In thе first count of this action the plaintiff seeks to recover the reasonable value of certain work, labor and services performed at the request of the defendants consisting of the relocation and resurfacing of a driveway and the draining and filling of a pond on lot 5 of the defendants’ land, of the reasonable value of $18,707.25. The second count is predicated on the same allegations of fact but damages are claimed on the ground of unjust enrichment.
The defendants answered admitting that demand for payment had been made by the plaintiff as alleged in the first count, and denying the remaining allegations of both counts. The defendants also pleaded three special defensеs. In the first special defense it was alleged that the plaintiff represented to the defendants that the cost of the work involved would not exceed the sum of $2500; that the defendants relied on the representations of the plaintiff, informed the plaintiff of such reliance and of the necessity of limiting the cost to $2500 and agreed to have the work done; that the plaintiff proceeded to do the work and at no time informed the defendants that the cost to the defendants would exceed $2500 until February 24, 1966, after the completion of the work. In the second special defense the defendants alleged that at the closing, when title to the properties in question was conveyed to the defendаnts, the plaintiff set forth claims for various additional work and extras but made no claim for payment for the additional work sought in this action, and that the payment of these extra sums was in full settlement of all extras and obligations between the parties to the date of the closing on December 6, 1965, other than the sum of $2500. In the third special defense the
In their assignments of error the defendants have made a wholesale attack on the finding, despite our repeated strictures against this practice.
State
v.
Dukes,
It should be noted at the outset that while the
The court found the following facts. Richard E. Doyle, the principal witness of the plaintiff, was the president of the plaintiff corporation and had been in the construction business sinсe 1948 as a construction superintendent and estimator. All the negotiations and the acts of the plaintiff corporation were carried on by Doyle, which fact was known to Paul T. Kearney, hereinafter called the defendant. All the negotiations and the acts of the defendants, Paul and Elizabeth Kearney, were conducted by Paul Kearney. Doyle and the defendant were on friendly and social terms and each had confidence in the other. In 1965 the plaintiff had a number of lots for sale on Nathan Hale Drive in Stamford. Early in 1965, the defendant entered into negotiations with Doyle to purchase a lot in this area in order to have a house built thereon by the plaintiff. On May 15, 1965, the plaintiff and the defendant signed a contract wherein the plaintiff undertook to construct a dwelling on lot 4 of this development, and to convey lot 4 and the dwelling to the defendants. The contract was composed of the basic contract, specifications and plans. In late August and early September, 1965, the plaintiff orally agreed to sell lot 5 to the defendаnts for the sum of $16,000. No money was paid in connection with this agreement until the closing of title on December 6, 1965. In early September, 1965, when the plaintiff and the defendants discussed the purchase of lot 5 by the defendants, Doyle suggested to the defendant that a depressed area on lots 4 and 5 be filled in for aesthetic purposes. The area to be
At the closing, when both parties were represented by attorneys, the parties, although arranging for an adjustment with reference to other items involved in the sale of the premises, did not take up the question of the cost of the additional work, which is the subject of this suit, and there was no discussion at the closing either betwеen the parties or their attorneys as to the cost of filling, or relocat
A total of 11,300 cubic yards of fill was purchased by the plaintiff to accomplish the filling operation. This operation and the relocation of the driveway were simultaneously performed and thus it was impossible to break down the cost as between the two оperations. Invoices were submitted to the court representing labor and materials purchased by the plaintiff solely for the purpose of filling in the depressed area and for the extension of the length of the driveway. These bills represent moneys actually expended by the plaintiff in relation to this work. At no time did the defendants request a breakdown as between the two operations. Subsequent to the completion of the filling operation and relocation of the driveway, the plaintiff submitted to the defendants a bill in the amount of $18,731.50, which sum represented out-of-pocket expenses incurred by the plaintiff to the outside suppliers of the labor and material. By December 5, 1965, the day before the closing, the plaintiff had incurred charges attributable to the filling operation which totaled $13,292.35. Doyle himself did not know the amount of these charges at that time.
The court concluded, inter alia, that when the plaintiff realized in October, 1965, that the costs were exceeding the estimate of $2500 because of the unavailability of fill from the subjeсt property and other properties owned by the plaintiff, the defend
It is the general rule that a promise to do that which one is already bound by his contract to do is not a sufficient consideration to support an additional promise by the other party to the contract.
Dahl
v.
Edwin Moss &
Son,
Inc.,
In October, 1965, when Doyle became aware that the costs were going to run beyond the original expeсtation of the parties due to the fact that he had to go into the open market to acquire fill, and because the cost of the fill to be obtained and the rental of equipment was rising sharply, he informed the defendant. The defendant wanted to know what the additional cost would be and was told by Doyle that he could not tell him at that time. The defendant thereupon instructed Doyle to proceed with the job and to get it done, and to keep the costs down to a “slow roar”. The defendant was anxious to have his house completed so that he could occupy it with his family. The situation was one wherein the defendant knew that the ultimate cost of the work was unknown when he instructed Doyle to рroceed with the job and to get it done. Obviously, he was expressing his desire that the costs be kept down, but there was no definable limit suggested. It is true, as claimed by the defendants, that the ultimate cost of the job was well beyond the expectation of both parties. It is also true that both parties were aware of the work being done. The defendants moved into the house in December and the work continued into the month of January.
Under these circumstances an implied contract would arise if services were rendered and materials furnished by the plaintiff at the request of the defendants under an expectation that they were to be paid for, and if the defendants either intended to pay for them оr the services or materials were
The trial сourt concluded that the labor and materials were furnished by the plaintiff with the expectation of payment and under circumstances wherein the defendants knew, or as reasonable persons should have known, that the plaintiff expected payment and that there was an implied agreement that the defendants would pay the plaintiff the reasonable value of the labor and material furnished. It also concluded that the plaintiff’s charges for labor and materials were based on actual out-of-pocket expenses incurred by the plaintiff to the outside suppliers of the labor and materials. This precluded any possibility of profit to the plaintiff for the work in question. The conclusions of the trial court that the charges of the plaintiff were fair and reasonable and that the fact that the costs were far beyond those anticipated by the parties does not defeat the plaintiff’s right to compensation for those costs, cannot be disturbed. The claim of the defendants that the plaintiff failed to prove its damages with reasonable certainty is without merit.
The defendants assign error in an evidentiary ruling by the trial court. In their first special defense the defendants alleged that Doyle represented to them that the cost to fill in the areas in question would not exceed $2500; that at the outset the defendants did not know that the cost of the additional work would exceed $18,000 and that had
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
