The plaintiff, a dry wall subcontractor, sued the defendant owner-contractors, claiming $5347 due under a contract. The defendants denied that the plaintiff performed under the contract and, in their special defense and counterclaim, alleged that the plaintiff failed to complete the work in a thorough and workmanlike manner as required by the contract. The defendants further counterclaimed for liquidated damages under the terms of the agreement, claiming that the work was completed 114 days late. The court rendered judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $5347 and for the defendants under their counterclaim in the sum of $1350, from which both parties appealed.
The defendants claim that the plaintiff failed to satisfy the terms of the contract, which provided that the work of the plaintiff was to be performed “in a good, substantial, thorough and workmanlike manner .. . and in every respect complete ... to the full satisfaction of . . .. [the] Architect”; the plaintiff, therefore, should not recover the amount due. “[W]here the court can see from the contract that it was the intent of the parties that the performance on the one side was not to be conditioned on the performance on the other, the promises will
*179
be construed as independent.”
Finlay
v.
Swirsky,
Another clause of the contract, however, unmistakably provides that payment by the defendants is conditioned upon approval by the architect,
1
who is also an owner-contractor and a codefendant. See
Haugen
v.
Raupach,
In its cross appeal, the plaintiff assigns error with respect to the granting of liquidated damages to the defendants. Substantial performance was completed twenty-five calendar days after the contract completion date. The plaintiff claims that the defendants breached the contract by delaying notification, for forty days past the agreed upon final date for such notification, that it might com *181 menee performance. 2 It argues that the defendants’ breach entirely excuses it from the liquidated damages clause in the contract. In the alternative, the plaintiff argues that for purposes of computing liquidated damages, it should be credited with the forty-day delay of the defendants.
The trial court concluded that the date mentioned in the contract, April 20, was not a guaranteed commencement date, but merely an approximation of the earliest possible date that the plaintiff could start working. The plaintiff attacks this finding, claiming that the defendants’ delay in notification until approximately June 1 that the work could begin constituted a breach of contract. The conclusion of the trial court is tested by the finding and must stand unless it is legally or logically inconsistent with the facts found or unless it involves the application of some erroneous rule of law material to the case.
New Haven
v.
United Illuminating co.,
The plaintiff has also attacked the underlying finding of fact that “[t]he plaintiff and defendants agreed that the earliest possible date on which work by the plaintiff might begin was April 20, 1970.” “A finding of fact is tested by the evidence printed in the appendices to the briefs.”
State ex rel. Golembeske
v.
White,
Even in the absence of an express covenant, “there is an implied one that the contractor shall be permitted to proceed with his construction in accordance with the contract and that he shall be given possession of the premises to enable him to do so.
Gray
v.
Bekins,
The defendants argue that due to the failure of the plaintiff to comply with a provision in the contract requiring the subcontractor to inform the contractor in writing of delays, the plaintiff should be estopped from complaining that the defendants delayed the contract. The contract provides that where the subcontractor is “detained by other Subcontractors . . . [it] will promptly notify the Contractor in writing.” The trial court found that the plaintiff failed to notify the defendants in writing or in any other way that its work was being delayed by other subcontractors or by any other circumstances beyond its control. It concluded that the apparent reason for the plaintiff’s failure to notify the defendants that it was being delayed by other subcontractors was that it was not delayed by anyone but the owner. Further, it concluded that the plaintiff’s failure to notify the defendants that it was being delayed, as provided for in the contract, estops it from raising that complaint as a defense to the imposition of liquidated damages.
The defendants did not plead, nor is there any finding to indicate, that the delay was caused on the part of any other subcontractors. To the contrary, the finding indicates that the plaintiff was not notified by the defendants as required by their agreement. Thus, the defendants are strictly bound *184 by tbe terms of the contract they drew up; the agreement imposed no duty upon the plaintiff to render notification to the defendants.
The plaintiff, in its cross appeal, claims that the defendants’ breach of promise to notify it that the work might commence by April 20 relieves the plaintiff of any obligation to pay liquidated damages for the delay. The defendants’ late notification did not constitute a material breach of the contract because, as the court found, the plaintiff" was not thereby precluded from satisfying the object of the contract without a substantial variance from what was contemplated by the parties.
Mazzotta
v.
Bornstein,
There is error in part, the judgment with respect to the counterclaim is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The contract provides, in pertinent part: “In consideration whereof, the said Contractor [owner] agrees that he will pay to the said Sub-contractor . . . the sum of $26,496 . . . , said amount to be paid as follows: 100 per cent (100%) of all labor and material which has been placed in position and . . . completed, approved by said Architect .... (Payments shall be made . . . within 15 days of satiafestasy completion).”
The contract provided in relevant part: “The Sub-contractor knows that the Contractor must have his contract performed on or before the 20th day of April; and it is therefore understood and agreed that the work provided for herein shall be entirely completed on or before July 31, 1970 and to that end the Sub-contractor will perform not less than the following average amount of work: Installation by at least a 4 man crew. Taping by at least a 2 man crew.” (Emphasis supplied.)
A memorandum of decision may bo consulted for a better understanding of a decision, to interpret the finding and to determine the grounds upon which the judgment rests.
Anonymous
v.
Norton,
