150 Pa. 41 | Pa. | 1892
Opinion by
The only question presented by this record is whether the court erred in refusing to enter judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defence. That question, we think, is entitled to an affirmative answer.
If this were a scire facias on a claim filed by Christy, the principal contractor, for work and labor done and materials furnished by himself under his contracts with the owner of the building, averments of default and consequent damage, such as are contained in this affidavit of defence, would be sufficient to prevent judgment; but the plaintiffs were sub-contractors, under Christy, for the painting and glazing of the house, without notice of the supplemental contract of April 7, 1890, and, as such contractors under the original contract of December 13, 1889, between Christy and the owner, they fully performed their part of the agreement and filed their claim in due form, giving the items and dates thereof in detail. The integrity of their claim is not in any manner impeached by the affidavit of defence, nor is it even suggested that they did not perform' their undertaking with due diligence and in strict compliance with the terms of said contract. Conceding, for
The authority of Christy to bind the building, as surety to the plaintiffs for the amount of their work and materials, sprang, not from his supplemental contract with the owner, made when the painting and glazing was nearly completed, but from the original contract of December 18, 1889, of which alone the plaintiffs had notice. The latter contains no provision that can be construed into a waiver of right to file .a lien; nor does it provide for the completion of the building, or payment of damages for non-completion thereof within a specified time. In form, it is an ordinary building contract, specifying the kind of building, cost, etc., not even providing for time and mode of payment. There is nothing in its provisions to bring the ease within the principle of Schroeder v. Galland, 134 Pa. 277, and that line of cases. The supplementary agreement contains other provisions, but, inasmuch as the plaintiffs do not appear to have had any notice thereof and cannot be affected thereby, it is unnecessary to consider them.
When plaintiffs were employed by the contractor to do the painting and glazing, they knew, or must be presumed to have known, the terms of the original contract—the only one then in existence. In the absence of any notice that its terms were changed, they had a right to presume that it remained unaltered. It was not their duty to inquire, during the progress of their work, whether a supplemental agreement was made or not. If it was to the interest of either party to that agreement that the plaintiffs should be informed of the change in
It is ordered that the record be remitted to the court below with direction to enter judgment against defendants for the amount of plaintiff’s claim, with interest, etc., unless other legal or equitable cause be shown to said court why such judgment should not be so entered.