108 N.Y.S. 739 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal by the defendant from & judgment entered upon a verdict directed by the court in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $22,350 damages and costs. The action was brought to recover the sum of $25,000 as damages for the breach by the defendant of a contract made and entered into by it with the plaintiff for the improvement of Crotona parkway from One Hundred and Seventy-fifth street to One Hundred and Eighty-second street, in the borough of the Bronx, New York city. The contract was made on October 11, 1902. In accordance with the terms thereof the plaintiff was notified to commence work thereunder on November 3, 1902. Under the contract tile work was to be completed within 2Q0 working days aftey the date-fixed for its commencement.
. The contract contained the following provisions: “(G) To prevent all disputes and litigation the engineer shall in all cases determine the amount or the quantity of the several kinds of work which are to be paid for under this contract, and he shall determine all questions in relation to said work and the construction thereof, and he shall in all. cases decide every question which may arise relative to the execution of this contract on the part of the contractor, and his estimate and decision shall be final and conclusive; and such estimate and decision, in case any question shall arise, shall be a condition precedent to the right of the contractor to receive any money under this contract.” “(L).The engineer’s certificate that the work has been faithfully performed so far forth in accordance
The complaint alleged “ that after the commencement of said work and on or about April 24, 1903, the engineer in charge of the work made a certificate or estimate as called for by the contract of the amount of work done thereunder amounting to $8,495, upon which the plaintiff received payment to the amount of $7,220.75. That after the making of said certificate or estimate and for a period of four months, said plaintiff proceeded with said work and furnished materials and labor to a large amount, and largely in excess in amount and value of seven thousand dollars, the sum which would entitle him, under the terms of the contract, to a certificate or estimate and the payment of another installment thereunder. That thereafter the said John IT. Devlin' repeatedly demanded of the city engineer in charge of said work and his representative that he should make a certificate or estimate of the amount of materials furnished and work done to which he Avas entitled to payment under the terms of said contract, in order to procure another monthly installment or payment. That notwithstanding the said demand for the certificate, the city engineer in charge of said work has refused to,make or deliver any certificate or estimate.” It further alleges that by reason of said breach the plaintiff suffered loss and damage in the sum of $25,000, the value of the Avork done, materials furnished at the time of said breach, increased cost and additional work .in connection with the performance of said contract.
The plaintiff ceased working and AvithdreAy his men on or about
These progress certificates differ in character from the final certificate made at the completion of the whole work upon which- the final payment is to be made. This final certificate i-s 'conclusive upon the contractor, but it is expressly provided that.all prior cer- ^ tificates or estimates upon which eightyffive per cent payments may he made are merely estimates and subject to the corrections of such final certificate. The progress certificate.is an estimate such as in the opinion of the engineer shall be just and fair, is not required to be made by strict measurement, but may he made by measurement or by estiniation, and is sufficient if approximate only ; but n'ever- " theless the opinion of the engineer that the contractor has done
In this complaint the plaintiff has confined himself to an allegation that he had furnished materials and labor in excess of the amount in value of $7,000 ; that he had demanded a certificate and that notwithstanding the said demand the engineer had refused to make or deliver the certificate. It seems to me that' when, by the terms of the contract, the making of this certificate is confided to the discretion of the engineer, when his opinion is the test of what shall be just and fair, based upon the approximate estimate which he shall have made of the amount of work done, it was essential that the .jury should have been allowed to pass upon the question whethér his refusal was fraudulent, arbitrary or unreasonable, even assuming that the language of the complaint was enough to raise it, and this seems to have been the impression of the learned trial court at one time upon the trial, for when, at the close of the plaintiff’s case, the defendant moved for a dismissal upon the ground that the plaintiff had not established that the engineer had arbitrarily withheld a ' certificate, the court said: “ I think I will let the jury determine, that.” He did not do so, however, but at the close of the case directed a verdict. The testimony tends to establish that the reason the certificate was not given was that in the opinion . of the engineer sufficient' work had not been done to entitle the contractor to it.. Instead of going on and doing enough additional work to satisfy the engineer he abandoned the work. Standing upon a legal right, asserting affirmatively a breach by the city, the plaintiff held the burden of establishing the fact. When a contract provides a condition precedent to the payment of money, that condition precedent must be complied with or disposed of. Not having been complied with, whether it-was disposed of under the language of this contract and the circumstances of this
Again, it is conceded that the burden was upon the plaintiff of showing, as matter of fact,- that he had done $7,000 worth of work' under the contract after the giving of the first progress certificate. He did not. do this by-direct evidence of the amount of work done. Taking the cross sections made by the city in the first instance from the- surface of the ground in place showing the work to. be done for the purpose of enabling proposed bidders to submit their estimate and.bids, the plaintiff attempted to, show the whole amount of work which he claimed to have done at the time that he abandoned the work, and, at the contract prices, calculated the amount he claimed to have earned for all the work done by him. From this he subtracted the amount of the -first progress certificate, and claimed that the result was the amount he had earned. The amount thus arrived at was more than the $7,000 provided in,the contract to entitle him to a second payment.' But' the first certificate was only an approximate estimate, expressly so provided, and there was' evidence given by the city which, if believed, would haver reduced the amount earned for the work done -thereafter considerably below the $7,000 required.
We reach this result from a most careful study of this voluminous ■ record. It is not necessary to set forth"the details.of the evidence, for we are clearly of opinion that' a question of fact was presented as to the amount done which should have been submitted to the jury.
Assuming that he had shown that .he bad performed sufficient' work to entitle him to a second payment, and that the refusal of the city to pay was a breach of the contract upon .its part which entitled.him to abandon the 'work arid to damages, the plaintiff
The judgment appealed from, therefore, should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to. the appellant to abide the event.
Patterson, P. J., Ingraham, Houghton and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with Mr. Justice Clarke that if there was any evidence that the failure of the city’s engineer to give .a certificate was either fraudulent, arbitrary or unreasonable, there would be a question for the jury; but I am in favor of reversing the judgment upon the ground that there was no evidence to sustain, a finding that the refusal of the engineer to give to the plaintiff the certificate which would entitle him to an ad interim payment was either fraudulent, arbitrary or unreasonable. As these certificates are not to be made by strict measurement, but may be made by the engineer by “ measurement or by estimation, or partly by one and partly by the other, and it shall be' sufficient if they are approximate only, and estimates strictly so-called,” it is necessarily the judgment pf the engineer as to the amount of work completed that the parties agree shall determine his action. While it- may be easy to imagine a case where the amount of work has been so great that no engineer could in good faith refuse to make an estimate and give a certificate that at least $7,000 worth of work under the contract-had been performed
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide . event. .