310 Mass. 70 | Mass. | 1941
This is an action of contract to recover a balance alleged to be due the plaintiff for services performed under the terms of a written agreement, entered into by the parties on November 12, 1929. The case was tried a jury. At the close of the evidence the defendant moved for a directed verdict in its favor. The judge denied this motion, subject to the defendant’s exception. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the amount of $34,454.88, and the judge reserved leave, with the assent of the jury, to enter a verdict for the defendant. Thereafter the defendant’s motion that this be done was denied by the judge and the defendant duly excepted. The case comes before us on the report by the judge of the questions raised by these exceptions of the defendant and by its exceptions to the admission of certain evidence, and to the refusal of the judge to grant certain of its requests for in
The evidence in its aspect most favorable to the plaintiff tends to show the following facts: Under the terms of the contract the plaintiff agreed to render services, as an architect, in connection with the proposed construction of a high school building for girls in the “Martin District” in Boston, in the performance of which he was to make preliminary studies, to submit them to the defendant, to provide working drawings, specifications and blue prints, and to assume the active supervision of all construction work on the building and also of “landscape and domestic engineering.”
The contract contained, among others, the following pertinent provisions: ‘ ‘ Section 1. The Board. — (a). Is to furnish the Architect with the requirements and information for the design and construction of the said building and to give the maximum cubical contents and the cost for said building, which shall not be in excess of one million eight hundred thousand (1,800,000) dollars. . . . Section 3. (a). The City ... is ... to pay the Architect 22/5 per cent, upon the cost of the landscape and domestic engineering, exclusive of plumbing, and 6 per cent, upon the cost of all other work. The Board at any time may discontinue the services of the Architect, and if . . . [so] discontinued prior to the completion of the work to be done by the Architect under this contract, the value of the Architect’s services shall be reckoned to the date of the discontinuance, and payment shall be made pro rata in accordance with the terms of this contract, and when made shall relieve the City from any further liability under this contract, (b). Payments to be made as follows: 1. When preliminary studies are completed, an amount not to exceed one-sixth of the estimated total commission, which total commission is to be based upon the estimated cost of the building, which estimated
The plaintiff completed the preliminary studies in accordance with the terms of the contract on or before December 28, 1929. On that date he submitted a bill to the city as follows:
“To professional services in the preparation of studies for the Girls High School, Worthington Street, Roxbury, in accordance with contract dated November 18, 1929,
Estimated cost of building, $1800000.00
Estimated cost of Heating & Ventilating, $144000.00
Estimated cost of Electrical work, 90000.00
Estimated cost of Landscape engineering, 20000.00
$254000.00 254000.00
$1546000.00
6% of $1546000.00 $92760.00
2 2/5% of $254000.00 6096.00
Total estimated commission $98856.00
1/6 of $98856.00............................ $16476.00”
This bill was paid by the defendant on May 21, 1930.
On February 4, 1931, the plaintiff delivered to the defendant the “working drawings and specifications ready for
“To professional services in the preparation of studies, working drawings and specification for the Girls High School, Worthington Street, Martin District, Roxbury, in accordance with contract dated November 18, 1929.
Estimated cost of building, $1300000.00
Estimated cost of Heating & Ventilating, $104000.00
Estimated Cost of Electric work 65000.00
Estimated cost of Landscape engineering, 5000.00
$174000.00 174000.00
$1126000.00
3.6% of $1126000.00 $40536.00
Previous payment, 16476.00
Due at this time, $24060.00”
Accompanying this bill was a letter from the plaintiff . to the defendant's superintendent of construction, which reads in part as follows: “At current prices I feel confident that this building could be placed under contract for a price not in excess of $1300000.00 and for that reason I am revising the figures to agree with the above in submitting a bill for services to date, a payment of three and three fifths per cent, on the above amount of $1300000.00 as the cost of the work, deducting the estimated cost of the electrical, heating and ventilating, and, landscape work; less the amount of the previous payment.” The defendant paid this bill on April 21, 1931. The plaintiff had fully performed all the duties required of him under the contract up to that date. He never performed any services under the contract thereafter, and on June 16, 1933, the defendant notified him, in writing, that his contract was terminated because “the school will not be built” and that he had been paid in full for his services. The defendant never constructed the school building or any part thereof, and so far as appears no construction contracts were ever let in connection with the project.
While it is settled as matter of substantive law that contracts in writing cannot be varied by paroi evidence, Goldband v. Commissioner of Banks, 245 Mass. 143, 150, nevertheless, for the purpose of applying the terms of such
At the outset it is to be observed that the figure of $1,800,000 is fixed under § 1 (a) not as the estimated cost of the building, but only as a limit beyond which the cost of the building may not go. That this was the understanding of the parties is evidenced by the interpretation they placed upon the contract. When the plaintiff rendered his second bill and sent the accompanying letter to the defendant, in which, of his own volition, he based the charges
The seeming conflict between references in the contract to estimated cost and actual cost is solved by a reading of the contract as a whole in the light of the subject to which it is related, that is, the construction of the building. It is obvious that, until the preliminary studies had been made and the working drawings and specifications “ready for contract” had been prepared by the plaintiff upon “full instructions” furnished by the defendant, no contracts could be let for the construction of the building, and actual costs could not be ascertained,. and that necessarily the provisions for payment for particular1 services of the plaintiff, just referred to, upon their completion could not be fixed for the time being other than tentatively upon an estimated cost. Doubtless it was in recognition of this fact that, in fixing the ultimate basis of the plaintiff’s compensation, “actual cost” was prescribed by § 3 (b) 2 of the contract, which also provided that there should be deducted from the percentage of “actual cost” fixed for payment any sums previously paid for work done by the plaintiff under the contract, thus permitting adjustments to be made on the basis of actual costs, from time to time, as the construction of the building progressed and such costs would be ascertained. That this was the understanding of the plaintiff, as before pointed out, was evidenced in express terms by his second bill and the accompanying letter sent by him to the defendant. The payment of the bill was
We are of opinion that, under the terms of the contract, read in the light of the subject to which it relates and the interpretation placed upon it as evidenced by the conduct of the parties themselves, upon the termination of the plaintiff’s contract and the abandonment of the main project before construction, no basis existed under the contract for the payment of additional compensation to the plaintiff, and that therefore nothing is due him under the contract, upon the terms of which alone he relies.
It follows that under the terms of the report, judgment must be entered for the defendant, and it is
So ordered.
The total appropriations when the contract was executed were, for construction of the building $1,071,762.12, for “plans” $110,000.