95 N.Y.S. 114 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
This suit is brought against the defendant as surety upon a bond executed by Edward Egenberger as principal, conditioned for'.his faithful performance of a written contract with the plaintiff for
First. Whether the plaintiff notified the defendant, as he was required to do by the terms of the bond, of the first act on the part of Mr. Egenberger which involved a loss for which the defendant was responsible thereunder, immediately after acquiring knowledge of the occurrence of such act; and
Second. Whether the action was brought in time, in view of the provision in the bond to the effect that any suit at law to recover any claim thereunder must be instituted within six months after the first breach of the building contract.
The learned trial court answered both these questions in the negative, and directed a dismissal of the complaint on the merits.
The contract between Hr. Egenberger and Hr. Burr for the completion. of the houses was dated November 11 and acknowledged November Í3, 1901. The property was conveyed to Hr. Egenberger by a deed acknowledged on the latter date, and it is not disputed that he then entered into possession of the premises. The contract required him within one week from the execution and delivery thereof “to enter upon and thereafter proceed with the erection and construction ■ of the said building's.” It further provided as follows: “ If at any time the party of the 'first part (Edward Egenberger) shall fail to push the work on the said buildings vigorously, of which fact the party of the second part (Joseph A. Burr) shall be the sole judge, and such default and neglect shall continue for ten days after the service of a notice on the party of the first part to that -effect, the said bonds and mortgages shall at once become due for the whole amount advanced thereon.” Hr. Egenberger never did any work whatever upon the buildings. The proof does not show clearly when the plaintiff became aware that nothing was being done toward the execution of the contract, but the testimony of his representative, Hr. John T. Bladen, an attorney in his office, indicates that he was chargeable with knowledge of the fact by the 14th of Decembér, 1901. On the twentieth he notified. Hr. Egenberger that he considered him in default, and that if such default continued for ten days he should and did elect that the bonds and mortgages should become due. On the same day, notice to the same effect was sent by the plaintiff to the defendant.
In the opinion of the learned trial judge, which appears in the appeal book in the form of a letter addressed to the attorney for the plaintiff, the first ground stated for the dismissal of the com
Second. The opinion of the learned trial judge bases the dismissal “ secondly, upon the ground that the action was not instituted within six months after the first breach of the contract.” This ground, in my judgment, is equally untenable. The bond is a contract of indemnity. It plainly manifests the intent of the parties that the surety should become liable not merely m the event of the failure of the contractor to complete the building, but only in case his failure to do so resulted in pecuniary damage to Mr. Burr. This is made particularly evident by the provision entitling the surety, in the event of non-compliance oh the part of the principal, to
For the foregoing reasons I think the plaintiff is entitled to a reversal of this judgment.
Hirschberg, P. J., Rich and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.