272 S.W. 717 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1925
Affirming.
The Jackson Lumber Supply Company made a contract with the Coneva Coal Company to furnish the material and build for it ten miners' houses and one schoolhouse on the property of the coal company. The lumber company then made a subcontract with T.H. Deaton, by which it agreed to furnish the material and he agreed to do the work and was to be paid $180.00 for building each of the miners' houses and $450.00 for building the schoolhouse. Deaton built the houses and thereafter brought this suit against the lumber company, alleging that he had been paid $1,752.47, and praying judgment for the balance of the contract price, $497.53, with interest from August 28, 1920. The lumber company filed an answer denying the allegations of the petition and charging by way of counterclaim that the houses were not built in a good workmanlike manner or in such class of workmanship as was acceptable to the Coneva Coal Company, to its damage in the sum of $1,600.00, for which it prayed judgment. The case was heard before a jury. *241 They returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $425.00, with 6 per cent interest from the date of the verdict, March 27, 1923. The defendant appeals.
By the written contract Deaton agreed to do all the work necessary for the completion of the buildings "in such form and manner and with such class of workmanship as will be acceptable to the coal corporation." It was further stipulated in the contract that all the work should be done, "in a good and first-class workmanship and workmanlike manner, subject to inspection and approval of first party's inspector, James Bolin."
The proof shows that as each of the houses was completed the coal company took possession of them. The proof for Deaton is to the effect that Bolin accepted the houses, saying that he had done a good job, as good as could be expected with the material furnished. The proof for the defendant is that Bolin did not accept the houses and that they were not built in a manner acceptable to the coal company. Bolin testifies as to what he thought necessary to be done to make the houses satisfactory as follows: "Well there was a lot of ceiling to be gone over, and a lot of quarter rounds to be put, and some windows and doors to be fixed, and some mantels and some grates and some thimbles to be put in the chimneys, and different things, I don't remember just what all. I told Mr. Deaton he and another man or two could do it in two or three days."
A contract providing for the building of houses to the satisfaction of the person for whom they are built, means to his reasonable satisfaction. In 30 Am. Ency. of Law, 1236, the rule is thus stated:
"Building contracts, however, frequently provide that the work shall be performed to the satisfaction of the builder. Such a provision is generally construed as not making the builder's declaration of dissatisfaction conclusive, but as requiring the performance of the work by the contractor in such a manner as ought reasonably to satisfy the builder." To same effect see 9 C. J. 744.
The contract provided that the work should be done with such class of workmanship as would be acceptable to the coal corporation and also provided that it should be done in good and first-class workmanship, subject to the inspection and approval of James Bolin, the lumber *242 company's inspector. The two clauses must be read together and when so read the contract must mean that Bolin should inspect and approve the work when done in such workmanlike manner as would be acceptable to the coal corporation, and Deaton was to be paid by the lumber company for the work when accepted and approved by Bolin. To read the contract otherwise is to give no force to the last clause of the contract, which was plainly inserted to determine when Deaton was to be paid for the work.
It is well settled that where the work has been done under a building contract but is defectively executed and the person for whom the buildings are erected has accepted and occupied them, the contractor may recover on a quantum meruit for the work he has done, less the damages the employer has sustained by the breach of the contract. Morford v. Mastin, 6 T. B. M. 612; Morford v. Ambrose and Martin, 3 J. J. M. 690; Escott v. White, 10 Bush 169; Ludlow Lumber Co. v. Kuhling,
While the instructions of the court were not aptly drawn they were not under the evidence substantially prejudicial to appellant. By the first instruction the court construed the contract for the jury. By the second he told the jury in substance that they should find for Deaton the reasonable value of the work he did, considering the contract price for the work, if done according to the contract, and that if this exceeded what he had been paid they should find for him the balance due and if it did not exceed what had been paid they should find for the defendant. If the plaintiff had recovered the whole amount he sued for he would have gotten a verdict of $497.47 with interest from August 28, 1920. The verdict of the jury in his favor for $425.00 with interest from March 27, 1923, shows that the jury deducted something like a hundred dollars from his claim and plainly this deduction was made upon the testimony of Bolin that he told Deaton the things that he should do and told him *243 that he and another man or two could do the work in two or three days.
It is earnestly insisted that the court should have told the jury that if the reasonable value of the work which Deaton did was less than what he had been paid, they should find for the defendant on its counterclaim for the difference. But if this instruction had been given it could not have affected the result of the case, for the jury fixed the value of the work at more than he had been paid.
Judgment affirmed.