Steltz v. Armory Co.

99 P. 98, 15 Idaho 551, 1908 Ida. LEXIS 134
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 99 P. 98 (Steltz v. Armory Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steltz v. Armory Co., 99 P. 98, 15 Idaho 551, 1908 Ida. LEXIS 134 (Idaho 1908).

Opinion

AILSHIE, C. J.

This action was instituted by the plaintiff for the foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien. Plaintiff entered into a contract with the defendant corporation to furnish the material and construct an armory building in the city of Genesee. Plans and specifications were adopted, the price and terms of payment were agreed upon, and the building was [554]*554erected. The company went into possession of the building and continued to use it for some six weeks, at which time an unusual windstorm occurred and blew down the front of the building. The company declined to pay the contractor, whereupon he filed his lien and prosecuted this action to foreclose the same. The defendant company answered, admitting the contract, but denying that the building was ever completed “in a good, substantial and workmanlike manner.” It also alleged as an affirmative defense that the building was defectively constructed, in that the front wall was not properly tied to the adjoining building, and other defects were charged, whereby the defendant alleged damages in the sum of $200. The trial resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for a balance due of $700 on the contract and $28.50 for extras. The court found in favor of the defendant on its allegation of damages in the sum of $140, which sum was offset against the total balance due on the contract. Both parties appealed from the judgment; and since each party is both appellant and respondent in this court, we shall refer to them in this opinion as plaintiff and defendant. Findings 4, 5, 6 and 7 are as follows:

“4. The court finds that the defendant tendered into court the sum of $610, and is shown to have tendered the same amount to the plaintiff at a period long prior to the time of the case.
‘ ‘ 5. The court also finds that the defendant corporation has been in possession of the building ever since the date shortly after its construction, and that they went-into possession of the said building with full knowledge of the defect alleged to have been the cause of the falling of the wall.
“6. The court finds that the north wall of the building was defectively constructed and that it was not properly tied to the building, and that on an occasion shortly after the defendant had taken possession of the same, the wall was blown down by a high wind, and the court finds that all of the aforesaid facts are substantiated by the evidence.
“7. The court further finds that it would take the sum of $140 to replace the said wall, and that the defendant has been [555]*555damaged to that extent, and the court finds that the defendant is entitled to deduct from the amount of the contract the sum of $140.”

Defendant contends that the fifth finding to the effect that the company went into possession of the building with full knowledge of the defect alleged to have been the cause of the falling of the wall is unsupported by the evidence, while the plaintiff contends that findings 6 and 7, to the effect that the north wall of the building was defectively constructed to the defendant’s damage in the sum of $140, is not supported by the evidence. We may dispose of these contentions on the part of both plaintiff and defendant by saying that there is a substantial conflict in the evidence on all these points, and that there is sufficient evidence in the record to support each of the findings. We would not disturb them on that ground. The contract provided that the plaintiff should construct this building “in a good, substantial and workmanlike manner.” Evidence was produced tending to show that the defendant complied with this provision of the contract. There was also a great deal of evidence produced by defendant to the effect that he had not complied with this part of the contract. There is also evidence both ways on the question as to whether defendant had knowledge in a general way of this defect at the time it entered into possession of the building. It must be admitted, we think, that the defect in not tying the wall to the adjoining building with spikes or ties was not an obvious or patent defect, but was rather a latent defect. Had it been a patent and obvious defect or a failure to complete the building, the defendant would, under ordinary circumstances, be held to have waived the same by taking possession of the building without doing so conditionally or protesting against its condition or demanding its completion. It may often happen that a building or structure contains a latent defect that the owner cannot reasonably discover at the time he takes possession; for instance, the material of which it is constructed may be of an inferior quality, or the work may have been so imperfectly done as to render the building or structure of little use or slight value, or so that it may fall, and thereby cause great damage [556]*556to the owner. In such ease the owner, although having paid for the building, would be entitled to recover damages for breach of the contract. (Barker v. Nichols, 3 Colo. App. 25, 31 Pac. 1024.)

Counsel for the defendant contends that these defects actually existed as proven and found by the court, and that for such reason the plaintiff had failed to “faithfully perform and fully comply with the contract on his part,” and was consequently not entitled to recover and particularly not entitled to a lien under sec. 7 of the lien laws (Sess. Laws 1899, p. 148). In support of this contention plaintiff cites the cases of Justice v. Myers, 68 Minn. 481, 71 N. W. 667; Boots v. Steinberg, 100 Mich. 134, 48 N. W. 657; 27 Cyc. 402, 403. The Justice case involved a contract for putting in a heating plant. The contract contained a warranty to the effect that the radiation should be sufficient to heat the rooms to seventy-five degrees on the coldest winter weather, and that the plant might be tested by the owner before accepting, and that if not entirely satisfactory it should be made so by the contractor without any additional expense. The defendant alleged that she had never accepted, but, on the contrary, had notified the plaintiff that it was not up to the requirements and that she would not accept it. The court held that there was no substantial compliance with the contract and that they could not maintain their action.

In Boots v. Steinberg, the contract provided for the erection of a house, and, among other stipulations, provided that it should be to the satisfaction of the owner; who should have the right to act as superintendent of the work or appoint someone to act in that capacity, and the last payment was not due until “ten days from the completion of said work to the satisfaction of said Julius Steinberg.” It appeared from the evidence that a number of things required to be done by the contract were never in fact completed in any manner, and others were imperfectly completed. The court held that the contract was not substantially complied with and refused plaintiff any relief.

The facts of that case are somewhat different from the facts [557]*557concerned, and as a matter of fact, the building was a completed structure, although defectively constructed. The company accepted it, and one of the defendant’s officers went far enough on the night it was opened for use to publicly state that they had a better building than they had expected to get for the money, and that they thanked the contractor for the work he had done.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 P. 98, 15 Idaho 551, 1908 Ida. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steltz-v-armory-co-idaho-1908.