275 Mass. 403 | Mass. | 1931
This is an action of contract to recover the balance due on a written contract and for extra work. No question is raised as to the extras. The declaration is upon an account annexed. The first item in that account is “Balance on contract for heating and plumbing work $125.00.” The answer of the defendant contained a gen
Parts of the contract printed in the record show that it was “intended to cover materials needed to make a first class hot water heating system. This material . . . shall be of best quality and erected in a workmanlike manner.” The contractor testified in substance that the work was completed about the first of 1929 and was a workmanlike job; that in June, 1929, he saw two leaks in the system, which he agreed to but never did fix, and that he had been paid all due on the contract except $125. There was other testimony from an expert that he had inspected the system and found it a good one as to materials and workmanship; that he saw no leaks, but, if there were leaks, it was not properly'constructed and was defective. The owner of the building testified that he moved into the house in February, 1929, and noticed six to eight leaks around the radiators and pipe joints, which were a source of inconvenience to him and necessitated keeping absorbent pads under the valves and joints to prevent staining the floor; that he was unable to cover the pipes in the cellar with asbestos “until last winter” (apparently 1929-1930) because of the leaks, and that in his opinion the work had not been completed.
This is in substance all the evidence in the record. There is nothing to show the contract price of the job or the expenditures, if any, due to the leaks, or how long the leaks continued.
The defendant requested instructions to the effect (1) that the plaintiff could not recover upon the contract unless he fully performed it, (2) that the plaintiff could not recover under item 1 of the account annexed unless the hot water
The declaration is not framed upon the written contract entered into by the parties. It does not conform to the requirements of pleading upon such a contract by setting out its terms. G. L. c. 231, §§ 7, Eleventh, 32, 147 (10. Policies of Insurance). If the declaration had been upon the contract in writing alone, there could be no recovery unless there was proof of complete performance of the
If, however, the plaintiff has honestly intended and attempted to perform the contract and has made such approximation to complete performance that the owner obtains substantially what was required by the contract, although not the same in every particular, and although there may be imperfections and omissions on account of which there should be a deduction from the contract price, there may be recovery for the contract price less such deductions as the imperfections and omissions fairly demand. Cullen v. Sears, 112 Mass. 299, 308. Gillis v. Cobe, 177 Mass. 584, 593. Lynch v. Culhane, 241 Mass. 219, 222. Smedley v. Walden, 246 Mass. 393, 400.
Where a contractor has completely performed his contract so that the amount or the balance due on the contract is clearly earned, he may declare therefor at his election on the contract as completed, or on an account annexed. Holman v. Updike, 208 Mass. 466, 471. Egan v. Massachusetts Bonding & Ins. Co. 266 Mass. 270, 273. Eastman v. Steadman, 269 Mass. 250, 252. This is the form of declaration in the case at bar. Under it the plaintiff is not confined to proof of complete performance of the contract to the last detail, but may prevail provided there is proof of honest intention and attempt to perform the contract completely, and in fact substantial performance of it. On this precise form of pleading the plaintiff was held entitled, after full discussion, to recover in the leading case of Handy v. Bliss, 204 Mass. 513, 518, 519.
The plaintiff did not preclude himself from recovery by the evidence presented in his behalf. He did not rely upon the doctrine set forth in Gillis v. Cobe, 177 Mass. 584 at page 593, as applicable to a case where a plaintiff admits that his failure to perform goes to the essence of the con
There was no error in the denial of the several requests for rulings presented by the defendant. The charge of the trial judge was adapted to the evidence and fairly protected the rights of the defendant.
Exceptions overruled.