64 N.Y.S. 733 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The action was brought to foreclose a mechanic’s lien. It was tried at Special Term and the plaintiff secured a judgment of foreclosure of the lien, from which this appeal is taken. The work was done and the materials furnished under a contract in which the terms of payment were fixed. The complaint alleged, that Bruggen, the plaintiffs’ assignor, sold and delivered to the defendant certain goods, wares and merchandise, etc., and performed carpenter labor and furnished other building material of the value and agreed price of $4,700, which was the price, the defendant agreed to pay therefor. He further says that the building materials were furnished in pursuance of a contract made by the. defendant. The contract is not set out in the complaint, nor is there any allegation of its terms or that Bruggen had performed the contract in accordance' with them. The lien was filed on the 21st of October, 189'7.
The plaintiffs j>ut in evidence the contract which was' made between Bruggen and the defendant on the 21st of May, 1897. It provided that Bruggen should furnish all' the material and should complete and finish all the carpenter work on the building before the first of September, agreeably to the architect’s drawings and specifications signed by the parties and annexed to the- contract, within the time aforesaid, in a good, workmanlike and substantial manner to the satisfaction and under the direction of the said architect, to be testified by a writing or certificate under the hand of the said architect. After the contract had been read in evidence the plaintiffs’ assignor, Bruggen, was asked if he had performed the work, to which an objection was promptly taken that performance was not alleged in the pleadings. The objection was overruled and an exception taken. Evidence was offered and received that the
It is unnecessary to consider upon this appeal the question of fact whether the building was substantially completed at the time of the filing of the lien, because We think the judgment must be reversed for the plain error committed by the court in receiving evidence of the waiver of the certificate on the' part of the defendant. Although the complaint is somewhat loosely drawn, yet it is quite clear that the plaintiff seeks to recover upon the contract. Indeed, if he does not recover upon the contract, he cannot recover at all. By the contract it was made a condition precedent, before receiving payment, that an.architect’s certificate- should be produced as evidence that the work was done in a good, workmanlike and substantial manner. It has been held many times that where there is such a requirement in a contract, it is essential in an action upon it to allege in the complaint performance of the conditions or to set forth facts excusing the non-production of the certificate. (Weeks v. O’Brien, 141 N. Y. 199.) The objection that the complaint does not contain these allegations may be raised upon the trial when evidence is offered to prove the fact, and, if it is raised, it is good. This rule has been so closely followed that it has been held, in an action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien where the contract provided for the payment of the contract price upon the presentation of the certificate of the engineer, that evidence that the engineer unreasonably refused to give the certificate was inadmissible under ah allegation of the complaint that the plaintiff had substantially performed the contract. (Smith v. Wetmore, 41 App. Div. 290.) The same principle has been held in McEntyre v. Tucker (36 App. Div. 53), Fox v. Davidson (Id. 159), and in the recent case of Conolly v. Hyams (47 id. 592).
. Van Beunt, P. J., Patterson, O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.-
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.