects prepared working plans for a building containing 17,580 square.feet of floor space. 1 The plans contained detailed *400 specifications for medical suites in 7,970 square feet of floor space to be occupied by defendants but contained no interior layout or design for the balance of 9,610 square feet which defendants intended to lease to other doctors.

In October 1966 the project was let out for bids and five contractors, including plaintiff Robinson & Wilson, Inc. (R & W, Inc.), submitted bids. The bids ranged from a high of $458,572 to a low of $429,918, R & W, Inc.’s bid being $436,440. In November 1966 all bids were rejected and the owners authorized Davis to negotiate with interested bidders to explore means of reducing costs. By letter dated November 23, 1966, plaintiff R & W, Inc. submitted a proposal based upon suggested modifications of the plans and performance on a cost plus basis with a guaranteed maximum price of $394,699. Following numerous meetings between Wilson (president of R & W, Inc.), Davis, and the owners, R & W, Inc. was ultimately selected to be the general contractor for the project. The architect prepared new plans incorporating the modifications agreed upon by the parties but the modified plans, like the first, contained no interior design or layout for the 9,160 square feet.

In December 1966 the owners’ attorney prepared a proposed contract on an AIA form under the terms of which R & W, Inc. would complete the work shown on the plans and specifications on a cost plus basis with a guaranteed maximum price. The lender objected to closing the loan escrow because' the contract made no provision for completion of the undesigned interior area of the building. Thereafter Davis prepared a draft of a proposed addition to the contract to meet the lender’s objection and took it to the owners’ attorney. The attorney suggested that Davis consult with the architects for more specific itemization of the work to be covered by the proposed amendment. According to the attorney, Davis returned shortly with a redraft, 2 he (attorney) made a few changes and added it to the proposed contract as article 20. The article reads: “Article 20. Completion of Undesigned Interiors. The total contract price includes the sum of $30,040 for the completion of the interior for portions of the building, approximately 9,610 square feet, for which work, plans and specifications will, in the future, be prepared by the architect for the tenants concerned. The Contractor will furnish all necessary labor and materials to complete and finish the said areas generally with the materials and to the standards fixed in the plans and specifications presently in existence for the other areas of the building and specifically may be required by the *401 said tenant’s architect and will, accordingly, furnish, construct, and install the following items: . . .” 3

Plaintiffs executed the contract on February 28, 1967. It provided for a guaranteed maximum cost of $394,806 4 and included article 20. In order to enable R & W, Inc. to obtain a performance and labor and material bond, plaintiff Barney Wilkerson Construction Co. executed the contract as a joint venturer with R & W, Inc.

At the time- the contract was executed, the owners had no tenants for the undesigned 9,610 square feet of the building. As work on the building progressed, the owners made commitments to various doctors to lease space in the undesigned area. Between May and July 1967, specific plans for several medical suites in the undesigned area for doctor tenants were forwarded to R & W, Inc. with a request for cost estimates. Following submission of cost estimates by R & W, Inc., a dispute arose over the contractor’s obligation under article 20. Basically, the contractor’s position was that under article 20 the $30,040 was intended to be an allowance against the ultimate cost of the work called for by the article and the owners or their tenants were obligated to pay all costs exceeding that amount. The owners on the other hand took the position that article 20 obligated the contractor to provide within the guaranteed maximum price all work and material necessary to complete minimum basic medical suites in the undesigned portion of the building, the work and material to be comparable in quantity and quality to that specified for the designed area except for “extras” or “embellishments” which were provided to meet the special needs of defendant owners. It was further the position of the owners that if the tenants of the undesigned area required any extras, they were to pay for them.

In August 1967 the owners transmitted to R & W, Inc. plans purporting to encompass only that work which they, the owners, conceived to be *402 required to be performed by plaintiffs under article 20 for $30,040. R & W, Inc. responded by offering to perform the work called for by those plans for $140,000 or less. In October 1967 the owners ordered plaintiffs off the job and thereafter had the undesigned portion completed to the specifications of their tenants through other contractors.

The court found that plaintiffs failed and refused to perform the work called for by article 20 of the contract and that the reasonable cost of that work was $84,844. 5 It aiso found that defendants were damaged by plaintiffs' breach in other particulars set forth below. 6

The court found that at all times during negotiations leading up to the *403

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Cal. App. 3d 396, 110 Cal. Rptr. 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-wilson-inc-v-stone-calctapp-1973.