260 Mass. 173 | Mass. | 1927
The plaintiff seeks to recover damages in an action at law for an alleged breach of a written contract for the construction and erection of certain walls and a garage, in that the foundation and walls of the garage have buckled and crumpled, and that the materials and construction were of poor quality.
All the material evidence is reported, and it warrants the finding of the following facts: The work contracted for was completed the last of April or the first of May, 1925. At that time the defendant had received $2,300 in payments on account of the work done. Forty-five days later the defendant called for the balance of the payments, $700, as being due under the provisions of the contract which in this regard read: “A fourth payment of five hundred dollars ($500.00) is to be made upon completion of the driveway and upon completion of all work agreed to be performed under this contract in accordance with the plans and specifications previously referred to herein and in a manner acceptable to the City of Boston and to the owner. The balance of the price, six hundred dollars ($600.00) shall be due and payable 45 days after date of fourth payment.”
The demands were refused by the plaintiff because, as he alleged, the walls were cracked. Three weeks after the walls and roof were constructed the walls and garage had cracked
There was evidence to the effect that, after the defendant had excavated for the foundation about eleven feet, the plaintiff went into the pit, tested the ground with a pick, and said to the defendant, “all right, go ahead and put in the foundation”; that he helped the men working for the defendant to throw down in the pit the rocks and material for laying the foundation; that the inspector saw the ground when a foot or two of the foundation was laid and said he was satisfied with it, it “looked like 'hard pan’.”
At the close of the evidence the defendant requested the judge to rule, (1) “In order for the plaintiff to maintain his
The words of the contract under seal, “All work to be done to the satisfaction of the City of Boston Inspector,” do not in themselves inhibit an action at law by the owner to recover damages for the breach of that contract until he shall “prove that the work outlined in the written agreement was not done to the satisfaction of the building inspector of the city of Boston.” Nor can such a condition be implied to restrain an action at law upon the contract by the owner from any facts which are inferable from the reported testimony; especially when consideration is given, as it must be, to the provision that the fourth payment “is to be made upon completion of the driveway and upon completion of all work agreed to be performed ... in accordance with the plans and specifications . . . and in a manner acceptable to the city of Boston and to the owner.” The provision looks to the result, and, while it necessarily was to be passed upon in a reasonable way by the inspector for the time being of the city of Boston, that condition did not make the individual
So ordered.