93 Pa. Super. 147 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1927
Argued October 28, 1927. Plaintiffs were orally requested by defendant to submit a bid for furnishing and erecting certain structural steel and iron work for an automobile sales and service building. Their bid of $16,000 was accepted *149 by defendant in writing. Shortly thereafter the Bureau of Building Inspection for the County of Philadelphia ordered certain changes in the weight of some of the steel to be placed in the building, one of which required the furnishing of a certain steel lintel of the weight of one hundred twenty pounds per foot. Plaintiffs installed a lintel weighing sixty-four pounds per foot instead of one hundred twenty pounds per foot. The total amount of the original bid and the supplemental estimates was $17,027.10. The building was finished and accepted by defendant who paid to plaintiffs $15,000 on account. When this suit was brought for the balance of $2,027.10 alleged to be due on the contract, defendant filed an affidavit of defense. Issues of fact were raised as to a small portion of plaintiffs' demand amounting to $325.06. In addition to this defendant pleaded a set-off or counter-claim. His allegation was and is that the substitution by plaintiffs of the steel lintel weighing sixty-four pounds per foot for one weighing one hundred twenty pounds per foot reduced the "carrying capacity of the floor at the place where the said lintel was erected and from the said lintel to the long beam into which the intersecting beams are framed is a space of 206 square feet, which space will only hold one-half the carrying weight of the balance of the building; ...... that the building was erected and is used as a garage, and that the said space would hold two automobiles if the lintel were of the weight intended to be placed there, to wit: 120 pounds per foot, but that by reason of the substitution of such lintel by the reduction in weight to 64 pounds per foot, said space will only carry the weight of one automobile. By reason of the wrongful substitution defendant will lose as a direct cause thereof the rental value of one automobile, to wit: $10 per month for the life of the building, conservatively stated as 20 years, or a total of $2,400." Plaintiffs filed a reply *150 and took a rule for judgment, claiming that the affidavit of defense was insufficient to the extent of the averments as to the counter-claim of $2,400 above mentioned. The court below made the rule absolute and directed the entry of judgment for the amount of plaintiffs' claim as to which the affidavit of defense was held insufficient. From that action we have this appeal.
The ground upon which the court based its action is that the averment that defendant will lose $2,400 as a result of the installation of the lintel weighing sixty-four pounds per foot is a mere expression of an opinion without any averment of facts to sustain it; that it is founded upon an assumption that he will own the building for twenty years, and that it will be used for garage purposes for the entire period, during which there will always be such a demand for storage of cars that he can fill every available space therein; and that the claim is so highly contingent, remote and speculative that it furnishes no reliable measure of damages. We agree with this conclusion. In the nature of things a loss or damage based on such a measure is not susceptible of the certain and definite proof which the law demands. In our view this is not the proper measure of damage to be applied to the breach averred. There is no averment of a diminution of the market value of the building, or of its rental value as a whole. The court was right in holding that the allegations as to defendant's counter-claim were insufficient.
The contention is made on behalf of appellant that plaintiffs were not entitled to judgment because the statement of claim is not self-sustaining in that it does not contain averments of fact which, if not contradicted, would have entitled them to a verdict for the amount of the judgment. It is pointed out that while the statement of claim avers an original contract for *151
furnishing and erecting material for $16,000 and two supplemental contracts to do certain other work amounting, respectively, to $965 and $62.10, and there is an averment of performance of the main contract and the acceptance by defendant, there is no averment of performance of the supplemental contracts. We are constrained to sustain this contention so far as it relates to that part of the judgment which represents the items of $965 and $62.10 claimed under the supplemental contracts. The statement of claim must be self-sustaining and sufficient to support a judgment in the absence of a defense: Jones v. Markley,
As so reduced, the judgment is affirmed, with a procedendo. *152