Vila v. Brovelli

39 P.2d 855, 3 Cal. App. 2d 713, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 349
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 18, 1935
DocketCiv. 5183
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 P.2d 855 (Vila v. Brovelli) 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
Vila v. Brovelli, 39 P.2d 855, 3 Cal. App. 2d 713, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 349 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

The plaintiff had judgment in an action instituted to recover the balance alleged to be due for and *715 on account O'! a building contract under and in accordance with the terms o£ which the plaintiff alleged that he constructed a dwelling house for the defendant, and that upon said contract there remained due the sum of $1662.85. The court awarded judgment to the plaintiff in the sum of $1395.86. From this judgment the defendant appeals.

The defendant also interposed a motion for new trial which was denied. From the order denying this motion the defendant also appeals. As no appeal lies from such order, that portion of the appeal is hereby dismissed.

The findings of the court are to the effect that the plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract for the construction of a dwelling house by the plaintiff for the defendant for the agreed sum of $4,762.50, construction of such building to be in accordance with plans and specifications agreed upon.

Paragraphs IV and V of the findings, being the ones really involved in this action, are herein set forth as follows:

“IV.
“The court finds that during the construction of said house said plans and specifications, by mutual consent, were in part changed; that plaintiff did construct the said house for the said defendant in a good, proper and workmanlike manner, and in accordance to and with the said plans and specifications and said agreed changes, and did substantially perform the said agreement in all respects and parts, excepting nevertheless in the particulars specified herein as follows: The front porch did not drain properly. The arch between the living room and dining room was mechanically untrue. The exterior plaster was poorly matched in color between courses and not workmanlike in finish. The tile work on the kitchen sink was not delivered to owner in first class condition, being minus some cap tiles, cracked and not properly sloped for drainage. There were several minor deficiencies as follows: failure to finish inside of cupboards and closets the same as rooms, improper placing of medicine cabinet, omission of iron receptacle, poor painting in bathroom, split and warped doors, poorly fitted window, omitted picture molding and shoe molding, omitted screen vents, center runs instead of side runs in drawers, wood instead of metal shelf brackets, oak thresholds omitted, *716 substitution of medicine cabinet, substitution of electrical materials, 2x8 instead of 2x10 wall cap in garage, and careless workmanship on garage which permitted nails to perforate sheathing paper causing leaks.
“V.
“The court finds that the plaintiff did not perform the said listed items in a good, proper, and workmanlike manner, and in accordance with the said plans and specifications and agreed changes thereto, and finds further, that the cost to defendant Linda. Brovelli, in placing the said house in a condition as called for under the construction agreement and plans and specifications and agreed changes thereto is $266.99.”

While the language found in paragraph IV of the court’s findings is not as clear and explicit as might be desired, it does appear from paragraph V of the findings that the defects found in the construction of the building, and failure of the plaintiff to strictly comply with the terms and provisions of the plans, and specifications, might be remedied, and that the cost to the defendant of remedying such defects was the sum of $266.99.

Upon this appeal it is strongly urged by the appellant that the language used by the court in finding No. IV can only be construed to mean that the building was not constructed substantially in conformity with the plans and specifications therefor. This contention would appear meritorious if only the following language be considered, to wit: “and did substantially perform the said agreement in all respects and parts, excepting nevertheless, in the particulars specified herein, as follows”: But if we continue to read the entire paragraph we find that while the word “trivial” was not used as commonly appears in findings relating to the performance of building contracts where the plans and specifications have not been literally followed, the conclusion seems to us certain that the court had in mind, and did in effect find that the schedule of defects were trivial defects which could be remedied by the expenditure, and which had been remedied by the expenditure of the sum of '$266.99.

In construing findings the law is well Settled that all of the findings must be read together, and if, when so read, the clear intent and purpose of the findings are made plain, the mere fact that a clause or a sentence therein, read alone, *717 would appear to be contradictory or insufficient, such error or failure, to completely express that which is intended to be stated will not vitiate the findings or render them insufficient to support the conclusions of law drawn therefrom and the judgment based thereon. (Haight v. Haight, 151 Cal. 90 [90 Pac. 197]; 2 Cal. Jur. 871, sec. 511; Title Ins. & Trust Co. v. Ford, 119 Cal. App. 188 [6 Pac. (2d) 101].)

Thus, when findings IV and V are read together, the fact that the remedying of the listed defects entails an expenditure of $266.99, it is just as apparent that the defects were found to be trivial as though the court had said that the contract was substantially performed notwithstanding certain trivial defects, as follows, to wit: The cost of remedying the same, amounting only to the sum of $266.99.

We do not need to review the authorities cited by the appellant that there must be a substantial performance of the contract, and that recovery cannot be had by a contractor unless the trial court so finds, and that such finding must be supported by the testimony.

The argument of the appellant, however, is based upon the assumption that the findings which we have quoted are not to the effect that the plaintiff has substantially performed the covenants of his contract and erected the building substantially according to the plans and specifications. What we have said, however, we think answers this contention of the appellant and eliminates entirely the appellant’s contention that the court failed to find substantial compliance.

Again, outside of the finding that we will call certain trivial defects, though not so listed in finding No. IV, the court does specifically find that the contract in all other particulars was substantially complied with, and reading the list of defects which we have said are shown to. be trivial by the mere reading thereof, the finding of the court is all that is required to sustain a judgment based thereon.

The appellant, in addition to the defects listed by the court in its findings, contends that the living room ceiling was crooked and improperly constructed; that the fireplace and chimney were improperly constructed, and constituted a fire hazard, and were not built in conformity with the plans and specifications; that the concrete land *718 ing at the rear entrance was 2y2

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Bluebook (online)
39 P.2d 855, 3 Cal. App. 2d 713, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vila-v-brovelli-calctapp-1935.