65 P. 391 | Cal. | 1901
Plaintiff's complaint charged in two counts. By the first, he sued in quantum meruit et valebat for the reasonable value of materials furnished and labor performed by his assignor, which he alleged to be $2,049. Of this sum there remained unpaid $572.25, for which he demanded judgment. By the second, he pleaded an express contract with defendant, under which his assignor was to refloor and repair the floor of the second story of the Nevada Stables for the agreed price of $2,049, of which defendant had only paid the sum of $1,536.75. For the remainder, judgment was sought. Defendant denied all the material allegations of the complaint, excepting the execution *172 tion of the contract for the work. Judgment passed for plaintiff as prayed for, and from the order denying his motion for a new trial the defendant appeals.
The uncontested facts are that defendant was the owner of the building known as the Nevada Stables. It was occupied by his lessee, and used as a livery-stable. The second floor contained stalls for stabling horses. The tenant complained of the dilapidated and leaky condition of this floor, by reason of which the horses' urine dripped upon and injured the carriages and other vehicles kept on the floor beneath. It was represented to defendant that a new waterproof floor for the second story was a necessity. In conversations with Fletcher, plaintiff's assignor, the need of an entire new floor was frequently discussed. Defendant finally decided to have the work done. Fletcher himself drew the contract with its specifications. Bids were called for, and Fletcher was the successful bidder. He entered upon the performance of the work and carried it to completion. The contract was never recorded, and was therefore "wholly void." As work progressed, payments upon account of it were made. When Fletcher announced its completion, payment of the remainder — the amount here in suit — was refused upon the ground that the work had not been done in substantial compliance with the contract.
To this point the facts are without conflict. The finding that the contract was void for lack of recordation was followed by an additional finding, to the effect that the contract had been substantially fulfilled by Fletcher, and that the reasonable value of his labor and material equaled, and indeed exceeded, the amount sued for. The court also found that since the date of completion the defendant had been in the full use and enjoyment of the construction.
Appellant contends that the work was not performed according to the terms of the contract, and that in substantial particulars there was a failure in this regard. Consequently, he urges that no recovery should have been allowed. Respondent meets this with the counter-declaration that for failure of recordation the contract was "wholly void, and no recovery shall be had thereon by either party thereto" (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1183); and supporting his position by adjudications upon this language of the code, asserts with boldness the following: "If, as frequently decided, the void contract is as nothing, with no existence *173 past or present, how can it be said that the contractor could be guilty of a breach of it? The omission to record a contract does something more than deprive a contractor of his right to a lien. It deprives him of his right to recover the price specified therein, unless it is the reasonable value of the work and materials furnished. It deprives the owner of his right to insist on the work being done in accordance with such contract, or to recover in damages for breach of the contract if it is not, and it deprives him of his right to compel the contractor to accept the contract price in full satisfaction of his claim if the reasonable value of his work and materials furnished is greater than that price."
If this be the logical result of our past interpretation of the statute, then must it be said, that if that interpretation is necessary under the law as written, naught remains but to adhere to it, leaving it to the legislature to afford relief. If, however, this interpretation is an erroneous one, then no considerations of adjudicated cases, no rule of stare decisis, should prevent a court from correcting mistaken views which lead to such extraordinarily harsh and unjust consequences.
The first question, then, to be resolved is, Do the decisions support the argument and conclusions of respondent's attorney? It must be admitted that they do. The first of them is Kellogg v.Howes,
As has been said, these decisions lend support to respondent's position. But it is to be noted that in Kellogg v. Howes,
Is such a conclusion necessary under the law? We think not; and we think further, that the error arose in Rebman v. San Gabrieletc. Co.,
Marchant v. Hayes,
In the case at bar, no question arises as to the character of the work done by the contractor. It is not in dispute that the *178 contractor did not wholly refloor the second story. The controversy arises over the interpretation of the contract. If the contract called for the laying of a new floor 3 x 6, clear kiln-dried pine flooring, put down in deck style, and filled with boiling-hot bitumen, then unquestionably the contractor did not comply with his contract, for, admittedly, in the passage-ways comprising an area of at least a fourth of the whole floor, he merely nailed a surface flooring upon the old flooring which was there.
The provisions of the contract are as follows: "First, the contractor agrees. . . . to furnish the necessary labor and materials, including tools, implements, and appliances required, and perform and complete in a workmanlike manner all the work of laying a new floor on the second story of the Nevada Stable." The floor was to be laid in conformity with the specifications. The specifications provided: "The entire stall-floor will be laid with 3 x 6 clear kiln-dried pine flooring put down in deck style, filled with boiling-hot bitumen, floor driven up tight and bored for the spikes, and then filled up with the hot bitumen."
"The entire stall-floors coated with hot bitumen. Then a two-inch surface-floor laid over the entire stalls, under the horses, a space of 3/5 x 5/6 to be laid 2 x 4-inch surface, open joints 5/8.
"The 3 x 6 floor will be laid lengthwise of the building and furred up to give the stalls 2 1/2-inch fall in the length of the stalls. Passageways furred up to the level with stall-grating."
We think no one, in reading this contract, could entertain any doubt that its meaning was that the entire flooring of the second story, designated the stall-floor, should be removed, and a new flooring of 3 x 6 laid lengthwise of the building, should be put in its place, and made waterproof with bitumen. The contract calls for "all work of laying a new floor on the second story," not for the laying of a new floor where necessary. In connection with the contract, the opening parapraph of the specifications declares that the entire stall-floor shall be so relaid, and in the next paragraph — as noting a recognized distinction between the stall-floor and the floors of the stalls — it is provided that "stall-floors," or floors of the stalls, in addition to the 3 x 6 flooring, shall have this flooring coated with hot bitumen, and an additional two-inch-surface-floor laid on top. *179
There does not seem, in this contract, to be enough of ambiguity to call for construction; but, if it be conceded that such ambiguity exists, remembering that the contractor himself drew the contract, that it is indisputably shown that the owner had discussed with him the necessity for a complete new flooring, that the contractor had said it was necessary, and that the owner certainly understood the contract to mean that the entire second story was to be refloored, the provisions of sections
The finding of the court in this regard is therefore unsupported, and the order denying a new trial is therefore reversed.
Temple, J., and McFarland, J., concurred.
*180Hearing in Bank denied.