Action to recover damages for breach of contract. The defendant appeals from the judgment.
By means of letters and telegrams passing between the plaintiff and the defendant, the terms of the contract were settled in writing. In a letter sent by the plaintiff to the defendant under date of August 11, 1909, the plaintiff said: "As the result of the irresistible persuasive powers of your Mr. Guthrie, kindly ship us as promptly as possible eight hundred (800) barrels of Mt. Diablo cement. . . . This cement is to comply with the inclosed specification of the Los Angeles County Highway Commission, and to be acceptable to their engineer." Then followed a statement concerning prices and payments. In the reply of defendant, the defendant said: "Yours of the 11th at hand and in reply beg to say that our cement will easily meet the specifications of the Los Angeles County Highway Commission." Then followed a statement *Page 480 somewhat different from that of the plaintiff in its letter concerning prices and freight payments. To the defendant's letter the plaintiff replied by telegram under date August 17, 1909, as follows: "If you desire order fill according to our letter; if not cancel same. Wire reply." The defendant replied by telegram as follows: "Can fill order as per ours fourteenth and will prepay." The defendant at the same time sent to the plaintiff a letter concerning said telegram, by quoting it and saying as follows: "We now confirm same. The only difference between us is that there is a delivered price Ivy instead of a Los Angeles price plus a local out and so we thought best to wire you as above."
The plaintiff had a contract with the Los Angeles County Highway Commission for certain paving and concrete work on a road in that county, and purchased the cement for the purpose of using it in the performance of that contract. The specifications referred to in the plaintiff's first letter to the defendant were the specifications of the plaintiff's contract with the Los Angeles County Highway Commission. Those specifications, among other things, provided that "no material of any kind shall be used until it has been examined and approved by the engineer, and the decision of such engineer shall be final." The specifications further provided for the quality of the cement to be used by fixing a standard and a percentage which the cement must pass as compared with such standard.
Appellant admits that under the contract the quality of cement furnished was to be such as would meet the specifications of the highway commission, but contends that there was no agreement that it should be "acceptable to their engineer." It is our opinion that under the terms of the contract the cement was to be acceptable to the engineer. Defendant's first letter to the plaintiff evaded that question, but its letter in reply to the plaintiff's telegram covered the point by asserting that there was no difference between the two parties on the contract, except as to another matter. This is shown by the quotations given above. Appellant contends that the court erred in admitting oral evidence of the terms of the agreement, and in admitting oral evidence of the negotiations that led up to the making of the agreement for the purchase of the cement. We think that the evidence in question should not have been admitted, but our interpretation of the written contract *Page 481 makes that error harmless, since upon the writings alone the point in question must have been decided against appellant.
Appellant next contends that the evidence is insufficient to support finding No. V of the court, wherein the court found "that the said cement so shipped to plaintiff as aforesaid did not comply with the specifications of the said Los Angeles County Highway Commission, in this, that the cement was not of the grade of fineness as required by said specifications, and the said cement and all thereof was rejected by the Los Angeles County Highway Commission, and plaintiff was not allowed to use the same on said work." The only testimony offered at the trial concerning the quality of the cement furnished by the defendant was testimony given by experts introduced as witnesses by the defendant. That testimony showed positively and without conflict that the cement was of the grade of fineness as required by said specifications. Therefore, in that respect, the evidence is not sufficient to support such finding.
Appellant's next contention is stated as follows: "The mere rejection of the cement by the Los Angeles County Highway Commission, or its engineer, is not sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover without a showing that the cement was in good faith tested according to the contract and found to be below the specifications." We agree that a rejection of the cement by the highway commission, considered apart from any rejection by the engineer, would not be sufficient without such showing of the facts concerning the quality of the cement. On the other hand, the terms of the specifications are such that a decision of the engineer rejecting the cement would have beenprima facie sufficient. Such decision would have been final, unless impeached by facts showing fraud or gross mistake amounting to fraud. (American-Hawaiian Eng. etc. Co. v. Butler,165 Cal. 497, 513, [Ann. Cas. 1916C, 44, 133 P. 616].)
But there is no allegation in the complaint that the cement contracted for was ever rejected by the engineer for the Los Angeles County Highway Commission. The only allegation on this point is contained in paragraph IV of the complaint, and is to the effect "that said cement and all thereof was rejected by the said Los Angeles County Highway Commission, and the plaintiff was not allowed to use the same on said *Page 482 work." Neither is there any finding to the effect that the cement was rejected by the engineer. So far as appears from the findings, the engineer may have certified that the cement furnished by the defendant was fit to be accepted and the highway commission may have, wrongfully perhaps, refused to accept his decision. At all events, when the plaintiff in this action seeks to base its right of recovery upon a rejection of the cement by the highway commission, without any allegation or finding of its rejection by the engineer, the plaintiff cannot prevail without first showing that in fact the cement did not comply with said specifications.
The judgment is reversed.
James, J., and Works, J., pro tem., concurred.