15 Daly 370 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1889
Walsh, the contractor, abandoned the work before it was finished. Exactly how far from completion the building was when Walsh deserted the contract the evidence does not disclose. The defendants attempted to prove by competent evidence how much of the work remained undone, and what the cost of completing the building in the manner provided for by the contract with Walsh actually was, but the referee refused to receive the evidence. This was error, and the defendants’ exception to that ruling is of itself enough to call for the reversal of the judgment. In order to ascertain what was due to Walsh it was necessary to learn how much work he had done, and what the value of that work was. Then the amount that the defendants were compelled to expend in finishing what Walsh left incomplete was to be proved. From these data a calculation could be made as to flow much, if anything, was due to Walsh, and the amount payable to Walsh is the sum that the lienors could recover from the defendants in this action. Wright v. Roberts, 43 Hun, 413; Van Clief v. Van Vechten, 1 N. Y. Supp. 99; Develin v. Mack, 2 Daly, 94; Cheney v. Association, 65 N. Y. 282.
The referee assumed that, no matter what the defendants had been compelled to lay out in completing Walsh’s unfinished contract, the defendants were still liable to pay the original contract price to the subcontractors. That this ruling is erroneous it requires no argument to prove. But, as the referee was led to this conclusion by an erroneous construction of the lien law of 1885,
Laws N. Y. 1885, c. 342.