84 P. 251 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1906
This action was brought to recover a balance of $863 for the performance of certain concrete work on the *700 basement of a stone building. The court made findings, upon which judgment was ordered and entered for plaintiff in the sum of $663, and costs. This appeal is from the judgment and order denying the defendant's motion for a new trial.
The complaint alleges that in August, 1900, the plaintiffs entered into a contract with defendant by which they agreed to furnish the labor and material and complete the concrete work of a certain two-story building, in conformity with certain plans and specifications, for the sum of $1,449, in four equal installments of $362.25 each, payable at certain designated times as the work progressed; that for additional and extra work the price per cubic foot of concrete should be in accordance with the contract price for the other work, and that the extra work so done amounted to $238.50; that defendant has paid plaintiff on account the sum of $924.50, and no more, leaving a balance of $863 due and owing on the contract. The complaint further alleges in a separate paragraph that the reasonable value of the work done and performed by the plaintiffs for the defendant under the terms of the contract is $1,787.50, and that defendant has paid plaintiff $825 thereon, and no more, and that the sum of $863 remains wholly unpaid. Defendant denied most of the allegations of the complaint, and alleged "that the plaintiffs wholly failed, refused and neglected to perform the said work in accordance with the said alleged contract, or plans, or specifications. That said specifications provided that, as shown on plans and sections, all the walls were to be plastered on the outside with one-inch thick cement mortar, also the bottom and sides of foundation were to have one-inch thick of plastering of said mortar, to be in equal thickness and smooth to make a perfectly watertight basement." It is further alleged in the answer that the walls of the building were not made water-tight, and that by reason thereof, and by reason of the failure to place upon the outside thereof a plaster of cement mortar, the building has been greatly damaged. Upon the issues thus made the case was tried. The contract was not recorded before the commencement of the work, and hence was void as to laborers and materialmen; but as no question is involved as to any laborers' or materialmen's claims, or any lien of any kind, the fact that the contract was not recorded becomes immaterial. The court found that the defendant was indebted to the *701 plaintiffs in the sum of $663 for labor performed and materials furnished in the erection and construction of the concrete work on the basement of the building described in the complaint, all at the special instance and request of the defendant.
The defendant's first point is that the plaintiffs cannot recover because they have not shown a substantial compliance with their contract. In an action of assumpsit a building contract, which has not been recorded, and hence is void as against subcontractors and materialmen, nevertheless constitutes the measure and test of the right to recover, and the contractor must show a substantial compliance with the terms of the contract, and the measure of his recovery must be limited by the terms of the contract. (Laidlaw v. Marye,
The second point claimed by defendant is "that the owner cannot be held liable to them (plaintiffs) for the value of the materials and labor furnished in a greater amount than they paid for them." If we apprehend correctly the argument of defendant's counsel on this point, it is that in case a written contract in excess of $1,000 is not recorded, the contractor cannot recover of the owner any greater amount than such contractor has actually paid out for labor and materials. We know of no such rule. On the contrary, it is expressly held inLaidlaw v. Marye, supra, otherwise. It is there said: "Therefore, as between him and the owner, the contract must remain, not the basis of his recovery, but the measure and test of his right to recover. He must still show a substantial compliance with its terms to warrant any recovery at all, and under implied assumpsit must be limited, as to him, by the contract price." The remarks of the court in Kuhlman v. Burns,
This disposes of all the questions argued by defendant in her brief.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Harrison, P. J., and Hall, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the superior court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on March 21, 1906.