66 N.Y.S. 10 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The careful and intelligent discussion of this case presented in the opinion of the court below makes it unnecessary to enter into any
The record shows that there were material modifications and changes made at the suggestion of the architect, with the approval of the defendant, that these required additional time, and the facts justified the decision of the court below that time was not of the-essence of the contract in the contemplation of the parties, and that the defendant had estopped himself from insisting upon the time limit of the contract by his own conduct. We fail to find in the-case anything to indicate that the trial court has misapplied the law. So far as our attention is drawn to the matter no evidence was.
The damages for injuries to goods, due to the failure of the plaintiffs to exercise that degree of care demanded of them under the circumstances, is fully treated by the court below, and the conclusion reached is supported by the evidence.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
The following is the opinion of the court helow :
Smith, J.:
The plaintiffs have sustained, by a preponderance of evidence, their claim that they completed their work in accordance with the contract and in a substantial and workmanlike manner, and that their claim for extra work should he allowed. The contract provided that the work should he done in a good, workmanlike and substantial manner, to the satisfaction and under the direction of the architect, to be testified by a certificate under his hand. The architect furnished the required certificate and testified himself upon the trial that the performance of the contract was in accordance with the plans and specifications thereof and in a substantial and workmanlike manner. The variation in these specifications of which the defendant most seriously complains is the substitution of angle irons for bridle irons. I find that such substitution was done under the direction.of the architect, and he testified that the defendant agreed to the change. Whether he did or not, I do not consider that material, because upon the evidence I find that the defendant was not damaged by the substitution, for, all things considered, angle irons make just as good a job as bridle irons.
The defendant interposes two substantial counterclaims—first, for damages for delay in the completion of the building beyond the time specified in the contract. The contract provided that the work should he completed by September twenty-fifth. The work was not actually completed until December twenty-fourth. From a consideration of the conduct of the parties during the whole period of the work, my judgment is that time was not considered of the essence of the contract. I think the time named for the completion of the-work is a date to he aimed at, and that neither party contemplated that it was more than possible that the work should he finished at that time. But, if I am mistaken in this conclusion, I think the evidence warrants the finding that the defendant estopped himself from enforcing this provision of the contract by his conduct. As was said in the case of Dunn v. .Steubing (120 N. Y. 232). upon the failure of the plaintiff to perform the contract by the date fixed, the defendant might have insisted upon his strict legal rights, and then put an end to the contract, hut this he did not do, hut permitted the plaintiffs to continue the work, and for this reason he cannot now insist upon the delay as a defense to an action brought to recover the price of the contract. There was a change in the plans and specifications by substituting different iron girders than those originally contemplated, made with the consent of the defendant, which entailed considerable delay. The defendant did not notify the plaintiffs that he should claim damage by reason of the delay, as he should have done, until a brief time before the work was finally completed. I do not think that the defendant at that time had in mind to make any claim against the plaintiffs for damages by reason of the delay, and that his whole conduct justifies a finding upon my part that he waived the strict performance of this part of the contract.
My conclusion is that the plaintiffs are entitled to judgment against the defendant for the amount claimed by them as the balance due on the contract and for extra work claimed, less the amount of the counterclaims of the defendant which 1 find have been established at the sum of §411.15. The plaintiffs are also entitled to the costs of the action, but I award no extra allowance.