138 N.E. 26 | NY | 1923
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *379
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *380 The plaintiffs made a contract with the defendant, the city of New York, in August, 1916, for the construction of that part of the subway known as *382 route number 61 in consideration of the payment of $4,194,797. They assert the existence of a later contract by which the defendant, acting through the public service commission and the board of estimate and apportionment, undertook to pay to them the extra cost incurred through the advance in the price of labor and material as a consequence of the war. The validity of that contract is the chief question to be determined. The circumstances leading up to its making are set forth fully in the fourth cause of action, to which for the time being our attention will be confined. The fifth and sixth causes of action, which together with the fourth are challenged by the demurrer, involve narrower questions of pleading with but slight relation to the merits.
The plaintiffs say that at the commencement of the work, the General Contractors' Association, of which they are members, fixed a wage scale with representatives of the labor unions engaged in subway work which was to continue unchanged until the completion of the contracts. In December, 1916, the men demanded an increase. The contractors yielded to the demand under protest, and fixed a new scale to continue for a stated time. In February, 1917, before the stated time had elapsed, there was a new demand. The workmen appealed to the commission and its chairman. The commission insisted that the work must not be interrupted. The contractors, however, were assured that a way would be found of reimbursing them for the increased expense. They were also assured that in the judgment of the commission a state of war was then imminent between the United States and Germany, that war would probably lead to still greater cost both of labor and of materials, and that if war were declared, "the defendant would pay plaintiffs and said other contractors, respectively, all further increases in the cost of labor and materials that might be due to it, or to labor inefficiency resulting from or following it." There was also a promise to co-operate *383 with the contractors in procuring the legislation necessary to that end. Shortly thereafter war was declared, and the contractors thereupon established a new scale to take effect from April 1, 1917, and to continue until the completion of the contracts. The war withdrew from peaceful industry great numbers of workmen whose services were required by the government. It also transferred large numbers to the munition plants and to other industries engaged in the manufacture of war materials and the furnishing of war supplies. The government at places outside of New York paid a scale of wages greatly in excess of that prevailing in subway and similar work when war was declared. So also did the war industries. "As a result of said increased demand for the services of workmen and of men for military duty by the United States and other employers, and the greatly increased wages established, offered and paid as aforesaid elsewhere than in New York city and its vicinity, as well as the increased and increasing cost of living," the workmen, in May, 1918, despite their earlier agreements, demanded "a large increase in the wages they were then being paid and in excess of the then prevailing rate," and gave notice to the contractors and to the commission and the board of estimate that they would strike if said increase was not granted. The contractors refused to pay said increase unless "defendant would agree to reimburse them for the added cost to them resulting from payment of said increased scale as compared with the scale prevailing at the date of their respective contracts, and also the increase in the cost of material due to the war, as compared with its cost at said dates, on the further performance and completion of their respective contracts," besides the increased cost of both labor and material paid or incurred since April 6, 1917. They did not limit their demand to the prospective increase in the cost of labor, but they included prospective increase in the cost of material, and also past increases in the cost both of labor and of material. *384 The commission and the board of estimate and apportionment, thus pressed, promised to enter into a binding agreement accordingly, and if necessary to exercise the powers conferred by the so-called Lockwood Act (L. 1918, ch. 586). The plaintiffs in reliance on these assurances accepted the new scale, and put it in force for one week beginning June 1, 1918. The defendant, however, failed and refused to enter into any binding agreement, and thereupon the plaintiffs canceled the new scale, and the men struck. They gave notice in striking that, unless they had a satisfactory agreement, they would scatter and prevent the further prosecution of subway work. Thereupon the board of estimate and the commission held joint and separate meetings. As a result, according to the allegations of the complaint, they "expressly, jointly and severally promised and agreed" that if the contractors would pay the increased wages, the defendant would pay the increased cost of labor and material "due to the war" from April 6, 1917, as well as any future increase "due to the same cause." The amount of the increase in the cost of labor was to be ascertained by comparing the scale of wages established in April, 1917, with the rates in force when the construction contracts were made, and the amount of the increase in the cost of material was to be computed in a like way. For breach of that agreement this action is brought. There are allegations that a critical situation was presented by the threatened strike; that there was danger of great injury to the public by the obstruction of the work; that about 6,000 workmen were employed; and that in the emergency thus arising it was necessary to relieve the contractors from burdens not foreseen when the undertaking was begun.
We think the contract is condemned by article III, section 28, of the Constitution of the state.
"The legislature shall not, nor shall the common council of any city, nor any board of supervisors, grant any extra compensation to any public officer, servant, *385
agent or contractor" (Constitution, art. III, § 28). We have held that there is no power to repair out of the public purse the losses that war prices have brought to contractors with state or municipality in the performance of their contracts (Gordon v.State of N.Y.,
The contractors say that what they are seeking is not a gift in form or substance, not an extra at all in the sense of a gratuitous concession, but the stipulated equivalent for the surrender of a right. The right, when subjected to analysis, will be found to be illusory. Millions were promised by the city in return for an unreal surrender. Either there was no consideration at all, or the shred of value, if any, is so grossly disproportionate to the return that to uphold it as sufficient would be to nullify the Constitution by subterfuge and fiction.
We are told that a right was surrendered when the contractors paid the wages that were necessary to keep the work in motion, and avert its disruption and suspension as the result of a protracted strike. In the circumstances disclosed by the complaint they could not have done less without being guilty of a wrong. They had covenanted to build the road and to keep at all times upon the work a suitable supply of men. This meant that they must hire the labor and pay the wages necessary to permit them to proceed. Their duty was to avert the strike *386
unless there was a reasonable prospect that without unreasonable delay other labor could be obtained at cheaper rates, not less, however, than those prevailing in the market. Payment of less is forbidden by the statute (Labor Law, §
The plaintiffs, therefore, did nothing more than it was their duty to do without additional reward (DeCicco v. Schweizer,
Some point is made that the contractors had claims against the defendant for delays already suffered as a result of the defendant's acts, and that there was a promise to pay these claims if the contractors would yield to the strikers and go forward with the work. The act did not supply a consideration for the promise. The delays charged against the city occurred while the undertaking was still new. The contractors with notice of the breach had elected to perform. Long before the promise of extra compensation, the right to rescind, if it ever existed, had been definitively renounced. What was left was a claim for the damages incurred (Mawhinney v. Millbrook Woolen Mills,
We hold, then, that the defendant's promise is unenforcible for lack of a consideration to support it. If, however, some shred of value could be discovered, if we could gather from the maze of this complaint the abandonment of an opportunity to find cheaper labor elsewhere, the promise in its dominant purpose and effect would remain the promise of a gift. We are dealing here with a restraint imposed by the Constitution itself upon the agencies of government. Its prohibitions are to be interpreted, not narrowly and grudgingly like those of a penal statute (McCulloch v.Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316; Prigg v. Penn., 16 Pet. 539, 612), but broadly and liberally to promote the policy behind them. A payment to a contractor does not cease to be extra compensation because some fragment of consideration, sufficient, it may be, to sustain a contract between private parties, may give to the transaction the aspect of an exchange of values. The underlying realities of plan and purpose and effect must prevail over the form or the disguise which may incumber or belie them. Approached in this spirit, the argument for the plaintiffs is seen to be beside the point. The argument is that courts do not weigh the adequacy of the consideration in determining whether an agreement has the obligation of a contract. Enough that a right has been renounced. The renunciation supports the concession of anything, no matter how large, that is offered in return. That may be true if the existence of a contract is the only question to be determined. What concerns *391
us here is not whether a contract exists, but whether in substance and operation it is one for extra compensation, a largess in purpose and effect though in name and in form a payment for money's worth (cf. Matter of Orvis,
This contract in its dominant purpose and effect was one to repair the hardships of the war by the award to the contractors of extra compensation. Its genesis and its provisions permit no other inference. The project was conceived as soon as war was imminent. The certainty of soaring prices was foreseen, and relief by legislation was planned in forgetfulness of the restraints to which legislation itself is subject. The project started as one for a largess or gratuity, and what it was at the beginning it continued to the end. Neither the plaintiffs nor the defendant had any thought that there was even a semblance of equality in the value of their reciprocal concessions. The plaintiffs did not limit themselves to a request for the payment of the larger wages then exacted by the workmen. They insisted that they receive whatever increase of wages might become necessary thereafter. They were not satisfied with that. They required the payment by the city of the increased cost of material as well as labor, and that not merely in the future, but retrospectively, from the beginning of the war. More than half the items of expenditure set forth in the complaint are classed under that head. The defendant on its side conceded everything that was asked, in effect indemnifying its contractors against loss through the fluctuations of the market, while continuing to be bound for the payment of the contract price with any profit there included. All this was done though the *392
plaintiffs surrendered nothing, unless it be the opportunity, known to be unsubstantial, and never mentioned, so far as appears, in the course of the negotiations, of finding cheaper labor elsewhere without descending below the level fixed by labor law and market. We cheat ourselves with words and forms when we speak of this surrender as the dominant inducement moving the defendant to the assumption of its added burdens. Here was no genuine balancing of values, no estimate of quid pro quo as even approximate equivalents, no thought that the contractors were contributing anything, much less a return for payments mounting into millions, nothing but an effort to spur them by a bounty to the fulfilment of their duty. We are not to "shut our minds" as judges to truths that "all others can see and understand" (TAFT, Ch. J., in Bailey v. Drexel Furniture Co. [Child Labor Tax Case],
Statutes are relied upon by the plaintiffs as authorizing or ratifying the defendant's promise. They need not long detain us. One (L. 1918, ch. 586) gave, or assumed to give, to the city the privilege at its election to cancel existing contracts, and remake them on new terms. The terms differ in essentials from those of the agreement sued on. Contractors taking advantage of the act must complete at cost without profit. The plaintiffs bargained for cost and the profit besides. If this act could be sustained, which we do not decide, the city did not attempt to comply with its provisions. Another statute (L. 1921, ch. 911) confers a right of action upon contractors who have fulfilled their contracts in reliance upon a promise to pay the increased cost resulting from a state of war. If the promise is invalid under the Constitution as one for extra compensation (Constitution, art. III, § 28), the statute cannot make it valid (Gordon v. State, supra).
The fifth and sixth causes of action remain to be considered. They allege, with slight differences of form, *393
that "for a good and valuable consideration given, paid and parted with by the plaintiffs to the defendant," there was a promise to pay the increased cost of labor and material resulting from the war. Unlike the fourth cause of action, they do not tell us what the consideration was. We have held that a general statement that a promise was made for value is sufficient on demurrer (California Packing Co. v. Kelly S. D. Co.,
We do not overlook the defendant's argument that under the Rapid Transit Act (L. 1909, ch. 498) the contract changing the rate of compensation was illegal unless bonds to an adequate amount had previously been authorized, and that in the absence of an appropriate allegation to that effect the complaint in all its counts must be adjudged defective. We think the failure to vote the bonds, if failure there was, is matter of defense (McNulty
v. City of New York,
The order should be affirmed, without costs, in so far as it sustains the demurrer to the fourth cause of action, and reversed, without costs, in so far as it sustains the demurrer to the fifth and sixth, with leave to the plaintiffs to amend within twenty days after service of a copy of *394 the order to be entered on our remittitur, and with leave to the defendant to withdraw its demurrer, and answer the complaint, within a like time. The first question certified is answered in the negative and the second and third questions are answered in the affirmative.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., HOGAN, POUND, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., concur.
Ordered accordingly.