Johnson v. Bovee

Colorado Court of Appeals
40 Colo. App. 317, 574 P.2d 513 (1978)
ELI5:

Rule of Law:

When a contractor elects to sue for restitution (quantum meruit) after a material breach by the owner, the contractor's recovery is capped by the total contract price.


Facts:

  • David O. Johnson entered into a written contract with John and Alice Bovee to construct a house for a fixed price of $47,176.
  • During the construction process, the parties orally agreed to numerous deviations from the original plans, resulting in both additions and deletions.
  • The Bovees became dissatisfied with the quality of Johnson's construction work.
  • Due to their dissatisfaction, the Bovees stopped making contractually required payments to Johnson.
  • In response to the non-payment, Johnson ceased all work on the house, at which point it was approximately 90% complete.
  • The Bovees then proceeded to finish the construction of the house themselves.

Procedural Posture:

  • David O. Johnson filed a suit in the trial court to foreclose on a mechanic's lien against John and Alice Bovee.
  • The Bovees filed a counterclaim against Johnson for the costs of repairing defective workmanship.
  • The trial court found that Johnson had substantially performed and that the Bovees had breached the contract by non-payment.
  • The trial court awarded Johnson damages based on the contract price minus payments made and the cost to complete.
  • The Bovees were awarded damages on their counterclaim for the cost of remedial work.
  • Johnson, as plaintiff-appellant, appealed the trial court's judgment to the Colorado Court of Appeals, challenging the measure of damages.

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Issue:

When a contractor elects to rescind a construction contract after a breach by the owner, is the contractor's recovery in quantum meruit limited to the total contract price?


Opinions:

Majority - Pierce, J.

Yes, a contractor's recovery in quantum meruit is limited by the total contract price. The court reasoned that a plaintiff should not be able to recover more for partial performance than they would have recovered for full performance. If Johnson had completed the house, his claim would have been for the liquidated debt established by the contract, limiting his recovery to the contract price plus agreed-upon extras. It would be illogical to permit a greater recovery for not completing the work than would be available had the contract been fully performed.



Analysis:

This decision establishes a significant precedent in Colorado contract law by resolving a split of authority on damage calculations. By capping quantum meruit recovery at the contract price, the court prevents a contractor on a losing contract from using the owner's breach as a way to escape a bad bargain and recover more than the benefit of that bargain. This ruling prioritizes the parties' original allocation of risk as expressed in the contract over a pure restitutionary theory that might ignore it. It creates a bright-line rule that provides predictability in construction disputes.

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