291 P. 699 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920
Plaintiff, insisting that the findings are not supported by the evidence, appeals from a judgment entered in favor of defendants.
The complaint sets forth three causes of action. By the first count it is alleged that in December, 1914, plaintiff sold, delivered, and installed in defendants' hotel, known as the Casa Blanca Hotel, certain described cooling-boxes for which defendants agreed to pay him the sum of $537.50, all of which is unpaid. The second count declares upon a written contract, dated October 21, 1914, under and pursuant to which it is alleged that plaintiff furnished and installed in said hotel a one-ton refrigerating plant and appurtenances to be used in connection therewith, for which defendants agreed to pay the sum of $763, no part of which has been paid. The third count is for $17.50, alleged to be due for a *133 pump and oil sold defendants, as to which, since judgment therefor was rendered in favor of plaintiff, there appears to be no controversy.
While the court found that plaintiff furnished and properly installed the cooling-boxes for which defendants agreed to pay him the sum of $537.50, it further found that payment therefor so to be made by defendants was conditional and dependent upon the refrigerating system operating according to warranties set forth in the contract dated October 21st for the installation of the same; in other words, payment for the cooling-boxes was made to depend upon the successful operation of the refrigerating plant, which, as found, "did not operate according to the provisions and warranties set forth in said contract," and did not produce refrigeration in accordance with the guaranty contained in the contract dated October 21, 1914, under which the refrigerating plant was installed.
[1] The contract for the refrigerating plant contained full and complete specifications therefor, and not a scintilla of evidence, in so far as we are advised, was offered tending to show that, as installed, it was not constructed in strict accordance with the specifications therefor. In other words, as to the refrigerating plant, defendants got precisely what they contracted for, and there was no implied warranty that the machine would answer the particular purpose for which the buyers intended to use it. (Seitz v. Brewers' RefrigeratingMach. Co.,
[3] The court also erred in finding that the cold-storage boxes installed by plaintiff under his contract were covered by the contract for the installation of the refrigerating plant. The two contracts were entirely distinct and separate. That for the cold-storage boxes, constructed in accordance with specifications, was made months after the contract for the refrigerating plant, and the position of plaintiff in reference thereto is precisely that of a third party who had put in the cooling-boxes. While it is true that the contract of October 21, 1914, under which the *135 refrigerating plant was installed, required defendants to provide the storage chambers and insulate and construct them in accordance with plaintiff's plans and instructions therefor, the construction thereof by plaintiff under a contract wherein no reference was made to the prior contract for other work did not render payment dependent upon whether or not the refrigerating plant should operate successfully. If done by a third party, he would have been entitled to payment, regardless of whether the refrigerating plant produced refrigeration equal to the melting of one ton of ice per day or not. And so plaintiff, having properly installed the cold-storage receptacles in accordance with the specifications, is entitled to payment without regard to whether or not he failed to comply with the contract under which he installed the refrigerating plant.
The judgment is reversed.
Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred.