Sauer v. School District

90 A. 150, 243 Pa. 294, 1914 Pa. LEXIS 617
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 5, 1914
DocketAppeal, No. 66
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 90 A. 150 (Sauer v. School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sauer v. School District, 90 A. 150, 243 Pa. 294, 1914 Pa. LEXIS 617 (Pa. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Mestrezat,

This is an action of assumpsit to recover on a written agreement for services rendered by an architect to the defendant school district in preparing plans and superintending the construction of a school building. An affidavit of defense was filed and a plea was entered. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. The defendant has appealed.

The plaintiff declared on an article of agreement, dated February 23, 1907, by which it appears that he was employed to render full professional services in the erection of a new school building for the borough, his [298]*298duties including attendance at meetings of the school board, the preparation of preliminary sketches for “a suitable school building” and all working drawings after approval of the sketches, the receiving of estimates and the execution of contracts, and personal superintendence of the erection of the building. The school district was to pay him as compensation for his services “the sums equal to five per cent, of the entire cost of said building.” The statement avers that after the contractors had partially erected the building, the defendant without any fault, of plaintiff, stopped the work and entirely abandoned the erection of the building, that the plaintiff performed the services required of him by the agreement until the work was abandoned, and that he has been ready to continue the work of superintending the construction of the building, but defendant refused to permit plaintiff to complete his service. He claimed five per cent, of the completed cost of the building less $3,000 paid on account of his services.

The defendant school district filed an elaborate affidavit of defense denying its liability, on the contract and setting up, inter alia, that before the building was completed an injunction was issued restraining the construction of the building on the ground that the contract for its construction was null and void as it involved an increase of the indebtedness of the school district to an amount exceeding two per cent, of the assessed valuation of the property without the assent of the electors; that before plaintiff rendered any services he had full knowledge that the district had no power to enter into the contract; and that both plaintiff and the contractor for the superstructure of the building had notice before any work was done under the contract for the superstructure, of such lack of authority in the district.

By leave of court, the plaintiff amended his statement whereby he waived his claim for that part of his services called for by the contract which was not performed, and claimed only that, part of the entire compensation which [299]*299.was represented by the service's actually performed up to the time defendant dispensed with his services.

At the trial the plaintiff testified, and he was uncontradicted, that when the contract was signed the board had not determined upon the size or kind of building, that nothing was said in his conferences with the board as to what the building would cost, and that he did not familiarize himself with the financial standing of the board. He testified at length to the performance of his duties under the contract, extending from the time of his employment down to the. time when work was stopped by the injunction; that after the injunction was served upon the board, they notified him that his services were no longer required; and that he had done everything required of him up to that time and all that remained was the superintendence of the part of the superstructure not yet completed. He testified and was corroborated by the testimony of several expert witnesses that the proportion of the work which had been done was about seven-eighths of the entire work and the compensation for the uncompleted portion of the work was worth, under his contract, one per cent, of the cost of the uncompleted portion of the building.

It appears from the testimony that a contract for the foundation work was awarded to C. K. Barnhart under which work was begun in August, 1907, and completed about the middle of November of that year; and that the contract for the superstructure was awarded June 9, 1908, after the reception of bids, to H. L. Kreusler, who did about $85,000 worth of work, beginning in July, 1908, and continuing until stopped by the injunction in September of that year. The debt incurred by this contract increased the indebtedness of the school district beyond the constitutional limit.

The defendant introduced evidence to show negligence and improper performance by plaintiff, but these issues aré not involved in this appeal. It also put in evidence the record of the equity case wherein the injunction [300]*300was granted restraining the further execution of the work on the ground that the agreement with the contractor was void because at the time when it was made its amount brought the indebtedness of the district above the constitutional limit.

The appellant suggests that the assignments of error raise three questions: (1) Can there be a recovery of any amount; (2) if there can be, should the amendment to the statement have been allowed; (3) was the method of proving the amount of the claim the correct one? The last question is not argued in the printed brief and the second is only referred to in the suggestion that the amended statement had the effect of making the action one on a quantum meruit instead of on an express contract, thereby changing the cause of action declared on in the original statement. This is clearly a misapprehension on the part of the appellant as to the change made in the appellee’s claim by the amended statement. It did not change the action to one on a quantum meruit. The original statement declared on a written contract, and claimed a commission on the entire cost of the building. The amendment reduced the amount of the claim to that part of the entire compensation which was represented by the services actually performed by the plaintiff up to the timé defendant dispensed with his services. The contract continued to be the foundation of the action and, assuming it to be legal, the plaintiff was entitled to recover. The cause of action was correctly stated in the original statement, and the amendment enabled the plaintiff to state the proper measure of damages. Where a party has partly performed an entire contract and is prevented from completing performance by the act of the other party or by the law, he may recover in an action on the contract, and the measure of his damages is the contract price less the cost of completing the work: Harlow v. Beaver Falls Boro., 188 Pa. 263. We think the amendment did not change the cause of action and was properly allowed.

[301]*301The important and controlling question in the case is whether there can be a recovery of any amount. In other words, was the contract between the plaintiff and defendant district a valid one, and enforceable at law? The defendant denies there can be a recovery and contends that the plaintiff’s agreement was illegal and void because it was an entire contract and depended upon contracts to be made subsequently to it for the amount of work to be done in the construction of the building, and that it was so dependent on and collateral to the illegal contract with Kreusler for the construction of the superstructure that it was itself void.

The plaintiff’s contract with the board was one which it was authorized to make and was clearly legal when it was executed.

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Bluebook (online)
90 A. 150, 243 Pa. 294, 1914 Pa. LEXIS 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sauer-v-school-district-pa-1914.