Court Opinion

ID: 5276778
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 21:42:27.500218+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:28:19.034229
License: Public Domain

H. T. Kellogg, J.:
The plaintiffs and the defendants Hoenzsch, on February 16, 1923, entered into a written contract whereby the plaintiffs, for the sum of $4,300, agreed to make alterations in a certain dwelling house belonging to the defendants. Payments were to be made as follows: “ $250 each week Bal when job is complete or $500.00 the first and 15 of each month.” The contract also stated: “ Job to be done June 1, 1923.” The plaintiffs entered upon the performance of the contract and continued to work upon the alterations until July 20, 1923, when they left the job with men and tools. They had been paid upon the contract the sum of $3,592. The defendants employed other contractors to complete the work. They performed the contract work, as slightly modified, for the sum of $2,041.63. The plaintiffs thereupon brought this action upon a quantum meruit to recover the value of the services performed and materials furnished less payments made. They have had a recovery of $1,158.94.
The plaintiffs contend that they were entitled to recover, as decreed, the reasonable value of the labor and materials furnished, independently of the contract price, for the reason that the defendants broke the contract (1) by refusing to permit the plaintiffs to perform it, and (2) by refusing to make the payments stipulated for therein.
On July 20, 1923, the plaintiffs, with their men, were engaged in constructing for the defendants an outdoor staircase, which, although its location had been changed, was covered by the contract specifications. The staircase, as being erected, would have partly closed a window opening, and the defendants objected to its location. According to the testimony of one of the plaintiffs, the following occurred: “ Mr. Hoenzsch said: ' Don’t do any more with that until you hear from me.’ I said: ‘ All right.’ I was *226walking out the alley. I says: ‘ I would like to get some money.’ He says: ‘You can’t get it.’ I says: ‘Allright.’ So I walked out * * As a result of the conversation the plaintiffs left the job never to return. It is entirely clear that the defendants asked the plaintiffs to suspend work, not upon the contract generally, but upon the outside staircase then being constructed. The testimony quoted so indicates. The testimony given by the defendants, undisputed by the plaintiffs, so establishes. The court evidently so construed the proof, for it found, not that the plaintiffs left the job because dismissed by the defendants, but “ because defendants refused to pay them any further installments until the work was completed.” It conclusively appears that the defendants did not break the contract by refusing to permit the plaintiffs to proceed with the work. ■
As already noted, the contract provided that 1250 was to be paid each week and “ Bal when job is complete.” It also provided “ Job to be done June 1, 1923.” It is not to be supposed that when this contract was made either party then intended to break it. The parties contemplated that the work was to be finished on June first, and phrased the terms of their contract accordingly. Work under the contract was begun on February twenty-second. Fourteen weeks would elapse between that date and June first. Accordingly,. during that period $3,500 would become payable, and the balance of the contract price, $800, would become due on June first if the plaintiff's did as they agreed and the job was then completed. The plaintiffs failed to complete on June first as agreed. It is true that the defendants, by permitting the plaintiffs to remain upon the job, forfeited the right to terminate the contract. Their conduct did not alter the fact that the plaintiffs had been guilty of a breach of contract which rendered them liable for the damages resulting. Certainly, neither the plaintiffs’ breach nor the defendants’ acquiescence therein, could avail the plaintiffs to make the defendants pay otherwise than as provided in the contract, viz., the balance remaining after the fourteen, installments of weekly payments, upon completion of the contract. On July twentieth the defendants had paid the plaintiffs $3,592, or $92 in excess of the installments due on or before June first. The defendants were, therefore, not required to make further payments when the plaintiffs abandoned the job. The argument that the defendants owed the plaintiffs $400 or over for extra work performed and that, therefore, the sum due on June first had not been fully paid, is not tenable. All payments made were weekly payments upon the written contract. That contract had been fully complied with by the defendants. The failure of the defend*227ants to pay a debt, arising outside the contract, could have no effect to alter terms contained within the contract.
The judgment should be reversed, with costs and a new trial granted. The court disapproves of findings six, nine and eleven, and of so much of finding seven as fixes the value of the labor and material furnished.
All concur.
Judgment reversed on the law and facts and new trial granted, with costs to the appellants to abide the event. The court disapproves of findings of fact numbers six, nine, eleven, and so much of finding number seven as fixes the value of labor and material furnished.