10 N.Y.S. 275 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
On the 28th day of September, 1886, John Strachen, a mason and contractor of the city of Rochester, entered into a written agreement with Max L. Gutmann, of the same place, tó build and finish a four-story brick block and apartment-house in the city of Rochester, in pursuance of drawings, details, and general specifications made by James C. Cutler, an architect. The building was to be completed by the 1st day of April, 1887; the price, $16,500, to be paid in installments to the amount of 80 per cent, as the work progressed, and the balance on the proper completion of the work,—payments only to be made on the architect’s certificate. All the drawings or specifications are either embodied in, or referred to in, the agreement. On the same day John Wadsworth & Son, contractors of the village of Brockport, entered into a written contract with John R. Strachen to construct the carpenter work of said building for the sum of $6,000; payments to be made as the money should be received by Strachen from Gutmann on his contract, and on the architect’s certificate. The drawings and specifications of the original contract w„ere referred to as a part of this. The job was to be finished at the same time. On the same day Frank P. Crouch executed a bond to Strachen for $6,000, the condition of which was that, if Wadsworth & Son should in all things perform their contract, the agreement should be void; otherwise in full force. The plaintiffs in Ho. 1 brought the action to recover a balance alleged to be due of $1,650 on the $6,000 contract, over and above all payments. It is alleged this claim was assigned to the plaintiffs by the Wadsworths. It is also alleged that on the 27th day of June, 1887, the Wadsworths made and delivered to the plaintiffs an order of which the following is a copy: “Rochester, H. Y., June 27th, Í887. Max L. Gutmann: Please pay to G. W. & F. P. Crouch sixteen hundred and fifty (1,650.00) dollars, and charge the same to our contract. [Signed] Jqhn Wadsworth & Son.” This was accepted in the following form: “Aug. 6,11:30 A. h. This order is accepted, payable out of any balance which may be due Messrs. Wadsworth & Son when the building is completed, to the extent of such unpaid balance, and no
As the rights of all the parties depend upon the same questions, the cases were practically tried as one action, with a stipulation that the testimony in one case, so far as applicable, should apply to the other. In No. 1 the referee finds the contracts, and that on the 5th day of August, 1887, Strachen served written notice to make no further payments to Wadsworth & Son. That the Wadsworths commenced work on the building about the 1st of November, 1886, and on the 1st day of February, 1887, stopped work at the instance of the architect, and also on account of inclement weather. At this time the roof was on the building. "Work was after that resumed, and continued until the 30th day of July, 1887, when it ceased. A strike in April caused a delay of two weeks, and there were some other delays. That Strachen substantially performed the work on his part, and that he was paid, from time to time, $8,500.45, which, with the $6,000 contract, and the amount allowed for deductions, equaled the contract price, $16,500. The referee also finds that the Wadsworths substantially performed their contract, except in certain particulars, in which they were guilty of no willful or intentional violation of their contract; that the work not performed by the Wadsworths was of the value of $145. He also found that, by arrangement, the defendant furnished the Wadsworths hardware to the amount of $293.64; also tile of the value of $140.50, and $14 for iron pipe; also $12 for iron transom guards. That they performed extra work to the amount of $260. That the walls of the building settled, affecting the carpenter work, for which the Wadsworths were not to blame, it being due to the settling of the walls, and shrinkage. That the materials furnished by the Wadsworths were in accordance with the terms of their contract, except in the case of shelving and closets and maple flooring for the halls, part of which was second-rate material. That the Wadsworths stopped work on the building in July, 1887, and did nothing further upon it. That at that time there were defects in the bath-room, on the hard wood floors, in piecing casings on windows in the rear of the building, in defective hand-rails of the front stairs, moulding in some portions of the building not being planed smooth, and improper painting of the building in the front part. That it would cost, to remedy all defects, $203, which was deducted from the contract price. That, after the Wadsworths stopped work, the defendant had the keys, and took possession of the building on the 21st day of September, 1887, and has since occupied the same. That after April 1,1887, Strachen and the Wadsworths continued work, with the knowledge and consent of the defendant, and that the architect visited and inspected the same, and made various estimates for payment on the contract. That the defendant made payments up to the 22d day of June. That" the payments actually made to the Wadsworths were $2,369. That, in addition thereto, the defendant accepted an order for $500. That there should be added to the contract price $266 for extra work. That the deductions to which the defendant was entitled were $293.64 for hardware; $148.50 for tiling; $26 for iron pipe; $439.29, amount of J. B. Pike’s bill; $148, an omission by consent of defend
All controversies between the original contractors are eliminated from the case, and a consideration of what occurred under the contract, or whether it was performed, is only important as it affects the parties to these actions. It must be assumed that the stipulation that the referee inspect the building was intended to aid him in weighing the evidence before him, as well as secure the information an inspection would impart, in the absence of any limitation as to the uses which the referee might make of a personal examination. In support of his findings, he was not restricted to what he discovered or actually viewed, but he was at liberty to construe the testimony in the light of the information thus obtained. In West v. Kiersted, 15 Wkly. Dig. 549, it was held that “ where, by consent of parties, the referee inspects the premises in dispute, his report must practically be conclusive on all those facts which came within his observation; the court cannot tell what he saw.” To the same effect is Claflin v. Meyer, 75 N. Y. 260. The exceptions, therefore, based upon the assumption that certain findings are against or without evidence, are not available.
The substantial question upon which these appeals depend is based upon the referee’s findings. The learned counsel for the appellant contends that those findings negative the claim of a substantial performance, and would defeat a recovery in No. 1, and secure a different result in No. 2. The case shows that all the parties treated the original contract as so far completed that the defects might be paid for by deducting their cost from the contract price. This was the theory upon which the parties proceeded in their settlement. If it should be claimed that the expectation of recovering full damages for non-performance from the obligor in the bond was one of the elements which produced the settlement, the natural answer would be that it cannot be assumed on these appeals that the appellant contemplated an injus