106 So. 338 | Ala. | 1925
This suit involves the claim of a contractor for balance due for labor and materials furnished in the erection of a residence under written contract with the owner, and the enforcement of a mechanic's lien therefor. The issues presented go to the question of indebtedness vel non. The register, on a reference, found for the contractor for the amount claimed. The trial court sustained exceptions to the report, and rendered a decree in favor of the owner.
The contract was as follows:
"This agreement made this 10th day of November, 1921, by and between Adalex Construction Company, hereinafter called the contractor, and Mrs. Sara C. Atkins, hereinafter called the owner, witnesseth:
"That the contractor and the owner for the considerations hereinafter named agree as follows:
"Article 1. The contractor agrees to perform all the work shown on the drawings and described in the specifications, subject to changes shown in article 4, entitled: 'Specifications for residence for Mrs. O. D. Atkins (Cliff Road) Birmingham, Alabama,' prepared by Brooks B. Burnham, architect, and to do everything required by the general conditions of the contract, the specifications and the drawings.
"Article 2. The contractor agrees that the work under this contract shall be substantially completed by February 14, 1922.
"Article 3. The owner agrees to pay the contractor, on satisfactory completion of the work, a fixed fee of six hundred dollars ($600). It is understood that all material for the work is to be ordered in the owner's name and is to be paid for by the owner; pay rolls to be met weekly by the owner.
"Article 4. The contractor agrees that the entire cost of building (that is, material, labor, and the contractor's fixed fee of $600, exclusive of plumbing, heating, and electrical fixtures) will not exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), provided the owner co-operates with the contractor. (It is the opinion of the contractor that the cost will be approximately $9,000.)
"The contractor and the owner agree that the general conditions of the contract, the specifications and the drawings, together with this agreement, form the contract, and that they are as fully a part of the contract, as if hereto attached or herein repeated; and that the following is an exact enumeration of the specifications and drawings:
"Specifications — 13 sheets.
"Drawings — 8 sheets.
"Contract as here signed includes everything, but plumbing, heating, and electric fixtures."
Then follow alterations from plans and specifications, designed to reduce the cost, which need not here be set out.
Without material controversy, the amount due the contractor, consisting of agreed price for the roof furnished and laid at $525 and unpaid balance on the fixed fee of $600, aggregates $832.54, with interest from February 15, 1922, as found by the register.
The defense is by way of recoupment for breach of contract in two regards: (1) Breach of covenant or guaranty of maximum cost as stipulated in the contract above; (2) breach of contract for good workmanship, resulting in defects in the building to the damage of the owner.
To the first alleged breach the contractor replies that the actual cost of the building as per contract did not exceed the amount stipulated; that the excess cost was due to alterations and additions made on orders of the owner, not covered by the guaranty; that the owner expressly waived the guaranty by directing changes and additions after warning that they would run above stipulated costs, and her agreeing to take the risk; that it was impliedly abandoned by such substantial changes and additions as to work a release of the obligation as to maximum cost.
To this the owner responds that the changes were made upon consultation and agreement that the changes would not add to the cost, or that compensating omissions would prevent the cost running above $10,000, and were made with the mutual assent that *55 the guaranty of cost should remain in force, and that the changes did not in fact involve any such material additions to the cost as would avoid the guaranty in the contract.
To the charge of defective workmanship, the contractor makes denial, and sets up that alleged defects, so far as they exist, were due to the orders of the owner in omitting supporting columns against the advice of the contractor; to changes on type of construction in which the owner assumed the risk; to the low grade of materials specified and used; to defects in the plans; to an omission not covered by this, but by the plumber's, contract.
Some other issues are more or less stressed in the case; but the above will illustrate the scope and nature of the matters litigated between the parties.
A few questions of law are raised, which we think determinable upon elemental principles governing contracts.
This is a form of "cost plus" contract. The compensation of the contractor is made a flat fee instead of a commission or per centum on cost; and, instead of a regular contract for a completed job at a fixed price, there is a covenant in the nature of a guaranty of maximum cost on the conditions named. The general conditions embodied in the specifications and drawings defining the duty of the contractor in matter of workmanship and material are part of the contract.
The construction company was a contractor with the duties incident to that relation, and not an agent or superintendent merely. True, the owner was to meet the weekly pay rolls for labor and material; but the contractor was to furnish the labor and order the materials in the owner's name. He had the duty to furnish competent labor and see that the material conformed to specifications.
While the specifications as drawn looked to the letting of the contract in the usual way, subject to the supervision of an architect, and the change of form of contract dispensing with an architect had the effect to strike out such specifications as were applicable only to the form of contract first contemplated, this did not strike out the general conditions requiring the contractor to construct the building in a good workmanlike manner; nor is the covenant as to cost a mere agreement to use due diligence as an agent to keep the cost within the limit stated.
Of course, if the owner take into his own hands the selection and purchase of material or employment of labor, the contractor's duty would be limited to proper supervision. The mere receipt and acceptance by the owner of bids for material to be furnished according to specifications would not relieve the contractor from his duties as such touching the quality of material delivered.
The covenant of maximum cost is limited by its terms to the construction of the building called for in the contract. If the owner, by virtue of her right to make changes, causes alterations and additions to be made which involve added cost, this, without more, would not waive the covenant, but the obligation would remain to construct the building within the cost limit after deducting the cost of extras.
If the parties co-operating together agree that changes be made wherein the omissions are agreed to be equal to the additions in cost, or, in other words, if the parties in course of execution of the contract modify the plans by mutual consent, keeping in mind and intact the stipulation as to cost, and the owner makes the changes on the faith of such agreement, the covenant as to costs is still binding. Indeed, if a suggested change is brought to the attention of the contractor to be made upon condition that it will not extend the cost beyond the limit, and the contractor approves the change, the covenant stands, although the extra cost may run above the limit. On the other hand, if the owner decides upon a change and merely asks the opinion of the contractor as to the probable extra cost, the mere expression of an opinion in good faith does not operate as a modification of the terms of the contract. There must be a meeting of the minds of both parties to the effect that the contemplated change shall come within the guaranty as to costs.
Again, if the parties begin with a view to holding down costs, but in course of construction the owner decides upon numerous and costly changes and additions, is warned that they will pass the cost limit, but nevertheless, with a mind to "want what I want like I want it," demands the extra expense be incurred, this is a waiver of the cost limit, and the contractor merely owes the duty to hold the costs as low as the circumstances permit.
A question is raised by appellant as to the conclusiveness of the register's findings upon the court below and upon this court. In the decree of reference it is recited that the parties "consent to this order." Thereupon it was ordered that the register hear the evidence, find the amount due the parties pro and con, and "report his conclusions of law and facts" with the testimony taken by him.
Appellant submits that this consent decree binds the parties in such way that the register's findings of fact cannot be impeached except upon like grounds as the award of arbitrators.
Rodgers v. Prattville Mfg. Co.,
That case is not in point here. There was no agreement that the register's findings should be final. In effect, it was a consent reference, in that the parties agreed the case was a proper one for reference and report.
In jurisdictions where the ordinary reference is merely to take testimony and report it to the court, an agreement of parties ex-tending the reference to findings upon the facts is more in the nature of an arbitration and award than under our practice. That the parties have selected a special tribunal is given as a reason for the strong statement of the rule applying to the report. However, in these jurisdictions, the report is not generally declared absolutely conclusive, but attended by the presumption of correctness like that accorded the verdict of a jury. Davis v. Schwartz,
This is the same presumption obtaining with us where the findings of the register are based, in whole or in part, upon the testimony of witnesses taken orally before him. Such is the rule applicable to the present case.
The register's report recites:
"I, the said register, at the solicitation of said parties, in company with the respective attorneys for said parties, viewed the residence, grounds, and improvements mentioned in said pleadings."
The decree recites:
"The court ex mero motu and without notice to or consent of cross-complainant, Adalex Construction Company having gone in person and examined the premises and the buildings and inspected the same," etc.
Appellant insists it was error for the judge to inspect the premises without consent of parties. There is authority for this view. 26 R. C. L. 1085. In this state, it is a matter of discretion. Jenkins v. Steel Cities Chemical Co.,
Should the court give notice to the parties of his purpose to make inspection with an opportunity to be present by counsel? It is assumed, as of course, that in making an inspection, in the absence of and without notice to the parties, the court exercised all the safeguards he would have thrown about a jury in making an inspection. But it is the wise policy of the law that, in receiving evidence of any kind in judicial proceedings, it should, so far as practical, be done in the presence of the parties, or with opportunity to be present. We commend this as a rule of judicial propriety in making inspections.
The results of an inspection, while placing the judge in like position with the register as to facts ascertainable thereby, placed him in no better position in that regard, and still without the advantage of having seen and heard the witnesses upon oral examination.
In passing upon the issues here, the case is within the rule that the register's findings should be sustained, unless upon the evidence we would overturn the verdict of a jury; that is, unless the evidence is such that despite the presumption we are convinced the findings of the register were clearly and palpably wrong. Pollard v. Mortgage Co.,
The legal principles we have discussed are used as guiding rules in passing upon the facts presented by the record.
The register found and reported in itemized form more than forty items of additions and alterations, and other added expenses, incurred in course of construction, increasing the cost in the aggregate sum of $2,423.60; that there were compensating omissions aggregating $379.80, leaving the net increase in cost $2,043.80; that the full cost of the building was $11,271.52; that, deducting the extras, the cost of the building as per contract was $9,227.72, or $772.28 below the guaranteed limit of cost. He further finds a waiver of the stipulation as to cost. He then deals with matter of defects in workmanship in detail, finding all these issues for the contractor upon grounds mentioned in the opening statement of this opinion.
The register's report disclosed full consideration of the several issues, and makes a full report covering more than fourteen pages of the typewritten record. His findings upon questions of law were not in some respects in keeping with the rules above announced, but he proceeded to consider and report fully his findings of fact under either view.
We have considered with much care the voluminous evidence pertaining to the several matters presented, with the aid of full and carefully prepared briefs on both sides. A discussion of the details would extend this opinion beyond all legitimate bonds. A discussion of particular phases would be misleading and unfair. The testimony is in sharp conflict. The major questions turn on evidence given ore tenus before the register. The evidence supports his findings. They should be sustained.
The decree of the court below is reversed *57 and one here rendered for the cross-complainant, Adalex Construction Company, for the amount found due by the register, and a mechanic's lien decree upon the building and lot described in the pleadings superior to the subsequent mortgage of Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia.
Reversed and rendered.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.