44 N.Y.S. 125 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
This action is brought for the cancellation of a bond and mortgage made by the plaintiff for the purpose of indemnity to two of the defendants, on the ground that the obligation for which the bond and mortgage were given as security has been released and discharged.
The firm of Wm. D. Andrews & Bro. contracted with the city of Albany in 1887 to erect a water plant known as a gang well system. The members of the firm as principals, and the plaintiff and the defendants Moore and Flynn as sureties, executed a bond to the city for the performance of the contract. The plaintiff gave a bond of indemnity for the execution of the city bond to his co-sureties, Edward and Henry 0. Moore, and, as collateral thereto, the mortgage in question. All the parties to the bond and the city itself are parties .to this action.
The original contract with the city was dated July 6, 1887, and the Andrews entered upon its performance, but liad not completed it when, on April 2, 1888, the Andrews made two other contracts with the city respecting the water plant. It is claimed by the plaintiff that these contracts constituted a novation of the original contract whereby the sureties were discharged from liability, and he asks that all the bonds in question be canceled, and the mortgage be discharged of record, and that the plaintiff be adjudged free from liability to any of the defendants, including the city of Albany, as surety on the bond or otherwise. Before proceeding to an analysis of the alleged changes in the contract it will be profitable to consider the principles which govern sureties in respect of novations of contracts.
In Grant v. Smith (46 N. Y. 93) Judge Allen said : “ Judge Story, in Miller v. Stewart (9 Wheat. 680), enunciates the principle by which the obligations of sureties are controlled very distinctly, and in accordance with the whole current of .authority. He says: ‘ Nothing can be clearer, both upon principle and authority,
In Paine v. Jones (76 N. Y. 274) Judge Danforth (at p. 278) says: “In Calvo v. Davies (8 Hun, 222 [affd., 73 N. Y. 211]) the court say: ‘ The rule is absolute that there shall be no transaction with the principal debtor without acquainting the person who has a part interest in it.’ * * * • The respondent’s counsel, however, contends with much earnestness that the alteration made by the creditor and principal debtor is not material, and, therefore, does not injuriously affect the surety. That it changes the contract is very plain, and it does not seem necessary to inquire what mischief the alteration might produce, or how it might be prejudicial to the surety. The law requires that if there is any agreement between the principals with reference to a contract to the ¡Performance of which another is bound as surety, he ought to be consulted in regard to any proposed alteration, and if he is not or does not consent to the alteration, he will be no longer bound, and the court will not inquire whether it is or not to liis injury.”
In Page v. Krekey (137 N. Y. 307, 314) Judge O’Brien said : “ This question seems to have been disposed of in the court below on the ground that the change was not material. But the answer to that is that the defendant’s obligation is striotissi/mi juris, and he is discharged by any alteration of the contract, to which his guaranty applied, whether material or not, and the courts will not inquire whether it is or is not to his injury.” For a similar case see Dobbin v. Bradley (17 Wend. 422).
Brandt, in his work on Suretyship and Guaranty (2d ed., § 388), says: “ ‘ No principle of law is better settled at this day than that' the undertaking of the surety being one striotissimi juris, he cannot, either at law or in equity, be bound further or otherwise than he is by the very terms of his contract. . . . Neither is it of any consequence that the alteration in the contract is trivial, nor even that
These authorities abundantly establish the proposition that the contract of a surety is strietissimi juris, and that he may plead non lime in fmdera veni. The simple question is not whether there has been any material change in the contract to his injury without his consent, but whether there has been any substantial change in its terms.
So, also, it is elementary that any change in the times of payment named in the contract will discharge the surety. (Ducker v. Rapp, 67 N. Y. 464; Calvo v. Davies, 73 id. 211.)
In Halliday v. Hart (30 N. Y. 488) Judge Davies said: “A creditor, by giving time. to the principal debtor, in equity destroys the obligation of the sureties, and a court of equity will grant an injunction to restrain a creditor, who has given further time to the principal, from bringing an action against the surety. This equitable doctrine the courts of law have applied to cases arising on promissory notes and bills of exchange.”
In order to arrive at a general understanding of the plaintiff’s contention it may be stated that the original contract provided for the erection of a system of gang wells capable of supplying to the city 10,000,000 of gallons of water daily, and that several months later two other contracts were made, increasing the system by an addition capable of supplying 16,000,000 of gallons daily. These last two contracts are referred to in this opinion as the second contract, as they were executed on the same day, the one increasing the supply to 15,000,000 and the second to 16,000,000 of gallons.
I propose to state the radical differences which seem to exist between the original and the later contracts consecutively. First. The original contract provided for “ a gang well, so called, amply sufficient to furnish, yield and supply ten millions of gallons of water ” }ier day, the tubes to be of the same diameter as those driven by the firm for the city of Brooklyn, “ complete in all parts with appurtena/nees, fixtures and connections, pipes, suction mains, receiver, and siphon caisson sufficient to gather and conduct the water from said well into said siphon caisson, from which it is to be
The second contract provided for the construction, “ at or adjoining the present Gang Well Station, * * * an addition to and modification of the Gang Well by them recently constructed and' now nearly completed, amply sufficient to furnish, yield and supply five millions of gallons of water * * * per day * * * in addition to the ten millions of gallons already contracted for, tubes of the said addition to be of the same diameter, etc., * * * complete in all parts with appwtenanees, fixtures, connections, pipes and suction mains, to be connected to and with the present plant as changed and enlarged, and to an enlarged reeeiwer, sufficient to gather and conduct water (after such change and addition is made) from the said extended and enlarged well into one siphon caisson.”
Thus it appears that there was to be an addition to and modification of the gang well which would furnish a larger supply of water, with tubes to be connected to and with the present plant as changed and enlarged, and to an enlarged receiver, sufficient to hold the larger supply from the said extended and enlarged well. In other words, the receiver provided by the original contract was enlarged by the second contract, and while we have' nothing to show how much larger the second receiver was to be, it may be assumed that while the first receiver was to be large enough to receive and conduct 10,000,000 of gallons, the enlarged receiver was to be of sufficient capacity to receive and conduct 16,000,000 gallons, i. e., sixty per cent larger.
The new receiver is termed “ an enlarged receiver,” and the well an “ enlarged well,” and thus the second contract declares that the gang well of the second contract was to be an enlarged gang well of the first contract. The second contract speaks of the new plant as- “ the present plant as changed and enlarged,” and of “ changes in the present plant.”
Besides, the first contract required a pump capable of pumping 10,000,000 gallons per day, and while nothing is specifically said in the second contract as to the size of the pump referred to therein, it may be easily inferred from its requirements that it was to be of sufficient capacity to pump the increased supply ; all the more, that
The second contract states, “ the change in present plant ana the additions, to be subject to the approval of the superintendent of the special water commission and substantially in accordance with the plan presented by him, to which reference is hereby made.”
We think this statement, of itself, shows that there was a clear and manifest change in the letter and spirit of the first contract, and that a new and different plan and plant were provided for, without any consultation of, or any notice or consent to the change on the part of the plaintiff.
Second. The first contract requires the whole work to be completed within six months from the date of its commencement, and “ whenever the works are so far completed as to authorize the same, a test thereof shall be begun and continued as hereinafter specified.” The test was to be made by the special water commission, which was to provide necessary engineers and assistants, competent to run the engines satisfactorily to its superintendent, and to furnish coal and other supplies necessary for that purpose, and pay all other necessary expenses for pumping continuously for three months. If the well should supply during that time 10,000,000 gallons of water daily, and of a certain specified quality, and if the commission should conclude not to abandon the scheme, then the test as to quantity should be continued for nine months more. The question of the quality of the water was to be submitted to and finally determined by Dr. Vander Veer. If it was decided that the water was not of a specified quality, or if the supply did not amount to 10,000,000 of gallons daily, then the commission had the right to abandon the enterprise, and the contractors were to refund to the city all moneys which they had received under the contract and were to have the right to remove their entire plant.
Thus it appears that the second contract postponed the time of trial, and changed the method of' testing and the times of the payments, as provided for in the first contract, and required the contractors to refund to the city moneys received by them, in a manner which was not contemplated in the first contract. These changes we hold to be material, and made without the consent of the plaintiff.
Third. The second contract provides that it shall not affect the first contract, except as to the limit therein prohibiting the pumping
AVe are able to ascertain what view was taken of the new contracts by the firm and by the city itself, the parties chiefly interested, to secure the enforcement of responsibility of the sureties for a failure to carry out the first contract. For, although the court may not substitute the opinion of the city for its own judgment, still, light is thereby thrown upon the subject. If an action were brought by the city directly against its bondsmen, the court might propierly call the declarations of the city to its aid, and no reason is seen why the same rule should not prevail in this action, to which the city is a party, especially as it demands affirmative relief against the plaintiff, and to be subrogated to the rights of the two defendants Moore against the plaintiff upon the bond and mortgage.
The second contract uses the following phrases in reference to the first contract: “An addition to and modification of the gang well by them recently constructed and now nearly completed; ” “ enlarged receiver sufficient to gather and conduct the water (after such change and addition is made) from the said extended and enlarged well; ” “ the change in the present plant; ” “ by reason of any changes herein provided for.” These words show that the contracting parties themselves declared that numerous changes were made in the plant and its appurtenances, and the general plan and its effect, and in the time and method of testing its efficiency, and the times and method of payment. Surely this resort to the declarations of the contracting parties themselves throws light upon their interpretation of the result of the second contract and its effect upon the first.
The city claimed and the learned court found that there was a breach of the first contract before the execution of the second; that thereby the liability of the sureties became fixed, and that the city thereafter, on August nineteeth, notified the Andrews that if detennined to abandon the enterprise under both contracts.
But the city had no right to decide that there was a breach of the first contract until after the final tests had been made, and this was to take place under the terms of the second contract. It is true that the six months’ term fixed for the completion of the first con
The learned counsel for the city of Albany insists that the action cannot be maintained either under sections 1638 and 1639 of the Code of Civil Procedure or as an action in equity.
Article o, of title 1 of chapter 14, of which these sections are a part, is entitled, “ Action to "compel the determination of a claim to real property.” Section 1638 permits an action by the owner of a fee in lands against any person to compel the determination of any claim adverse to that of the plaintiff, “ including any lien or incumbrance upon said property of the amount or value of not less than two hundred and fifty dollars.” Section 1639 states the requisites of the complaint and, among them, an allegation that the defendant unjustly claims “ a lien or incumbrance thereupon.”
Section 1641 provides that “the defendant may, in his answer, * * * set forth facts * * * showing that he has an interest * * * in or lien or incumbrance upon said property, and thereupon he may demand * * * any judgment to which he would be entitled in an action brought by him to * * * enforce in any manner the interest * * * therein or the lien or incumbrance thereupon which he asserts.”
The city availed itself of this latter action, and for affirmative answer alleged a partnership between the Andrews and the plaintiff in the contract with the city, and an agreement between them whereby the plaintiff was to receive one-fourth of the profits, in pursuance of which the plaintiff procured the execution by the Moores of the bond to the city; that this interest in the contract
The defendants Moore, in their answer, alleged that the bond and mortgage by the plaintiff were intended as indemnity against all costs, expenses and liability by reason of their executing the bond to the city, denied knowledge of the transactions set forth in the complaint as discharging their liability on that bond, claimed that they had been subjected to costs, etc., in the sum of $2,000, and demanded affirmative judgment declaring void the bond to the city and ordering the payment by the plaintiff of their said damage, and that upon such payment' the plaintiff’s bond and mortgage be canceled and discharged of record. The defendants Andrews answered admitting the allegations of the complaint.
There is no finding of the court in respect of any partnership of the plaintiff in the Andrews contract with the city, and that part of the answer may, therefore, be dismissed from our consideration.
The argument of the learned counsel inadvertently loses sight of the force of the amendment of 1891 to section 1638 and the following sections, by which a clear right is given to bring an action and demand a judgment to remove a lien or incumbrance on real estate. These sections seem to override the previous authorities cited by him, or any others discovered by us, and to give a remedy exactly suited to this controversy. He argues that there is “ no claim of title adverse to that of the plaintiff, nor any lien or incumbrance created by any person who claims a title adverse to the plaintiff.” The words of section 1638, “ adverse to that of the plaintiff,” have no relation to the words “ lien or incumbrance ” in the subsequent part of the section; all the more that these words are not used in section 1639 in specifying that the plaintiff may demand judgment that the defendant, and every person claiming under him (and we cannot see why this does not cover the city’s prayer to be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagees), be barred from a claim to
We have not found it necessary to examine the plaintiff’s exceptions to the admission or rejection of evidence as our conclusion disposes of the matter.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
All concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Sic.