Plaintiffs are architects, and were employed by defendant to prepare the plans, specifications, etc., and oversee the construction of a certain building, and in consideration of their services they were to receive four per cent of the cost of the building. The plans of this structure included the construction of a very elaborate cafe, and while in the negotiations leading up to the employment of the plaintiffs they insisted upon a compensation amounting to five per cent of the cost of the building, yet finally, actuated by the fact that their employment was to extend to the entire work, including the interiordecorations of this cafe, they agreed to undertake the work upon the basis of four per cent. Considerable work was done by them under the contract, but very little of it upon the interior decorations of the cafe, when upon July 31st, defendant addressed *Page 410 to the plaintiffs a letter which, among other matters, said: "Messrs. De Prosse Meussdorffer. Dear Sirs: With reference to the interior decorations, bar fixtures, etc., we beg to inform you that we have concluded to handle this matter ourselves," — and in the communication gave their reasons in detail why they had arrived at this conclusion. Giving no heed to the contents of the letter, plaintiffs continued the work until September 17th, when they ceased work. Thereafter they brought the present action in quantum meruit, seeking to recover the reasonable value of their services rendered prior to September 17th. And the real question here appears to be, Are they entitled to recover upon aquantum recruit for services rendered upon the interior decorations of the cafe between the time when the letter was written to them and the 17th of September, the time when they withdrew from the building?
An action in quantum meruit is based upon the theory that one party has performed services for another at his request; and here, if defendant ordered plaintiffs not to perform services upon the interior decorations of the cafe, they could not recover in quantum meruit if thereafter they proceeded in opposition to that order. Services performed under these circumstances would not be performed at the request of the defendant. This principle of law is approved by the trial court when it gave to the jury the following instruction: "The plaintiffs cannot recover in this action for any work they may have done for the interiors of the building known as the Pabst Cafe, except such work, if there was any, as was done at the request of the defendant."
The court is thus brought to a consideration of the force and effect of the letter sent by defendant to plaintiffs. It is claimed upon their part that it is equivocal in character, and is not in effect a direction to cease and refrain from work upon the interior decorations. But the letter appears to be plain to the contrary, and such was the construction given it by the plaintiffs themselves. If they had come before the trial court claiming the letter to be equivocal, vague, and indefinite, and asserted that they continued their labors through a misunderstanding or misconstruction of its force and effect, — that is, if its effect was to order them to cease work upon this particular part of the building, — another question would be presented; but no such case was attempted *Page 411 to be made out in the trial court, and it is apparent that plaintiffs understood the letter to mean exactly what defendant claims its meaning to be. The testimony of both plaintiffs is clear to the point that they understood by the letter that defendant ordered them to refrain from doing work upon interior decorations. One of the plaintiffs testifies as follows: "On Monday we received the letter, and then, notwithstanding the letter, I went on and did the work. We did not stop work when we received that letter. We intended to carry out our contract, notwithstanding the letter." There is no principle of law involved in the action of quantum meruit which will justify a recovery for services rendered, in the face of positive directions not to render those services by the party from whom it is sought to recover. Here, as far as any principle of quantummeruit is concerned, plaintiffs had no right to perform services upon these interiors after ordered not so to do, and cannot recover for services so rendered.
It is insisted that the contract for the service was an entire contract, covering the whole building, inside and outside, and that defendant could not repudiate the contract as to a part, — namely, the interior decorations of the cafe. This contention is unsound. As to defendant, it could repudiate a part of it or repudiate it all. In other words, a repudiation of a part of it was, as to plaintiffs, a repudiation of it all, — that is, plaintiffs had the right to consider the breach of this covenant a breach of the entire contract. The acts of defendant were a breach of the entire contract, but the breach could be waived by plaintiffs as to all portions thereof not included in that part relating to the interior decorations. As to all other matters, plaintiffs could waive the breach and continue their work. That was a matter entirely optional with them at the moment they were ordered to cease work upon the interior decorations. At that moment they were justified in law in ceasing from work upon all parts of the building if they so felt disposed. It is said inHaskell v. McHenry, 4 Cal. 411: "The contract declared on was an entirety. The first breach by the defendant was a breach of the whole, and discharged the plaintiff from the performance of any conditions on his part. It gave him a complete right of action. (See Cockley v. Brucker, 54 Ohio St. 214.)"
Plaintiffs insist that subsequent to July 31st they performed *Page 412 certain work upon the interiors of the cafe with the knowledge and consent of defendant, and they claim thereby defendant waived any repudiation of the contract evidenced by the letter of July 31st. The particular work relied upon to support this contention related to the entrances to the cafe, and the evidence seems to be plain that these entrances were no part of the interior decorations referred to in the aforesaid letter. Respondents' own testimony points directly to this conclusion. It may be further said that in the instructions of the court given to the jury we find no question of waiver submitted to them for consideration.
For the foregoing reasons the judgment and order are reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Harrison, J., and Van Dyke, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.