54 A.D. 398 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The damages recovered in this action were for the breach of the conditions of a joint and several bond executed by the defendant, Matthew Baird, together with the Sargent Granite Company, to the plaintiff in the penal sum of $6,000.
The condition of the bond was that the Sargent Granite Company should well and truly perform the stipulations and agreements in a contract made by it with the plaintiff to furnish all the granite for the erection of the armory building on Fourth avenue, in this city, cut, fitted and ready to set, and deliver the same on a certain dock in New York city. The granite was to be furnished in conformity to and in pursuance of an agreement between the plaintiff and the mayor, etc., of the city of New York, by the armory board of said city, and th¿ plans, drawings and specifications attached thereto ; and such contract, plans, drawings and specifications were, so far as they or either of them referred to the work or material, or either, therein mentioned, made a part of the contract between the plaintiff and defendant, for che faithful performance of which the bond in question was executed. The contract further provided that the work of furnishing the granite should be commenced within seven days from its execution, and the furnishing and delivery should be completed within eight months from the 1st day of May, 1892. An d the granite company further agreed therein that, before any payment should be due or become due, it should furnish to the party of the second part, this plaintiff, a certificate in writing of the supervising architect approving of the quantity and quality of the material furnished, and that eighty-five per cent of the value of the work delivered, when set as per such certificate, should be paid once a month, the balance when all the said granite work should be completed, And it was provided that, in case the granite company failed to fully
The contract made between the plaintiff and the city required all of the cut stone trimmings to be of quarried stone from Manhattan island or Connecticut, or of granite from such quarry and of such color as the architect should approve, and that all of the stone for exterior work should be of like stone, or of granite, and of. such quality and color as would meet the approval of the architect, and contained the same provision as to time and conditions of payment as did the contract between', the granite company and plaintiff, viz., that eighty-five per cent of the value of the work delivered, when set as per architect’s certificate, should be paid once a month, and the balance when all the granite work should be completed. By the terms of this contract the armory was to be completed within eighteen months from the 11th day of March, 1892, and damages for failure were stipulated at fifty dollars per day.
•The Sargent Company failed to commence the work within the time limited by the contract, i. e., within seven days after the 1st of May, .1892, and no granite was delivered by it until about August 1, 1892. Repeated complaints were made by the architect to the plaintiff ' and by the plaintiff to the Sargent Company for this failure, and the company was requested repeatedly to hurry up the work. It is admitted that the said company did not finish and complete the work within the eight months as covenanted by it.
After having furnished a quantity of the granite contracted for on or about the 14th day of ¡November, 1892, this defendant, who, in the meantime, • had become the assignee of the rights of the Sargent Company under its contract with plaintiff, and of the money due and to grow due thereon, and had taken possession of the quarry from which the granite was obtained, made a demand upon the plaintiff for the payment of $10,000 or' $11,000 under the contract.
The plaintiff refused to pay the sum demanded, on the ground that no such amount was due under the terms of the contract, but
It is conceded that no certificate of the architect showing his approval of the quantity and quality of the material furnished was procured or presented by the defendant when his demand for money was made, but it is contended that plaintiff waived the production of such certificate, for the reason that he had himself procured the certificate, and that he did not put his refusal upon that specific ground, nor himself suggest that such certificate was required or would be demanded. But there was, concededly, a bona fide dispute as to what amount was due upon the contract,, and if a technical demand was to be relied upon, it should have been. made in the method required by the contract, as there was no other way than by the architect’s certificate to ascertain the amount due. The certificate furnished by the plaintiff to the city on receiving payments does not certify with respect to the quantity or value of the granite work as required by- the Sargent contract, but embraced the value of the granite cut and set in the building, which, of course, included the cost of transportation, for work in setting it, and for the labor-an d expense of the material used. The granite company should have obtained a certificate showing the granite cut and fitted ready to set, and delivered at the company’s expense on the dock at New York, and only after such granite was set in the building was the certificate to be given. At the time of the demand some of the granite was in transportation.
After the defendant stopped work on the contract the plaintiff sought to obtain the granite necessary for the completion of the armory in the open market. The building having been partially
It appears that the plaintiff used diligence and care in his efforts to procure the granite in open market, and made all reasonable efforts to diminish the damages. His .operations in procuring the granite were made necessary by the failure of the defendant to perform his contract and the special circumstances of the case, and it does not appear but that his work was economically conducted. His-real damages were two or three times the penalty of the defendant’s bond, but his recovery has been limited to the sum stipulated, with interest.
Upon these facts three questions have been presented and argued in this court which substantially resolve themselves into:
First. That there was no breach of the contract to furnish the granite.
• Second. That the architect’s certificate was not required as a condition precedent to payment upon the contract, or, if so, it was waived.
Third. That an improper measure of damages was adopted as a basis for the recovery.
It is clear from the foregoing statement of facts that not only was there a breach of the contract, but there was a complete abandonment of it. For this act there was no justification. When the demand for money was made it was not for the sum due "upon the
It is said that the liquidated damages for which the contract made provision furnished the measure of damage. But this clause relates to delay in completion of the contract; its language so shows. “ In case the said party óf the first part shall fail to fully and entirely * * * complete within the time hereinbefore limited for such completion or delivery * * * the said party of the first part shall, and will, pay to the said party of the second .part the sum of fifty dollars for each and every day that' the said party of the first part shall be in default.” It is manifest that this clause contemplated a completion of the contract with damages for delay. There was no completion or attempt to complete, but an utter abandonment, and such clause was' not intended to cover such a case, nor was provision made in the contract for such a contingency. The defendant’s
The testimony is abundant to show that the plaintiff exercised ■ diligence and care in procuring the granite,- and made all reasonable efforts to diminish the damage sustained ; and it is clear that under the proof he sustained much larger damages than is measured by the penalty of the bond.
There are no other questions which require discussion. As we think the judgment below is correct, it should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.