336 Mass. 676 | Mass. | 1958
In this action of contract the plaintiff declared on an account annexed for goods sold and delivered. The disputed items in the account are a balance allegedly due for “skylight material delivered for 46 Vaneo Duratite Hip Skylights as per contract 10/18/51 in re Kensington Housing Project” with interest from January 28, 1952, and interest on three other undisputed items. In its answer the defendant made general denial, pleaded payment, and
The judge found for the plaintiff on the disputed items, granted the plaintiff’s requests for rulings, denied certain requests for rulings by the defendant, and reported his findings and rulings on the requests to the Appellate Division. The case is here on the defendant’s appeal from an order of the Appellate Division dismissing the report.
It appears from the findings that on September 28, 1951, the plaintiff received from the defendant, a subcontractor engaged on the Kensington Street Housing Project at Hartford, Connecticut, an order for the fabrication of 46 Vaneo Duratite Hip skylights for a price of $14,500. The contract, which originally provided that the sheet metal trim should be of aluminum, was later “mutually modified and changed so that the skylights to be manufactured and fabricated . . . were to be of galvanized iron and instead of hip they were to be of ridge type.” The skylights were constructed in accordance with plans and specifications approved by the architects of the project and were shipped to the defendant before the end of December. The understanding was that payments were to be made as requisitioned by the plaintiff. The defendant did not comply with these terms and made no payments “for months” after the skylights had been delivered. For “many months” after delivery the defendant “made no complaint . . . about the skylights not being made according to plans but on the contrary . . . promised time and time again to pay for the same but did not.” The “plaintiff in every respect conformed to the agreement it made with the defendant.”
In view of these findings there was no error in the dismissal of the report. There was consideration to support the modification of the original agreement. Hastings v. Lovejoy, 140 Mass. 261, 264. Wit v. Commercial Hotel Co. 253 Mass. 564, 572-573. McCormick v. Proprietors of the Cemetery of Mount Auburn, 285 Mass. 548, 550-551, and cases cited. “If the parties to a bilateral contract agree to rescind or modify it, there is no difficulty in regard to con
The findings of the judge make a discussion of the various requests for rulings unnecessary.
Order dismissing report affirmed.