158 N.Y.S. 879 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1916
The plaintiff has brought an action for damages which it claims that it suffered by reason of the failure of the defendant to furnish an auto truck to haul bricks. The plaintiff contends that the defendant agreed to furnish such a truck for one month, and that the agreement was made in contemplation of a contract which the plaintiff had made to buy and promptly haul away bricks from a building in Eighty-Sixth street which was being demolished. The defendant denies that it agreed to furnish a truck for 30 days, and claims that the agreement was only to furnish a truck by the day; that it furnished a truck for 4 days, and that it was never paid for these 4 days, and that it therefore refused to furnish the truck any longer; and it counterclaims for the alleged agreed price for the auto truck for the 4 days.
At the trial the plaintiff produced some testimony, although it is rather vague, that its foreman arranged with a person representing himself as the manager of the defendant for an auto truck for one month at $24 a day, payments to be made every 14 days; that the defendant after 4 days refused to furnish the auto truck because some one offered it more; that thereafter he telephoned to three concerns in an attempt to hire another auto truck with a dump, which is the only kind of an auto truck which would serve his purpose; and that these concerns were the only concerns which rented out such trucks “so far as he knows.” The plaintiff further showed that thereafter the wrecker, who had agreed to sell him the bricks, gave him 3 days’ notice to obtain other trucks, and then canceled the contract; that at that time he had agreements to deliver the bricks in the Bronx and in East New York; and that these agreements would have shown large profits, if he could have obtained the trucks to make the deliveries.
The defendant, on the other hand, testified that it agreed only to furnish a truck by the day, that the plaintiff did not pay for the 4 days it used the truck, and that it thereupon refused to furnish the truck any longer. It also produced testimony tending to show that there were 50 or 60 concerns which were in the business of renting out such trucks in the Greater City of New York and 12 or 14 in Brooklyn. Upon this testimony the trial justice decided that the plaintiff was entitled to a judgment for the sum of $700, and that such judgment included an allowance of $96 on the defendant’s counterclaim.
The plaintiff claims that the reason the trial justice arrived at this result is because it did not at the trial really contest the defendant’s counterclaim, because it believed that in fairness, if not in law, the defendant was entitled to a recovery for the 4 days’ service of the truck. Of course, a party can waive any rule of law of benefit to it, and the plaintiff at the trial, or at any other time, had a right to waive the condition of complete performance as a concurrent or precedent condition to defendant’s right of payment. The record, however, shows no such waiver, and upon this record we are bound to hold that the trial justice has made inconsistent findings.
Judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with $30 costs to appellant to abide the event.
WHITAKER, J., concurs. PENDLETON, J., concurs, on the last ground stated in the opinion.