175 N.Y. 214 | NY | 1903
The defendant, the Uvalde Asphalt Paving Company, entered into a contract with the city of New York on July 10th, 1900, for the paving of the roadway of Eighth street, in that city, from Broadway to McDougal street. The plaintiff was a sub-contractor employed by the defendant to do the work of setting new curb and repairing the old curbstones under that contract. This action was brought to recover the balance of $2,615.27 due the plaintiff for the work done and materials furnished under his sub-contract. There is no dispute as to the amount due, and the only questions presented arise upon the defendant's counterclaim.
The defendant, in its counterclaim, alleged that the plaintiff had performed the work under his sub-contract in such a negligent and unskillful manner as to cause damage to adjoining property owners; that two cellars and their contents on East Eighth street were damaged by being flooded with water collected in a trench dug by the plaintiff, and that the flagging in the sidewalk in front of certain premises on West Eighth street was broken and destroyed; that by reason of this negligent work the persons affected thereby had brought suit against the defendant to recover damages therefor, amounting to $1,000 in one case, $673.97 in another and $26.21 in the third, which sums the defendant is legally bound to pay. *217
The plaintiff's reply is, in effect, a general denial of the defendant's counterclaim.
Upon the trial, after the plaintiff had rested, the defendant sought to introduce evidence tending to prove the damages which had been occasioned by the alleged negligence of the plaintiff to the persons who had brought suit against the defendant. The plaintiff's counsel objected to this evidence as incompetent, immaterial and irrelevant, and also upon the ground that it is not claimed that the defendant had been called upon to pay any damages by reason of the plaintiff's bad workmanship. The trial court sustained the objection and the defendant excepted. The defendant did not claim that it had paid any of the sums for which suits had been brought against it, except the sum of $26.21 claimed in one of the actions brought, and as to the payment of that item, which with costs amounted to $28.20, there was no dispute upon the trial.
The contract between the plaintiff and the defendant was informal and contained no express stipulation that the defendant should be indemnified against liability or loss which might arise from the negligent performance by the plaintiff of the work which he had engaged to do. The plaintiff's alleged liability must, therefore, be predicated upon the rule of law under which a person guilty of negligence is charged with the responsibility for his wrongful act, not only directly to the person injured, but indirectly to a person who is legally liable therefor. In the latter case the wrongdoer stands in the relation of indemnitor to the person who has been held legally liable, and the right to indemnity rests upon the principle that every one is responsible for the consequences of his own wrong, and if another person has been compelled to pay the damages which the wrongdoer should have paid the latter becomes liable to the former. (Village of PortJervis v. First Nat. Bank,
The learned counsel for plaintiff and defendant, respectively, are in substantial accord upon the general features of *218
the rule above stated, but they do not agree as to its application to the case at bar. Counsel for the defendant insists that the contract of indemnity raised by inference of law includes indemnity against liability as well as against loss or damage, and it is upon this theory that he urges defendant's right to counterclaim the amounts for which it has been sued, although they have not been paid. Counsel for the plaintiff contends that defendant can have no right to a counterclaim until judgment has been recovered against it and the same has been paid. Neither of these conflicting positions can be maintained. The contract of indemnity implied by law, in favor of one who is legally liable for the negligence of another, covers loss or damage, and not mere liability. (Sedgwick on Damages, sec. 785;Oceanic S.N. Co. v. Compania T.E.,
The defendant offered to prove the damages sustained by the persons who had brought suit against it, but admitted that it had paid nothing except the said claim of $28.20. The ruling of the learned trial court was correct, therefore, in excluding evidence to support that part of defendant's counterclaim based upon demands which it had not paid, and erroneous in refusing to allow that part of it which was based upon actual payment. The counterclaim should not have been dismissed altogether, but only so much thereof as related to the demands against the defendant which it had not paid.
Counsel for the defendant further argues that if the defendant is not entitled to assert as a counterclaim its liability to others for plaintiff's negligence, it has at least a right of equitable *219
set-off against the plaintiff. We cannot assent to this proposition. A set-off may be either a defense or a counterclaim, but the same obstacles that stand in the way of a counterclaim herein also present themselves to any claim of set-off. It is to be observed, moreover, that there can be no such thing as a right to "set off" a possible but unestablished liability unliquidated in amount, against a liquidated legal claim that is due and payable. This is as obviously impracticable in equity as in law. One of the essentials of equitable set-off is that the demand of the party claiming the right must be due at the time when the ground for equitable intervention arises. (Munger v. AlbanyCity Nat. Bank,
The judgment herein should, therefore, be modified by deducting therefrom the sum of $28.20, which should have been allowed upon defendant's counterclaim, and as thus modified affirmed, without costs of this appeal to either party.
PARKER, Ch. J., BARTLETT, HAIGHT, MARTIN, VANN and CULLEN, JJ., concur.
Judgment accordingly.