25 N.Y.S. 375 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
This action was brought to recover an alleged balance due to the plaintiff from the defendant for work done and materials furnished under certain contracts in connection with the building by the defendant of nine houses on West Eighty-Second and Eighty-Third streets in the city of New York, and for the value of certain extra work and materials furnished by the plaintiff to the defendant in and for said houses. The answer admitted the making of the contracts, but denied the performance thereof; and admitted the doing and performance. of extra work, but denied the value thereof; and alleged payment for all. work and extra work done by the plaintiff, and for all materials, and extra materials furnished. It also set up a counterclaim for damages for the alleged failure to complete the work to be done under the contracts within the time therein stipulated, and also because the work done and materials furnished by the plaintiff were of inferior kind and quality. The issues raised by the pleadings having been referred to a referee, said referee reported in favor of the plaintiff, and from the judgment thereupon entered this appeal is taken.
The claim upon the part of the appellant is that the plaintiff did not substantially comply with the terms of the contracts and the plans and specifications, as found by the.referee, and that the contracts were not only not completed within a reasonable time, but were not completed at all, and that the certificates required by the contracts were not furnished, and that the plaintiff delayed the work unnecessarily and unreasonably, and failed to do the work it did in a good and workmanlike manner, by which the defendant was damaged. In the consideration of these questions raised by the appellant .we have been somewhat embarrassed by the fact that the referee has, in respect to some of the points raised in the case, taken an erroneous view1 of the law, and also seems in his opinion to have, in at least one respect, a different idea of the facts from that which is contained in his findings. Upon an examination of the opinion of the referee, it will appear that he states that it does not appear at any time while the work was in progress, either before or after the dates fixed by the contracts for completion, any complaint was made by the defendant that the contracts had not been performed within the periods fixed in the contracts. Upon examination of the findings it will be found that the referee finds “that during the progress of the work under both contracts defendant continuously complained of the lack of material and men, and spoke to the foreman and superintendent of plaintiffs, and wrote to the plaintiffs thereof, and repeatedly requested the plaintiffs verbally and in writing to supply more men, and send the material to the buildings being erected, and expressed dissatisfaction at the manner in which the plaintiffs were performing their work
The claim which seems to have been asserted for the first time upon the bringing of this suit, that the proper architect’s certifi