Opinion by
The plaintiff is a home owner in Philadelphia. The defendant corporation is engaged in the “home improvement business” with offices in that city. On February 26, 1955 the defendant by written contract with the plaintiff, undertook to “apply plastic plastering” on the four exterior walls of plaintiff’s cement block house for a consideration of $1,100. In this action the plaintiff alleged that the material applied to the building was not in conformity with the samples submitted by defendant at the time the contract was entered into; also that the material was improperly applied; and sought damages resulting from defendant’s failure to perform the work in accordance with its
“Damages are never presumed; the plaintiff must establish by evidence such facts as will furnish a basis for their assessment according to some definite and legal rule”:
Rice v. Hill,
The contract by its terms specifically stated the extent of the contractor’s liability for defective performance, in this language: “Contractor guarantees that all materials furnished by it will be of standard quality free from defects and will be installed or applied in a good and workmanlike manner for a period of one
The work was performed in March 1955. Under the contract damages were limited to the period of one year from installation. There is evidence that within that period the paint-like material, which had been applied, chipped and peeled from parts of the walls of the house. Plaintiff’s proofs however did not establish the extent of the damage for which the defendant was solely responsible (Cf.
Hood v. Meininger,
Judgment reversed with a venire.
