128 Cal. App. 2d 40 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1954
This is an appeal from judgments entered in favor of defendants. Plaintiff and appellant, hereinafter called “Castro,” is a paving contractor and contracted with defendant B. Goold & Son, Inc., one of the two respondents, hereinafter called “Goold,” to perform certain paving work required to be done under a prime contract between Goold and Solano County Sanitation District No. 1. This prime contract called for the construction by Goold of a sewer system for the district. Defendant and respondent Pacific Indemnity Company, hereinafter called “surety,” was the surety on Goold’s performance bond. By this contract Goold agreed to perform all the work and furnish all the labor, materials, expendable equipment and all the utility and transportation services required to complete the work of constructing and installing the system. The contract was not a flat price contract. A number of documents were incorporated in the signed agreement. The work had been divided into nine items. Items 8 and 9 constituted the paving restoration which Castro by his subcontract agreed to do for Goold. Item 8 called for furnishing in place 975 tons of crusher run street repair at $5.75 per ton for a total of $5,606.25. Item 9 called for the furnishing in place of 390 tons of plant mix at a price of $8.70 per ton for a total of $3,393. The contract declared as to all items including Items 8 and 9 : The “estimate of quantities of the various items of work to be included in the Contract is approximate only and is for the purpose of comparing bids. The District does not expressly, or by. implication, agree that the final quantities, to be measured upon completion of the work as a basis for payment to the Contractor, will correspond with these quantities.” And as to payments for Items 8 and 9 the contract provided specifically that the district obligated itself to pay “for the materials used in the pavement restoration up to eight (8") inches outside the outside surface of the pipe and one (T) foot outside the outside diameter of all structures. Any additional materials, work and equipment necessary due to overbreak, slides, caveins, or any
“Pavement Restoration—The price paid per ton of Plant Mix Surfacing and Crusher Run Base shall include full compensation for the following items.
“(a) All necessary excavation, shaping, and compacting of subgrade; disposal of excess material.
“(b) Furnishing Crusher Run Base; delivering, spreading, shaping, watering and compacting.
“(c) Furnishing Plant Mix; delivering, spreading, shaping,
, and compacting. ’ ’
The specifications further provided as follows:
“Restoring Pavements
“All avenues, streets and alleys through which the sewers are built must be restored in the following manner to existing line and grade.
“Where there is an existing bituminous surface on the area the backfill shall be made according to Section V, paragraph 12 of these specifications to within seven (.7) tenths of a foot of the existing surface. Crusher Run Base shall then be placed in accordance with Section 19 of the Standard Specifications of the Division of Highways, State of California for a depth of five (.5) tenths of a foot. The plant mix surfacing shall be placed on top of this base in accordance with Section 26 of the Standard Specifications of the Division of Highways, State of California, for a depth of two (.2) tenths of a foot.
“On travelled ways where there is no Bituminous surface the backfill shall be placed in accordance with Section V, paragraph 12 of these specifications to within five (.5) tenths of the existing grade. Crusher Run Base shall then be placed in accordance with Section 19 of the Standard Specifications of the Division of Highways, State of California.
“The District will pay for the materials used in the pavement restoration up to eight (8") inches outside the outside surface of the pipe and one (!') foot outside the outside diameter of all structures. Any additional materials, work and equipment necessary due to overbreak, slides, caveins, or any other reason shall be furnished by the Contractor at no additional cost to the District.”
Under the foregoing plain wording of the prime contract Goold was to restore pavement disturbed in ditching for the installation of pipe and other structures such as manholes. He
Goold executed a written contract with Castro which in material part provided as follows: The terms and conditions of the prime contract were made a part of Castro’s contract by reference. Castro agreed to furnish the necessary labor and materials, including tools, implements, machinery and appliances required and perform and complete “all of the following described work as shown and described in and by, and in conformity with the plans, drawings and specifications for the same made by Wm. A. Jones, the authorized Architect employed by the Owner, and which are signed by the Owner and the General Contractor: Name of work: Solano County Sanitation District #1. Location of work: Solano County. Work to be performed: Item 8: 975 Tons Crusher Bun Street Bepair at $5.175 Per Ton. Item 9: 390 Tons Plant Mix at $7.85 Per Ton.” The contract further provided that Goold would pay to Castro “the sum of the Unit price as bid upon completion.” Castro completed the work of pavement restora
By his complaint he alleged the execution of his contract with Goold, and incorporated the written instrument in the complaint by reference. He referred to the work of Goold in backfilling the trenches, alleged that Goold was required by the prime contract to compact the backfill by tamping and that he had not done so with the result that due to rainfall the backfill material settled. He then placed a construction upon his contract with Goold, alleging as follows: That he had fully performed his obligations under that contract and in doing so that he 1 ‘ did furnish and install in the construction of said sewer line, with appurtenances, 975 tons crusher-run, for which defendant, R. Goold & Son, Inc., agreed to pay plaintiff herein, $5.175 per ton,- that the total amount due plaintiff for said 975 tons crusher run is Five Thousand Forty-five and 62/100ths Dollars, ($5,045.62); that under the terms of said Articles of Agreement, plaintiff agreed to and did furnish and install in the construction of said sewer line, with appurtenances, 390 tons plant mix, for which defendant, R. Goold & Son, Inc., agreed to pay plaintiff herein, the sum of Seven and 83/100ths Dollars, ($7.83) per ton; that the total amount due plaintiff for said 390 tons plant mix, is Three Thousand Fifty-three and 70/100ths Dollars, ($3,053.70).” He averred that the total amount earned by him under the contract was $8,099.32. It is to be noted that by the foregoing specific allegations Castro treated his contract with Goold as calling for no more than the furnishing in place of the specific tonnages mentioned in both his contract and in that of Goold’s with the district. He does not consider that these quantities, at least as between himself and Goold, were estimates only. Castro proceeds to allege that by reason of the sinking or settling of the untamped earth additional labor and materials were necessary to complete the pavement restoration by Goold and that Goold requested him to assist him in that completion, whereupon Goold orally agreed to pay him “the same price as set forth in the Articles of Agreement, marked ‘Exhibit A’, [the Castro-Goold contract] for all crusher run and plant mix furnished and installed” by him in the completion of Goold’s contract with the district. He alleges he agreed to this and did furnish and install an additional quantity over and above those mentioned in his contract with Goold, these additional quantities amounting to 1,270.75 tons of crusher run and
Upon these pleadings the cause went to trial and Castro introduced evidence in support of his contention that, when he had about finished furnishing the quantity of material he claimed he was obligated to furnish, he made an oral contract with Goold to furnish the balance necessary for complete pavement restoration on the job. Testimony was introduced by Goold and the surety contradictory of this, but some uncertainty had apparently developed in the minds of Castro and his counsel as to whether or not there might be another interpretation of Ms contract with Goold, that is, one where-under he was obligated to Goold to complete the pavement restoration just as Goold was obligated to do the same for the district; that the tonnage quantities named in his contract with Goold were estimates only of the amount that would be required for complete pavement restoration, just as were the tonnage quantities named in Goold’s contract with the district and that under that theory, he having completed the restoration, Castro was entitled to be paid at the tonnage price named in the written contract between himself and Goold. There seemed to be uncertainty also, at least in the minds of Castro and Ms counsel, as to how these tonnages were to be measured
The trial court found that Castro and Goold had executed the written agreement and that under the terms of that contract ‘ ‘ Castro performed labor and furnished materials in the construction of said improvement”; that he had “been paid in full for all of said work and materials furnished” by him under the terms of the written agreement and that “at this date there are no moneys whatsoever owing from said Defendant Goold to said Plaintiff under the terms of this written agreement.” The trial court found that there were likewise no moneys owing from the surety company to Castro under its bond, and finally the court found “that it is not true that the Plaintiff and Defendant Goold made any contract for the doing of the work and the performance of said contract other than the written contract attached to plaintiff’s complaint,” and that it was “not true that the said Plaintiff and the said Defendant Goold made an oral contract in and by which the said Defendant Goold agreed to pay the Plaintiff any moneys over and above that set forth in said written contract.” Conclusions of law and judgment in conformity therewith were entered.
We think it must be said at once that the trial court’s finding there was no oral contract concerning the furnishing of crusher run and plant mix is sustained by the evidence. Although Castro testified directly that when he had placed nearly all of the crusher run and plant mix material and was only about halfway through the pavement restoration he went to Goold, told him that such was the situation and asked him for a new contract and that Goold told him “the bills will be paid, ” so he went to work again under what he considered a verbal agreement. Goold, when asked about this conversation, said that he never had a conversation with Castro in which he told Castro if the district did not pay him
However, the finding against there having been any oral contract does not dispose of the matter, although, as noted, Castro placed a construction upon the written agreement to the effect that it only bound Castro to furnish the stated number of tons of material in place at the stated price, thus leaving him free to end his work when those quantities had been used and to negotiate a new contract for the balance of the pavement restoration. Nevertheless he also made the written agreement, by reference to the exhibit thereof attached to his complaint, a part of that pleading and all the pertinent documents referred to therein and constituting the prime contract were put in evidence. It is familiar law that a pleaded construction of a written agreement contrary to the terms of the pleaded instrument itself is to be treated as surplusage. (Stoddard v. Treadwell, 29 Cal. 281; Ventura & Ojai Valley Ry. Co. v. Hartman, 116 Cal. 260 [48 P. 65] ; National Pavements Cory. v. Hutchinson Co., 132 Cal.App. 235 [22 P.2d 534]; Pimentel v. Hall-Baker Co., 32 Cal. App.2d 697 [90 P.2d 588].) The answer of Goold and the surety essentially denied Castro’s constructionary allegations, though admitting the allegations that only the sum of $8,099.32 became due and owing to Castro. In view of the state of the pleadings and of the record which shows that much testimony throughout the six days’ trial had to do with the conduct of the parties under their written agreement it is apparent that the issue as to the construction of that agreement was before the court.
We need not repeat what has heretofore been said concerning the contents of the prime contract referred to in the Castro-Goold contract and concerning the language of the Goold contract. What has been said compels the conclusion that any implication in the findings of the trial court that the
In support of his appeal from the judgment in favor of the surety Castro urges that, notwithstanding anything in the contractual arrangements between himself and Goold, he has an independent right of action against the surety to be paid for all of the material which he furnished and placed in completing the pavement restoration. In support of this extreme claim he cites a number of eases having to do with the concept that a public works performance bond does furnish a separate cause of action upon which a materialman may sue, disregarding in many aspects the provisions of the prime contract. We have examined these cases and they do not uphold the final contention of Castro that the provision fixing
The judgments appealed from are reversed.
Peek, J., and Schottky, J., concurred.