16 A.D. 358 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
Upon this appeal, which. is by the plaintiff from the judgment entered upon the decision of the court at Special Term, the one
Mr. Buchman, the architect, called by the plaintiff, testified that the cost of the work done by the plaintiff, after the abandonment of the contract by the construction company, was $7,781.21, and that for that work, under the contract, the defendant, the construction company, was to receive $8,942.06. There would thus be due to the construction company the difference between the contract price and the cost of finishing the work — $1,160.85, to which should be added the amount due to the construction company before the abandonment of the contract—$2,742.57, making a total of $3,903.42 due to the construction company from the plaintiff.
The defendant challenges the correctness of the testimony^of the architect, claiming that the amount due, according to the contract rates, for the work completed, was $10,419, instead of the amount testified to by the architect, of $8,942.06. This amount is ascertained by adding the number of feet of tiling furnished by the JRaritan Hollow and Porous Brick Company and Isaacs; and it is claimed that this amount of tiling furnished shows that there was 29,769 feet of three-course tiling, which, at thirty-five cents per foot, would make $10,419, the amount for which it is claimed the plaintiff is liable. This calculation seems to us to be based upon a wrong principle.. Under the contract the architect was to be arbiter as to the amount of work done. He has testified that he measured the work done, and has furnished in his testimony the amount of such work from actual estimate. It must be apparent that such evidence is much more satisfactory than an estimate of the amount of. tiling erected, as estimated from the amount of tiles furnished; for it appears that of this tiling furnished a considerable portion was
We think, therefore, that the court below was wrong in allowing to the construction company the amount of $10,419 as the price of the- work under the contract, but that there should be allowed to the said company the sum of $8,942.06, as testified to by the architect.
The' next question at issue between the parties is as to the amount paid by the plaintiff for completing the contract after the work was . abandoned by the construction. company.. There is no difference between the parties as to the value of materials furnished to complete the work by the brick company and by Isaacs. For such materials, the plaintiff was to pay $2,946.83. According to the testimony of the. plaintiff, the amount paid for labor was $2,754.52, while the witness for the defendants testifies that the amount was $2,636. Taking the testimony of Rodriguez as the most satisfactory, it seems that there was paid for labor for the tile work the sum of $2,356. To that, we think, should be added the amount paid to Rodriguez as foreman, $400. It seems quite plain that his employment as foreman was made necessary because the plaintiff was compelled to complete the work which the construction company had contracted to do. There .is no reason why the whole of his wages should not be charged to that work. As to Raymond, it does not appear that his employment was in any way caused by the work that the plaintiff had to do to complete this contract. ■ He simply continued in the employ of the plaintiff at the same salary that he received prior to the time that the work was performed. This makes a total amount for labor of $2,756.
The court allowed two other items, one of $15 and the other of $28.68, aggregating $43.68, to which there seems to be no objection.The court also allowed to the plaintiff for sand, plaster and cement, $888. This was based upon the testimony of Rodriguez as to the quantity of these materials used, upon the work. The plaintiff
This would make an aggregate of $6,668.01, as the amount to be allowed to the plaintiff for expenses incurred by it in completing the work after it was abandoned by the construction company, and deducting that from the amount to be paid under the contract, viz., $8,942.06, leaves a balance due to the construction company from the plaintiff of $2,274.05, to which should be added the amount conceded to be due for work performed, prior to the abandonment of the contract, $2,742.57, making the total amount due by the plaintiff to the construction company under this contract, $5,016.62, and, upon the plaintiff’s appeal, the judgment should be modified by requiring that the plaintiff pay into court the sum of $4,876.89, being the sum of $5,016.62, found to be due from the plaintiff to the construction company after deducting the sum of $149.73, the* amount of the plaintiff’s costs and expenses as taxed, and that, upon such payment into this court, the plaintiff be discharged of and from all further liability to the defendants or any of them.
Neither party to have costs of this appeal.
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Bumsey and O’Brien, JJ., concurred.
Judgment modified as directed in opinion and, as modified, (^affirmed, without costs to either party on this appeal.