Crossways Apartments Corp. v. Amante

213 A.D. 430 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1925

Burr, J.:

As to the first cause of action the complaint seems to be little more than a demand for payment of a sum of money. The com*434plaint simply says in effect that there was a contract; that defendants failed to perform, and that plaintiff is entitled to damages for the breach. Few of the terms or conditions of the contract are given, and as to the nature of the breach nothing whatever is stated.

The agreement is alleged to be in writing, but the writing is not annexed, nor is the contract pleaded by alleging it according to its legal effect, namely, by setting forth so much of the terms and conditions of the agreement as to enable this court to see what the obligation was that the defendants assumed thereunder.

Material facts are lacking and their place cannot be supplied by bare conclusions of liability for damages.

In Fox v. Stern Dental Supply Co. (207 App. Div. 750) the complaint alleged: “ That on the 2d day of April, 1919, the said deceased, Abraham B. Fox, entered into a written contract with the defendant herein under and by which the said defendant employed and hired the said deceased, and the said deceased agreed to and did enter into a contract of employment with the said defendant as traveling salesman ’ for a period of five years from January 1st, 1919.”

The court, through Mr. Justice McAvoy, held as follows: Obviously there is nothing here but conclusory statements of what the contract provides. * * * While it is unnecessary to set forth the contract in full, or to annex it to the complaint, the provision of the contract upon which compensation is claimed to have been earned, or its terms in substance, must be set out to make a logical premise for the' conclusion that anything is due. The complaint does not state a cause of action and should have been dismissed.” (See, also, Bandler v. Globe & Rutgers Fire Ins. Co., 205 App. Div. 515.)

The allegation of a breach of contract by the defendants is insufficient.

In Booz v. Cleveland School Furniture Co. (45 App. Div. 593) the action was on contract. The complaint alleged: “ That by the acts of said defendant the plaintiff has been prevented from carrying out his part of the contract, and for the breach of said contract by the said defendant the plaintiff has been damaged in the sum of ” $8,000.

In the opinion of the court, Ingraham, J., said: “ The complaint must allege facts, not conclusions, which, if proved, would entitle the plaintiff to a judgment. * * * The allegation that by the acts of the defendant the plaintiff had been prevented from carrying out his part of the contract is not a sufficient allegation of a breach by the defendant. The allegation is a mere conclusion, as the particular acts of the defendant from which the plaintiff drew that conclusion are not pleaded.”

*435A more recent case directly in point is Baby Show Exhibition Co. v. Crowell Publishing Co. (174 App. Div. 368) where Mr. Justice Lattghlin stated: “ A general allegation of due performance by plaintiff of conditions precedent to his right to recover on a contract without stating the facts constituting performance is expressly authorized (Code Civ. Proc. § 533); but not so as to a breach of contract by the defendant.

There is no allegation of fact with respect to any act or omission on the part of the defendant constituting a breach of the contract. The specification of various agreements on the part of the defendant, followed by a general allegation of a breach thereof, presents a pleading precisely the same as if the plaintiff had set forth in hcec verba the contract and alleged performance on its part and a failure on the part of the defendant to perform its obligations thereunder. It is well settled that in an action to recover damages for the breach of a contract the facts constituting the breach must be pleaded, and that it is insufficient to plead generally that the defendant failed to fulfill his obligations under the contract, or that he has been guilty of a breach of the contract.”

The allegations therein held insufficient to support a cause of action are, in substance, the allegations contained in this complaint and these allegations amount merely to a statement that the defendants failed to perform their contract, which is a mere conclusion of law in too general terms to apprise the defendants of the cause of action against them.

As to the second cause of action.

Summarized, the plaintiff purports to set forth a cause of action based on duress resulting from a single threat that if “ a payment ” was not made by plaintiff, defendants would file (in futuro) a mechanic’s lien against plaintiff’s building, and would make false complaints against plaintiff to the Plasterers’ Union.

The gravamen of the complaint is “ the threat,” not the payment of money at a subsequent time. The payments in the instant case, as averred in the complaint, were made at various times between the 1st day of November, 1923, and the 15th day of February, 1924.”

The pleader alleges no facts showing that the payments were made under the compulsion of urgent and pressing necessity. The complaint merely alleges conclusions of law. It characterizes defendants’ conduct as a “ threat ” or alleges that payments were made under duress,” or that the threatened complaints to the Plasterers’ Union were to be “ false,” which are conclusions of law without any facts upon which they may be based.

*436.The same question as is here presented was before this court in the case of Kamenitshy v. Corcoran (177 App. Div. 605). There the complaint alleged that the defendant “ threatened that if the said sum was not paid to defendant he would cause the license of the plaintiff herein to be taken away and would cause the plaintiff to be ousted from the said location.” - In granting defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, the court, through Mr. Justice Shearn, said: In the first place, the essential allegations in the complaint are mere conclusions. Stripping the complaint of its conclusions, there are no facts pleaded which show that the payments were made under the compulsion of urgent and pressing necessity. If is not sufficient merely to characterize defendant’s conduct as a ' threat ’ or to allege that the payments were made ‘ under duress.’ The complaint must state facts which constitute a legal basis for the charge of compulsion or involuntary payment, so that the court can see that the pleader’s conclusion of law is justified. * * * The words employed by the defendants should have been pleaded. This requirement does not offend the rule against pleading evidentiary matters, for that rule only applies to unnecessary allegations.”

The only threat and duress was the alleged threat on the part of the defendants to file a mechanic’s lien unless a payment was made. The defendants were given the right by law to file such a lien. (Lien Law, § 3.)

The courts have uniformly held that threats to take legal proceedings did not constitute duress. (McGuire & Co. v. Vogel Co., 164 App. Div. 173.) To the same effect is Abelman v. Indelli & Conforti Co. (170 App. Div. 740).

Nor does plaintiff’s allegation that payment was to be made upon architect’s certificate render defendants’ demand unlawful and of such character as to constitute duress. The architects were •by the very nature of the arrangements the agents of the plaintiff and, as such, were in a position unreasonably to refuse to give a certificate. Defendants were not obligated to abide by the determination of either plaintiff or its agents on the question as to whether moneys were due them, but could proceed to enforce their rights under the statute.

The facts alleged as a second cause of action are, therefore, also insufficient to constitute a cause of action.

As to the third cause of action.

Stripped of its unnecessary verbiage the third cause of action in the complaint simply attempts to recover in tort damages for failure to fulfill a contract within the time specified. This i»' attempted in face of the fact that nowhere in the complaint is *437there any allegation as to when the work was to be completed under the terms of the written contract, or that it was not completed within the time agreed, or that it was to be performed with any particular degree of speed, or that time was of the essence of the agreement. If defendants made undue statements at or before the time of making the contract as to when the contract would be completed, these statements would furnish no ground for an action in tort or fraud. If defendants did not perform the contract within the time agreed, plaintiff’s remedy would be for damages for breach of contract and not in tort. The general rule that plaintiff cannot recover in fraud is tersely stated in the case of Adams v. Gillig (199 N. Y. 314, 318), where the court said: It may be assumed that promises of future action that are a part of the contract between the parties, to be binding upon them, must be stated in the contract. An oral restrictive covenant, or any oral promise to do or refrain from doing something * * * about which a written contract is made and executed between the parties, will not be enforced * * * because the covenants and agreements being promissory and contractual in their nature and a part of, or collateral to a principal contract, the entire agreement between the parties must be deemed to have been merged in the writing. The value of a writing would be very seriously impaired if the rule mentioned in regard to including the entire agreement in such writing is not enforced. * * *

Such rule makes it necessary for the parties to a written contract to include everything therein pertaining to the subj ect-matter of the principal contract, and if by mistake or otherwise an oral agreement, a part of the transaction, is omitted from the writing, it can only be made effective and enforceable by a reformation of the writing, so that the same shall include therein the entire agreement between the parties. The rule is quite universal that statements promissory in their nature and relating to future actions must be enforced if at all by an action upon the contract.”

Plaintiff attempts to make a tort action out of what at best would be a breach of contract for failure to complete the work within an agreed period of time. The plaintiff does not show a right to recover on a contract, for there is no allegation that time was of the essence of the contract, or that the work was agreed to be done within any specified time, or that defendants failed to perform within the agreed time.

This rule of law has been very recently restated by the Court of Appeals in the case of Adams v. Clark (239 N. Y. 403), where Judge Pound wrote: Mere promissory statements as to what will be done in the future are not actionable. (People v. Miller, 169 *438N. Y. 339, 350.) * * *. Disappointed hopes are not the basis of legal liability. If they were, no one, without making himself liable for damages, could innocently and in good faith say that he would advance money in aid of an embarrassed enterprise and then change his mind when it developed that the situation was not as rose colored as good-natured optimism had pictured it when the promise was made. Proof of failure to keep a promise may tend to establish the intent not to keep it, but common experience teaches us that such proof is not conclusive; that the making of an unkept promise does not imply of necessity in all cases a present intention not to keep the promise.”

In Urtz v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (202 N. Y. 170) the court considered the question as to whether the mere allegation of fraud and deceit was sufficient to warrant a recovery of damage. It said: In an action for the recovery of damages caused by the fraud of the defendant, the plaintiff must allege and prove that he has been injured by the fraud which he charges. The essential constituents of the action are firmly fixed and are tersely stated in Arthur v. Griswold (55 N. Y. 400), as, 'representation, falsity, scienter, deception and injury.’ Pecuniary loss to the deceived party is absolutely essential to the maintenance of the action. Fraud and deceit alone do not warrant the recovery of damages. Deceit and injury must concur. (Taylor v. Guest, 58 N. Y. 262; Ettlinger v. Weil, 184 N. Y. 179.)”

Since the plaintiff has endeavored to allege a cause of action for the recovery of damages by reason of fraud, and since the facts alleged by plaintiff as constituting fraud were merely a representation of an expectation, and non-performance is not shown, and the. facts on which damage is predicated made known to the defendants, the facts alleged as a third cause of action do not constitute a cause of action.

The order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion for judgment dismissing the complaint granted, with ten dollars costs, on the ground that the complaint as to all three causes of action does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, with leave to plaintiff to serve an amended complaint on payment of said costs.

Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Merrell and McAvoy, JJ., concur.

Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion for judgment dismissing the complaint granted, with ten dollars costs, with leave to the plaintiff to serve an amended complaint within twenty days from service of order upon payment of said costs.

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