85 N.Y.S. 732 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
This action was brought to foreclose a mechanic’s lien for work performed and materials furnished in erecting for defendants a building in the city of "Mew York.
The complaint alleged that the parties entered into a contract by which the plaintiff agreed to do certain work and furnish certain materials for the erection of a building for the defendants in the city of Mew York, and for which it was to receive the sum of $6,600; that the plaintiff duly performed all the terms and conditions of the contract upon its part, together with certain additions thereto authorized in writing, by which it was entitled to receive the further sum of $155, and also that it performed extra work and furnished extra materials not specified in the contract or authorized in writing, by which it became entitled to receive the further sum of $1,100, making a total of $7,855 for which judgment was demanded. The answer admitted the making of the contract; denied the other material allegations of the complaint, and specifically denied the claim for $1,100 for extra work. It further set up a counterclaim amounting to $20,200, for damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of plaintiff’s failure to perform the contract in furnishing the materials required and completing the work within the time specified. The plaintiff had a recovery for $4,755, together with interest thereon from September 5, 1901, to December 10, 1902, and a foreclosure was directed to satisfy this amount. Judgment was entered to this effect and defendants have appealed from so much" thereof as allows interest on the amount recovered.
I think the judgment should be modified in so far as the defendants have appealed from it. The plaintiff sought to recover $7,855 and interést. It recovered only $4,755; in other words, the trial court held that the claim which it made against the defendants was invalid in upwards of thirty-nine per cent. The "claim of $1,100 for extra work was disallowed upon the merits, and in addition thereto the court found that the defendants were entitled to offset against the plaintiff’s claim the sum of $2,000 by reason of the defective way in which it performed the work specified in the contract and inexcusable delays in completing the same. The contract price, it will be remembered, was" $6,600 and the plaintiff predicated its
The plaintiff was not entitled to recover interest for another reason. The claim made by it was unliquidated and was subject to a reduction as the trial court found of $3,100. This being the situation, the case fell directly within the rule laid down in Delafield v. Village of Westfield (41 App. Div. 24; affd., 169 N. Y. 582). There action was brought to recover the contract price for labor performed and materials furnished, and the defendant claimed damages for breaches of the contract, which claim was allowed to the extent of $2,000. Here, as already said, the damages were unliquidated. The plaintiff had not performed its contract, and for which it was legally liable to respond in damages to the extent of $2,000, nor iyas it entitled to recover $1,100 claimed for the extra work. But it is said that the casó of Delafield v. Village of Westfield (supra) has in effect been overruled by Sweeny v. City of New York (173 N. Y. 414.) We do not think it has. The Sweeny case
Here the plaintiff’s claim was subject to reduction for damages caused by its breach of contract. The amount of the set-off was unliquidated and what the plaintiff was entitled to could not be ascertained until the amount of the set-off had been determined. Such amount Was determined upon the trial to be .$2,000, and in addition the claim made by the plaintiff was subject to a further reduction of $1,100 for extra work. It cannot be that one can be subjected to a liability for interest which depends upon a proper demand because he does not accede to an improper demand. The demand made by the plaintiff prior to the commencement of the.action .upon which the claim for interest has been allowed not only exceeded by $2,000, the amount due upon the contract, but it was
The plaintiff was not entitled to recover for another reason, and that is because it did not produce the architect’s certifícate entitling it to. payment. The contract provided that thé payments were to be made upon the certificate of the architect. It is true the complaint alleges that the architect wrongfully' withheld the certificate, but the-findings made by the trial court show that' this, is not the fact. . Plaintiff had not performed his part of the contract and, therefore, was not entitled to be paid. Under a clause in a contract of this character the obtaining of the certificate is indispensable to a recovery. (Weeks v. O'Brien, 141 N. Y. 199; O’Brien v. Mayor, 139 id. 543.) Discussion is unnecessary to demonstrate that- the architect was not unreasonable in. refusing a certificate where the court finds, after an investigation, that the plaintiff had not performed its" contract, and- by reason thereof defendants were entitled, to ari allowance by Way of damages in nearly One-third of the entire contract price. ,
The judgment, so far. as appealed from,- therefore,- must be
Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien, Ingraham and Hatch, JJ., concurred.
Judgment modified by striking out allowance of interest and as so modified affirmed, with costs to appellants. .