Shopping Center Management Co. v. Rupp

343 P.2d 877, 54 Wash. 2d 624, 1959 Wash. LEXIS 443
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1959
Docket34835
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 343 P.2d 877 (Shopping Center Management Co. v. Rupp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shopping Center Management Co. v. Rupp, 343 P.2d 877, 54 Wash. 2d 624, 1959 Wash. LEXIS 443 (Wash. 1959).

Opinion

Donworth, J.

The three plaintiff corporations named in the caption jointly owned a parcel of land situated on highway 99 in southern King county in an area known as Federal Way. In June, 1955, they commenced the construction of a shopping center on this land and entered into a contract with defendant Rupp, who was a plumbing and heating contractor, to install a complete storm drainage system, a large septic tank and drain field on the premises for $25,830. The defendant General Casualty Company of America, as surety, executed a contractor’s bond along with defendant Rupp, as principal, insuring the faithful performance of the contract by him.

The issue in this case involves the liability of defendants under a guaranty clause in the contract for the alleged failure of two automatic submersible sewage pumps (described in detail in the contract) to function properly after they were installed in the septic tank. As a part of the work, the contractor agreed to furnish and install these pumps for the purpose of disposing of the effluent from the septic tank by pumping it to the drain field, where it was planned to have it seep into the ground.

The specifications described the pumps as Weil model SE 830 or an approved equal. The contractor ordered the pumps through Seattle Plumbing Supply Company, who ascertained from Weil’s manufacturer’s representative that model 830 was not available. Thereupon model 860 was substituted. After the contract was executed, the contractor suggested to the architect that the starting devices be installed outside the septic tank because the manufacturer had stated that this should be done, but the proposed change was not permitted (on the theory that it would be impractical to do so), and the equipment was installed according to the plans.

*626 The parties stipulated that the effective date when the guaranty clause in the contract became operative (for one year) was December, 1955. The difficulties encountered in the opereation of the pumps are described below in the trial court’s oral opinion.

The case was tried to the court, sitting without a jury, and resulted in a judgment for the plaintiffs (based on findings of fact and conclusions of law) in the sum of $1,445. Of this sum, $945 represented the cost of the pumps, and the balance ($500) was allowed as damages caused plaintiffs by reason of the failure of the pumps to function properly. The judgment also provided that plaintiffs should permit, defendants to remove the pumps and equipment from the-premises within thirty days after satisfaction of the money-judgment. Defendants have appealed from this judgment..

The contractor (M. F. Rupp) will be referred to as though he were the sole appellant, and respondents will be designated as the owner.

At the close of the trial, the court rendered an oral opinion in which it reviewed the evidence (much of which consisted of technical testimony describing the plumbing; and electrical devices used for the removal of the effluent from the septic tank).

Since this case involves several issues of fact, and since we cannot find that the evidence preponderates against the trial court’s two findings to which appellant assigns error,, we quote the following portions of the oral decision which, sets forth clearly the court’s evaluation of the evidence:

“The contract was entered into in June of 1955, and the pumps were evidently placed in operation some time in the-fall of that year. The first trouble developed during a freeze* around Thanksgiving, at which time it is agreed that Mr. Rupp was summoned and evidently that particular trouble-was eliminated after the pipes had thawed out between the-—the drains, I should say, between the drain area and the pumps in question. This was followed by other complaints, from the plaintiffs. Finally in the summer of 1956, the pumps were removed and one of the pumps sent to the factory for examination or repair. Mr. Rupp supplied a substitute pump during that period of time. About ninety- *627 days later the pumps were reinstalled and plaintiffs’ witnesses tell me that, or I should say before going into that, that during the time the pumps were out in the summer or early fall of 1956, certain of the electrical controls were removed from inside the pit where they were placed according to the specifications and part of them placed in a building. This was done at the suggestion of the Seattle Plumbing, or Merrill Musgrave — their agents or both — who had been summoned by Mr. Rupp in an effort to satisfy the plaintiffs and alleviate the conditions which the plaintiffs had found so unsatisfactory.
“Getting back to the chronological history of the events, after the pumps — after one pump was returned from the factory and they were reinstalled, I gather in late 1956, as I say, plaintiffs’ witnesses testified the pumps were then not satisfactory. There was flooding and finally a substitute pump was inserted by the plaintiffs and the pumps in question were removed and stored. This must have been into 1957 before this was done.
“Finally there was a caucus by all concerned on July 2, 1957, at which time the defendant and Mr. Mussen [an engineer employed by Seattle Plumbing Supply Co.] and Mr. Rosen, who were in on this caucus, Mr. Rosen being the agent of Merrill Musgrave [the pump manufacturer’s representative], first learned the pumps had been removed. Just who removed the pumps on this second occasion and stored them is something of a mystery and perhaps isn’t too important. Since that time the parties have resorted to litigation to settle their troubles.
“Now getting back to the particular complaints of the plaintiffs, I find that the overwhelming evidence is that the operation of this pumping device, and that includes, of course, the electrical equipment, was most unsatisfactory and that is agreed by all. There is a serious dispute as to just what the cause of it was and whether or not, assuming that the cause be as contended for by the defendant, the defendant can escape liability on the guarantee which he has made.
“It might be well at this point to notice the specifications for the pump because this relates particularly to the contention of the defendant that he had fulfilled the contract and his contract of guarantee because he contends the evidence shows that the trouble with this operation has been the electrical equipment, but if we look to the contract which defendant made, and in speaking of defendant I am refer *628 ring to Mr. Rupp, speaking of Mr. Rupp and not the bonding company, he contracts to provide ‘Two submersible sewage pumps, Weil Model SE-830 or approved equal, install in septic tank pump chamber.’ Then it goes on to describe the pump in some detail; goes on to say that it ‘be equipped with high and low-level electrodes, capacitor and magnetic started with hand-off-automatic selector switch. Each pump discharge shall have a 3-inch check valve, and shall be connected to a common 4-inch discharge to the distribution box.’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
343 P.2d 877, 54 Wash. 2d 624, 1959 Wash. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shopping-center-management-co-v-rupp-wash-1959.