4 Wash. 390 | Wash. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by the respondents to recover of the appellant a balance alleged to be due upon a contract for the construction of a certain brick building in Ellensburgh. The contract contained the usual clause making payment conditional upon a proper certificate from the architect that the work for which the payment was claimed had been satisfactorily done and accepted by him. No such certificate was presented by the respondents as a basis for the demand for the payment of the sums for which the action was brought. They alleged in their complaint, however, as a reason why such certificate was not furnished, the fact that the architect unreasonably, obstinately and in bad faith,refused to give the same. The only proof offered on the part of respondents, to support this allegation in the complaint, was testimony tending to establish the fact that the work which they were to do under the contract had been done and completed in substantial conformance with the requirements of said contract. The court instructed the jury that if they found that the con
What is the proper rule as to the necessity and force of the architect’s certificate under contracts of this kind? That the provision of the contract requiring such certificate should be given force, is too clear for argument, and is not denied, as we understand it, by the respondents. If, however, the law of such cases justifies the instruction given by the court in this case, we are unable to see that any substantial benefit to either party can be derived from requiring such certificate. Without such provision the respondents, to have recovered upon the contract, would have been required to show a substantial compliance therewith on their part, or some acts on the part of the appellant excusing them from such performance, and, as under the instruction of the court as above stated, that was all they were required to show, with such provision in the contract, it follows that said instruction deprived, appellant of any and all benefit from such provision.
Counsel for respondents, with great diligence and ability, cited to the court a large number of cases in which, as he claims, this precise question had been decided in accord
The instruction of the court not only warranted the jury in any case in excusing the production of the architect’s certificate for the reasons above stated, but under the peculiar circumstances of this case, as disclosed by the proofs, was clearly erroneous. The undisputed proofs showed that a material part of the work was so inefficiently constructed that it had fallen down and had become of no value; that such work was of a nature that it could be replaced according to the conditions of the contract, and
The judgmentmust be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Anders, C. J., and Stiles, Scott and Dunbar, JJ., concur.