86 Wash. 251 | Wash. | 1915
The purpose of this action was to foreclose a lien for a balance claimed to be due upon a written contract for the construction of a concrete basement. The defendants counterclaimed for damages, alleging defective workmanship. A judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff for $165 and the costs of the action. The defendants have appealed.
On September 8, 1913, the appellants, being then the owners and occupiers of a certain dwelling house, contracted with the respondent in writing for the construction of a concrete basement under such dwelling house. This contract provided that the basement should be constructed in a “first-class, workmanlike manner.” Another provision of the contract was for “Full cement walls of 8-inch thickness, and cement floor-basement to be 7%feet in the clear.” The contract price was
Upon the trial, the appellants offered evidence to the effect that it was the understanding of the parties at the time the contract was drawn that the concrete walls of the basement were to be constructed in such a manner as to prevent water from leaking through them, and for this purpose the outside surface of the walls should have been coated with a mixture of cement and fine sand, and a drain tile should have been put around the house to carry away the seepage from the hillside.
If the contract by its terms was ambiguous upon its face, oral evidence was admissible for the purpose of determining its meaning. If it was not ambiguous, the trial court ruled correctly in refusing to admit the evidence offered. The provision of the contract is, that the work shall be done “in a first-class workmanlike manner.” The term “workmanlike manner” when applied to constructive work, such as that in question, has a well defined meaning. 40 Cyc. 2861; 8 Century Dictionary. Hence the contract upon its face is not ambiguous. Oral testimony to add to, vary, or modify its terms was inadmissible. The question as to whether the basement was constructed in a first-class, workmanlike manner was one of fact. Smith v. Clark, 58 Mo. 145; Holland v. Rhoades, 56 Ore. 206, 106 Pac. 779.
The testimony as to whether the basement was constructed in a first-class, workmanlike manner, offered by the respective parties, was' in conflict. The trial court, after hearing this testimony, was of the opinion that there was not “anything deficient in the building of that wall,” and that “it was the kind of a wall that Armstrong agreed to build, and it was the kind of a wall provided for in the contract.”
It is also claimed that the workmanship was defective in some other particulars which it does' not seem necessary to review in detail. It is sufficient to say that, after a careful consideration of all the evidence, we are unable to say that the judgment of the trial court was erroneous.
The judgment will be affirmed..
Morris, C. J., Crow, Fullerton, and Ellis, JJ., concur.