150 N.E.2d 732 | Mass. | 1958
GUIDO CETRONE
vs.
PAUL LIVOLI, INC. (and a companion case[1]).
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, Middlesex.
Present: WILKINS, C.J., RONAN, SPALDING, WHITTEMORE, & CUTTER, JJ.
William S. Monahan, for Paul Livoli, Inc.
Marvin H. Margolies, for Cetrone.
SPALDING, J.
About May 15, 1956, Guido Cetrone executed *608 and delivered to Paul Livoli, Inc., hereinafter called the corporation, the following:
"Re: Granite Park, Braintree, Massachusetts"Gentlemen:
"We propose to install the bituminous concrete walks and driveways at the above-captioned development for the price of 50 ¢ a square yard. All work is to be done in a good workmanship manner and guaranteed for a period of one (1) year after installation. All walks and driveways to be installed in a standard two (2) coat paving method.
"We will furnish all labor necessary to complete said work, and all materials are to be supplied by you. We will commence work at once and complete the entire job not later than June 15, 1956.
Cetrone and Son By: Guido Cetrone (Signed)"The proposal was accepted in writing by the corporation. Alleging a breach of this contract on the part of the corporation, Cetrone brought this action of contract. The declaration originally contained three counts, but we are concerned only with the second and third, the first having been waived. The second count alleges a breach of the written agreement set forth above. The third count, under an account annexed, seeks recovery of $1,550 for grading. The corporation brought a cross action alleging breach of contract on the part of Cetrone in connection with the above contract. The cases were tried together and the judge in the original action found for Cetrone in the sum of $1,196.60 on the second count and in the sum of $1,200 on the third count. In the cross action brought by the corporation there was a finding for Cetrone. A report to the Appellate Division was dismissed and the corporation appealed.
A summary of the pertinent evidence is as follows: When Cetrone arrived on the job to start work under the contract "none of the gravel was graded or ready for hot top." Cetrone talked with Paul Livoli, and told him that "nothing *609 was ready for the laying of hot top, and that ... [it] could not be spread." Livoli told him to spread gravel and to work where he could, and that he would be paid for "all the labor used in spreading the gravel." Under the contract, according to Cetrone, he was only required to spread black top. "[A]ll preparation in getting the walks and ways ready for black top was to be done by ... [the corporation]." Cetrone brought six men to the job and for a period of fourteen days they spread gravel.
On June 1, 1956, Cetrone's men were ordered off the job by Livoli. Later that day Cetrone saw Livoli and it was agreed that they would meet on the following Monday "to work the matter out," but Livoli failed to keep the appointment. Cetrone did not see Livoli again and his men did not return to the job. Cetrone testified that he paid his men $1,550 for spreading the gravel and that this was a fair and reasonable charge. The area on which black top was to be placed, according to Cetrone, was 6,943 square yards and his net profit would be thirty cents per square yard. A witness for the corporation testified that the area was 5,983 square yards.
There was evidence introduced by the corporation to the effect that prior to the making of the contract Cetrone was told that he was to spread the gravel and was given the name of the person who would furnish it. There was also evidence which would warrant the conclusion that Cetrone's men were ordered off the job because they were slow and inefficient. According to one witness in the trade the spreading of gravel constituted part of the job of laying black top and according to another "hot top men do hot topping without doing rough grading."
The written agreement here is not so comprehensive, nor is the term "install the bituminous concrete walks and driveways" so clear and free from ambiguity, that the conduct of the parties cannot be resorted to for aid in its construction. Anderson v. Sopp, 295 Mass. 97, 102. Coleman Bros. Corp. v. Commonwealth, 307 Mass. 205, 209-210. From the evidence *610 most favorable to Cetrone it could have been found that the parties intended that the gravel work was to be done not as part of the written agreement but under the subsequent oral agreement. See Goldstein v. Katz, 325 Mass. 428, 430. Whether we view this subsequent oral agreement as a modification of the earlier agreement or as a separate contract the same result follows. That result is that the corporation agreed that (1) Cetrone was to do the gravel work for which he would be paid, and (2) Cetrone was to put on the "hot top" for the price fixed in the contract.
The corporation has argued many questions in its brief but in essence the questions here are relatively simple. After determining what the parties had agreed to, the judge then had to decide whether there had been a breach of the contract and by whom. There was evidence from which he could find that before the completion date in the written agreement the corporation refused to supply Cetrone with the material for the gravel work and ordered him and his men to leave the job. This was a question of fact and if the evidence was believed as by the finding it obviously was the judge could have concluded that there had been a breach of the contract on the part of the corporation of such a nature as to preclude recovery under it by the corporation and excuse Cetrone from further performance. Bucholz v. Green Bros. Co. 272 Mass. 49, 52-53.
With respect to the written agreement Cetrone was prevented from performing by the corporation (or so it could have been found) and he was entitled to be placed in as good a position as he would have been in had the contract been performed. Restatement: Contracts, § 315. St. John v. St. John, 223 Mass. 137. Associated Perfumers, Inc. v. Andelman, 316 Mass. 176, 185-186. Such damages would include loss of profits, and that was the basis of the award under count 2.
The judge acted on numerous requests for rulings presented by both parties but we do not deem it necessary to discuss them other than to say that we perceive no error in the manner in which he dealt with them.
*611 Other questions argued by the corporation and not dealt with in this opinion have not been overlooked; they do not require discussion.
Order dismissing report affirmed.
NOTES
[1] The companion case is Paul Livoli, Inc., vs. Guido Cetrone.