188 P. 550 | Cal. | 1920
This action was brought by plaintiff, a contractor, to recover certain money alleged to be due from defendant on account of certain marble and tile work done in a theater building in Los Angeles belonging to defendant, which was then being constructed for said owner. *362 The complaint was in three counts, of which it is necessary to consider only one, the second, that being the count on which the action was tried and determined. The action was tried by the court without a jury and judgment was given for plaintiff in the aggregate sum of $1,830, with interest. This is an appeal by defendant from said judgment.
The claim of plaintiff was based upon a written contract of date July 21, 1911, by which he agreed to furnish the labor and materials necessary to complete the marble and tile work in accord with the specifications therefor, under the direction and subject to the approval of the architect, for $3,130, payable in installments. There was a provision that when any payment or installment became due, and at the final completion of the work, a certificate in writing shall be obtained from the architect stating the amount due. It was further provided that progress payments shall not be construed as an absolute acceptance of the work up to the time of the payment, "but the entire work is to be subject to inspection and approval of the architect at the time when it shall be claimed by the contractor that the contract and works are complete." The complaint (filed May 28, 1915) alleged that plaintiff fully completed said contract about January 10, 1912, all in accord with the plans and specifications. It did not allege the issuance of any certificate by the architect, and did allege substantially that said certificate was willfully and without just cause refused by the architect and under the direction of and in collusion with the owner. It further alleged that defendant, who took possession of the premises shortly after January 10, 1912, based his refusal to pay the balance of the contract price on the ground that there was a series of slight depressions in the tile floor, and on the further ground that some of the marble slabs did not match, and never objected on account of any failure of plaintiff to secure a certificate from the architect, but based his refusal solely on other grounds, and that defendant waived the production of any such certificate. No question was presented in the trial court as to the sufficiency of the allegation to present the issue of waiver, and the trial court found in accord with the allegations of the complaint in regard thereto. Defendant claimed that the contract was not substantially performed in that the tile flooring in the lobby was not properly laid and that the *363 marble work did not comply with the specifications. The trial court found that the plaintiff did substantially perform and complete all of the terms and conditions imposed on him by the contract; that the marble work as furnished by plaintiff complied completely with the requirements of the contract; that there are certain "depressions" in the tile floor, but that the tile floor as constructed substantially complies with the conditions of the contract and is a substantial performance thereof; and that "said tile floor is damaged by said trivial defects in the sum of three hundred dollars, and that said defects can be remedied, and the reasonable cost of remedying said defects is three hundred dollars." (The judgment was for the sum remaining unpaid on the contract, less said three hundred dollars.) The trial court further found in accord with the allegations of the complaint in regard to the architect's certificate and the waiver of the same by defendant. In his answer defendant set up the plea of a former action pending, and the finding of the trial court was substantially that although there had been a previous action, such action was no longer pending. The judgment of the trial court was for the sum remaining unpaid on the contract price, less the three hundred dollars allowed defendant as the cost of remedying the defects in the work.
With relation to the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding of substantial performance of the contract, appellant's principal reliance, as evidenced by his briefs, appears to be based on the failure of plaintiff to obtain the architect's certificate, evidencing completion of the work, the theory being that in view of the provisions of the contract relative to approval of the work by the architect and the issuance of a certificate to that effect, such certificate constitutes a necessary prerequisite to the right to recover. [1] The provision of the contract as to an architect's certificate was, of course, a provision for the benefit of defendant which might be waived by him. (SeeKnarston v. Manhattan Life Ins. Co.,
[5] Upon the question of substantial performance in fact we see no reason to doubt that the evidence was sufficient to support the findings. As to what is meant by the term *365
"substantial performance" in such matters as this, the law of this state is clearly set forth in Connell v. Higgins,
The district court of appeal in deciding this case was of the opinion that there was not sufficient evidence on which to found a conclusion as to the reasonable cost of remedying the defects in the tile flooring, the court finding, as already noted, that while the tile floor was constructed substantially in accord with the conditions of the contract, "said tile floor is damaged by said trivial defects in the sum of three hundred dollars, and that said defects can be remedied, and the reasonable cost of remedying said defects is three hundred dollars." No useful purpose can be subserved by a discussion of the fragmentary evidence elicited by the trial court on this question. Suffice it to say that we find therein no evidence furnishing a sufficient basis for the conclusion as to *366 the amount that should be deducted from the contract price on account of the defects. This, as we have noted, was the conclusion of the district court of appeal.
The briefs are largely devoted to the question of the defense of pendency of a former action. The court found that there was a former action between these parties involving the same subject matter, in which a judgment of nonsuit was entered, and further that said action had been abandoned and was not pending in abatement of this action. [7] We think the latter finding, while placed among the conclusions of law, must be deemed a misplaced finding of fact. [8] It seems entirely clear that this finding cannot be held to find support in the evidence. The record must be held to show without conflict that the judgment of nonsuit having been entered, plaintiff took an appeal therefrom to this court, and that such appeal was pending herein at the time of the trial of this action. We see no force in any of the claims to the contrary made by plaintiff. "An action" is deemed to be pending from the time of its commencement until its final determination upon appeal, or until the time for appeal has passed, unless the judgment is sooner satisfied." (See Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1049.) The appeal having been taken, it necessarily was a pending appeal until decided or dismissed by the appellate court. That the appellant was not in fact diligently prosecuting the appeal or had practically abandoned it is altogether immaterial. Until it was decided or dismissed, there was no final determination of the action upon the appeal, and the action was therefore still pending. This being the situation, the finding of the trial court should have been to the effect that the former action was still pending, and such a finding would have required that this action abate. Plaintiff seeks to exclude this case from the effect of the general rule by reason of the fact that the judgment in the former action was one of nonsuit only, which could not operate as a bar to a second action. This fact is altogether immaterial. Notwithstanding it, the action was still pending by reason of the appeal which had not been finally determined. The only question is whether the former action was still pending, and the nature of the judgment given from which the pending appeal was taken is altogether beside the question. Plaintiff relies in this connection upon Pyle v. Piercy, 122 Cal. *367
383, [55 P. 141]. Some of the language in that opinion may, upon a cursory reading, be misleading. The court there was not discussing a plea of former action pending, but a case of a former judgment plead in bar. After very properly concluding that a judgment of dismissal for failure of plaintiff to appear on the trial could not be held to operate as a bar to another action, the court said in reply to some contention of appellant that it necessarily followed that such a judgment cannot be pleaded in abatement and avoidance, that if the "judgment" is such that it cannot be pleaded in bar, it cannot be pleaded in abatement, and that a "judgment" which has not the elements to constitute a bar has not the elements to support a plea in abatement. What the case really holds, and all that it has ever been cited for, is that a judgment of dismissal of action for want of prosecution for nonappearance of plaintiff at the time set for trial is not an adjudication of the cause on the merits and is in no way a bar to a subsequent action. (Carr v. Howell,
[9] Defendant insists that in view of the situation with relation to this matter, the judgment of the superior court should be reversed with directions to dismiss the action. This was the course followed in Fisk v. Atkinson,
We find no other claim of material error that, in view of our conclusion on the points already noticed, merits discussion.
No good reason appears why the new trial that must be had should not be limited to the matters in regard to which error has been shown. Learned counsel for defendant appears to think that injustice would be done by adopting any such course, in that he relied so confidently on his plea *369 of former action pending that he did not fully develop his other defenses. He had no right to rely to any such extent on this technical plea, and in so far as we can see he did not lack in presenting fully to the court below such defenses as he had. It is a plain duty of appellate courts to facilitate to the extent of their capacity as speedy a disposition of litigation as is consistent with the doing of complete justice between the parties.
The judgment is reversed and a new trial ordered solely upon the issue of a former action pending, and upon the issue respecting the amount, if any, that should be allowed defendant by reason of defects in the tile work, the findings already made upon all other issues to stand as the findings upon such issues in so far as the new judgment to be given is concerned.
Shaw, J., Lawlor, J., Wilbur, J., Lennon, T., Olney, J., and Kerrigan, J., pro tem., concurred.