Bertolero v. Clark

McOOY, J.

There was verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiffs, and defendant appeals, assigning -certain errors in instructions to the jury.

From the record it appears that appellant was desirio-us of constructing a theater 'building in the city of Lead according to certain plans and specifications, and entered into an agreement with respondents, wherein and whereby they agreed to loan and advance to appellant, for the purpose of assisting him in .the construction of said building, the sum- of $5,000, drawing interest at 6 per cent, as follows: One thousand dollars when the plans -were accepted and the agreement to loan executed; $1,000 when the walls of said building were up to the first floor; $1,000 when the roof was completed on said building; $1,000 when the building was completed, excepting furnishings; and $1,000 when the building was completed readly for occupancy. As a part of said loan agreement between appellant and respondents it was further stipulated) that respondents would rent said building from the day of -completion for the sum of $150 per ¡month, and1 that said lease should continue until- the said rental should equal the full sum- of $5,000 so loaned! and advanced to defendant. It further appears that in compliance w-itih said agreement respondents advanced to appellant the first two installments of said loan, but that when the roof was completed the plaintiffs refused to make further advancements on said loan, for the alleged reason that said building had not been constructed according to said plans and specifications, and by reason thereof respondents abandoned- the further performance of said contract and further refused to be bound thereby. Subse*258>q;uently appellant procured means elsewhere, and completed the construction of said building. Subsequently respondents brought this suit to recover from, appellant the said $2,000 and interest so advanced on said ldan.

Appellant answered, denying that respondents had any cause or grounds for abandoning said loan contract, and refusing to make further loans by virtue thereof, and further alleged 'by way of counterclaim that appellant, by reason of the failure of plaintiffs to comply with said loan contract, had been compelled to borrow money elsewhere at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum, and that by reason thereof he had been damaged in the sum. of $75,; that appellant had been further damaged in the sum of $1,500 ■by reason of the failure of respondents to lease and pay rent upon said building according to the terms of said contract for the period of ten months, during which time said building remained unleased and unoccupied.after its completionthat appellant could not rent said building for more than $110 per month during the remainder of the 33 1-3 months, and by reason thereof appellant was damaged in the sum of $40 per month, that he lost $500, in time and expense, in an effort to find a tenant, and that his total damage caused by the wrongful breach of contract of respondents aggregated .$3,008.38, for which amount appellant demanded affirmative judgment as counterclaim against respondents’ cause of action. On the trial there was much testimony offered concerning the issue as to whether or not there had been a breach of contract on the part of respondents in refusing to further make loans to appellant. It was adimitted on the trial by the respondents that they had refused to make any of the loans provided for by said contract other than the first two, for the reason that they claimed that the said building had not been constructed according to the plans and specifications forming a part of said contract. On tlhe trial the -court, among other things, in substance instructed the jury that, if -they found from the evidence that the said building was constructed in substantial compliance with the said contract and' the plans and specifications thereof, the defendant would be entitled to such damages, as he could show by the evidence that he had sustained under his counterclaim, which would include the said item of $75, damage for interest, and also include rent for the time -s-aid building was idle and not rented, and also include the difference be*259tween the rent that the plaintiffs were to pay and the best rent that the defendant was able to secure, and that defendant should recover such further sums as the jury should determine from the evidence were the proximate additional damages suffered by him' by reason of such breach of contract, if any. The court also instructed the jury that when the plaintiffs refused to further loan the money, if they were not justified in such refusal, the defendant could do one of two things; he could go on and hold the plaintiffs •to the contract by completing the building according to the contract, and then hold them for dhmages, or he could go on and complete the building in any way he saw fit; but, if he did this latter, he could recover only such damages as the evidence shows he suffered at the time of the refusal, which, according to the evidence in the case, would- be confined to the $75 interest item.

The contention of appellant is that the court by said instruction limited the amount of his recovery under his counterclaim to the item of $75 interest damages, and refused to submit to the jury the other items of damage pleaded in the counterclaim. We are of the view that this contention is not well taken. It is plain from the entire instructions given that the court instructed the jury that in case the plaintiffs were guilty of a breach of said contract, and if the defendant then went on, after such breach, and completed said building according to contract, the jury should find in favor of defendant on his counterclaim for all the damages proximately caused by such breach, including the interest item,, loss of rents, and any and all other damages proximately resulting from such breach, but that in case the jury found that after the plaintiffs’ breach of contract, in case they did so find that there was such a breach, and that the defendant did not complete the building according to contract, then and in that case the defendant could recover on his counterclaim only the item' of $75 damages for interest. The jury having found a general verdict in favor of plaintiffs upon all the issues, and not having found! in favor of defendant for the item, of $75 damages for interest, it therefore conclusively appears that the jury found that there had been no breach of contract by plaintiffs, and that plaintiffs were justified in not making further loans to defendant by reason of the failure of defendant to construct the building according to contract. ' Under this situation of the record it was wholly immaterial, and not *260prejudicial to appellant, as to what the subsequent instructions were, or however erroneous the same might have been, that the court submitted to the jury. The court might properly have further instructed the jury that, in case they found that plaintiffs had not been guilty of breach of contract and were justified, by reason of the failure of .the defendant to construct the building’ according to contract, in refusing- to advance further loans, then and in that case the jury should find in favor of plaintiffs for the full amount of their claim, and that no further consideration of defendant’s counterclaim should be considered by them. Such an instruction under such circumstances would1 have been proper regardless of whether the defendant finished the construction of such building according to contract or not. When the jury found for plaintiffs upon all the issues, that ended the consideration of defendapt’s counterclaims. The sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict is not questioned by the assignments of error.

Finding no error in the record, the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed1.

POLLEY, J., took no- part in this decision.