Case ID: mass_261/html/0456-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "By the Court.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Elena Bottini & another vs. Josephine Addonizio.
    Suffolk.
    November 28, 1927.
    November 30, 1927.
    Present: Rugg, C.J., Crosby, Carroll, Wait, & Sanderson, JJ.
    
      Contract, Performance and breach, Building contract.
    If, at the hearing in a municipal court of an action upon a contract in writing providing for the sale by the plaintiff and the purchase by the defendant of certain land and buildings and that the plaintiff first should erect on the land a garage, all “work and material to be satisfactory to the inspectors and to the buyer,” the defendant asked for a ruling, in substance, respecting a deduction from damages .to be assessed in favor of the plaintiff of the amount of the difference between the value of the property as it should have been if the contract had been performed and as it was as a result of the plaintiff’s not having performed the contract “in a manner which would have been reasonably satisfactory”; and the judge found that the plaintiff performed all the work required by the terms of the contract in a workmanlike manner, and found generally for the plaintiff for the full amount claimed, it was proper for the judge to refuse the ruling requested as not applicable in view of the findings of fact made, since it was evident that the judge never reached, nor properly could reach, consideration of the question of damage done to the defendant.
    Contract upon a contract in writing by which the plaintiffs were to sell and the defendant was to purchase certain land and buildings thereon. Writ in the Municipal Court of the City of Boston dated October 20, 1926.
    Provisions of the contract were that the plaintiff was to “make two car concrete first class waterproof garage in the rear of the yard, twenty feet long and nine feet high, with iron beams dividing the ceiling and lay concrete driveway from garage to street. All work and material to be satisfactory to the inspectors and to the buyer. The garage is to be completed within a reasonable time.” The contract price was $14,500, of which sum all had been paid excepting the final payment of $1,500, which the defendant refused to pay because of the alleged fact that the garage had not been built in accordance with the requirements of the contract.
    Material evidence, rulings requested by the defendant at the trial in the Municipal Court, and facts found by the judge are stated in the opinion. The judge found for the plaintiffs in the sum of $1,630 and reported the action to the Appellate Division. The report was ordered dismissed. The defendant appealed.
    
      H. Horvitz, for the defendant.
    
      P. C. Borre, for the plaintiffs.
   By the Court.

This is an action to recover the balance due on a written contract for the building of a garage. The answer was a general denial, payment and recoupment. One clause of the contract was: “All work and material to be satisfactory to the inspectors and to the buyer.” The trial judge found that the plaintiff performed all the work required by the terms of the contract in a workmanlike manner, and found generally for the plaintiff for the full amount claimed. At the conclusion of the evidence the defendant requested a ruling that “the measure of damages would be the contract price, minus the amount by which the value of the house as left by the plaintiff falls short of what the value would have been if he had constructed the property, including the garage, in a manner which would have been reasonably satisfactory.” This ruling was refused as not applicable in view of the findings of fact made.

The general finding in favor of the plaintiff imported a finding of every subsidiary fact necessary to that result. The evidence was ample to warrant the conclusion that the work was performed in such a way as reasonably ought to have been satisfactory to the defendant. This is all that the contract required. Handy v. Bliss, 204 Mass. 513, 520. The general finding for the plaintiff means that the judge found this fact in the plaintiff’s favor. Therefore he never reached, nor properly could reach, consideration of the question of damages, and the requested ruling was denied rightly.

Order dismissing report affirmed.