The plaintiff, an architect licensed to practice architecture in Connecticut, brought this action to recover a fee alleged to be due under a contract wherein the plaintiff agreed to provide architectural services for the construction of an apartment building on land situated in the city of Meriden. The defendants are Joseph F. Carabetta, Meadow Haven, Inc., Carabetta Enterprises, Inc., and Victoria Towers, Inc., all of Meriden. Joseph F. Carabetta, the individual defendant, is a principal and officer of each of the three defendant corporations and each defendant is engaged in the building business. During the course of the trial, the parties stipulated that any judgment rendered against any one defendant should be against all defendants. The referee rendered judgment for the plaintiff to recover of the defendants the sum of $57,378.65, together with interest in the sum of $9324, making a total of $66,702.65. The defendants have appealed to this court.
The defendants assign error in the finding of subordinate facts. They concede that there was evidence to support these findings but urge that some of them were made without the benefit of evidence which the defendant sought to introduce, which was excluded by the referee. The ruling in question will
On these subordinate facts the referee concluded that the plaintiff contracted with the defendants to design an apartment building which would meet the limitations of qualifications of the F.H.A.; that the defendants agreed to pay the plaintiff a fee for these services which would not exceed the maximum permitted by the F.H.A.; that the plaintiff fully performed his contract with the defendants
The defendants assign error in a ruling by the referee excluding certain evidence. The case was tried on six days over a period of three months from September 15, 1969, to December 19, 1969. On the second day of the trial the plaintiff testified during cross-examination that he felt sure that the wind and floor loads in his plans complied with the applicable F.H.A. code because he had confidence in his structural engineer who prepared the calculations and computations. Later on that day during the cross-examination of Peter Verkon, the chief architect in the Hartford office of the F.H.A., a witness called by the plaintiff, the defendants offered in evidence the minimum standards of the F.H.A. with respect to wind and floor loads applicable to apartment buildings. The plaintiff objected to the evidence on the ground that up to that point the defendants had given no indication that the plans were defective. The plaintiff called the referee’s attention to the fact that in response to the plaintiff’s motion for disclosure the defendants’ compliance therewith on December 10, 1968, had specified three objections to the plaintiff’s plans—“incomplete, unsuitable, and late”—and had given no indication of any claim that the plans were defective. In so doing the plaintiff acted in accordance with the procedure suggested in
Hirsch
v.
Thrall,
The defendants claim that the architectural services rendered by the plaintiff did not comply with the basic design criteria for live and wind loads according to the F.H.A. standards, and that such evidence was admissible under a general denial. Practice Book §120 provides: “No facts may be proved under either a general or special denial except such as show that the plaintiff’s statements of fact are untrue. Facts which are consistent with such statements but show, notwithstanding, that he has no cause of action, must be specially alleged. Thus, accord and satisfaction, arbitration and award, coverture, duress, fraud, illegality not apparent on the face of the pleadings, infancy, that the defendant was non compos mentis, payment (even
The referee indicated by his ruling that where the plaintiff alleges performance of a building contract, if the defendant claims there was a failure to perform in any particular, it is a fundamental rule of pleading that the defendant must affirmatively specify that particular in his answer. In
Dean
v.
Connecticut Tobacco Corporation,
The defendants also assign error in the ruling of the referee denying their motion to amend their
In the case at bar the amendment was offered after the second day of trial. The referee considered the fact that at no time prior thereto had the defendants claimed that the plans were defective. The defendants’ compliance with the plaintiff’s motion for
One of the issues at the trial was whether the plaintiff agreed to design an apartment budding which would not cost more than $12.50 per square foot. The plaintiff and a witness called by him were permitted, over the objection of the defendants, to testify as to whether it was customary within the architectural profession to enter into such an agreement. The defendants duly excepted and now claim, first, that these rulings on evidence recited in the draft finding should be added to the finding, and second, that such evidence was not admissible. We have considered the matters set forth in the draft finding in order to review the referee’s ruling. The defendants objected several times to the testimony on custom and usage on the ground of irrelevancy. “We’re only concerned with the contract with this particular case,” and such evidence “would have no bearing” on the issue of this case. In their brief, however, the only argument offered to sustain their position is that the evidence was not admissible in the absence of a showing that the defendants knew of the custom or usage. When an objection at the trial is made a ground for appeal, reasons subse
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
