60 A.D. 528 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
This is an appeal from an interlocutory judgment overruling a demurrer. Plaintiff, a sub-contractor, complains that the defendant and a contractor executed an agreement whereby the defendant was to advance certain payments as a building progressed, and that plaintiff was to be paid out of the funds due on the sixth payment named in that agreement, which provided, inter alia, that the work should all be done under the supervision and to the satisfaction of Henry E. Hillier, and that the various payments “ shall be made only with the assent of Morris P. Ferris, attorney for the mortgagee, and only upon his being satisfied with (that) the work on said building is faithfully and properly done, and far enough advanced to justify said payments ; and that said bond and mortgage is a first and prior lien upon the property, as to which the said attorney is to be the sole judge.” The complaint alleged that the said plaintiff duly performed all of the conditions of said agreement to be performed on her part between her and Geoghegan, the said contractor, contained in the contract annexed .thereto and marked Exhibit B; that the said Geoghegan duly performed all of the conditions between him and the defendant on his part to be performed to entitle him to the sixth payment, as set forth in the contract annexed thereto and marked Exhibit A.
The defendant demurs on the ground that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, argues that the plaintiff does not plead the performance of the conditions relative to the supervision of Mr. Hillier and the assent of Mr. Ferris, and relies upon the authority off Weeks v. O’Brien, (141 N. Y. 199), which, he states, lays down the rule that “ where a building contract contains a condition requiring an architect’s certificate of completion of the contract, before payment of the last installment, it is essential in an action upon the contract to recover that installment, to allege in the complaint performance of that condition, or set forth facts excusing plaintiff from procuring the certificate.” This is an accurate quotation of part of the head note, but the court, in
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred.
Interlocutory judgment affirmed, with costs.