Wyman v. Hooker

83 P. 79, 2 Cal. App. 36, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 137
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 18, 1905
DocketCiv. No. 59.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 83 P. 79 (Wyman v. Hooker) 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
Wyman v. Hooker, 83 P. 79, 2 Cal. App. 36, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 137 (Cal. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

*38 GRAY, P. J.

This is an action to recover the sum of $2,455.66, alleged to be due upon a certain builder’s contract, and to foreclose a mechanic’s lien securing the same. The plaintiff had judgment for $1,665.57, and for costs, and a decree of foreclosure, from all of which, and from an order denying a new trial, the defendant appeals.

The builder’s contract provides that the work shall be done under the direction and to the satisfaction of the architect. It further provides for payments as follows: 1 ‘ $2,000 when walls are up ready to receive the trusses; $2,000 when roof on, copings of wall cemented and rear corrugated iron finished; $2,127.50 when completed and accepted; the final payment of $2,042.50 shall be made thirty-five days after the completion and acceptance of the work.” It was also provided: “That in each case of the said payments a certificate shall be obtained from and signed by said John Parkinson, architect, to the effect that he considers the payment properly due; but no certificate given or payment made under this contract, except the final certificate or final payment, shall be conclusive evidence of the performance of this contract either wholly or in part, and that no payment shall be construed to be an acceptance of defective work or improper materials.”

1. Appellant contends that the complaint contains no allegation that the work was done to the satisfaction of the architect, or that the architect gave the certificate as to the last payment mentioned above. The complaint did state that the contract was fully performed on the part of the contractor, and contained a copy of the contract attached as an exhibit. The answer denied this averment of performance, and there was no special demurrer to the complaint for uncertainty. The allegations of the complaint in this respect were sufficient. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 457; Moritz v. Lavelle, 77 Cal. 12, [11 Am. St. Rep. 229, 18 Pac. 893].) If the appellant did not regard the complaint as sufficient in this respect, he should have demurred specially for this reason, and the defect, if it was a defect, could have been remedied by amendment. He will not be heard on appeal as to an objection of this character, as such an objection is deemed to be waived when not taken by demurrer to the complaint in the court below. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 434.)

*39 2. The court finds: “That the said contract and the building therein agreed to be constructed, including the said additional work, was fully completed and finished by the said contractor on the seventeenth day of May, 1902; and was on said day accepted by the said architect named in the said contract, and that said architect then and there issued his certificate for the completion payment in accordance with said contract. That on June 7, 1902, the defendant Hooker filed in the office of the county recorder of Los Angeles county a notice of the completion of the said building in the words and figures set forth in paragraph 8 of the said answer; that the said defendant Hooker by his tenants took possession of the said building on May 19, 1902, and have ever since occupied same.” We think there was evidence to support every part of this finding. The written certificate for the completion payment, duly signed by the architect, was placed in evidence. And this certainly was some substantial evidence that the architect was satisfied with the building, and followed as it was by the owner going into possession of the building, it was evidence also of acceptance of the building on the part of the owner, as well as the architect. It is true that the architect made some oral declarations, both before and after the giving of this certificate, showing that he was not satisfied with the building, but these declarations could hardly be taken by the trial judge as impeaching the written document certifying that the completion payment was due, which document seems to have been executed with full knowledge of the exact condition of the building. Besides, it may well have been that the “wall out of plumb,” and other defects complained of by the architect, were considered, if not by the architect himself, at least by the trial judge, as the direct fault of the plans and specifications drawn by the architect, and in no way the fault of the builder. The builder was there to follow the plans and specifications, and it would be unjust in the extreme to allow the architect to interpose an objection, based on his own fault, between the builder and compensation for his work. We also think that the quoted finding was responsive to the issue already referred to, as to the performance of the contract.

3. The contract also provided that: “The contractor shall, on or before thirty-five days after the acceptance of the work *40 herein contracted for, cancel and release the said work, premises, or property from all claims that may have accrued against the same in carrying out the work herein contracted for.” And it is shown that at the commencement of the action some $600 and upward was yet due from the contractor, and constituted a lien on the property, for materials' put into the building. But it was also shown that this lien was paid by defendant, and the whole thereof, including attorney’s fees and all expenses connected with it, was allowed as a counterclaim, and deducted from the amount otherwise due the contractor. This was the proper disposition of the matter, as directed by section 1193 of the Code of Civil Procedure (see Adams v. Burbank, 103 Cal. 646, [37 Pac. 640)], and is all that defendant has a right to demand. He has lost nothing on account of that lien, and as the matter has been disposed of as directed by the law, he cannot be heard to complain. It was not here agreed, as in Holmes v. Richet, 56 Cal. 316, [38 Am. Rep. 54], “that if any lien upon the property shall exist at the time when an installment will be otherwise due, the existence of such lien shall constitute a good and sufficient reason for the nonpayment thereof”; hence, that case is not inconsistent with the position here taken, nor is there anything inconsistent herewith to be found in the ease of Loup v. California S. R. R. Co., 63 Cal. 101, or in any of the other cases cited by appellant.

4. To be sure, the last payment was to be made upon the obtaining of the certificate of the architect that the amount was due. But where it is shown, as here, that the builder had completed his contract, and the owner had gone into possession after the acceptance certificate had been executed, and the contractor had done everything necessary to entitle him to a certificate for the final payment, the defendant uwill not be allowed to defeat the contractor’s right of recovery by a wrongful withholding of the final certificate on the part of the architect. It is not to be presumed that the parties intended that money rightfully belonging to the contractor should be forfeited upon the arbitrary will or caprice of the architect in withholding the final certificate. (Antonelle v. Lumber Co., 140 Cal. 315, [73 Pac. 966].) Nor was it necessary that any excuse for not obtaining this final certificate should be set out in the complaint. It was sufficient in that *41

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 P. 79, 2 Cal. App. 36, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyman-v-hooker-calctapp-1905.