186 Pa. Super. 101 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1958
Opinion by
The plaintiff as general contractor built a manufacturing plant for the defendant corporation in 1952. The contract price was $154,000 all of which was paid except $3,666.67, evidenced by four promissory notes signed by all of the defendants. This is an action in assumpsit brought by plaintiff on the notes. The defendants contested payment alleging that plaintiff did not complete work contemplated by the contract, in
At the trial in January 1957 the defendant corporation was permitted to submit evidence of the cost of installing the terra cotta drain and the construction of the cesspool at prevailing market prices for labor and material at the time of trial. Plaintiff, alleging error in the refusal of a new trial contends that the breach of the contract, if any, occurred in 1952 and that defendants’ damage cannot be measured by inflated costs under changed conditions over four years later. It was also contended that the alleged cost of install
When a building contractor has neglected to perform his contract in every respect, it is the duty of the owner to mitigate the damages resulting from the unfinished work which the contractor failed to perform. Taber v. Porter-Gildersleeve Co., 271 Pa. 245, 114 A. 773. The rule that one cannot recover damages from a defaulting party which could have been avoided by the exercise of reasonable effort is applicable to construction contracts. In Henry Shenk Co. v. Erie Co. et al., 319 Pa. 100, 178 A. 662, at 109, it is said: "`The rule [avoidable consequences not recoverable] may be applicable in any case of breach of contract. Where damages are claimed, not for the direct injury, that is, the loss of the value of the contract itself, but for a consequential loss, the plaintiff cannot recover for such loss if he might reasonably have avoided it'. Since the early New York case of Clark v. Marsiglia, 1 Denio 317, practically all American jurisdictions recognize and adopt this rule: Chamberlin v. Morgan, 68 Pa. 168; Hoffman v. Delaware, etc., R.R. Co., 39 Pa. Superior Ct. 47."
When plaintiff therefore, defaulted in the performance of its contract in the above respects it was the duty of the defendants to mitigate the damages as of the approximate time of the default by doing the work themselves or through others, at labor and material costs then obtaining. The defaulting contractor should be compelled only "to pay what it would reasonably cost [to do the work] at the time of the breach, less contract price . . ." Taber v. Porter-Gildersleeve Co., supra. (Italics added). "As a general rule, the damages upon breach of contract are to be measured as of the date of the breach": 15 Am. Jur., Damages, § 50. To the same effect is Morse, Williams & Co. v. Arnfield
The record in this case is meagre in a number of respects. The actual date of default does not appear. And from the testimony it is impossible to determine the conditions on the ground under which plaintiff was obligated to install the cesspool and the terra cotta pipe. It does appear definitely however that the cesspool was intended for the disposal of industrial wastes only, and the function of the pipe, running from the downspouts of the structure was to carry storm water from the roof of the building to a nearby creek. The defendants’ expert witness testified in effect that changed conditions between 1952 and 1956 increased the costs of construction of both the cesspool and the pipe line. He testified: “When the work was started, it [the cost] could have been less because the ground was ruined. Q. What ruined the ground? A. It is more like a swamp. Q. What is that from? A. It comes from spreading upon the fields from this drainage. It is a very marshy situation, more like a swamp than anything else.”
Defendants’ witness, Marder, a plumber, testified from an inspection of the premises that the cost of running a 15-inch terra cotta pipe from the plant to the creek at the time of trial in January 1957 would be approximately $2,200. Plaintiff’s witness, Stauffer, a sewer and drainage contractor, testified that in Au
Judgment reversed with a venire.