272 Mass. 555 | Mass. | 1930
This is an action of contract brought in the Superior Court by an owner of land against a builder to recover damages for breach of a written agreement to erect a dwelling house thereon. The case was referred to an auditor whose findings of fact were to be final. The trial judge denied the defendant’s motion to recommit the report to the auditor and ordered judgment for the plaintiff for $4,900, with interest from the date of the writ, and the defendant excepted.
The auditor found that the defendant entered into a contract with the plaintiff to build a dwelling house for the plaintiff to be completed in October, 1926, for $13,400, payable in instalments, that the plaintiff fully performed his part of the contract except the payment of the last instalment of $900, which amount he contends he is not required to pay because of nonperformance by the defendant, that because of the defendant’s “failure to build according to the plans and specifications serious defects resulted in the finished house,” that “if the house had been constructed according to the contract, plans and specifications, it would have been of the fair market value of $13,400 at the time fixed for completion in October 1926,” that “the fair market value of the house at the time fixed for completion . . . was $8,700,” that, if material, “it would have cost in October, 1926, at least $4,000 to tear down parts of the structure and rebuild it to accord with the terms of the contract, specifications and plans,” but “it would not be practicable and economical to make all alterations necessary to make the house conform” thereto, that the plaintiff actually expended $299.41, the reasonable cost of remedying certain minor defects, that he “made his last payment on October 23, 1926, then telling . . . [the defendant] that the house was in an unsatisfactory condition,” and the defendant then gave the plaintiff “a receipt . . . which indicated that . . . [the plaintiff] paid with reservations,” and that the plaintiff “moved into the house about October 28, 1926,” “about the time the house was completed.”
The contract provided that payments should be made
The auditor found that the “architect did not supervise construction or issue certificates,” that he “had not supervised the work in its progress nor had he followed it in its progress, although he saw the house a few times while it was being built,” and that there was no evidence that the plaintiff “asked the architect to supervise” or that the defendant “took any action about supervision by the architect.” It was not found that any matter was submitted to arbitration.
1. There was no error in the denial of the motion to recommit.
No ground for recommitting the report is shown by the record outside the report itself. It was within the judicial discretion to refuse to recommit the report on the ground of its form. In this aspect the refusal to recommit did not amount to a ruling of law. See Koch, petitioner,
Rulings by the auditor as to the admission and exclusion of evidence are reviewable by us on the exception to the denial of the motion to recommit. Lunn & Sweet Co. v. Wolfman, 268 Mass. 345, 348 and cases cited. In these respects, however, no error appears.
The defendant’s offer to show a statement by the architect of the amount which, in his opinion, should be allowed by the defendant to the plaintiff for defects and the amount which should be paid by the plaintiff to the defendant for extras, was excluded rightly. The statement did not purport to be an architect’s certificate within the meaning of the contract. See Hennebique Construction Co. v. Boston Cold Storage & Terminal Co. 230 Mass. 456, 462. This evidence was merely hearsay as to the architect’s opinion.
An engineer, called by the plaintiff, was permitted to testify as an expert. Some of his testimony, according to the report, was disregarded by the auditor. The question, therefore, whether, if this testimony was admitted wrongly, the report should be permitted to stand was not a matter of law reviewable here, but a matter solely within the discretion of the trial judge. Chelmsford Foundry Co. v. Shepard, 206 Mass. 102, 108. The other testimony of this witness that “he thought the house was then worth $9,000”
2. There was no error in ordering judgment for the plaintiff, but judgment should have been ordered for $3,800 with interest instead of for $4,900 with interest.
The auditor’s findings of fact stand upon the same footing as the verdict of a jury (Lunn & Sweet Co. v. Wolfman, supra), and no “cause appears or is shown to the contrary” why judgment should not be entered thereon, under Common Law Rule 30 (1923) of the Superior Court. See Marden v. Howard, 242 Mass. 350, 353, 355. The auditor found, a breach of the contract by the defendant and the elements of the plaintiff’s damages resulting therefrom. The defendant contends, however, that an architect’s certificate of the damages incurred by the plaintiff by reason of the defendant’s defaults, was a condition precedent to recovery by the plaintiff and that excuse for its absence was not pleaded or proved. Under the contract such defaults were to be considered by the architect in preparing his certificates for payments by the owner, but no such certificate except a final one was to be conclusive evidence of performance of the contract, wholly or in part.
The case does not appear to have been tried, and was not argued, on the theory that there was any “intentional departure from the contract in a material matter.” Divito v. Uto, 253 Mass. 239, 243. See also Smedley v. Walden, 246 Mass. 393, 400. Hence, the sum to be recovered as damages, if the full contract price had been paid, would be “the amount by which the value of the house as left by the . . . [builder] fell short of what that value would have been if the contract had been exactly performed.” Pelatowski v. Black, 213 Mass. 428, 430, 431. See also Moulton v. McOwen, 103 Mass. 587, 591, 598; Norway Plains Savings Bank v. Moors, 134 Mass. 129, 135; White
According to the rule of damages applicable 'here the amount to be deducted from the contract price was $4,700, the amount by which $8,700, the value of the house as left by the defendant in October, 1926, fell short of $13,400, the value (as found by the auditor, and not unsupported, as the defendant contends, see Parks v. Boston, 15 Pick. 198, 209, Westport v. County Commissioners, 246 Mass.
It follows that the defendant’s exception to the denial of his motion to recommit the report must be overruled, but his exception to the order of judgment for the plaintiff for $4,900 with interest from the date of the writ must be sustained. As, however, “all the facts necessary for determining the question in dispute” are before us, and from them it appears that judgment should be entered for the plaintiff for $3,800 with interest from the date of the writ, under authority of G. L. c. 231, § 124, such judgment is to be entered.
So ordered.